Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Emotions Rule

This image is in the Public Domain {{PD-US}}

"In politics, being deceived is no excuse." 

                                            Leszek Kołakowski [1]

The post-election mood in the United States ranges widely from intense feelings of jubilation through fear. Many pundits now focus less on the election than what it means for people's lives, locally and globally. 

Initially, some in the media are trying to watchdog a slew of appointees to high-level government roles. But ongoing news cycles continuously amplify agitation as indistinguishable from anything meaningful in daily events.[2]

Despite multiple analyses of opportunities seized or missed in the election, much of what motivated voters appears little understood. The opinion poll industry has rapidly self-congratulated, camouflaging again how useless the poll projections were. When election results are close, a poll is meaningless with an aggregate error range totaling as much as 6 percent (that is, plus or minus 3 percent error margin). 

In an online newsletter, one writer helpfully offers that the Harris campaign "...failed to trigger the necessary emotive responses...arguments were too sensible."[3] Perhaps future outreach to voters will seek to better express, rather than describe or advocate for feelings. 

While ideas are powerful, expressed emotions are more powerful. We all respond more readily to "ouch"[4] than a description of pain or other emotions. In other words, even urgings or propositions for change to benefit folks are immaterial or redundant against bursts of emotion.[5] 

We daily acknowledge this in lots of ways. Notably, the ever-present memes on social media largely deal in emotions. There, interjections, polite, impolite or worse, carry the day. Controversy and polemic now frame politics in an emotion-filled landscape of interjections with proffered certainties.

In an attention culture devoted to what's intuitive and snappy, what matters is truly engaging early and often with people. To overcome many years of sophisticated microtargeting of voters' emotions, candidates for public office should no longer count on eleventh-hour election campaigns.

References:

1. Leszek Kołakowski [Polish philosopher/historian] quoted in Timothy Snyder (2017), On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century, New York: Tim Duggan, p. v

2. Jacques Ellul (1965), Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes, New York: Knopf, p. 20

3. Elisa Bird (2024), "The Transatlantic Sequel to Brexit," Read or Die! November 8, https://medium.com/read-or-die/the-transatlantic-sequel-to-brexit-6ab726673b36

4. Tim Wharton and De Saussure, Louis (2022), "The Pragmatics of Emotion, Argument and Conflict," in Gesine Lenore Schiewer, Jeanette Altarriba and Bee Chin Ng (Eds.), Language and Emotion: An International Handbook, Volume 1, Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 664-680, at p. 667, https://doi.org/10.1515/97831103475240032

5. Wharton and De Saussure, p. 666

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Courage

by John via Sheba_Also 43,000 photos licensed under 

Around the globe annually, at 11 am on the eleventh day of the eleventh month, we mark with two-minutes of silence memory of the heroes who paid the ultimate price to protect our political freedom. We celebrate our men and women who returned from war along with all who lost their lives in too many conflictswhose sacrifice sought to assure our freedoms. 

It was their courage that provided opportunity to make a society that seeks respect and wellbeing for all citizens. Their sacrifice was for us to take the practical initiatives required to strengthen key values of western civilization like honesty, justice, temperance, and wisdom.

This is most understood among peoples who have experienced the atrocities of an invading force or the threat of invasion. The former president of Smith College, Jill Ker Conway, growing up on her parents' farm west of Sydney in Australia, is among many who describe vividly the wartime experience. 

In her book The Road from Coorain, she writes of her own times during World War II as a child, when she was thought to be asleep, overhearing her parents long into the night at the kitchen table discussing the day's newsand what they would do when the country was invaded.

She overheard that her father planned to pack belongings, take his rifle, and put the family onto horses, and they would ride far into the mountains. Knowing the reported brutality of the invading soldiers who would eventually catch up to the family, the plan was that he would shoot his wife and children before shooting himself, to avoid the alternative.

Such expectations and experiences as these were still spoken about periodically when growing up in the 1950s through the 1960s and beyond by adultswith children out of sight, but some still within hearing, reminding everyone of the loss of loved ones in the ferocious fighting of that war in the Pacific. 

Then for adults, youth, and children, the persistent blights of wars in Korea and Vietnam so near weighed heavily and long in the awareness of many in South-East Asia.

Recent or not so recent, history can be brutal when its lessons are ignored.

Friday, October 25, 2024

Choice

by Lorie Shaull from St Paul, United States
licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic


People are voting early in record numbers in the United States. Many Republicans and Independents are joining with Democrats, seeking to keep democracy alive.


Whether these vigorous, eleventh-hour efforts defeat the autocrat-extremists will soon be known. 


Some mainstream media continue to assert that the candidates' "campaigns now turn on a small set of national issuesthis year primarily the cost of living, abortion and the border."[1] The writer of this comment seems oblivious to the vows of wannabe-dictators to strip away more freedoms.


In "this year" such journalism says little to anyone who believes it's good to live in a representative republic. However, the comment does offer two useful clues on what to emphasize in the closing days of this consequential election campaign. 


Firstly, voters need to be presented with emotional reasons to both feel and believe a candidate will make groceries, fuel, and everyday purchases cheaper. And it's of declining value to keep banging out ambitious pledges about "price gouging" or tax incentives. 


Anyone overdrawn on credit has needs right nowlike a roof overhead and food for the kids. It's time to specifically and convincingly illustrate what's being done and what more will be done to cut the cost of groceries and other necessities immediatelynot weeks, months, or years away!


Secondly, very large numbers of people probably vote according to the projected image of a political figure. But if all an opponent's faults highlighted during almost ten years haven't moved the needle against electability, why expect this approach to work during the less than ten days remaining?[2] 


Many of us want to vote for a candidate, not against someone! Repeated illustration of an opponent's graft has to hit home to how badly this harms us. Unfortunately "the United States, as well as some other nations, too often elect accused criminals to public officedespite vigorous commentary on the candidate's alleged criminality"[3] or immorality.


In the closing days of any election campaign, it's a serious challenge to promote truth, law, and justice. By this time, public discourse is a mash of snappy truthiness and outrage. And election news is frequently thought to be propaganda. Election campaigns certainly amplify propaganda processes, to provoke "action without prior thought."[4]


As Randal Marlin notes, it was Jacques Ellul who alerted to the necessity for "liberal government to offset seditious ideas from within the state or... [use] propaganda to offset other states seeking conquest over one's own state. But he recognizes that once a state begins to engage seriously in propaganda, it erodes its own claim to being liberal."[5] 


We must be careful about this inherent danger of propaganda. And we need to elect sincere leaders, who are equipped to remedy the serious harm autocrat-propagandists cause us.



References


1. David Lauter (2024), "All Politics Are Local? Not in This Election," Los Angeles Times, October 12, https://www.latimes.com/politics/newsletter/2024-10-12/all-politics-is-local-not-this-year-politics


2. David Brooks (2018), “Opinion: The Failures of Anti-Trumpism,” The New York Times, April 10, p. 27; Rodney G. Miller (2024), Get Ahead of Propagandists: Countering Disinformation, Albany, NY: Parula, p. 55; also at: Word to the Wise blog (2024), "Going Forward," February 4,

https://communicator.rodney-miller.com/2024/02/going-forward.html

Tim Ward (2024), "To Defeat Trump, Don't Focus on Trump. Wise Advice from An Unlikely Source," Medium - The Political Prism, online newsletter, October 24, https://medium.com/the-political-prism/to-defeat-trump-dont-focus-on-trump-9e7fdcd5eca9


3. Miller, p. 24; also at: Word to the Wise blog (2024), "Neutralizing Propaganda," January 10, https://communicator.rodney-miller.com/2024/01/neutralizing-propaganda.html


4. Jacques Ellul (1962), Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes, New York: Knopf, p. 240


5. Randal Marlin (2021), "Dynamic Tension for Pandemic Times," Current Drift, 10 May, IJES Ellul Society, https://ellul.org/current-drift/dynamic-tension-for-pandemic-times/; also at: Word to the Wise blog (2021), June 10, https://communicator.rodney-miller.com/search?q=clash

Saturday, October 5, 2024

Truth to Tell

by Master Steve Rapport, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic

It's long past time to shake free from propaganda and disinformation. This requires large-scale, sustained, cooperative efforts.

Some Western democracies are massively expanding education in media literacy, critical analysis, rhetoric, and civics. This is occurring most where people feel the looming threat of invasion, such as among nations in Europe. These civic leaders are seriously boosting education to enhance the ability of adults, youth, and children to discern and assess reality.

Ever-increasing is the need to identify and counter dishonest politicians. Autocrat-propagandists routinely berate us with a fearfully absurd mixture of lies and partial truth. Their systematic, persistent distortions become exhausting and impact both our thinking and prioritiesto change personal belief systems and actions.

With voters heading to the polls in the United States, for what's likely the nation's most consequential election, many of us continue to wish for more effective countering of those unprincipled politicians, who continuously exploit the freedoms of democracy.

We surely need more than warnings or naive repetition of the "flood of falsehoods," as one media outlet chose yesterday to headline its own lame critiquewhich largely amplified a politician's lies and dangerous nonsense.[1] 

Many workable methods for countering propaganda were available much more than a decade ago[2]–when prebunking or other timely actions may have worked. What's realistic now to hope for enough civic leaders, jurists, journalists, editors, educators, or others to advance enough actions for the common good? 

What more can we do to 

* Counter the propaganda processes that spontaneously embed in our daily thinking, actions, and language, to intimately drive our actions?[3]

* Help to develop people's "cognitive skills, technical know-how, emotional self-awareness, and an ability to navigate massive flows of true, false, and irrelevant information via images, texts, videos, and audio clips"?[4]

* Incentivize news, information, other corporate, government, and nonprofit organizations to become better equipped to take a pivotal role in combating propaganda and disinformation?

* "Regulate the social media recommendation algorithms"?[5]

* Criminalize lies "intended to cause serious harm if said harm results"?[6]

It's time to put aside unfounded assumptions that rational explanation will counter the emotions that propagandists exploit in listeners or readers. It's time to more substantially spotlight and more effectively remedy the direct harms that propagandists do to individuals and society.


References

1. CNN (2024), October 4

2. Jacques Ellul (1965), Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes, New York: Knopf, especially pp. 294-296; J. Michael Sproule (1994), Channels of Propaganda, Bloomington, IN: EDINFO Press and ERIC Clearinghouse; J. Michael Sproule (2001), “Authorship and Origins of the Seven Propaganda Devices: A Research Note,” Rhetoric and Public Affairs, 4(1), Spring, pp. 135-143; Marlin, Randal (2013), Propaganda and the Ethics of Persuasion, Peterborough, ON: Broadview; Garth S. Jowett and Victoria O’Donnell (2019), 7th edn, Propaganda and Persuasion, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage [with Nancy Snow as lead author for the recently updated 8th edition]


3. Ellul, p. 64; Rodney G. Miller (2024), Get Ahead of Propagandists: Countering Disinformation, Albany, NY: Parula, pp. 56-61; also, Word to the Wise blog (2024), Going Forward, February 4, https://communicator.rodney-miller.com/2024/02/going-forward.html

4. Jannie Lilja, Niklas Eklund, and Ester Tottie (2024), "Civic Literacy and Disinformation in Democracies," Social Sciences, 13, 405, pp. 12-13, https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13080405

5. John Grönvall (2023), "Fact-checkers and the News Media: A Nordic Perspective on Propaganda," Nordic Journal of Media Studies, 5(1), pp. 134-153, at p.151, https://doi.org/10.2478/njms-2023-0008

6.  Druzin, Bryan H. and Jessica Li (2010), “The Criminalization of Lying: Under What Circumstances, If Any, Should Lies Be Made Criminal?” The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1973-), 101(2), pp. 571-572,

Saturday, September 14, 2024

Cross the Streams!

1984 Columbia Pictures movie 
by Director/Producer Ivan Reitman and Writers Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis 
Video is copyright. All rights reserved. Used under Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 Fair Usage for non profit, non competing, educational, political commentary and criticism.

"Ghostbusters was released at the right time...at the height of the sci-fi blockbuster during the '80s."[2] Chock-full of ironic dialogue, with some now dated comedy and special effects, the movie refreshed tongue-in-cheek the age-old story of warrior saviors. 

Updated (to four decades ago) this "group of miscast nerds, geeks, scientists and paranormal enthusiasts start their own business studying, hunting and 'busting' ghosts, goblins and ghouls."[3] The setting was New York City at a time when, along with many other cities, residents were beleaguered by crime, grime, and povertywith subway cars, so covered by graffiti on the outside and inside, that these became go-to, must-sees for tourists. With a comedic twinkle, the movie has some hints useful for fighting the slime, grime, crime, and harm generated by autocrat-propagandists.

Defeating the lies, part-truths, rumors, faulty reasoning, abuse, and worse that self-proclaimed autocrats amplify is best done by each of us taking both individual and cooperative actions.

Organizations, nations, or individuals fighting disinformation and propaganda require competence and cooperative commitment to make strategic impact in everyday conversations, as well as through all information platforms and communication channels. Akin to the targeted reach of the Disinformation Summit planned at University of Cambridge in 2025, cooperative initiatives are needed that address strategically "social media, news media, financial and non-financial reporting, and other broadcast vehicles."[4] 

Unsurprisingly, defeating a swill of disinformation requires ongoing actions that deploy better developed understandings and resources than paranormal science provided to the comedic ghostbusters. 

Urgently needed for a serious task are more civic leaders, judges, lawyers, media anchors, pundits, journalists, media managers, teachers, researchers, librarians, students, parents, family, friends, neighbors, and any of us to get up to speed with how to pre-empt wannabe autocrats. Autocrat-propagandists aim to secure acquiescence, not belief, to create "conformists."[5] Dialogue that encourages a variety of viewpoints sharpens doubt about the formulaic comments of propagandists.[6] 

But dispersed warnings and discussions about propaganda mechanisms, the supposed intent of the propagandist, or many fact-checking approachesvia however intelligent and penetrating commentary, or blistering advertisements, or hype, or endless micro-analyses of legal probes in the mediaare no match for an ongoing onslaught of unfettered propaganda.[7] 

Such dispersed discussions can be especially damaging in the form of media microanalyses that include repeatedly replaying audio or video of a propagandist. As highlighted in a recent blog post, this approach neglects the "truth effect" of repeating lies.[8] Perhaps the urge to microanalyze a propagandist is fueled by some naive belief that this will spark some magical ah-hah self-awareness in the uncommitted, or that it energizes rather than eventually draining or depressing anyone who already feels negatively toward some propagandist. 

Others may offer that it shows the laziness of too many in the media who latch onto readily available photos, or video, or catchy quotes, in a vain effort to attract attention. As long ago as 2018 in the United States at least, the failure of the approach was publicly acknowledged.[9]

For Now

Certainly, unchecked propagandists work people over continuously to attack free thought and, by extension, freedoms of speech and association.[10] But it is early detection and pre-emptive actions that are critical to neutralize propaganda. Engaging many authoritative voices to debunk nonsense may sometimes be useful. But pre-bunking seems most potent to counter mis/disinformation.[11] Are we prepared to anticipate and head-off what grifter-autocrats will say or do?

Surely, any of us can help counter false information by joining active efforts or setting up our own initiatives to push ahead of nonsense talkreplacing the swill by redirecting the focus of public and private conversations to address everyday concernslike personally meaningful specifics of healthcare, jobs, shelter, food, safety, freedom, and making bad actors accountable.

Can each of us find ways to

Join or start an action group addressing matters you care aboutby putting pressure and expecting results from civic officials, elected representatives or candidates for election, and the media?

Grow networks of person-to-person communicationespecially using emails and personalized social media?

Ignore verbal refuse designed to distract, deny, or delay?

Stop using or repeating a bad actor's namewill enough friends in the media ever stop repeating direct quotes in the lower thirds of the television screen, stop showing video clips repeating a bad actor's words or actions, and stop using photos that PR folks believe will make a bad actor look strong?

Reverse any serious lie right back onto the liarusing words much like a graffiti artist sprays a mustache on a propaganda poster? Mastering rhetorical questions is one approach [video here][12] and polemic has a long and honorable record in public communication, especially through artful parody and satire!

More Broadly 

An equal priority is to massively expand education that enhances the ability of adults, youth, and children to assess public discourseto discern, analyze, and synthesize reality.[13] Substantial expansions of media literacy, rhetorical, and civics education[14] are required in Western democracies. Even where the will exists, this takes time. 

Meanwhile, can organizations and nations also execute well-developed plans to get ahead of and counter the efforts of propagandists, at scale?[15]

Illustrations of success and resources are now available. Some writings crystalize criteria for useful interventions. These are derived mainly from investigations of social media.[16] Some writings deal with the media and propaganda processes more broadly.[17] Further actionable understandings distilled from studies outside the laboratory/"in the wild" are needed,[18] along with cross-disciplinary studies and action research focused on actively building viable futures.[19]

It's up to organizations, nations, and each of us fighting disinformation to call on civic, legal, media, corporate, education, and other leaders to collaborate on strengthening practical initiatives that will address some big challenges, particularly

* Burgeoning computerized propaganda systems.[20]

* Government impotence regulating social media platformsperhaps we can expect similar failures regulating anticipated hazards of Artificial Intelligence.

* Ever-increasing pressure in social media and mass media to help grow audiences by amplifying what is outrageous.

Propagandists continuously use the capabilities of computer networks, social media, and mass media powerfully against us.[21]

Into the Future

Some gargantuan goals for each of us, for organizations, and for nations are to evolve systematic, ongoing efforts that:

1. Engage autocrat-propagandists' "targets" and followers in productive decision-making to advance community initiatives.[22]

2. Educate everyone about detecting and calling out propaganda.

3. Codify remedies to the multiple deficiencies of norms and regulationsto protect the rule of law.

4. Educate everyone on ways to put civics to use.

As detailed throughout earlier blog posts, our better future requires us continuously to 

* Challenge any propaganda targeting our pre-existing attitudes AND reassert our beliefs in honesty, justice, temperance, courage, and wisdomand our desire to live in a society that seeks respect and wellbeing for all citizens.

* Highlight the harm to people by those using anti-democratic actions to deny health care, jobs, safety, community services, etc. AND, most importantly, say exactly what should happen instead.

* Reassert the rightness of facts, positively and specifically (without naming the lie or the liar, to avoid being a megaphone for the corrupt).

* Keep repeating what is right (propaganda decays over time, especially when crowded out of the public communication channels).

Yes, our future depends on us. 


References

1. Ivan Reitman (Director/Producer) and Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis (Writers) (1984), "Ghostbusters: Crossing the Streams," from Ghostbusters [Movie], Columbia Pictures,  https://youtu.be/9wrEEd1ajz4

2. Hannah Rose (2024), "RETRO REVIEW: Ghostbusters Busted Genres & Standards at the Right Place & Time," CBR, June 8,  https://www.cbr.com/ghostbusters-1984-review/

3. Rose

4. Cambridge Disinformation Summit (2025), University of Cambridge, Judge Business School, "First-order objectives and deliverables: Identify and convene researchers, from across disciplines (e.g., journalism, social-psychology, sociology, anthropology, business, computer science, law, communications, theology, philosophy, political science, criminology, and authoritarian studies) who are engaged in this body of work; Develop shared networks for collaboration; Develop infrastructure to share research and research feedback across disciplines; Develop trust and share learning with policymakers, practice professionals, and data providers; Develop curriculum to enhance societal awareness of, and resilience to, disinformation campaigns; Develop infrastructure to protect research community members from threats, harassment, frivolous legal or freedom of information, or other attacks on academic freedom by those who exploit disinformation." Background at: https://www.jbs.cam.ac.uk/2023/fighting-disinformation-needs-interdisciplinary-approach/; see also: https://www.jbs.cam.ac.uk/events/cambridge-disinformation-summit-2025/

5. Nicholas O'Shaugnessy (2017), "Putin, Xi, and Hitler - Propaganda and the Paternity of Pseudo Democracy," Defence Strategic Communication: The Official Journal of the NATO Strategic Communication Center of Excellence, 2, Spring, p. 115-130,  https://issuu.com/natostratcomcoe/docs/full_academic_journal_vol2_issuu_07

6. Jacques Ellul (1965), Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes, New York: Knopf, p. 300

7. Rodney G. Miller (2024), Get Ahead of Propagandists: Countering Disinformation, Albany, NY: Parula, p. 55

8. Word to the Wise blog (2024), Repetition at Work, August 31,  https://communicator.rodney-miller.com/2024/08/repetition-at-work.html

9. David Brooks (2018), "Opinion: The Failures of Anti-Trumpism," The New York Times, April 10, p. 27

10. Miller, p. 13 

11. Jon Roozenbeek, Eileen Culloty, and Jane Suiter (2022), “Countering Misinformation: Evidence, Knowledge Gaps, and Implications of Current Interventions,” European Psychologist, 28(3), pp.189-205, published online July 14, 2023, https://econtent.hogrefe.com/doi/full/10.1027/1016-9040/a000492

12. Luís Azevedo (Director) and Mark Forsyth (Writer) (2021), What Makes a Movie Line Memorable? Rhetorical Questions, Little White Lies - https://lwlies.com/ video at: https://youtu.be/UD3TaR5iPAo

13. Miller, p. 44

14. Hobbs, Renee (2020), Mind Over Media: Propaganda Education for a Digital Age, New York: W.W. Norton, also Media Education Lab, Harrington School of Communication and Media, University of Rhode Island, mediaeducationlab.comAndreas Ventsel, Sten Hansson, Merit Rickberg, and Mari-Liis Madisson (2023), “Building Resilience against Hostile Information Influence Activities: How a New Media Literacy Learning Platform Was Developed for the Estonian Defense Forces,” Armed Forces and Society, April 18, pp. 1-21,     https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0095327X231163265?af=R&ai=1gvoi&mi=3ricys; David Fleming (2016), "Quintilian, Progymnasmata, and Rhetorical Education Today," Advances in the History of Rhetoric, 19, 2, pp. 124-141,    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/304069434_Quintilian_Progymnasmata_and_Rhetorical_Education_Today; Lorraine Higgins, Elenore Long, and Linda Flower (2006), “Community Literacy: A Rhetorical Model for Personal and Public Inquiry.” Community Literacy Journal, 1(1), pp. 8-43, https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/communityliteracy/vol1/iss1/2/; Brandon L. Kingdollar (2021), "Harvard Professors Allen, Kamensky Help Develop Roadmap for U.S. Civics Reform," The Harvard Crimson, March 5,   https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2021/3/5/harvard-professors-civics-reform/; see also: Educating for American Democracy (2021), Educating for American Democracy Projecthttps://www.educatingforamericandemocracy.org

15. Dmitri Teperik, Solvita Denisa-Liepniece, Dalia Bankauskaitė, and Kaarel Kullamaa (2022), Resilience Against Disinformation: A New Baltic Way to Follow? Estonia: International Centre for Defence and Security,   https://icds.ee/en/resilience-against-disinformation-a-new-baltic-way-to-follow/ and https://www.researchgate.net/publication/364474732_Resilience_Against_Disinformation_A_New_Baltic_Way_to_FollowJon Bateman and Dean Jackson (2024), Countering Disinformation Effectively: An Evidence-Based Policy Guide, Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,  https://carnegieendowment.org/files/Carnegie_Countering_Disinformation_Effectively.pdf

16. Laura Courchesne, Julia Ilhardt, and Jacob N. Shapiro (2021), “Review of Social Science Research on the Impact of Countermeasures against Influence Operations,” Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review, September 13,   https://misinforeview.hks.harvard.edu/article/review-of-social-science-research-on-the-impact-of-countermeasures-against-influence-operations/; Li Qian Tay, Stephan Lewandowsky, Mark J. Hurlstone, Tim Kurz, and Ullrich K. H. Ecker (2023), "A Focus Shift in the Evaluation of Misinformation Interventions," Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) Misinformation Review, 4(5),  https://misinforeview.hks.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/tay_focus_shift_interventions_20231005.pdf

17. Paul Baines, Nicholas O’Shaughnessy, and Nancy Snow (Eds.) (2020), The Sage Handbook of Propaganda, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Nancy Snow, Garth S. Jowett, and Victoria O’Donnell (2024), 8th edn, Propaganda and Persuasion, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Jacques Ellul (1965), Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes, New York: Knopf

18. Roozenbeek, Culloty, and Suiter (2022),   https://econtent.hogrefe.com/doi/full/10.1027/1016-9040/a000492; Miller, p. 42; Jon Roozenbeek, Miriam Remshard, and Yara Kyrychenko (2024), "Beyond the Headlines: On the Efficacy and Effectiveness of Misinformation Interventions," Advances.in/psychology, July 27,  https://advances.in/psychology/10.56296/aip00019/ 

19. Kenneth J. Gergen (2023), "The Social Sciences as Future Forming," Possibility Studies & Society, 1(1-2),  https://doi.org/10.1177/27538699231157624

20. Woolley, Samuel C. and Howard, Philip N. (2019), Computational Propaganda: Political Parties, Politicians and Political Manipulation on Social Media, Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 243; Shaffer, Kris (2019), Data Versus Democracy: How Big Data Algorithms Shape Opinions and Alter the Course of History, New York: Apress/Springer Science + Business Media, pp. 114-115

21. Miller, p. 6

22. Miller, p. 26

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Repetition at Work


"Free at last! Free at last!" 
by staff photographer of U.S. News & World Report, Library of Congress
Image is in the Public Domain {{PD-USGov}}

Consciously or intuitively, we frequently use repetition to emphasize, connect, contrast, and compareor for humor and other rhetorical or literary effects.[1] While too much repetition may become boring, or suggest careless editing, the occasional repetition of a word or a few words in a passage of speech or writing can also help simulate the informality of conversationprobably because we often repeat words in everyday talk.

We've long recognized that carefully crafted repetition, especially with variation, powerfully reinforcesfor good or ill. Teachers of classical rhetoric in Ancient Greece and Rome from about the fifth century BCand more widely sinceadvocate strategic use of repetition, through choice from a battery of rhetorical devices with different effects.[2] These include commonly used anaphora, antistasis, commoratio, or diacope.[3] [video here] 

A nineteenth century guide to composition recommended that "A frank repetition of a word has even sometimes a kind of charmas bearing the stamp of truth, the foundation of all excellence of style."[4] 

Some nuances of this truth effect are explored in more recent psychology research. Apparently "people judge repeated information as truer than new information." Researchers also find "People consider that others are more susceptible...than themselves, and underestimate the impact of repetition on judgments of truth."[5] This all seems to confirm "Repeating information increases people's belief that the repeated information is true."[6]

Propagandists intuitively understand this power of repetition. As Jacques Ellul points out, the "endless repetition of formulas, explanations, and simple stimuli" erodes "scorn and disbelief."[7] However foolish we might initially believe some nonsense to be, its repetitive use focuses both conversation and actions.[8] 

When journalists and others in the media repeatedly quote verbatim the egregious lies or nonsense of propagandists, this just helps to advance a propagandist's name, identity, and stylewhich inevitably increases the significance of the rants and ramblings.[9]

Former editors or journalists and the large number of readers or viewers cancelling media subscriptions seem more concerned about this than many in the media.[10]


References

1. Jeanne Fahnestock (2011), Rhetorical Style: The Uses of Language in Persuasion, New York: Oxford University Press

2. Fahnestock, pp. 320-327

3. Luís Azevedo (Director) and Mark Forsyth (Writer) (2020), What Makes a Movie Line Memorable? Diacope, Little White Lies - https://lwlies.com/ video at:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oo5Ikx3F5ak

4. Richard Nordquist (2023), "Definition and Examples of Repetition in Writing," ThoughtCo, April 5, https://www.thoughtco.com/repetition-language-and-rhetoric-1691887

5. Simone Mattavelli, Jérémy Bena, Olivier Corneille, and Christian Unkelbach (2024), "People Underestimate the Influence of Repetition on Truth Judgments (and More So for Themselves than for Others)," Cognition, 242, January, 105651,  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010027723002858; also Preprint, April 2023, "Repetition Increases Perceived Truth of Interpersonal Statements from Both Politically Congruent and Incongruent Sources," https://www.researchgate.net/publication/369858247_People_underestimate_the_influence_of_repetition_on_truth_judgments_and_more_so_for_themselves_than_for_others

6. Felix Speckmann and Christian Unkelbach (2024), "Illusions of Knowledge Due to Mere Repetition," Cognition, 247, April, 10579,  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010027724000775

7. Jacques Ellul (1965)Propaganda: The Formation of Men’s Attitudes, New York: Knopf, p. 312

8. Rodney G. Miller (2024), Get Ahead of Propagandists: Countering Disinformation, Albany, NY: Parula, p. 14

9. Miller, p. 18-19

10. Zada, John (2021), Veils of Distortion: How the News Media Warps Our Minds, Toronto: Terra Incognita; Dan Gillmor (2024), "At Its Moment of Peril, Democracy Needs Journalists to Be Activists," Medium, July 2,  https://dangillmor.medium.com/at-its-moment-of-peril-democracy-needs-journalists-to-be-activists-8776aa9c99c3