New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Apr 06, 2017 12:40 pm

I'm pretty skeptical about that figure / rationale, too, but I think it would be great, AS EVER, if we could maintain some kind of, like, Adulthood Courtesy Firewall between who we're talking to and what we're talking about.

Because it's certainly not like the "coverage" Trump was getting were cable news networks running his campaign ads for free. It was constant repetition of news stories that were running because they were aimed at discrediting and destroying Trump's campaign. It was intended an assault on him.

Had most media mavens possessed the self-reflection to realize how much they were helping the man, they would have stopped. I take them at face value when they say they never intended to help elect Trump and feel horrified at having done so. That, at least, I can believe coming from a US mainstream media mouthpiece.
User avatar
Wombaticus Rex
 
Posts: 10896
Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2006 6:33 pm
Location: Vermontistan
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 2:15 pm

Wombaticus Rex » Thu Apr 06, 2017 11:40 am wrote:Because it's certainly not like the "coverage" Trump was getting were cable news networks running his campaign ads for free.


That is exactly what it was. Every rally, run on CNN. Instead of showing a Sanders rally, they would show the empty podium of the Trump rally with a countdown. Every time he called in to Morning Joe: Free campaign time. Non-stop for more than a year until he had achieved an insurmountable lead in the Republican primaries. Only then did they "realize" what they had done.

Had most media mavens possessed the self-reflection to realize how much they were helping the man, they would have stopped. I take them at face value when they say they never intended to help elect Trump and feel horrified at having done so.


They didn't give a shit, or understood it as an acceptable risk. The structural parallel in terms of how the media worked it would be the All-O.J. Simpson period, by the way.

Only after "realizing" did this follow:

It was constant repetition of news stories that were running because they were aimed at discrediting and destroying Trump's campaign. It was intended an assault on him.


That was when they did all to destroy - and really not full-on before the summer conventions. And at that point they still didn't get that it was solidifying his base. Nevertheless, it was excellent air bombardment for a Clinton offensive into the policy arena. And this is where the super-professionalized super-well-funded Clinton campaign took the Alinsky strategy and followed the opposite in every way. In their ad buys, all about Trump, mere echoes to what the media were already doing for her (but including his worst statements, red meat for his base, that he could not stick in his own ads himself). In their media talk, nothing but Russia, nothing about policy alternatives.

Wrex, inadvertantly (of course) you are providing the establishment media alibi. They didn't know, then they did their best to trash the beast. No. They made him. And never mind the estimates of what the ad-buy "value" might have been (a typically American way of arguing shit).

I do not forget and will not revise (absent actual evidence of things having been different than the above). We tracked it here, real-time. Actual events at key conjunctures matter, long-view summaries often obscure what happened and let it all get buried under layers of subsequent assessments.

This is what counts - December 2015:

my prior post wrote:
https://mediamatters.org/blog/2015/12/1 ... -on/207428

81:1.

Does that ratio seem out of whack? That's the ratio of TV airtime that ABC World News Tonight has devoted to Donald Trump's campaign (81 minutes) versus the amount of TV time World News Tonight has devoted to Bernie Sanders' campaign this year. And even that one minute for Sanders is misleading because the actual number is closer to 20 seconds.

For the entire year.

(snip)

So in terms of stand-alone campaign stories this year, it's been 234 minutes for Trump, compared to 10 minutes for Sanders. And at ABC World News Tonight, it's been 81 minutes for Trump and less than one minute for Sanders.

Other Tyndall Report findings:

*Trump has received more network coverage than all the Democratic candidates combined.

*Trump has accounted for 27 percent of all campaign coverage his year.

*Republican Jeb Bush received 56 minutes of coverage, followed by Ben Carson's 54 minutes and Marco Rubio's 22.

Did you notice the Bush figure? He's garnered 56 minutes of network news coverage, far outpacing Sanders, even though he is currently wallowing in fifth place in the polls among Republicans. And you know who has also received 56 minutes of network news compared to Sanders' 10? Joe Biden and his decision not to run for president.


NOTE THAT THE ABOVE IS IN MINUTES, NOT NOMINAL PLAY-DOLLAR ESTIMATES. TIME COUNTS.

me again wrote:Network nightly news is only a fraction of what happened, of course. Every morning he felt like, he got to call Morning Joe and get 8-10 free minutes, which then set the yap-yap agenda for the cable news and news-lite blanket coverage for the rest of the day.

The corporate media, after 15-30 years of creating the Trump character as a positive avatar of the American dream (and letting him bully people ceaselessly on his own show), proceeded to make the Trump campaign in 2015-2016. I will take Les Moonves' perception of this matter over karmamatterz'. Pretending otherwise only works with deliberate (or awesomely neurotic) blocking of one's perception and memory.

.



.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15986
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby brekin » Thu Apr 06, 2017 2:43 pm

Wombaticus Rex wrote:I'm pretty skeptical about that figure / rationale, too, but I think it would be great, AS EVER, if we could maintain some kind of, like, Adulthood Courtesy Firewall between who we're talking to and what we're talking about.
Because it's certainly not like the "coverage" Trump was getting were cable news networks running his campaign ads for free. It was constant repetition of news stories that were running because they were aimed at discrediting and destroying Trump's campaign. It was intended an assault on him.
Had most media mavens possessed the self-reflection to realize how much they were helping the man, they would have stopped. I take them at face value when they say they never intended to help elect Trump and feel horrified at having done so. That, at least, I can believe coming from a US mainstream media mouthpiece.


I think it just shows how naive (perhaps even innocent) those in the media are to the crude shift in infamous being as good, actually better, than being famous as the article below shows Trump realized 27 years ago.
Seems Liz Smith called it back in 1990. I guess we can thank the recent mutants with very brief memories. (Another reason to read N.I.T.A.E.I.P.)

“Well,” Smith concluded, “now it appears Donald Trump will never be President. He can be a lot of other important things, but not the chief executive of the U.S., unless, of course, the next few generations of Americans produced are mutants with very brief memories.”


I learned a new word today. Succès de scandale

(French for "success from scandal") is a term for any artistic work whose success is attributed, in whole or in part, to public controversy surrounding the work. In some cases the controversy causes audiences to seek out the work for its titillating content, while in others it simply heightens public curiosity. This concept is echoed by the phrase, "there is no such thing as bad publicity".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Succ%C3%A8s_de_scandale

Trump and the Dark Art of Bad Publicity
In one lurid, scandalous month in 1990 he learned a lesson that helped forge his whole candidacy.
By Michael Kruse
July 21, 2016
On the epic spectrum of bad publicity that has defined Donald Trump’s volatile, attention-snatching campaign, Melania Trump’s plagiarism of parts of a Michelle Obama speech on the first night of this week’s Republican National Convention was relatively tame. The advice from seasoned professionals was pretty simple: Find someone to fire, let the scandal die down, move on. Instead, clumsy and contradictory excuses from staffers and surrogates helped keep the story alive all day Tuesday. By Wednesday morning, with the gaffe still dominating the news cycles, the boss had had enough—enough apologizing, enough flailing attempts at standard crisis management.
It was time for Trump to declare victory.
He took to Twitter.

“Good news is Melania’s speech got more publicity than any in the history of politics,” he said, “especially if you believe that all press is good press!”
This seemed like a preposterous claim—that borrowing lines was basically a good thing if it got enough attention, that all the fumbles that kept the topic in the news were just part of a story of success. [u]But the idea, unprecedented at this level of politics, is at the heart of one of the most remarkable mechanisms of Trump’s rise—the conviction that mistakes, flagrant provocations and the attendant bad publicity genuinely don’t matter, so long as they serve the goal of owning the spotlight. On the short list of Trump’s most guiding, abiding beliefs, this is one that ranks near the top: that bad publicity doesn’t have to be avoided, and doesn’t have to be endured—that it should be embraced, and even stoked.

It’s possible to see Trump’s whole campaign as a structure built on colossal missteps, statements that would have torpedoed all other candidacies but have buoyed Trump’s simply by keeping his name in the news. Trump launched his presidential candidacy last summer by descending the escalator at the tower that bears his name and uttering his infamous words about how Mexico is sending to America its criminals and rapists. Those remarks alienated an ally, trashed a major portion of an ethnic group Republicans had vowed to court and set the tenor for a bid that has willfully, almost gleefully defied every poll-tested tenet of modern politics.

Calling Senator John McCain “not a war hero” last July was another early signal that he would go out of his way to make trouble, and benefit from it: The disrespectful comment earned Trump widespread condemnation—and a surge in polls. Since then, from his mocking of a disabled reporter to his declaration that he could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue and “wouldn’t lose voters” to his grinning, thumbs-up Cinco de Mayo social media taco bowl blast—“I love Hispanics!”—to his suggestion that the judge in a Trump University class-action lawsuit couldn’t be impartial due to his Mexican ancestry to his pigheadedness in the Star of David controversy, bad publicity hasn’t torn him down. It consistently has kept him in the public eye, and kept his opponents scrambling for attention.

If that belief has seen its most high-stakes demonstration over the past 13 months, it has for Trump a much deeper, more personal history. And if it’s possible to identify the moment when the tactic was first on full display, it was February of 1990—a month in which Trump’s scandalous affair with the buxom actress Marla Maples destroyed his marriage with the former Ivana Trump, the mother of his first three children. In the mind of nearly every business and public relations expert in America, such an event was a damaging crisis to be buried posthaste; the frenzied coverage of his congenital intemperance and incorrigible megalomania, they thought, obviously would tarnish Trump’s brand. In the mind of Trump, on the other hand—as he watched his name and photograph jump from the New York tabloids to the national news, day after day, week after week—the nonstop exposure was a tool to enhance his celebrity on a vast new scale. Trump was right. The experts were wrong. And the approach that came into focus more than a quarter-century ago hasn’t changed.

He is of the mindset that the more his name is dropped, the more a kind of hypnosis, for lack of a better word, there is to the American public,” Jim Dowd, the CEO of Dowd Ink, who did public relations for Trump from 2004 to 2010, told me in a recent interview. “He thinks even a negative piece is a positive for him.”
More than any Oval Office aspirant ever, Trump the candidate hasn’t managed bad publicity so much as he has turned it into a weapon.
But this philosophy, and his skill deploying it, now faces its stiffest test. What really knocked the plagiarism episode from the headlines this week was an even bigger piece of bad PR—the spectacle of a stalwart of his own party, Ted Cruz, standing in front of the Republican crowd, refusing to endorse Trump, pointedly and in prime time. In background chats with GOP operatives and delegates around Cleveland, the refrain was consistent: The Trump campaign must be operating under the theory that the most important thing is sheer publicity, good or bad.
“I can’t explain it any other way,” said an aide to a Republican member of Congress who has hesitantly backed Trump. “They don’t care that this thing is a mess, as long as people are paying attention to it.”

Trump leaves the convention, though, as the official nominee of a party that still hasn’t united behind him, many of its members seeing as disqualifying his suspect conservatism, his ceaseless missteps and his overall disposition. In the months to come, too, he will be raked by an ongoing onslaught of Democratic attack ads, the fodder for which is the mass of material that generated the bad publicity he has turned into fuel—the bad publicity he has used to get to the brink of residence in the White House. But his unfavorable ratings are historically high. He sits at zero-percent support among black voters in swing states Ohio and Pennsylvania. He has well-documented meager support from Hispanics and from women. If bad publicity is partly what helped him run through the primaries, it is also, analysts contend, what finally will stop him over the next three-plus months heading into the general election.
“My expectation is that the data will continue to show that this isn’t going to work for him in the general, and his response to that is going to be to act out more,” Tim Miller, the former Jeb Bush communications director and Republican strategist, told me Thursday afternoon. “He’s a toddler. When he doesn’t get what he wants, he throws a tantrum. It’s a negative cycle for him that’s going to continue to spiral downward.”

“Look,” veteran Democratic strategist Bob Shrum added, “he does have the most extraordinary unfavorable ratings, and a lot of that is driven by the bad publicity. So I think it has hurt him. And I think it will hurt him.” The ads from Hillary Clinton’s campaign and associates have been relentless, and will continue to be. “And there’s no more effective negative ad,” Shrum said, “than one that comes out of the mouth of the object of the attack.”
November 8 is shaping up to be a referendum on a question Trump has pressed to its limits.
“Is there such thing as bad publicity?” Neal Hartman of the MIT Sloan School of Management wrote earlier this year. “Donald Trump’s campaign appears to be a test case in whether this old adage is true or not.”
“We’ll know,” Hartman told me, “on Election Day.”


***

Liz Smith, the gossip columnist for the New York Daily News, broke the story on February 11, 1990, on a Sunday, on the front of the fattest paper of the week. “The marriage of Ivana and Donald Trump seems to be on the rocks,” she wrote, “and inside sources say lawyers are already at work trying to divide the complex Trump holdings.” Reports of Maples, the model and actress Trump had ensconced in a suite at the St. Moritz, and the size of the payout of the prenuptial agreement were on their way. The flood of headlines came fast.

SPLIT.
IVANA BETTER DEAL.
IVANA BE ALONE.

Ten years before, in one of his first lessons concerning a round of bad publicity, he had had workers jackhammer valuable Art Deco bas-relief friezes to make way for Trump Tower—after telling the Metropolitan Museum of Art he would donate them. “Obviously,” the New York Times scolded in an editorial, “big buildings do not make big human beings.” Trump shrugged. He claimed the attention helped him sell more apartments. His takeaway from the incident, according to The Art of the Deal: “from a bottom-line business perspective, bad publicity is sometimes better than no publicity at all.”

Now, faced with a potentially embarrassing personal scandal, would he clam up? Hand off the task to a high-priced, top-flight public relations firm? No chance. Trump—at the time, the riding-high, 43-year-old builder of Trump Tower, the owner of the Trump Shuttle airline, the Trump Princess yacht and two and soon to be three Trump-branded Atlantic City casinos—mostly did it himself.
“I am leaving because I want to leave,” Trump told the News one day in.
“Ivana doesn’t want the money,” he said three days in. “She wants Donald. She totally loves me.”
He couldn’t help but marvel. “It’s a beauty, isn’t it?” he said. “Some story already.”
Five days in, the cover of the Post all but exploded from newsstands. “Marla boasts to her pals about Donald: ‘BEST SEX I’VE EVER HAD.’” Maples denied it. Trump discounted the report as a “disgrace.”

That day, though, Trump had no problem talking about it. He sat in his office with John Taylor from New York magazine. Taylor had said he thought that wall-to-wall coverage of Trump’s personal failures would be a “setback.”
“What do you mean?” Trump responded.
He told Taylor it was exactly the opposite. Now his name, he explained, was “hotter than ever.”
To PR experts, that was crazy. They thought he was doomed. A man who had crafted a widely known personal luxury brand had been exposed as an undisciplined adulterer, and more sober financial analysts and reporters had started to pick up hints that his corporate record, too, was about to be shown as a sham.
To Taylor, Trump didn’t seem like a man too troubled by the tabloid titillation.

“I’ve never seen anything like it in my life,” he said. “I don’t think there has been anything like this. One day it was eight pages in the tabloids. Even the Times is doing it.” That morning’s headline in the august broadsheet, the national paper of record: “Trumps! Scoops! Frenzy! Competition!”
Their conversation turned to “BEST SEX EVER.”
“Well,” Trump reasoned, “you could take it as a great compliment.”

Not everybody saw it that way. A full seven days in—February 18, 1990, the second Sunday of the story—the News reported on the results of its “Trump Wars Telephone Poll.” Readers of the paper overwhelmingly sided with her, not him, “by a margin of more than 4 to 1,” said the News.

Also that day, on the 15th page of the business section of the Times, there was a totally different, much less splashy headline: “Rocky Times for Trump’s Bonds.” “Trump’s mortgage-bond issues have fallen so far in the past several months that Salomon Brothers, the Wall Street bond house, recently advised its institutional clients to sell the bonds issued for Trump’s Castle casino in Atlantic City casino,” Diana B. Henriques reported. Analysts warned the bonds’ shaky state could be exacerbated by the opening of the Trump Taj Mahal—Trump’s third casino—which was scheduled for early April. It was one of the first indications in ink that his business empire was actually a debt-burdened, panting-for-profit, smoke-and-mirrors show. Barely anybody noticed.

IVANA SEES A SHRINK.
HOW SUITE IT WAS.
FIRING BACK.

“I think that the news media should be ashamed of itself,” Trump said. “I’m sure that it sells, and people don’t care for the truth. … I think it’s a shame that this has been allowed to take place. I always thought there was a far higher level of professionalism in this …”
But he kept talking to reporters. He kept taking their calls. He kept answering their questions.

One reporter from the Post asked if he considered adultery a sin. “I don’t think it’s a sin,” he said, after half a minute of silence, “but I don’t think it should be done.” Had he done it? “I’ll let you guess,” Trump said.
And he kept talking about how all “this negative publicity,” as he put it to the Post, was helping his business, not hurting it. “Business has never been better,” he told the Associated Press.
“If you had to pay by the column inch or the network minute, only our national debt could fund this much publicity,” Howard Rubenstein, a Trump spokesman, told Newsday—quickly adding that of course all this publicity was neither sought nor welcome. (Rubenstein told me he didn’t want to comment.)
Ten days after the story broke, the New York Society of Association Executives hosted Trump at a luncheon to give him an award as the “Outstanding New Yorker of the Year”—this was on the schedule before the hubbub—and Trump got up in front of an audience of the group’s 750 members and a horde of press.

“I cannot believe the media turnout for this award,” he said with a smile. People laughed. “Isn’t it ridiculous? Isn’t it? It’s sick.”
Others weren’t smiling. Critics clucked.
“The publicity has finally pushed him over the line,” marketing consultant Al Ries told ADWEEK. “Trump has gone from somebody to be looked up at to somebody to be laughed at.”
“It is going to be hard to view Mr. Trump as a prudent individual,” corporate identity expert Clive Chajet said in the Times.
Even Liz Smith, the doyenne of attention, access, gossip and celebrity, figured this was too much. In her column two weeks post-LOVE ON THE ROCKS, she tried to take stock of the madness.

“I once wrote a flattering and, I thought, truthful evaluation of Donald for New York magazine,” she wrote. “I said I thought (I hoped) one day he’d get over his youthful immaturity and build low and middle-income housing and maybe get into a better form of philanthropy. I opined also that he might one day be President.
“I pointed out that Donald didn’t want to have to think seriously right now about the needs of others while he was busy empire-building,” she continued. “And he was satisfied to do only superficial charity giving. He congratulated me at the time for my ability to size him up.
“Well,” Smith concluded, “now it appears Donald Trump will never be President. He can be a lot of other important things, but not the chief executive of the U.S., unless, of course, the next few generations of Americans produced are mutants with very brief memories.”


***

By early 2004, the Trump playbook for bad publicity was battle-tested.
Trump Hotels and Casino Resorts, his casino company that hadn’t turned a profit since it went public in 1995, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Shareholders noticed. Few others did. Instead, most people followed along as Trump played the boss on the year’s breakout reality TV show, The Apprentice.
The way he talked evoked the 1990 sit-down with Taylor from New York.
“The brand is obviously very hot,” he told Newark’s Star-Ledger. “It’s hotter now, I guess you’d have to say, than it’s ever been before—and it’s been hot before. But this is the all-time in terms of heat.”
The bankruptcy didn’t seem to bother Trump, but it did others.
“This shows that the Emperor may not have that many clothes on,” Fraser Seitel, the managing director of Emerald Partners and the author of college textbooks on public relations, told the Times.
“It doesn’t matter,” Trump told the News. “It’s terrific,” he told Newsday.
“He didn’t mind conversations about bankruptcy and what have you,” said Dowd from Dowd Ink, who was doing PR for Trump at the time, “because it was driving awareness.”


Dowd added: “He gets the value of just being a part of the conversation—positive or negative.”
By early 2011, Trump was weighing whether to run for president in 2012—a longtime publicity ploy of his, dating back to 1987 when he was promoting The Art of the Deal—and here he opted to wade into the rightward fringe of “birther” conspiracy theorists. Trump’s six-week fixation on the zany wedge issue ultimately prompted an exasperated Obama to make public his “long-form” birth certificate to prove he in fact was born in Hawaii. Many considered it an unseemly distraction with upsetting racial overtones. With a certain portion of the populace, though, it upped Trump’s political profile.


“I feel I have accomplished something really, really important,” he said in a press conference. He said he was “really proud” of what he had done.
In USA Today, a reader wrote to Steve Strauss, a business columnist, with a question: “I don’t see how anyone in business takes Donald Trump seriously right now. I mean come on, really, pandering to birthers?”
“What seems obvious to me is that almost everything Trump does publicly is designed with one purpose … to build the brand,” Strauss wrote. “The idea is this: The more we hear about Trump, the bigger his name gets, the more valuable it should be on buildings, golf courses and other buildings. So instead of some fringe right-winger, it seems to me that Donald Trump the birther is nothing but a cold-blooded cynical capitalist capitalizing in our celebrity culture.”
Strauss stressed: “I think there is such a thing as bad publicity. I think there is a point where you can unfortunately discover how far you can go because you finally went too far.”
Four years and two months later, Trump rode the Trump Tower escalator down into the orange-peach marble atrium and said he was running for president, and that he wanted to build “a great wall,” “a great, great wall,” to keep out Mexican rapists.

***

Trump has done this with such longevity that bad publicity somehow has become a facet of his perceived authenticity. He has done it with such consistency that a lack of bad publicity weirdly would feel like a betrayal to his brand. Experienced, respected advertising and marketing professionals—including some who have worked for Trump—told me there’s never been anybody quite like him, this combination of arrogance, intelligence, obstinacy and manifest incapacity for shame.
George Lois is a giant in the ad world. He was the brains behind dozens of iconic covers for Esquire. He wrote books like The Art of Advertising and $SELLEBRITY. And he came to loathe Trump—because he had worked for him. In the mid-1980s, he did some casino ad strategy for Trump, and Trump tried to short him from the agreed-upon pay, Lois told me last week. “I think the guy’s a total scumbag,” he said.

In 1990, though, when he was asked whether all the coverage of Trump’s divorce would damage his brand or ruin his name, Lois said ... no. And this is how he got Trump precisely right.
“Like it or not,” he told the Times, “the Trump name stands for a man who’s the master of wheeling and dealing—the king of excess. People have always either loved or hated him. In the long run this could make his name even bigger.”
Lois, a cynical but sophisticated student of the fame game, saw then what Trump was doing. “Even the Zulus know who he is now,” Lois told Newsweek.


He’s been watching with interest, of course, as Trump has spent the last year-plus shocking his way to the Republican nomination. “Here’s a guy who thinks every prisoner of war is a pussy because they gave up,” Lois said. He added, “Everybody who knows anything knows that is the Star of motherfucking David!”
Now, finally, he believes Trump has gone too far.
“I think it’s getting bad,” he said. “I think it’s getting worse and worse. I think it’s got to come to a point pretty damn soon where sooner or later he’s going to get nailed. If he doesn’t get nailed, maybe he wins this election. But I think the time of reckoning is coming. He’ll be a loser on election night.”
Bad publicity, Stuart Stevens, Mitt Romney’s top strategist in 2012, told me in an email Thursday evening, “does stick to him. He’s the most unpopular national politician in America.”
Since Trump’s announcement speech, though, he has explored the frontiers of effrontery more boldly than any major candidate in the history of the country—and the “time of reckoning” is TBD.

In the primaries, every time Trump did something that spurred another round of bad publicity—the “captured” McCain comments, the Megyn Kelly “blood” comments, calling for “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States,” playing dumb when asked to disavow white supremacist David Duke, on and on—overall, his poll numbers went up, not down.
And his “pivot” to the general election, that sudden maturation of style from smashmouth into something more sophisticated and presidential, has been nothing of the sort.

He became the presumptive Republican nominee on May 3; two days later, the taco bowl tweet. Asked in the middle of that month if he thought voters have a right to see his tax returns, he said, “I don’t think they do.” Asked to disclose his effective tax rate, he said, “It’s none of your business.” That fallout, though, got fogged over by a (welcome) few news cycles fixated on how he used to use a fake name to pose as his own spokesperson. He issued credulity-straining denials. He responded to assiduous reporting about his lying about donations to veterans by attacking the press, knowing that maligning the media would play better than any additional focus on phony philanthropy. He responded to reporting about the Trump University trouble by attacking the judge, knowing that even racial animus would play better than ongoing talk about a venal scheme masked as education for striving Americans. He responded to the June massacre in the gay club in Orlando by bragging on Twitter: “Appreciate the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism.” And earlier this month, in the dying-down wake of the Star of David tumult, he reignited the bad publicity in a speech in Cincinnati by saying he regretted only deleting the offensive tweet and then changing the six-sided star to a circle. “I said, ‘Too bad. You should have left it up,’” he said of a conversation with a campaign worker. “I would have rather defended it.” He blamed the media—“bad people”—for making it a big deal.
“Is there such a thing as bad publicity?” asked MIT’s Hartman.
“I think there is,” he told me last week. “But it isn’t an easy thing to measure.”

Just as it’s difficult to gauge specific reasons for fluctuations in polls—it’s almost always a combination of factors. But Trump now is heading out of Cleveland armed with recent polls that show him gaining on, all but even with or outright ahead of Clinton in critical swing states as well as overall. And the experienced, prominent industry experts and professionals who said bad publicity would hurt Trump—in 1990, in 2004, in 2011—now don’t sound anywhere near as certain.
“It may be there is a tipping point at some point,” said Steve Strauss from USA Today. Or maybe not.
Clive Chajet, the corporate identity expert who in 1990 said it was “going to be hard to view Mr. Trump as a prudent individual,” has had to reassess. “He’s obviously very, very, very skilled at managing the media,” he told me. “I think that has allowed him to say and do the things he’s done and get away with it.”

Al Ries, the marketing consultant who in 1990 said Trump had “gone from somebody to be looked up at to somebody to be laughed at,” has had to update his critique. “The brand was damaged,” he told me. “But brands come back. People forget.”
And Fraser Seitel, who in 2004 called Trump the emperor with no clothes, grasped in our conversation for a way to explain what’s going on.
“It’s perplexing, and it’s just unfathomable, almost,” he said. “He really has defied this traditional model that you have to back up what you say with reality. It really is a new day in terms of publicity. In this new era, it’s gotten dangerous, where it’s really the case that any publicity is good publicity.”

I asked him if he wanted to modify his memorable quote from 2004.
“The emperor has no clothes,” he said again.
He paused.
“But it doesn’t seem to matter.”

http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/ ... -pr-214083
If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer
User avatar
brekin
 
Posts: 3229
Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:21 pm
Blog: View Blog (1)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 3:09 pm

brekin » Thu Apr 06, 2017 1:43 pm wrote:
I think it just shows how naive (perhaps even innocent) those in the media are to the crude shift in infamous being as good, actually better, than being famous as the article below shows Trump realized 27 years ago.
Seems Liz Smith called it back in 1990. I guess we can thank the recent mutants with very brief memories. (Another reason to read N.I.T.A.E.I.P.)


No. No. This has always been understood in the age of mass media. Long before FDR supposedly said, who cares what they are saying, as long as they are talking about you? Exposure is good. Exposure normalizes. Scandal gets talked up. Scandal turns into soap opera. Being the bad man wins adherents. Everyone wants to appear as the underdog going in to a match. There are limits, there are kinds of scandals that destroy, but within the limits, practitioners have a lot of room. Unless you are selling soft drinks, you do not want to appeal to "everyone." This is even Marketing 101. You want to appeal to a specific audience that distinguishes itself as special, and build on it. Nothing short of the Super Bowl gets a majority of the potential audience watching. Even in the days of three networks, #1 rated shows were getting ratings of 30, shares of 40%, and this is even better if they're hated by most of the other 70% (spreading the amount of talk). Polarization is the usual winner, you just want it to break well enough.

Don't accept the corporate media's alibis for having made the Trump campaign into a certain winner on the Republican side. They understand all this, they don't care because the consequences are an externalized cost. Not on their own ledgers.

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15986
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Apr 06, 2017 3:21 pm

JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 2:09 pm wrote:
Don't accept the corporate media's alibis for having made the Trump campaign into a certain winner on the Republican side. They understand all this, they don't care because the consequences are an externalized cost. Not on their own ledgers.

.


But W. Blitzer can afford to live in a very different reality from J. Zucker, no? That's why I'm saying I believe "journalists" and talking heads when they say they were really that stupid - they could certainly afford to be. As servants of democracy and all.
User avatar
Wombaticus Rex
 
Posts: 10896
Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2006 6:33 pm
Location: Vermontistan
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 3:30 pm

Wombaticus Rex » Thu Apr 06, 2017 2:21 pm wrote:
JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 2:09 pm wrote:
Don't accept the corporate media's alibis for having made the Trump campaign into a certain winner on the Republican side. They understand all this, they don't care because the consequences are an externalized cost. Not on their own ledgers.

.


But W. Blitzer can afford to live in a very different reality from J. Zucker, no? That's why I'm saying I believe "journalists" and talking heads when they say they were really that stupid - they could certainly afford to be. As servants of democracy and all.


Sure. I don't know that this is because he can "afford," he has his role as talent and is that stupid, since it would be a handicap to be any smarter than he appears. Long as we understand who is in charge over any period longer than a single news cycle.

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15986
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby 82_28 » Thu Apr 06, 2017 3:57 pm

It is kinda like the brutal UFC fighting that I thought would never take off or catch on. Yeah, no. I only watch it now for only a few moments when flipping back and forth from the comedy shows, but back when it became "normalized" I said this ain't going nowhere -- I was wrong in other words. I just cannot believe the acceptableness of brutality. You can't tell me no kids ain't sittin' there with their dad or whoever being normalized to brutal violence. Boxing, as it was, at least had an art to it I guess. See Ali.

Oh well. . .
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
User avatar
82_28
 
Posts: 11194
Joined: Fri Nov 30, 2007 4:34 am
Location: North of Queen Anne
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby brekin » Thu Apr 06, 2017 4:07 pm

My "take" is that Trump was seen by many on both sides of the established media and politics as an amusing archetype of an anachronism. A handy short hand freak show of everything that is wrong with America, and so was run as a huge carny draw for ratings. What they didn't realize was that by giving the carnival barker so much exposure they were actually connecting him with millions of micro Trumps and activating them. They were putting him in front of the class in a dunce hat as a model of bad behavior and he was working the class the whole time. It's like in the old days when they had public executions and some highwayman would give a self justifying speech to the crowd before he was to be hung, and his speech would bring the crowd around to his side and they would mob the scaffold and free him.

Trump isn't everyday media relations, because while exposure is good, scandal is the death knell for most politicians, until they get to a certain very high untouchable apex level. Just 10% of what Trump has said or done would have (and has) sunk numerous public figures from local Sheriffs to Governors and Senators. Scandal and crudeness may be great for say a Gangsta rappers career, but for politicians its the reverse. That Trump's style and strategy has worked, may be just his style aligning with the current national style. I blame the internet and 80's nostalgia. Trump as icon again and high waisted ugly mom jeans everywhere. Truly The Decline of Western Civilization part III: The Hate Pop Years.

If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer
User avatar
brekin
 
Posts: 3229
Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:21 pm
Blog: View Blog (1)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby Elvis » Thu Apr 06, 2017 4:21 pm

Wombaticus Rex wrote:Had most media mavens possessed the self-reflection to realize how much they were helping the man, they would have stopped.


Not so with CBS chairman/president/CEO Les Moonves! — skip to 4:16 for Moonves audio:


https://youtu.be/0iB3gM4TUgg?t=256


CBS Chairman Les Moonves said that Donald Trump’s candidacy might not be making America great, but it’s great for his company. While at a Media & Telecom Conference in San Francisco, Moonves said, "It may not be good for America, but it's damn good for CBS."

Moonves added that the 2016 campaign is a "circus," but "Donald's place in this election is a good thing." He went on to say, "I've never seen anything like this, and this going to be a very good year for us. Sorry. It's a terrible thing to say. But, bring it on, Donald. Keep going."



And what's good for CBS is good for...CBS? :tongout
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
User avatar
Elvis
 
Posts: 7432
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2008 7:24 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

elvis beat me to it

Postby IanEye » Thu Apr 06, 2017 4:28 pm



"In order to be a realist, you must believe in miracles." - David Ben-Gurion
"It may not be good for America, but it's damn good for CBS." - Les Moonves
"I believe in miracles, where you from?" - Hot Chocolate
User avatar
IanEye
 
Posts: 4863
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 10:33 pm
Blog: View Blog (29)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 4:34 pm

Thanks to the actual moral code of this society, which is legally mandated, and is not called "The Bible" but corporate fiduciary practice, this is actually the hegemonic view of virtuous behavior. He's making money. This is good. Just as true of Trump.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15986
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby brekin » Thu Apr 06, 2017 5:10 pm

Elvis » Thu Apr 06, 2017 3:21 pm wrote:
Wombaticus Rex wrote:Had most media mavens possessed the self-reflection to realize how much they were helping the man, they would have stopped.

Not so with CBS chairman/president/CEO Les Moonves! — skip to 4:16 for Moonves audio:
CBS Chairman Les Moonves said that Donald Trump’s candidacy might not be making America great, but it’s great for his company. While at a Media & Telecom Conference in San Francisco, Moonves said, "It may not be good for America, but it's damn good for CBS."
Moonves added that the 2016 campaign is a "circus," but "Donald's place in this election is a good thing." He went on to say, "I've never seen anything like this, and this going to be a very good year for us. Sorry. It's a terrible thing to say. But, bring it on, Donald. Keep going."

And what's good for CBS is good for...CBS? :tongout


JackRiddler wrote:Thanks to the actual moral code of this society, which is legally mandated, and is not called "The Bible" but corporate fiduciary practice, this is actually the hegemonic view of virtuous behavior. He's making money. This is good. Just as true of Trump.


Toward the end of N.I.T.A.E.I.P. (Nothing is True and Everything is Possible) you know the N.O.M.F.S.A. (New Operating Manual for Spaceship America) there is an interesting scene where all the London art dealers and realtors are hanging out at a lavish art showing party and then later a fashion show of the nouveau riche Russians who have bought into London after acquiring their money through dubious means (the Moscow mayor's wife is especially interesting as helping to raze (sometimes literally arson wise) much of Old Moscow for new construction projects) and it is alluded to how the numerous English, American, Swiss, German, bankers, lawyers, businessman, politicians who are raking in cash by providing respectable channels to invest and launder the money from corrupt and ill gotten gains are actually bringing in the trojan horse of Putin era corruption and mafia violence, and truly "hostile" take overs, to their systems.

I think the same goes for Trump and the media where they flirted with fire, and got burnt. They thought they could reap the rewards of speculating on triggering America's reptile brain day after day without the reality television pathology becoming chronic. But if you are going to handle snakes, you are eventually going to get bit.

Image
If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer
User avatar
brekin
 
Posts: 3229
Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:21 pm
Blog: View Blog (1)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Apr 06, 2017 5:36 pm

brekin » Thu Apr 06, 2017 3:07 pm wrote:My "take" is that Trump was seen by many on both sides of the established media and politics as an amusing archetype of an anachronism. A handy short hand freak show of everything that is wrong with America, and so was run as a huge carny draw for ratings. What they didn't realize was that by giving the carnival barker so much exposure they were actually connecting him with millions of micro Trumps and activating them. They were putting him in front of the class in a dunce hat as a model of bad behavior and he was working the class the whole time. It's like in the old days when they had public executions and some highwayman would give a self justifying speech to the crowd before he was to be hung, and his speech would bring the crowd around to his side and they would mob the scaffold and free him.

Trump isn't everyday media relations, because while exposure is good, scandal is the death knell for most politicians, until they get to a certain very high untouchable apex level. Just 10% of what Trump has said or done would have (and has) sunk numerous public figures from local Sheriffs to Governors and Senators. Scandal and crudeness may be great for say a Gangsta rappers career, but for politicians its the reverse. That Trump's style and strategy has worked, may be just his style aligning with the current national style. I blame the internet and 80's nostalgia. Trump as icon again and high waisted ugly mom jeans everywhere. Truly The Decline of Western Civilization part III: The Hate Pop Years.



This doesn't work all the way, given full historical context. He was among the 10 best-known U.S. celebrity figures since the 1980s, since the 1990s at the latest. NBC gave him a big platform for 15 years. They knew damn well he was connecting with millions of micro-Trumps, as you put it. It was always fine, and when he started his campaign and hit paydirt with the overt racist appeal, they ran with that exactly as they had run with his earlier PR stunts. He was pre-immunized from the kind of exposure that kills politicians, because he'd been bathing it the whole time, and (even more importantly) because he and most of the other members of the club of billionaire-politicians (of which there are more than 100 at this point) are absurdly presented as non-politicians who have real achievements and are free to speak things as they see them. (That varies, it's more true of Buffett or Bloomberg or Gates than it is of Kochs or of course Soros.)

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15986
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby brekin » Mon Apr 10, 2017 3:24 pm



The media loved Trump’s show of military might. Are we really doing this again?
By Margaret Sullivan Media Columnist April 8
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyl ... 1929f8724a

The cruise missiles struck, and many in the mainstream media fawned.

“I think Donald Trump became president of the United States last night,” Fareed Zakaria declared on CNN, after the firing of 59 missiles at a Syrian military airfield late Thursday night. (His words sounded familiar, since CNN’s Van Jones made a nearly identical pronouncement after Trump’s first address to Congress.)
“On Syria attack, Trump’s heart came first,” read a New York Times headline.
“President Trump has done the right thing and I salute him for it,” wrote the Wall Street Journal’s Bret Stephens — a frequent Trump critic and Pulitzer Prize-winning conservative columnist. He added: “Now destroy the Assad regime for good.”
Brian Williams, on MSNBC, seemed mesmerized by the images of the strikes provided by the Pentagon. He used the word “beautiful” three times and alluded to a Leonard Cohen lyric — “I am guided by the beauty of our weapons” — without apparent irony.
Quite the pivot, for some. Assessing Trump’s presidency a few weeks ago, Zakaria wrote in The Washington Post that while the Romans recommended keeping people happy with bread and circuses, “so far, all we have gotten is the circus.” And the Times has been so tough on Trump that the president rarely refers to the paper without “failing” or “fake” as a descriptor.


The Department of Defense released video of the U.S. military launching cruise missiles in Syria after President Trump ordered the strike on April 6. (Department of Defense)
But after the strikes, praise flowed like wedding champagne — especially on cable news.
“Guest after guest is gushing. From MSNBC to CNN, Trump is receiving his best night of press so far,” wrote Sam Sacks, a Washington podcaster and journalist. “And all he had to do was start a war.”

Why do so many in the news media love a show of force?

“There is no faster way to bring public support than to pursue military action,” said Ken Paulson, head of the Newseum Institute’s First Amendment Center.
“It’s a pattern not only in American history, but in world history. We rally around the commander in chief — and that’s understandable.”
Paulson noted that the news media also “seem to get bored with their own narrative” about Trump’s failings, and they welcome a chance to switch it up.
But that’s not good enough, he said: “The watchdog has to have clear vision and not just a sporadic bark.”
Clara Jeffery, editor in chief of Mother Jones, offered a simple explanation: “It’s dramatic. It’s good for TV, reporters get caught up in the moment, or, worse, jingoism.”
She added: “Military action is viewed as inherently nonpartisan, opposition or skepticism as partisan. News organizations that are fearful of looking partisan can fall into the trap of failing to provide context.”
And so, empathy as the president’s clear motivation is accepted, she said — “with no mention of the refugee ban keeping those kids out, no mention of Islamophobia that has informed his campaign and administration. How can you write about motive and not explore that hypocrisy?”

Mocking “the instant elevation of Trump into a serious and respected war leader,” Glenn Greenwald in the Intercept recalled John Jay, one of the authors of the Federalist Papers, who wrote more than 200 years ago: “However disgraceful it may be to human nature . . . nations in general will make war whenever they have a prospect of getting anything by it.”
In fact, Jay wrote, “absolute monarchs will often make war when their nations are to get nothing by it” — except, of course, to scratch that eternal itch for military glory, revenge or self-aggrandizement.


Groupthink, and a lack of proper skepticism, is something that we’ve seen many times before as the American news media watches an administration step to the brink of war.
Most notoriously, perhaps, that was true in the run-up to the Iraq invasion in 2003, the start of a long disaster there.
Stephen Walt, a Harvard professor of international affairs, thinks the press and the public should have learned some things by now.
“Syria remains a tragedy because there are no good options,” he wrote in Foreign Policy, and U.S. interventions in the Middle East very seldom end well.
Walt later told me that the news media now must look forward and ask deeper questions.

“What is Trump’s overall strategy for Syria,” given that “the balance of power on the ground is unchanged and we are no closer to a political settlement?”
Missile strikes may seem thrilling, and retaliation righteous.
But journalists and commentators ought to remember the duller virtues, too, like skepticism, depth and context.
And keep their eyes fixed firmly there, not on the spectacular images in the sky.
If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer
User avatar
brekin
 
Posts: 3229
Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:21 pm
Blog: View Blog (1)

Re: New Operating Manual for Spaceship America

Postby brekin » Mon Jun 19, 2017 5:27 pm

Psst. Since no one probably remembers/looked into the OP book that was shilled as the New Operating Manual for Spaceship America...
Allow me to suggest, The New, New Operating Manual for Spaceship America.

Image

Starting reading this awhile ago, put it down, picked it up again because it seems more and more relevant each passing day.
This could have gone in a few other threads, but I've decided to use the new style thread guide of "fuck all" and put it in thread where there is a higher ratio of mysteriousness to accessibility.

In an nutshell, (from what I remember/have gathered before), I think everyone can benefit from and is most likely susceptible to what Beck discusses.

1. Basically that pre-conscious/subconscious/sneaky thought patterns that people are mostly unaware/uncritical of can cause "primal thinking"
2. This primal thinking takes individuals and groups and negatively reframes them as the "Enemy".
3. A combination of often irrational egocentric thinking (I'm am in the right and being victimized) and poisonous ideologies cause people to see them as a personal threat.
4. To legitimize them as a threat they further 1. Homogenize 2. Dehumanize & 3. Demonize the individual or group.
5. This make it easier to continue to hate them and eliminate them if possible.


I think naturally we've seen this escalate with Trump getting elected.
Obviously from the administration, but also from individuals and groups of all political stripes.
Whatever the supposed reasons or affiliations, many/most people are in a lather of righteous indignation of being in the right, knowing what is the truth and just, but put upon by those who are "evil and must be stopped".

Image

Prisoners of Hate: The Cognitive Basis of Anger, Hostility, and Violence

World-renowned psychiatrist Dr.Aaron T. Beck, widely hailed as the father of cognitive therapy, presents a revolutionary and eye-opening look at destructive behavoir in Prisoners of Hate. He applied his established principles on the relationships bewteen thinking processes and the emotional and behavoiral expressions to the dark side of humanity. In fascinating detail, he demonstrates that basic components of destructive behavoir-domestic abuse, bigotry, genocide, and war-share common patterns with everyday frustrations in our lives. A book that will radically alter our thinking on violence in all its forms, Prisoners of Hate, provides a solid framework for remedying these crucial problems.

https://www.amazon.com/Prisoners-Hate-C ... 0060932007

From Kirkus Reviews
A reflective consideration of the dysfunctional thinking that results in acts ranging from verbal abuse on the personal level to mass murder on the societal level, as well as suggestions for remedying these problems. Known as the father of cognitive therapy, Beck, professor emeritus of psychology at the Univ. of Penn. School of Medicine, finds parallels between violent reactions of troubled individuals to presumed wrongs, bombings by extremist militant groups, and acts of genocide perpetrated by states. In his psychotherapeutic work with patients, he observed a pattern of thinking that he describes as ``hostile framing,'' that is, perceiving the person one is in conflict with as dangerous and evil and the self as right and good. Such thinking locks the mind in a ``prison of hate'' in which a false image is mistaken for the real person. Beck calls such cognitive distortion ``primal thinking'' because it occurs in the earliest stage of information processing and also in the early developmental stage of children. When primal thinking pigeonholes adversaries as evil, even subhuman, creatures who deserve to be punished, the moral code against killing is weakened. Beck demonstrates how such cognitive errors have led to wife-beating, group rape, the Salem witch trials, the Oklahoma City bombing, the Holocaust, and genocide in Cambodia, Turkey, and the Soviet Union. The cognitive distortions that led to WWI get special attention. There is hope, however, says Beck, who argues that war is not inevitable and asserts that humans have an innate capacity for altruistic behavior to override hostile tendencies and for rational thinking to correct cognitive distortions. He argues that an understanding of individual psychology can provide the tools for developing corrective political and social programs, and he describes how these might operate in preventing child and spousal abuse, juvenile delinquency, and ethnopolitical violence. A provocative and most timely report in this era of ethnic cleansing abroad and high school shootings at home. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


From Library Journal
Noted as the founder of cognitive psychotherapy, Beck (emeritus, Pennsylvania State Univ.) here applies his work to greater social problems, from domestic violence to bigotry, crime, and war. Focusing on involuntary and usually unnoticed thought patterns, Beck's therapy emphasizes relearning. He wants patientsAand, now, everyone from gang members to world leadersAto examine their cognitions rationally with a view to decreasing hostility. Beck's approach is so sweeping that economic, geographic, and racial issues all can be subsumed under it, and he makes a strong case. However, he oversimplifies when he argues that anger, hate, and hostility are the same whether the conflict is between spouses or nations. Unfortunately, he gives short shrift to the constructive aspects of anger and chooses to ignore the psychology of nonviolence, though his approach is consistent with Gandhi's and King's. Still, Beck's broad scope; valuable summaries on prejudice, altruism, and political psychology; and optimistic, humane, and rational treatment of a vital subject recommend this for lay and professional readers.AE. James Lieberman, George Washington Univ. Sch. of Medicine, Washington, D.C.
If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer
User avatar
brekin
 
Posts: 3229
Joined: Tue Oct 09, 2007 5:21 pm
Blog: View Blog (1)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 47 guests