19. The Engineered Yes
"The public is enormously gullible at times." --
The Public Relations Journal.
Persuaders who earn their livelihood as
public-relations experts sometimes feel a little underappreciated when they
see the massive persuasion efforts undertaken by their colleagues, the ad
men. As one complained in The Engineering of Consent, a manual of
public-relations techniques edited by Edward L. Bernays: "Many more millions
are spent in engineering consent for products than in creating favorable
attitudes toward the companies which make them. . . ." He went on to urge
his co-workers to borrow from the advanced persuasion techniques being
practiced in the marketing field "because organized research is much more
highly developed here."
By the mid-fifties public relations had become quite a bursting field for
persuasive endeavor, much of it in depth. One hundred leading companies
alone were reported spending a total of more than $50,000,000; and the
number of practitioners in supervisory capacities in the United States was
estimated at about 40,000. Some of the larger P.R. firms such as Carl Byoir
and Associates and Hill and Knowlton were reported having billings running
into millions of dollars a year. The Harvard Law School, in setting up a
study of public opinion and persuasion, explained that the move seemed
imperative because of tlie "multiplication of channels of communication to
the public. ... At every turn we see manifestations of the systematic
consideration of efforts to inform and persuade the public. . . ."
These channels of communication of mid-century America were enumerated, as
inviting pastures for public-relations endeavors, in The Engineering of
Consent, as follows:
1,800 daily newspapers
10,000 weekly newspapers
7,600 magazines
2,000 trade journals
7,635 periodicals geared to race groups
100,000,000 radio sets
12,000,000 TV sets
15,000 motion-picture houses
6,000 house organs.
Judge Learned Hand expressed himself as being
enormously disturbed by the growth of professional publicists in our
society. He called publicity "a black art" but agreed it has come to stay.
"Every year adds to the potency, to the finality of its judgments," he said.
By the fifties some of our publicist-persuaders, feeling their power, were
no longer content with such bread-and-butter chores as arranging publicity
and helping their company or client maintain a cheerful, law-abiding
countenance to present to the world. They were eager to get into
mind-molding on the grand scale. As one P.R. counselor, G. Edward Pendray,
stated: "To public-relations men must go the most important social
engineering role of them all -- the gradual reorganization of human society,
piece by piece and structure by structure." Evidently it was vaguely felt
that by such grandiose feats their calling of public relations might finally
be given full professional status. The more successful operators in public
relations were sensitive about the fact that a motley assortment of people
flew the flag of "public relations": hustling press agents, lobbyists,
greeters, fixers. There were efforts to define public relations. One of the
most prominent practitioners, Carl Byoir, however, stated that "public
relations is whatever the individual practitioner thinks it is."
Some leaders in the field began groping for a new name for public relations.
They felt "public relations" had a rather insincere sound. The outgoing
president of the Public Relations Society of America in 1954 pointed out
that some companies were dropping the "public-relations" identification of
their executives in charge of P.R. to prevent "the illusion that their
program is contrived" and not a part of the company's basic philosophy.
As public relations grew and grew, it found itself in some seemingly strange
fields. The Public Relations Journal of March, 1954, carried a glowing
report on the way smart preachers were putting P.R. to work to fill up the
pews and maintain a "strong financial condition." It conceded that one
"obstacle" to a really hard-hitting use of P.R. in sacred activities was
that a "dignified approach" is demanded. Another obstacle is "the problem of
showing the practical worth of some religious values." But it added: "If we
are to pattern our techniques on those of the Master, we must bring the
truth down where people can understand it ... talk about common things . . .
speak the language of the people. [Here was shown a picture of Jesus in a
boat talking to Disciples.]" The report detailed how the smart preacher can
use TV and other mass media, and how to cope with "Mr. Backslider." (He is
wooed back by "psychological influences.") The final tip to preachers was to
check results carefully to find just "what clicked.
In striving to increase their penetrating powers (and perhaps their own
sense of importance) publicist-persuaders turned to the depth approach in
great numbers during the fifties. Raptly they soaked up the lore of the
social scientists. The book The Engineering of Consent edited by Mr.
Bernays, the famed publicist (University of Oklahoma Press, 1955), is
studded with references to the findings of psychologists, sociologists,
anthropologists, and social psychologists. The studies of these scientists,
he notes, are "a gold mine of theme-symbol source material" for
public-relations counsels.
Bernays explains the need to take the depth approach with people in order to
give them the right attitudes in these words: "It would be ideal if all of
us could make up our minds independently by evaluating all pertinent facts
objectively. That, however, is not possible." In a later chapter a publicist
amplifies this by discussing Vilfredo Pareto's theory on the nonlogical
elements in human activities and then quotes Richard Worthington's comments
on Pareto's General Sociology, in these words:
There are [in this book] certain ideas and discoveries which may ... be of
considerable value ... to those who wish to modify society. . . . Many men .
. . have tried to change the conduct of people by reasonings, or by passing
certain laws. Their endeavors have often been peculiarly barren of results.
. . . Pareto shows how their failure is associated with the importance of
the non-logical .... People must be controlled by manipulating their
[instincts and emotions] rather than by changing their reasonings. This is a
fact of which politicians have always made use when they have persuaded
their constituents by appealing to their sentiments, rather than by
employing [reasoning], which would never be listened to or at least never
prove effective for moving the crowds.
Mr. Bernays has gotten his views published in The Annals of the American
Academy of Political and Social Science, where he pointed out that
"newsworthy events involving people usually do not happen by accident. They
are planned deliberately to accomplish a purpose, to influence ideas and
actions."
The files of The Public Relations Journal contain what to an outsider may
seem like a startling number of accounts of American men of science
co-operating intimately and confidentially with the mind-molders, and
would-be molders, of public relations. To cite a few examples: In June,
1953, the journal described, under the title "Orientation in the Social
Sciences," a series of seminars held at Columbia University Teachers'
College for New York members of the Public Relations Society of America. Six
doctors in the social sciences, headed by Lyman Bryson, social
anthropologist, did the "orienting." (All were Columbia men.) Dr. Bryson
told the publicists:
"If you are engineering consent, then I think the social sciences would like
to warn you that you should begin with a basic analysis of three levels upon
which consent moves in a society like ours." The first level, he said, is
human nature. He added that little could really be done here to "manipulate"
people. The second level was cultural change, which is where you must
operate, he said, if you want to. influence people's ideas. The third level
is the region of choice. Here is where an impulse is running in a particular
direction, and some sort of choice will be made regardless, "as when a
choice between similar products is made." At this level, he said, "it is
relatively easy to manipulate people." On the other hand, if you are trying
to change their ideas, "you work on the second level," where different
"psychological pressures, techniques, and devices from those successful on
the third level" must be used.
Earlier in the year two different issues covered at length "The Social
Science Session," which explored the "close interrelation of
public-relations practice and the social sciences." The Journal introduced
the report with this blurb: "Social Science holds the answer -- if we can
but get hold of it -- to many of the . . . problems with which we are so
ineffectually struggling these days."
On hand to advise the publicists on how to "get hold of" the answers were
two social scientists of the first rank: Dr. Rensis Likert, director of the
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan; and Dr. Samuel A.
Stouffer, director of the Laboratory of Social Relations, Harvard
University. Dr. Stouffer said it was a great privilege to come before the
gathering of "practitioners of human relations," and he proceeded to tell
his listeners it was a good working rule that people's attitudes are more
easily reached through their emotions than through their intellects. He
added that at the Harvard laboratory "we are doing some intensive research
on the subject of fear in connection with learning theory." He held out
promise that in years to come public-relations practitioners might be able
to find in the material "practical guides for action." Dr. Likert talked at
length on what motivates people and how their behavior can be changed by
changing "the motivational forces working upon them."
Those were just two of several accounts of scientists orienting the
publicists. A bystander reading the accounts might feel an impulse to tug
the doctors' sleeves and warn them to give thought to the uses to which
their insights might be put by unsqueamish or rough-playing listeners who
might possibly be in the audience.
There was some evidence that the American public was becoming accustomed to
having its attitudes manipulated by public-relations experts. David Riesman
noted in The Lonely Crowd that residents of a great suburban development
outside Chicago took an odd way of showing their annoyance against the
management for all the irritating aspects of the arrangements there. He said
complaints were frequently put in terms of the bad public relations shown by
the management. "In effect people were complaining not about their direct
grievances but because they felt they had not been so manipulated as to make
them like it," he reported.
The engineering of consent has taken hold to a startling extent in a field
that might at first seem unlikely: fund raising Americans are reputed to be
the most generous people in the world. By mid-century philanthropy ranked as
the nation's fourth largest industry in terms of dollars. Spontaneous
giving, however, was just a memory as far as large-scale philanthropy was
concerned.
To assure big giving, big persuaders came into existence By 1956 there were
more than four hundred professional fund-raising firms dotted across the
land, most of them schooled in manipulative techniques.
Business Week counseled its executive readers not to be scornful of the
professional fund raisers who might approach them for help. These people, it
said, are not necessarily "impractical visionaries." As a matter of fact, it
added reassuringly, "you'll find that many have a surprising grasp of sound
business principles."
The professional fund raisers claim they can collect for a cause many times
as much money as they cost. And they are probably right. America's most
noted fund raiser, John Price Jones, contended in The Engineering of Consent
(he wrote a chapter) that fund raising is one of the most highly developed
forms of public relations. "It takes better public relations to get a man to
give a dollar than it does to convince him to spend a dollar," he explained.
Jones contends that with solicitors even enthusiasm is not enough unless it
is "brought into an organized machine." The professionals themselves usually
stay in the background, because local residents are apt to resent them, and
confine themselves to master-minding the drive.
If you are an important prospect the professional fund raiser probably knows
more about you than do your best friends. As Jerome Beatty explained it in
describing Mr. Jones's operations in The American Magazine:
The expert fund raiser will tip off solicitors
as to your weaknesses and how to touch the tender spot in your heart just as
a baseball pitcher knows whether the batter goes for a curve or for a fast
ball. John Price Jones has a file of more than 66,000 names of persons all
over the U.S. who have given substantial sums to worthy causes and who are
likely to give more if properly approached. This file is kept up to date by
six girls and one man who read and clip newspapers, magazines, trade
journals, collect corporate reports, financial ratings. For each person
there is a file almost as complete as the FBI keeps on suspected Communists.
These professional fund raisers soon got into
the depth approach to their calling when they sought to discover the real
reasons people are willing to give away large parcels of their money, and
the real reasons citizens are willing to volunteer to punch doorbells as
solicitors.
The "real" deep-down reasons people can be
stimulated most easily to give to charitable causes or to serve as volunteer
solicitors for those causes appear to be several in the view of leading fund
raisers. Most of the explanations boil down to masked forms of
self-aggrandizement or ego-gratification. First is self-interest. Mr. Jones
feels that when this motive is properly promoted, for example, it can always
bring recruits into service as solicitors. He accepts the fact as basic that
self-interest is a primary motivation in all of life and is "basic to
successful organization." This self-interest angle was stressed in The
Public Relations Journal in a discussion for public-relations men on the way
they should guide their companies in the matter of local causes and
philanthropies. The writer, a public-relations director, stated:
"Contributions should always serve the best interests of the corporation.
They should return direct benefits, as through improved community hospitals
where employees reside, or there should be a long-range return, as through
schools."
A second reason people may be impelled to give is "public interest,"
according to the professional persuaders' viewpoint. Mr. Jones, however,
says this is far less forceful than self-interest and actually may often
involve some self-interest, too, "as in the case of those who have private
interests which can benefit from the reflection of their service in the
interest of the public."
The third force Mr. Jones mentions is the social or business benefit that
accrues from associating with "the best people in town." He pointed out that
if you get the best people it is surprising how many other people are
downright eager to serve. And he adds that salesmen have often found that
being active in a drive is a "fertile field for building their own
acquaintanceship."
Researchers have found more than thirty reasons why people give, according
to Mr. Beatty, who mentions as potent stimulants the possibility of the
amount of their contribution appearing in the local paper, or their picture,
or "fear of what people will say if the contribution is small." If you are
sensitive to the status angle, he added, the professionals will let you buy
"all the publicity and social prestige you will pay for."
In smaller communities a generous contribution is often solicited on the
golf course. If the president of the bank casually mentions to you on the
street, "By the way, we need a fourth on Sunday. How about it?" Mr. Beatty
warns that you may be the next prospect on his list. Beatty added: "You
probably beat him at golf, but at the nineteenth hole he will probably sign
you up for a big contribution."
History of Banking Fraud:
The Coming Battle
By M. W. WALBERT
The Coming Battle
documents from Congressional records, newspaper reports and writings by
the founding fathers and others a chronology of events long forgotten that
shaped our fledgling nation from 1776 to 1899. Read about the manipulation
of our money and its supply, the intentional creation of recessions,
depressions and panics, manipulation of the stock markets, and the
demonetization of silver.
Secrets of the Federal Reserve
by Eustace Mullins
Eustace Mullins' carefully
researched and documented treatise picks up from Walbert's expose' of
control of the money supply and the economy and
brings it to the mid 1980's.
The
World Order
by Eustace Mullins
How control of the world's money has inexorably led to an ever tighter
grip on control of the world's people.
Uranium Wars by Leuren Moret
How control of the world's people has inexorably led to wider use of
depopulation methods which include spreading radioactivity in food,
water, air, and the human genome.
Taking Back Your Power
by Allen Aslan Heart
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© 2007, Allen Aslan Heart / White Eagle Soaring of the Little Shell Pembina Band, a
Treaty
Tribe of the Ojibwe Nation