Marketing War and Death- now there is a concept....

riff

Jose Jones
Joined
Nov 22, 2000
Posts
10,348
I am posting this article because we live in a world shaped by marketing.

(Any marketing students out there- or any teachers wanting to engage critical discussions of the the powers of propaganda and persuasion) .

An excellent starting point:

Branding New and Improved Wars
by Norman Solomon


Marketing a war is serious business. And no product requires better brand names than one that squanders vast quantities of resources while intentionally killing large numbers of people.

The American trend of euphemistic fog for such enterprises began several decades ago. It's very old news that the federal government no longer has a department or a budget named "war." Now, it's all called "defense," a word with a strong aura of inherent justification. The sly effectiveness of the labeling switch can be gauged by the fact that many opponents of reckless military spending nevertheless constantly refer to it as "defense" spending.

During the past dozen years, the intersection between two avenues, Pennsylvania and Madison, has given rise to media cross-promotion that increasingly sanitizes the organized mass destruction known as warfare.

The first Bush administration enhanced the public-relations techniques for U.S. military actions by "choosing operation names that were calculated to shape political perceptions," linguist Geoff Nunberg recalls. The invasion of Panama in December 1989 went forward under the name Operation Just Cause, an immediate media hit. "A number of news anchors picked up on the phrase Just Cause, which encouraged the Bush and Clinton administrations to keep using those tendentious names."

As Nunberg points out, "it's all a matter of branding. And it's no accident that the new-style names like Just Cause were introduced at around the same time the cable news shows started to label their coverage of major stories with catchy names and logos." The Pentagon became adept at supplying video-game-like pictures of U.S. missile strikes at the same time that it began to provide the big-type captions on TV screens.

Ever since the Gulf War in early 1991, people across the political spectrum have commonly referred to that paroxysm of carnage as Operation Desert Storm -- or, more often, just Desert Storm. To the casual ear, it sounds kind of like an act of nature. Or, perhaps, an act of God.

Either way, according to the vague spirit evoked by the name Desert Storm, men like Dick Cheney, Norman Schwarzkopf and Colin Powell may well have been assisting in the implementation of divine natural occurrences; high winds and 2,000-pound laser-guided bombs raining down from the heavens.

Soon after the Gulf War a.k.a. Desert Storm ended, the Army's chief of public affairs, Maj. Gen. Charles McClain, commented: "The perception of an operation can be as important to success as the execution of that operation." For guiding the public's perception of a war -- while it is happening and after it has become history -- there's nothing quite like a salutary label that sticks.

In October 2001, while launching missiles at Afghanistan, the Bush team came up with Operation Infinite Justice, only to swiftly scuttle the name after learning it was offensive to Muslims because of their belief that only Allah can provide infinite justice. The replacement, Enduring Freedom, was well-received in U.S. mass media, an irony-free zone where only the untowardly impertinent might suggest that some people had no choice other than enduring the Pentagon's freedom to bomb.

If you doubt that the Executive Branch is run by people who plan U.S. military actions while thinking like marketers, you're (no offense) naive. It was a candid slip of the tongue a couple of months ago when the White House chief of staff, Andrew Card, told the New York Times: "From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in August." Not coincidentally, the main rollout of new-and-improved rationales for an upcoming war on Iraq did not take place until September.

Looking ahead, the media spinners at the White House are undoubtedly devoting considerable energy to sifting through options for how to brand the expected U.S. assault on Iraq. Long before the war is over, we'll all know its reassuring code name. But we won't know the names of the Iraqi people who have been killed in our names.

Norman Solomon writes a syndicated column on media and politics.

In our times, it is all about persuasion. You really can't believe much on faith anymore. You must be persuaded.
 
Interesting article.

Marketing war & death began before Emperor Bush I, of course.

Robert MacNamara was a Harvard MBA and Professor, then President of Ford Motor Co. before being brought in by JFK to run the Vietnam War.

And of course, prior to that, bombers in WWII had names like "Liberator" .

And that stuff you buy from Prudential isn't called "Death Insurance" , you may have noticed.

Marketing is the science and art of persuasion.

War & Death are hard sells, so you sell the benefits...Freedom, Safety, Economic Expansion...all good effects of war.

And you downplay the negatives....Collateral Damage, Friendly Fire...

Propoganda might simply be the marketing slogans of the enemy, or they could be complete lies....because there is a difference between a lie and a well crafted piece of spin.
 
After seeing a news segment on the Gulf War with all of the Desert Storm graphics and hoopla, my then 7 yr old daughter said, "Mama, are they trying to sell the war to us? That looked like a commercial."
 
riff said:
I am posting this article because we live in a world shaped by marketing.

(Any marketing students out there- or any teachers wanting to engage critical discussions of the the powers of propaganda and persuasion) .

An excellent starting point:

Branding New and Improved Wars
by Norman Solomon


Marketing a war is serious business. And no product requires better brand names than one that squanders vast quantities of resources while intentionally killing large numbers of people.

The American trend of euphemistic fog for such enterprises began several decades ago. It's very old news that the federal government no longer has a department or a budget named "war." Now, it's all called "defense," a word with a strong aura of inherent justification. The sly effectiveness of the labeling switch can be gauged by the fact that many opponents of reckless military spending nevertheless constantly refer to it as "defense" spending.

During the past dozen years, the intersection between two avenues, Pennsylvania and Madison, has given rise to media cross-promotion that increasingly sanitizes the organized mass destruction known as warfare.

The first Bush administration enhanced the public-relations techniques for U.S. military actions by "choosing operation names that were calculated to shape political perceptions," linguist Geoff Nunberg recalls. The invasion of Panama in December 1989 went forward under the name Operation Just Cause, an immediate media hit. "A number of news anchors picked up on the phrase Just Cause, which encouraged the Bush and Clinton administrations to keep using those tendentious names."

As Nunberg points out, "it's all a matter of branding. And it's no accident that the new-style names like Just Cause were introduced at around the same time the cable news shows started to label their coverage of major stories with catchy names and logos." The Pentagon became adept at supplying video-game-like pictures of U.S. missile strikes at the same time that it began to provide the big-type captions on TV screens.

Ever since the Gulf War in early 1991, people across the political spectrum have commonly referred to that paroxysm of carnage as Operation Desert Storm -- or, more often, just Desert Storm. To the casual ear, it sounds kind of like an act of nature. Or, perhaps, an act of God.

Either way, according to the vague spirit evoked by the name Desert Storm, men like Dick Cheney, Norman Schwarzkopf and Colin Powell may well have been assisting in the implementation of divine natural occurrences; high winds and 2,000-pound laser-guided bombs raining down from the heavens.

Soon after the Gulf War a.k.a. Desert Storm ended, the Army's chief of public affairs, Maj. Gen. Charles McClain, commented: "The perception of an operation can be as important to success as the execution of that operation." For guiding the public's perception of a war -- while it is happening and after it has become history -- there's nothing quite like a salutary label that sticks.

In October 2001, while launching missiles at Afghanistan, the Bush team came up with Operation Infinite Justice, only to swiftly scuttle the name after learning it was offensive to Muslims because of their belief that only Allah can provide infinite justice. The replacement, Enduring Freedom, was well-received in U.S. mass media, an irony-free zone where only the untowardly impertinent might suggest that some people had no choice other than enduring the Pentagon's freedom to bomb.

If you doubt that the Executive Branch is run by people who plan U.S. military actions while thinking like marketers, you're (no offense) naive. It was a candid slip of the tongue a couple of months ago when the White House chief of staff, Andrew Card, told the New York Times: "From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in August." Not coincidentally, the main rollout of new-and-improved rationales for an upcoming war on Iraq did not take place until September.

Looking ahead, the media spinners at the White House are undoubtedly devoting considerable energy to sifting through options for how to brand the expected U.S. assault on Iraq. Long before the war is over, we'll all know its reassuring code name. But we won't know the names of the Iraqi people who have been killed in our names.

Norman Solomon writes a syndicated column on media and politics.

In our times, it is all about persuasion. You really can't believe much on faith anymore. You must be persuaded.

Great article, Riff, giving insight into the MacLuhan -like approaches used by unscrupulous politicians to enrich themselves and their mates . . .

Great posts, Lance and Juicy (any Juicy post is great with that sensual av!! :p :devil: :p ) . . .

So now the American idiom equates

"Liberating the people in a country run by one of our puppets" with "Imperialist War for Control of Oil Reserves";

"Liberate the oppressed people of Iraq" with "Bomb the Iraqi national infrastructure to oblivion";

"US corporations develop Iraq Oil Reserves" with "Iraq forced to abandon plans to develop their own petrochemical industry and do oil and gas deal with US Oil corporations to pay for re-building infrastructure bombed to obliteration by US military forces in the US-Iraq War for the Control of Oil Reserves";

"Free Trade in the World" with "US manufacturers able to access all foreign markets without paying tariffs while almost excluding all foreign competition on US domestic markets by tariff barriers and huge government subsidies to corporations who patronise the Republican Party" . . . the list goes on . . .

Truly it can be said that US government policy is doing a great job positioning the American people in the nineteenth century . . . :)

Meanwhile . . . watch and see which corporations get the pipeline contracts . . . would there be a Bush interest there, perhaps???
 
Re: Re: Marketing War and Death- now there is a concept....

Don K Dyck said:


Great posts, Lance and Juicy (any Juicy post is great with that sensual av!! :p :devil: :p ) . . .



So I can still inspire you with this av, too?:kiss: :p
 
juicylips said:
Hello, riffilicious:kiss:

Who's the darling kitty in your hand?

Not one of mine Juicy, Just an innocent soul born into being somewhere
 
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