logo
Democrats disseminate information: It's time to unleash propaganda

Democrats disseminate information: It's time to unleash propaganda

The Hill31-01-2025

Back in the 1990s, I worked for an organization marketing to engineers. When surveyed, this group insisted they preferred their information straight — no pretty pictures, plain text emails, just the facts.
When we tested their self-reported preferred delivery methods against a combination of evocative imagery and more emphatic text, guess which won? While highly educated engineers wanted to see themselves as 'above' falling for the crass tactics of marketing and propaganda, they were just as susceptible as the rest of us.
This reminds of today's Democrats and their approach to communication. Pitching for Vice President Kamala Harris's presidential bid, President Obama stated, 'Joe Biden sent you a check during the pandemic. Just like I gave people relief during the Great Recession. The thing is, we didn't put our name on it because it wasn't about feeding our egos.'
Obama seemed to find it unseemly to demand credit for an act of duty. Noble, but, in 2024, grossly misguided. Even Biden has now acknowledged that he paid a high price for failing to aggressively and regularly tout his achievements. His 'put your head down and just do the job,' ethos put him in the political 'if a tree falls in the forest,' conundrum. If you do things that benefit Americans, and they don't know you did them, politically, it's as if you did nothing.
Many Democrats expect the media to do this work for them. This is incredibly naïve in today's information ecosystem, in which 'truth,' in and of itself, has no news value. Media will present a politician's lie with the same credibility as an undeniable truth. Somewhere in the 14th paragraph, you may get notice that the statement is false, but how many even read that far?
It is no longer the political press's job to sort truth and fiction. That's not considered 'objective.' They report what political actors say and respond to pressure from them. Democrats still live in the world of 'All the President's Men,' in which noble journalists uphold American ideals. They live in a media museum.
Democrats still believe, like the engineers at the top of this piece, that an 'intelligent, well-informed public' thirsts for unvarnished truth. They have not yet realized that the tools of marketing and propaganda do not work only for lies — especially when, per the National Literacy Institute, 54 percent of adults read below an sixth grade level. Marketing and propaganda tools can also be used to spread the truth.
Case in point: studied social media content regarding the 2023's Lahaina fire. The top YouTube video discovered on the social platform X was a surprise. It was, in fact, a deep dive into the actual causes and circumstances of the fire, free from misinformation and conspiracy theories.
Democrats need to speak in a language audiences understand. It's the language of social media, of reality television — not of think tanks, policy papers and wonkfests. Marketing and propaganda are not dirty concepts to be sniffed at. They are America's lingua franca in 2025. Speak them, or be ignored.
Leonce Gaiter is a writer who also works as vice-president of a marketing agency. His latest novel is a modern take on the bildungsroman called, 'A Memory of Fictions (or) Just Tiddy-Boom.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

When is Flag Day 2025? Is it a federal holiday? What to know
When is Flag Day 2025? Is it a federal holiday? What to know

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

When is Flag Day 2025? Is it a federal holiday? What to know

As the country prepares to salute the Army's 250th year with President Donald Trump's grand military parade in downtown Washington, D.C. on June 14, the day will also celebrate America's symbol of freedom: the American flag. A flag resolution was adopted 248 years ago, on June 14, 1777, according to the Smithsonian, that said, "Resolved: that the flag of the United States be made of 13 stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be 13 stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation." However, it would be more than 100 years after the Continental Congress approved the flag, that Flag Day would be observed. The event was first observed in the late 1800s by schoolteachers around the U.S., according to the National Constitution Center, and in May 1916, President Woodrow Wilson declared June 14 Flag Day. Since then, the U.S. has honored the adoption of the stars and stripes in a number of ways, including carrying the flag in parades, displaying it outside homes and holding other patriotic events. Before 1916, a number of states and cities had started to observe the day. Flag Day, meanwhile, was declared a national holiday in 1949 by congressional legislation signed into law by President Harry Truman, who in a proclamation directed the U.S. flag to be displayed on all government buildings on that day. Here's what to know about Flag Day and its evolution over the years. Army's 250th birthday parade: How to celebrate Army's 250th year – and (unofficially) Trump's birthday parade Flag Day is on Saturday, June 14, 2025. The June 14 date for Flag Day remains the same, no matter which day of the week it falls. Though it's observed nationally, Flag Day is not a federal holiday. However, the president traditionally proclaims its observance every year. Pennsylvania, meanwhile, recognizes it as a state holiday. June 2025 holiday schedule: Summer solstice, Pride Month, Father's Day, Juneteenth, more The American flag, characterized by 50 stars and 13 stripes, will celebrate its 65th birthday on July 4. After Hawaii became the 50th state in 1959, on July 4, 1960, the flag's new design was officially adopted. Contributing: Janet Loehrke, USA TODAY / Cheryl McCloud, USA TODAY NETWORK - Florida Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@ and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Flag Day 2025 date: When is it? Is it a federal holiday?

Three cheers for the US-China trade war ceasefire
Three cheers for the US-China trade war ceasefire

New York Post

time36 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Three cheers for the US-China trade war ceasefire

Yay! High-level US-China talks in London this week reached a trade-war ceasefire, offering some stability for nervous markets. Days of talks, following on President Donald Trump's call with China's Xi Jinping last Thursday, settled on a framework that leaves a 55% US tariff on Chinese goods and a 10% Chinese levy on American imports. Plus, Beijing will ease restrictions on rare-earth exports while Washington will back off on its developing ban on Chinese students attending American universities. Plenty of issues remain: China's key role in world fentanyl production, for one thing; its long history of intellectual-property theft, currency manipulation and so on. Not to mention the outright espionage that so many of those students are dragged into. And of course in the longer term the United States needs to be less dependent on China for rare earths, pharmaceutical precursors and many other critical needs. The two sides are supposed to reach a comprehensive deal by Aug. 10, but at least the summer should be calm. The chaos of on-again, off-again tariffs had led to turbulence in US markets and had mom-and-pop shops bracing for 'the end'; now they can plan at least a couple of months ahead, with solid reason to hope the worst is over. US businesses can adapt to 55% tariffs on Chinese goods, as long as they've got some certainty that the rate will remain stable. Kudos to Treasury and Commerce Secretaries Scott Bessent and Howard Lutnick, the top US negotiators in London, for mastering 'the art of the framework'; let's hope Trump and Xi can close a final deal.

DNC votes to redo vice chair elections, dealing a blow to David Hogg
DNC votes to redo vice chair elections, dealing a blow to David Hogg

Washington Post

time40 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

DNC votes to redo vice chair elections, dealing a blow to David Hogg

The Democratic National Committee has voted to hold new elections for two leadership positions, dealing a blow to DNC Vice Chair David Hogg that could lead to his removal after months of internal turmoil. In a 294-99 vote that concluded Wednesday, DNC members agreed to move forward with redoing the contest earlier this year that elected Hogg and another Democrat, Malcolm Kenyatta, as vice chairs. The DNC will now vote from Thursday through Saturday — and then Sunday through Tuesday — to fill the two slots, which both men can seek again.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store