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Propaganda - Coggle Diagram
Propaganda
information, often biased or misleading, used to promote or publicize a particular belief
it is important to identify and analyze propaganda so people can make informed choices that are not biased or influenced
testimonials
when public or trustable figures give positive reviews or endorsements of certain products or people in order to make others look favorable upon said product
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Red Herring
a distracting tactic to get people to focus on irrelevant information rather than important information in an effort to mislead people
Ad Hominem
a personal attack on a figure or product irrelevant to the issue discussed at hand to shame and frame said product or person
slippery slope
storytelling in a way to mislead people or bring them down a path of extremism in order to convince them to join your cause
Name-calling
using bad words or political cartoons to paint a negative picture of someone in a very broad and unspecific sense
glittering generalities
using incredibly general phrases and pictures to show someone in a positive light, such as posters and slogans that are easy to remember
Card stacking
manipulating data to show only positive or negative things on 2 opposing sides, to make people believe that the information is fair, when it is incredibly bias
Plain folk
appealing to the masses by trying to relate to them in a way to get them to follow you or your ideology
Transfer
Propaganda technique to make one connect 2 random things together and associate them with positivity, such as a presidential candidate and the beer industry
Artificial dichotomy
creation of polarization in order to pit people for or against you to paint yourself as a desired figure