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propaganda

  • propaganda

    propaganda
    Propaganda: I think that propaganda means that if people think that one person thinks of something and the other person doesen't agree with them.
    Propaganda is like people talking about how people think how propganda goes.
    how people talk about propaganda it can be right or wrong.
  • event Two

    event Two
    Propaganda can be anything, it can tell lies to people, and it is also it can have effective techniques to insight the human nature.
    When people use propaganda it is hard for people to figure out what there saying in the begging or in the end.
    If propaganda risaes, there are a lot more subtle and pervasive than we might even imagine.
  • event three

    event three
    If we all lived in the age of the message it would be difficult to learn how to separate the messages.
    Some of the messages are supose to manipulate us without our knowing it.
    There are a lot of disturbing kinds of propaganda originated during 20th century wars.
  • event four

    People had to prepare for the war there was a big battle in somme.
    The British shelled a section of the German lines for eight days with 1.7 million artillery rounds.
    After the five weeks they have been i war the British have had suffered over 200,000 killed or wounded.
  • event five

    event five
    Propaganda really came of age during World War I.
    In spite of the introduction of the machinegun, hand grenades, very powerful, fast-firing artillery, and chemical warfare, military leaders still believed that the cavalry had an important role to play in modern battle.
    Technology had checkmated raw courage as a key.
  • event six

    event six
    The Germans adapted more quickly than the British to the knew army.
    Locked together along a line of battle that crossed Europe, neither opposing army could break through the other's lines of defense, capture critical.
    Being in such a terrible war meant getting every available man into the army, shifting factories to the manufacturing of munitions.
  • event seven

    event seven
    When soldieres were in the war they forged linked in propaganda.
    Propaganda was to be inpacted and effect the whole country.
    Up until this point, we have been talking about Britiain primarily, as well as Germany and France. America, however, also has an interesting history relating to propaganda and World War I.
  • event eight

    event eight
    When people were in the war and the battlefields a different battle was taking place in each of the participating countries, a campaign to control information and civilians.
    One important realization is that in the 20th century, democratic governments, not only dictatorships and totalitarian regimes, have used propaganda to misinform.
    The britain were in the war maintaining control of the flow of information in the face of such terrible losses.
    It also meant transforming society for the war eff
  • event nine

    event nine
    From the past we have learned how terribly propaganda can mislead and misinform people.
    They say it may actulaly set of psychological insights and proven We can not set of psychological insights and proven strategies.
    we can not hypnotized or be able to control robots.
  • event ten

    event ten
    Only the little girl isn't looking at the baby but rather is looking at us, in a way inviting us into the circle.
    kNowing how histroy went and the nightmars of the nazis.
    The put on posters and it made a great deal.
  • event eleven

    The protective eagle, symbol of the Nazi Party, was often depicted with a swastika that it held by its talons.
    Later this sense of guardianship and "safeguarding the Nation" would extend to protecting the purity of the "blood" in the German family.
    The seeds of that disastrous racial thinking, propped up by pseudo-science and propaganda, were already being sown.
  • event twelve

    event twelve
    The nazis had posters about families to dismiller the families.
    The nazis had posters hovering in the back ground.
    To vote for Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis, his running mate, is to vote "for the prosperity and the happiness of your country and your home.
  • event thirteen

    event thirteen
    They look at the posters in the background.
    Propaganda is a harmless poster.
    What is important to understand, what we keep returning to as the essential core of propaganda, is the nature of these links. They are not an appeal to our reason.
  • event fourteen

    event fourteen
    They siad to vote for hoover and that life would be yours they said.
    Unlike the nazis posters that focuses on families that state roll.
    This is a lot of analysis for one small campaign poster, but thinking along these lines is important.