How to Talk to People - How to Know What's Real: How to Know What’s Really Propaganda
Episode Date: September 4, 2024Peter Pomerantsev, a contributor at The Atlantic and author of This Is Not Propaganda: Adventures in the War Against Reality, is an expert on the ways information can be manipulated. For this special ...episode, Megan talks with Peter about the role of propaganda in America and how to watch out for it. Looking for more great audio from The Atlantic? Check out Autocracy in America, hosted by Peter Pomerantsev and staff writer Anne Applebaum. Subscribe wherever you listen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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I'm Anne Applebaum. Over the past year, as I watched Donald Trump demand unprecedented new powers,
I wondered, don't he and his team fear that these same powers could one day be used by a different administration
and a different president to achieve very different goals? Well, maybe they are afraid. And maybe that's why
they're using their new tools to change our institutions, even to alter the playing field in advance of
midterm elections later this year, to make sure that they're using their new tools to change our institutions.
their opponents can't win. Ultimately, destroying trust is the currency of autocrats.
We could win, but we are very, very, very likely to lose if we keep treating this as business
as usual. Reporting on the sweeping changes unfolding in our country and preparing you to think
about what might happen next. The new season of Autocracy in America, available now.
Andrea, when you think of propaganda, what first comes to mind?
You know, Uncle Sam posters during the war effort, you know, I want you and Rosie the Riveter, you know, we can do it.
And, you know, war posters from World War II and World War I, you know, where they're asking people to buy bonds or to ration food.
I mean, I think even Looney Tunes had wartime cartoons that served as propaganda.
Ooh, oh wow.
And it's interesting.
The history stuff is my first thought, too.
These really bold, visually driven posters, basically, almost like advertising billboards, except the products being sold are political causes.
And I guess there is something appropriate about that because the people who've created propaganda historically learn some of their tactics from the advertising industry.
And one of the core ideas in advertising is that, you know, while you're in one way,
way appealing to consumers' rationality, you're also and often even more so appealing to their
emotions.
And one of the most fundamental ways to appeal to emotions is really just using charged language.
The platforms can change, posters, commercials, cartoons, social media.
But one common denominator throughout all of the history of propaganda is the use of powerful
language. Yeah. And it's interesting, too, that both of us, when we think about propaganda as
language, just the word propaganda went to the past, because of course propaganda isn't just an
element of the past, right? It's very much a part of our present reality. Yes. And, you know,
that gets to one of the core questions from our season, How to Know It's Real. When it comes to
information, what is real? This question feels especially urgent around our
political realities. Right now, there's a presidential election coming up, and it feels like so many
people, both here and abroad, live in their own individual political realities. Clearly,
propaganda has played a big role here. Yeah. And that has me thinking, too, about what makes
certain kinds of messaging propaganda. And I guess how the ways it's evolved and devolved might
instruct us as we try to figure out life in this moment.
The technologies people use to create propaganda and to spread it might change, but it's defining
characteristics do stay the same.
I actually call my second book, This is Not Propaganda, and then virtually never use the
word in the book, because I thought, this word has become so polluted and contentious that
it's become kind of meaningless.
That's Peter Palmeransef. He's an Atlantic contributor, and the author of
of several books, including nothing is true and everything is possible, and this is not
propaganda. Peter's work is especially urgent right now, I think, because he is an expert
on the ways information can be manipulated, historically, but also in the present. For this special
episode of How To, I talked with Peter about the ways everyday people can contend with
messaging that tries to skew our sense of reality. But we started with what propaganda
actually is.
The modern usage of the term starts with the counter-reformation
and the Catholic Church is worried about the spread of Protestantism,
saying, di Propaganda Fide, go and spread the faith, go and defend the faith.
It's not about information, it's about persuasion, but it's not a negative term.
And one of the reasons some historians think that we use the term negatively
is because in the Protestant tradition, anything associated with the Catholic Churches
is negative.
So propaganda becomes a negative.
It's a word in England and Northern Europe because it's about Catholics.
So that might be one of the root causes of this neutral term getting a bad name.
So, Peter, zooming out to the present moment where propaganda does have this generally negative connotation,
I'm wondering if you can help delineate how it's different from other forms of information transfer.
Since there are a lot of places outside of politics but also within it where the kind of persuasive information you're describing,
almost these new forms of spreading the faith is legitimate.
Propaganda essentially means forms of mass persuasion.
Mass persuasion that is to the benefit of the person doing it rather than the person receiving it.
So that's how it's different to public education.
Public education is meant, in principle, to be for the benefit of the people receiving it.
So that doesn't mean propaganda can't benefit the person's receiving it,
but it is not conceived with that aim.
It is you trying to get somebody else to do what you want.
So frankly, propaganda is usually used in a negative way,
in the sense that it's usually somehow duplicitous,
is somehow deceiving people about the true nature of its aims.
So the way it's become used in society is with that sense.
You're trying to get people to do something that you want them to do
in a way that involves some sort of dishonesty.
I think we have to go campaign by campaign, by activity, by activity,
and decide, is this okay for democracy, or do we think this overstep to line which starts to mess up democracy?
And I want to pivot from that to one of your areas of expertise, which is Russia.
You've not only studied propaganda in Russia, but you've lived in Russia and you speak Russian fluently.
And I wonder about the state of propaganda there.
What does it feel like to live in an information environment where there is so much propaganda,
swirling around.
So, look, it was a really unique experience
until I moved to the US
and saw so much of the same stuff here.
Look, you're living in a world
where truth has lost his value,
a world of extreme doubt.
I mean, the Putin's propaganda,
unlike communist propaganda,
is defined not on a positive,
you know, some story about, you know,
the glorious communist future.
It's defined by seeding doubt,
conspiracy theory, suspicion
with an aim of making people so confused,
they don't know what's true
and what's not, making them feel absolutely passive, and essentially saying, look, in this world where
there are no values, no truth, total confusion, you need a strong man to lead you through the mark.
And, you know, it's quite bizarre moving to America and finding so many people who echoing things
that I'd heard in Russia, like, oh, you can't tell the difference between truth, you don't know
who's lying, you can't trust anybody anymore.
You know, I don't trust anybody.
I just go with my feelings, you know, which is the most manipulable thing.
Yeah, and I'd love to ask you about this idea that propaganda isn't always just about truth and falsehood,
but it's also about this broader idea that truth itself can't really exist.
So the manipulations you're describing leading to a form of nihilism almost.
Could you tell me a little bit more about how cynicism factors into propaganda?
Well, the sort of propaganda that of Putin puts out is all about that.
you know, effective propaganda always works with the grain of what people feel.
You know, there's a deep cynicism in the last sort of 30 years of the Soviet Union,
when no one really believed in communism, but still pretended that they did.
So that cynicism is encouraged, you know, it's going with the flow, and it's weaponized.
You turn it against the world.
You say, look, you know, you may have hoped for a democratic future,
but democracy doesn't exist anywhere at all a sham.
There's just a deep state in America.
and it's just the elites controlling things.
Yeah, we're kind of corrupt here, but everybody's corrupt.
But it's also kind of a funny paradox that I think, you know, it's important to grasp,
but I think we all know it from our own experiences,
that people who are super cynical, like, oh, you can't trust the media and you can't trust the politicians,
they don't end up free.
They actually end up believing in crazy conspiracies instead.
So there's something about the human mind that does need to live in some sort of framework.
and some sort of way of understanding the world,
some sort of way of understanding which community you belong to,
and some way of placing yourself in the world.
And it's a real paradox that in order to be free and independent,
you have to be a little bit open-minded and trusting.
Being super cynical doesn't make you free.
It actually makes you more dependent on propaganda.
In Russia, at least they have an excuse, sort of.
It's an authoritarian country where the government controls all the media.
here people are choosing to live in this sort of space.
And I'm yet to understand why they've made that decision.
I'm Anne Applebaum.
Over the past year, as I watched Donald Trump demand unprecedented new powers,
I wondered, don't he and his team fear that these same powers could one day be used by a different administration
and a different president to achieve very different goals?
Well, maybe they are afraid.
And maybe that's why they're using their new tools to change.
change our institutions, even to alter the playing field in advance of midterm elections later this
year, to make sure their opponents can't win. Ultimately, destroying trust is the currency of
autocrats. We could win, but we are very, very, very likely to lose if we keep treating this as
business as usual. Reporting on the sweeping changes unfolding in our country and preparing you to
think about what might happen next.
The new season of autocracy in America, available now.
This idea that we're sort of choosing to be manipulated, as far as the U.S. is concerned, I think of something like reality TV, for example, and how it shapes American politics.
I'm thinking here of The Apprentice in particular, which did so much to launch the political career of Donald Trump to present him as, you know, both a celebrity and a leader, and to suggest that celebrity
and leader might be effectively the same thing.
And so many of our politics in the U.S. these days
comes in the form of and looks like and acts like entertainment.
So reality shows are something that I thought about a lot
because my first career was to work in entertainment TV
when reality shows were king.
This was right after university in the early 2000s.
And I think reality shows are very important.
America had a president and might have a president
again very soon, who was a reality TV show star.
And in Russia, people like Vladislav Sorkov, he was sort of Putin's great vizier of propaganda,
he would actually go to reality show sets to learn how to create a political theater based on reality shows.
I think it's very important to understand.
When do reality shows emerge?
They emerge in the 1990s.
At this point, when in politics, post-Cold War politics becomes bled of any ideological
meaning. It's when you have the emergence of these politicians like Tony Blair or Bill Clinton,
who don't have any strong ideology, but they're really good at showmanship. Politics becomes
all about personality rather than deep ideas. That is the moment when the reality show emerges
as our definitive entertainment genre. You have the rise of politicians who are all about
personality with little substance, and politics becomes all about personality clashes. And you have
the rise of reality shows which are all about clashing personalities. Media are actually completely
complicit in this process because they start to cover politics not as a series of arguments
and policy debates but as a series of tactics who's going to outsmart the other, Clinton or
Newt Gingrich. It was like a game. So politics became about tactics rather than about
policies like a reality show. Everybody was complicit in it. I don't want to blame the
reality show producers, I don't want to blame the media. I think it's just the moment when
personality clashes replace policy debates. But I think now we've got to a point where we're
very conscious of what we're doing. And I'm not sure we're stopping. Take American presidential
debates. They're designed in the way we used to design a reality show. They're designed in a way
to get people, candidates to attack each other in the meanest possible way. Now, everybody who's a member
of a reality show knows that the way you get to dominate the show is you attack someone
and they'll attack you back and you guys, you're the heart of the conflicts and you dominate
the series. It's all about you. By giving debates the same logic as that we gave reality
shows where we're doing everything to further a political culture where reality show stars
are going to win and keep on winning. In terms of where we are in the US right now,
what could we even do at this point to resist that? So let's say,
It was solutions-oriented.
Like, here is a policy problem.
Show us how you're going to work together
and how you're going to work with the other side to get this through.
Yeah?
It's still a competition.
You're still forcing people to compete,
which we want competition.
We want to see who's better.
But you're setting a completely different set of challenges.
I don't know.
We'd have to test it out.
We'd have to test it out whether it could still be entertaining.
I think that, you know, people do have a desire
to watch low-level conflicts.
We do all enjoy that,
but we also like to see
people collaborating together
for a greater aim.
I'm looking at some social research
at the moment about which bits
of history Americans admire the most.
And it's things like,
well, civil rights movement obviously
comes top. But beyond
that, it's things like the moon landing
and the Hoover Dam and
bits of like
successes in the Cold War and the Normandy landing
because they all show people working together for a greater aim.
So there is also a pleasure in collaboration and achieving things together.
If you're creating TV that's actually both entertaining and for the public good,
then that's the sort of challenge you need to solve.
And in your observations, whether in a global context or in the US,
have you seen things that have worked when it comes to fighting back against propaganda?
Have there been strategies that have proven successful?
So I teach a course about propaganda at Johns Hopkins, and one of the early things we look at is we look at photographs from the Great Depression, photographs that every American knows of, you know, the heart-wrenching photographs of people left destitute by the Great Depression.
And these were photographs by some of the greatest photographers of the age that have become completely iconic in the American imagination, which were sponsored by, you know,
the government in order to promote the need for a new deal.
And I ask my students, is this propaganda or not?
But that is a wonderful example of how you use communication for something positive.
Because however you feel about the details of the New Deal,
the fact is you are setting up empathy.
So I think propaganda in the negative sense,
and in its most vile sense, and in its most extreme sense,
and its most dangerous sense is about dehumanizing the other.
So the first thing is to start to live in a culture where we do humanize each other.
And I think, but you do do that through culture.
You do that through films, through movies, through photography.
You know, we talk about identity a lot, you know,
and a toxic identity politics where, you know, it's all about my tribe and the other tribe is evil.
But doesn't have to be like that.
You know, you can have a much more open-ended identity where you're like,
You realize that actually, you know, we're all connected, dependent on each other and so on and so forth.
Now, I don't mean anything fluffy, by the way.
I certainly don't think you should hug fascists.
I think you should defeat fascists.
But if we're talking about, you know, a society managing to live together, it starts with overcoming that dehumanization.
That's step number one.
And then what step number two?
Once you've done that, you can move on to the next phase, which is agreeing on what we think is.
evidence is. It's not about agreeing on the fact, but can we at least agree what counts as evidence?
And then, and then finally, I think democratic discourse is how it's different from a dictatorship
like Russia is that this leads to decision making and political change. So people aren't just
screaming into the abyss or screaming at each other through Twitter. They're actually
getting somewhere.
We're actually affecting something.
And when we look at theories
of a democratic public sphere,
that's what makes it special.
It's all about people debating,
gathering evidence,
swapping stories,
and then coming to decisions
which become policy.
So you need to think through
all those stages.
And I think today
we really need to think
how we're going to get there.
You know, what's the role of movies?
What's the role of online platforms
and how we design the online.
space? And then what's the connection of all those discussions to political change? Look, if you don't
have the photographs at the start, if you don't have the humanization process, nothing else,
nothing else is possible. I'd love to know what you say to people who might say that concerns
about propaganda are overblown, that, you know, politicians have always lied, that there's
always been misinformation, that nothing's really new about this moment.
How would you respond to those arguments?
Whenever a new technology emerges, whether it's the printing press or radio or the internet and social media today, it causes huge ruptures.
So we're clearly in a phase like that.
Clearly, you know, online technologies have produced both incredible excitement, but they've also produced huge opportunities for those who wish to unleash.
destruction of violence. So I am not alarmed when a politician is lying. That is fairly,
you know, fairly standard for that profession. But when something has gone wrong in our societies,
when people can no longer trust each other enough to communicate with each other,
when hate has become normalized, when violence has become normalized, I think we're in a very
dangerous place.
Megan, in this past season, you invoked the media theorist Marshall McLuhan a couple of times.
Your conversation with Peter has me thinking of another very famous media theorist named Neil Postman.
Postman had an essay called Propaganda that he published in the 1970s, and in it he wrote,
of all the words we use to talk about talk, propaganda is perhaps the most mischievous.
I love this definition of the word.
It really gets it what Peter was talking about.
That propaganda can be many things to many people.
It's not inherently good or bad.
It's malleable.
And that's such an important way of looking at things, in part because it highlights the challenges we're facing,
or at least one of the challenges, when it comes to propaganda.
in our own political lives.
It would be so much easier if propaganda were clear-cut and easy to define,
almost like those posters you mentioned at the beginning of this episode
with their blunt messages and really obvious aims.
But propaganda doesn't look like that always, and especially now.
The bright colors are actually gray areas.
Megan, our season of How to Know What's Real is over,
but Peter, along with staff writer in Applebaum, they'll be the new hosts of a podcast coming from the Atlantic called Autocracy in America.
I am so excited about this show. It's a five-part series, and unlike a lot of coverage right now, it's not just a warning.
It's also about how America is already transforming, in part due to the types of psychological manipulation we've been talking about.
Anne and Peter explore how the recent consolidation of power
and the way we permit secrecy in politics
makes democracy ever more vulnerable
and how some of our other vulnerabilities
were actually baked into the American system by the founders.
The series is an effort to mark what's changing in America
and to recognize what we're losing before it's too late.
Follow the show now wherever you listen.
How to Know What's Real was hosted by Andrea Valdez
and me, Megan Garber.
Our producer is Natalie Brennan.
Our editors are Claudina Bade and Jocelyn Frank.
Fact-checked by Anna Alvarado.
Our engineer is Rob's Merciac.
Rob also composed some of the music for this show.
The executive producer of audio is Claudina Bade,
and the managing editor of audio is Andrea Valdez.
I'm Ann Applebaum.
Over the past year, as I watched Donald Trump demand unprecedented new powers,
I wondered, don't he and his team fear that these same powers
could one day be used by a different administration
and a different president
to achieve very different goals?
Well, maybe they are afraid.
And maybe that's why they're using their new tools
to change our institutions
even to alter the playing field
in advance of midterm elections later this year
to make sure their opponents can't win.
Ultimately, destroying trust is the currency of autocrats.
We could win,
but we are very, very, very likely.
to lose if we keep treating this as business as usual.
Reporting on the sweeping changes unfolding in our country and preparing you to think about
what might happen next.
The new season of Autocracy in America, available now.
