Ahead of the final presidential debate in 2016, Donald Trump is renewing his claims that Election Day could see widespread voter fraud. CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett has the latest.
Joseph Goebbels, head of the Nazi
Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, operated on the core premise that mass communication must be centralized and pragmatic. His strategies focused on
emotional appeal, strict message control, targeted scapegoating, and relentless repetition to reshape public perception.
Core Principles & Strategies
According to historical analyses of his directives (such as those archived by
), the operational "keys" to his methodology include:
- Centralized Authority: Propaganda must be planned and executed by a single authority to eliminate competing narratives and enforce consistency.
- Simplification and Repetition: Avoid abstract ideas in favor of simple emotional appeals, constantly repeating just a few core concepts.
- The "Big Lie" Technique: Fabrications must be grand enough that people assume no one would have the audacity to invent them, shielded by repressing dissenting truths.
- Vilification of a Single Enemy: Continuously criticize opponents while picking out one specific "enemy" (e.g., Jewish people, foreign adversaries) for special blame and hatred.
- Labeling and Sloganeering: Events and people must be labeled with distinctive, easily memorable phrases or slogans.
- Media Omnipresence: Messages must be pushed through attention-getting mediums—such as cheap mass-produced radios, films (like Triumph of the Will), and massive public rallies.
- Credibility vs. Truth: The propagandist does not need to be strictly truthful, but the message must be credible to the audience; half-truths are utilized when they serve the ultimate objective.
- Anxiety Management: On the home front, propaganda must maintain an optimum anxiety level while preventing the raising of false hopes that can be shattered by reality.