Thoughts Percolating
I wonder if the narrative of division in political speech can be clearly identified as such if the listener cannot distinguish between historical fact and media conditioning?
A book entitled "1984" was written to explain how powerful words ( and the elimination of them from mainstream / popular vocabulary ) can be.
I learned this phenomenom when I first entered the real estate industry. I would read everyday words I've used all my life, yet the words now had a completely different meaning when used in conjunction with other particular words / phrases.
How much more have the words in political speech been used to promote, process and pacify popular perception?
Take a look down the rabbit hole with me HERE!
A book entitled "1984" was written to explain how powerful words ( and the elimination of them from mainstream / popular vocabulary ) can be.
I learned this phenomenom when I first entered the real estate industry. I would read everyday words I've used all my life, yet the words now had a completely different meaning when used in conjunction with other particular words / phrases.
How much more have the words in political speech been used to promote, process and pacify popular perception?
Take a look down the rabbit hole with me HERE!
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