Propaganda in a Democracy
by Dennis Lewis/Authentic-Breathing.com
When Edward Bernays, proclaimed by many as the father of public
relations, published his book "Propaganda" in 1928, few people
realized the far-reaching influence that the new discipline of
public relations would have on society. Propaganda, Bernays
claims, is not something pernicious that one government or group
inflicts on another, but is rather an integral part of democracy
itself.
"The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized
habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in
democratic society," said Bernays, who, perhaps appropriately, is
the great grandson of Freud. "Those who manipulate this unseen
mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is
the true ruling power of our country."
Living in a so-called free-market democracy, we are besieged
with choices of all kinds in our daily lives - from the products
and services we buy for home and business, to the activities that
we undertake for entertainment and relaxation, to the politicians
and government amendments we vote for, to the ideas that bring us
motivation and meaning. Bernays points out that as citizens we
have "voluntarily agreed to let an invisible government sift the
data and high-spot the outstanding issues so that our field of
choice shall be narrowed to practical proportions."
If this was true in Bernays’ time, it is even truer today.
The ever-growing influence of the mass media, combined with the
ability of inexpensive powerful computer technology to manipulate
huge databases of information and images and to communicate this
data almost instantaneously worldwide, has spurred the move from
a industrial society to an information society. There is simply
no way that any one of us can keep up with and interpret all the
information that is required for sound decisions in the many
arenas of our lives. Whether we like it or not, we depend on the
"special pleading," the "propaganda," the "public relations" of
communications experts, mostly invisible, to bring to our
attention the products, services, people, facts, and ideas that
fit in best with our own specific social, psychological,
political, and economic situations. These invisible experts, who
include advertising and public relations professionals, newspaper
editors, book publishers, movie producers, government officials,
TV editors and anchormen, and so on thus have a tremendous
influence in our lives.
Though most of us would agree--at least intellectually--that
this is all obvious and true, we live our lives as though it were
not. We assume, for the most part, that we are the masters of
ourselves and that in issues of real importance we are able to
discriminate between these outside influences and our real needs
and beliefs--between hype and reality. Such an assumption is
questionable, however, when we realize that from early childhood
on, almost everything we eat, buy, use, or read has been shaped
or packaged for us by a member of this invisible government.
The fact is, Bernays takes his ideas much further than many
of us would like. He states that "We are governed, our minds our
molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we
have never heard of." And he then proceeds in this and other
books to lay out the formal mechanism by which propaganda can be
used to meet the needs of a democratic society.
Propaganda, along with the special pleading it depends on,
has been around since the beginning of time. But in the
past--before the advent of the mass media--it was clear who was
doing the pleading and for what purpose. Radio, television,
newspapers, motion pictures, and lately computers have changed
all that. Propaganda of one sort or another has become so much a
part of our lives that we don’t even recognize it as such. As Lao
Tzu said, "the best knots are tied without rope."
Of course, one could easily say that we in the west are
better off than people living in communist countries or under
dictatorships, because their propaganda is far more rigid and
insidious than our own. This argument is a misleading one,
however, for the simple reason that their propaganda is more
visible and easier to perceive than our own. By its very nature,
a democratic society offers so many choices to its citizens that
we would have neither the time nor the energy to narrow them down
without a whole industry of communications professionals
dedicated to just that. Our propagandists do not use rope, barbed
wire, mental hospitals, and the militia to make their point;
no--they use the latest communication techniques disseminated
through the print and electronic media in the guise of "giving us
what we really want."
What is truly pernicious about much of the propaganda that
surrounds us in the west is the very "reasonableness" of it--the
way in which we are taught to believe that it somehow represents
our real needs. For the goal of a propagandist--no matter what
his or her stripe--is to make a sale of some kind by seeking to
convince us that they understand our inner or outer needs and
goals and are responding to them. In this regard, a newspaper
editor or TV anchorman trying to tell the news in a way that will
attract readers or watchers is no better or worse than a public
relations professional attempting to improve the public’s
perception of a company or product.
What is important in either case is that we, the public,
begin to understand this process better so that we begin to
differentiate between what we really want and what we’ve been
conditioned to want by the invisible government competing for our
share of mind and money. Such a differentiation is an important
step on the path of self-knowledge and in the struggle for inner
freedom.
Dennis Lewis teaches natural breathing, qigong, tai chi, and
meditation through classes and workshops. He is co-editor with
Jacob Needleman of "Sacred Tradition & Present Need," and "On the
Way to Self Knowledge." He is the author of acclaimed book "The
Tao of Natural Breathing," and the audio program from Sounds True
"Breathing as a Metaphor for Living." He can be reached through
his website at www.authentic-breathing.com.
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