I no longer take anything at face value. Like Freud asking "What do women want?" I find myself asking this question without regard to gender, embellishing it further with yet other questions like: "What does he or she really mean?" or "What is he or she thinking?" or "What does he or she want me to believe?"
Perhaps being steeped in the irony of my profession as a novelist, I am getting paranoid since I have discovered that I am developing a kind of shell, an armor that is trying to protect me from manipulation. My level of distrust has expanded exponentially as I grow older. I find I am resisting all manner of attempts to persuade me about anything. As a result, I have discovered that I am subliminally blocking out all forms of commercial or political attempts at manipulating me to act in the manner that serves other people's agendas.
When I see or hear the word "free" or "sale," for example, I feel the symptoms of nausea. Nothing is free and a sale is dumping products that never sold. Celebrities who hawk goods strike me as an inside joke. Are there really idiots out there who believe them? Did Ronald Reagan, whose ubiquitous advertising posters were plastered all over the subways of my youth, really believe that Chesterfields were good for you? And did nine out of ten doctors prefer... was it Camels or Chesterfields? Considering how much lung cancer has inflated the pockets of doctors, one must pay attention to the laws of unintended consequences.
Speaking of doctors, there is something obscene happening today where we victims in the patient pool are being persuaded by massive advertising to try this or that prescription drug by pushing our doctors to prescribe them. Somehow it seems that it should be the other way around. The doctors should be telling us what drugs will benefit us. There is even more subtle persuasion going on here, since the advertising is also directed to those who buy these drugs on-line from websites where no prescriptions are required.
Never mind the illegalities of such ventures. Indeed, even the word illegal is taking on new connotations. Take the case of illegal immigration for example. Crime used to be defined as breaking the law. "Crime doesn't pay" was the mantra of my youth. By today's standards some crimes actually pay pretty well.
As a group, advertising people tend to be brilliant and cunning persuaders. (Pardon the bit of self-flattery here. I once was a member of that gang.) They have researched us down to the atomic dust in our brains and they really believe that they know all our secret urges and alleged needs.
Advertising people will tell you that what they are doing is trying to get your attention and hopefully get you to buy the product they are charged with hawking. It takes great knowledge of the craft of manipulation to dip into the mind of an indifferent public besieged by competing products and motivate them to part with their cash and choose the one they are pushing. The objective is to create a need in your mind, to seduce you into believing that this or that product or idea will satisfy an urgent or latent desire, to entice you to believe in what they are selling. It isn't an easy job since the competition for your attention and your bucks is fierce.
"Caveat Emptor" we are warned. Let the buyer beware. I am not knocking the process. Consumption lies at the heart of our capitalistic society and often the product being hawked might, just might, really improve our lives. There is a vast army of inventors and entrepreneurs who are perpetually innovating, creating, and embellishing various products that do indeed improve and extend our lives. Our judgment of the efficacy and usefulness of these products can be swift and sure. You buy it, try it, and you evaluate it. If it doesn't work for you, you reject it.
Behind every effort to persuade us is the vast network of focus groups, pollsters, and analyzers who track what they have broken down into bits and pieces of what they allege is your psychological profile, your habits, your predilections, hoping to dig deep into your heart, mind, and soul to determine your preferences so that, as the fly fisherman say, they can match the hatch, hook you and reel you in for their own purposes.
Indeed, they believe in their results and have, so it seems, an excellent track record in predicting outcomes, but always with the caveat that their predictions can be a few percentage points off. They allege that they have worked out their tactics with scientific precision and can break you down into broad labels, like liberal and conservative, and then slice you into unlimited categories with the precision of an algorithm. Politicians and all sorts of commercial enterprises employ these professionals, whose results and determinations form the basis for their marketing ploys.
Yet, despite the fact that their conclusions are often chillingly correct, I feel quite resentful that I can so easily fit into a pigeonhole. It strikes to the heart of my individuality and mocks my own worldview and my sense of my own uniqueness. Are we so alike that we can so easily be categorized and labeled? Is our place in the culture so predictable? Are we so unified in opinion that we can be put in little lock step compartments? Such determination seems anathema in a so-called free society.
I can't stand the idea of being categorized, dubbed a statistic, tucked away in a demographic. I hate the idea of being targeted to persuade me to buy a product or an idea based on my gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, appetite, or whatever.
Worse, I am appalled by the idea of being labeled, right, left, center, liberal, conservative, tall, short, old, young, etc. Everything in the media seems self-serving and cynical. I try valiantly, perhaps futilely, to resist this attack on my individuality. I read and view all media content with a jaundiced eye, searching zealously for signs of manipulation. Unfortunately, it is everywhere, ubiquitous, powerful, and often subtle.
The Internet with its Tower of Babel-no-holds-barred opinion machine choked with bizarre grievances, angry rants, and misinformation is a particular challenge and worrisome, but I'll leave that for another time, since my tendency at this moment is to throw out the baby with the bath water. Never mind that I am using this media to distribute my own pearls of wisdom.
When it comes to politics, I admit I listen carefully to each candidate's words, trying to determine what they really mean. I have found that my own interpretation is very different from what I know they want me to believe. I am immediately suspect when I see staged political rallies. Remember those brilliant films of Leni Riefenstahl depicting Nazi rallies with hands heiling in ecstasy as the evil mass murderer Adolf Hitler strode to the rostrum? It takes an enormous effort of will to resist such mass persuasion.
As a live participant in such rallies, it is almost impossible to be indifferent to the heady excitement and hysteria of such seductive crowd enthusiasm. Even observing it second hand on television and on film inspires your participation. We yearn to be part of the crowd mind I suppose.
So called soaring rhetoric, which is an integral part of these carefully staged rallies, makes me immediately suspect. I know exactly what the political manipulators are doing. I used to be one. All political campaigns are exercises in mass pandering.
But it is one thing to know you are being manipulated and for what reason and quite another to resist the invasion of your mind. The brutal fact is that you need the information, however packaged, to make a decision on anything. You can't be part of the real world by ignoring the avalanche of information coming at you. The best you can do is filter it through your own defensive anti-pollutant mechanism.
Information, you see, is like oxygen. You can't make any decisions without carefully weighing information, subliminally or consciously. All life is about making choices, fulfilling real or imagined needs, responding to your inner urges. Sometimes you have to take the path well worn or, as Robert Frost suggested, it might be better to take the path less traveled.
Perhaps it is the political season that prompts this call to arms against the persuaders. After working your way through the clichés and occasional nuggets of wisdom, consider this little rant a warning label from an old hand and practitioner of the art of manipulation.
|
by
Warren Adler
Member since:
February 7, 2007 The Persuaders Are After You: A Call to Arms
July 02, 2008 10:12 PM EDT
views: 182
|
comments: 60
To Groups:
News, Politics and the Economy, Gather Politics Essential, Gather Broadcasting, Fugitives From Ignorance, Conformity, and Peer Pressure, *~Happy Posting! Post to Your Heart's Content!~*, ! Spamn It All! (Spam your articles, images and videos here), WELL, HERE WE ALL ARE........NOW WHAT??, The Esoteric and Alternative, for Harmony
Please provide details below to help Gather review this content. If it is found to be inappropriate and in violation of the Gather Terms of Service, action will be taken.
You have successfully submitted a report for this post.
|
|
More by Warren Adler |
||||
About Gather |
Engagement Marketing |
Make New Friends |
Gather Points |
Advertise on Gather |
Gather Press |
Privacy |
Terms of Service |
Community Guidelines
Books | Celebs | Entertainment | Family | Food | Health | Moms | Money | News | Politics | Spirituality | Sports | Travel | Writing
Books | Celebs | Entertainment | Family | Food | Health | Moms | Money | News | Politics | Spirituality | Sports | Travel | Writing
Version 16961, "Pacino"; Copyright © 2009 Gather Inc. All rights reserved.


Comments: 60
I enjoyed all of this - but wish everyone would read this paragraph every day until it becomes their reality.
But it is one thing to know you are being manipulated and for what reason and quite another to resist the invasion of your mind. The brutal fact is that you need the information, however packaged, to make a decision on anything. You can't be part of the real world by ignoring the avalanche of information coming at you. The best you can do is filter it through your own defensive anti-pollutant mechanism.
I've tried to encourage this personal responsibility and taking of power, several times on Gather, but didn't make my point. You cover it so eloquently that I believe you will be more successful. Thank you.
You're welcome, Warren.
I've seen a few that were so insulting to my intelligence that I wouldn't buy the product if I wanted it. If no one did, they might get the idea.
Thanks, Warren, for the word of warning. It's a shame that matters of great importance have become equated with the sale of commodities. We've grown more and more cynical.
But I find I agree with your point and with your conclusion. As the commenter at the top said, you are a man after my own heart. As another member above said (wow, I feel so tired I can't dredge up the strength to scroll up to check their names), I too try to make this point among others and to communicate it to the world, but too often I am misunderstood, cannot phrase myself correctly (no it's express myself, wrong word choice there), and am labeled for my beliefs, falsely and unjustly.
Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts, which are mine also, in an effective, benignly provocative, and incredibly poetic way. Beautiful words from a beautiful heart.
and a stubborn streak a mile wide: "No! -I don't NEED sleep!"
this may be what puts us on the same side of the fence.
or maybe we can tell the difference between "cute"...
...and "i should buy INTO that."
10 4 u
The sellers think we are all stupid and try to sell things we dont need.
You are so right, Maurice.
hits the nail on the head
I hate advertisements. Especially the ones that make the buyer of the product look like an idiot for buying the product. They make the advertisers look like idiots for their lack of good sense in writing. Maybe that's the only truth in advertising.
Thanks… (This is a comment link for A Stone's Throw Away. It was written for you're entertainment. Don't click this link until you're in the mood to be entertained.)
People tend to forget that we all have the same basic wiring, thus the same buttons for them to push.
every even considering my doctor prescribing it to me, let alone suggesting it. And I am with Kimberly too, I used to like the good old days, when you couldn't talk about a lot of things and Jack Paar got put off the air for saying water closet or something to that effect. We were adults then, knew all about everything but our imagination was still ours, and in all the old movies when the sex scenes came on, the door was closed, and you could just think about what was happening and I feel that is enough to see even now, who wants to be a peeping tom . and as for politics, well I don't believe any of them, and whoever delivers the speeches with the best style, can make some people believe anything they say. Thank goodness, as old as I am, I still have my own mind to make up, Thanks for this article Warren, we all need to read and remember.
I am a cynic about just about anything.
It just amazes me to think I would try to recommend anything to my doctor. Who bends over backwards to see I have the best medicine for my various maladies, and that they all work together.
Politics have just totally went off the deep end, in my opinion. They stand there spouting all They are going to do for us.. when anyone with a brain knows they can do nothing without the support of the Senate and Congress. They can do nothing by themselves. They can plant an idea, but whether it grows or not is another story.
I feel I am a strong and intelligent thinker and can truly make up my own mind about things. As you said the information must be out there for me to make an intelligent decision - but it doesn't need to insult me to do so. I would prefer 'just the facts, ma'am' and nothing but the facts. Don't try to woo me with cutesy and fluff. And please do not vacuum my behind, thank YOU!
I am not one easily persuaded.
I have my beliefs and not many can shake those and make me change my mind.
I ignore all commercials because they are inconsequential. I have already made up my mind about what I should buy and stick to that.
Or I just buy whatever is the cheapest product at the time.
In regards to government. I don't listen to boring speeches about how they will change the world. I wait and see with their actions. For those speak very loudly indeed.
I see Obama on tv and I just watch his face, his gestures and the way he stands.
I can see that he is very truthful to a point.
He is a politician after all. But, I do think he can change the country.
And, that is all I will say to that.
Thought I should let you know that I was/am interested in the discussion and why I backed out.