Political
Marketing 101
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
False
advertising in the free market rarely pays. In fact, it can cause
a business to incur serious losses or go bankrupt. This is because
customers who are told that their hotdog is made of 100% beef and
then discover that it is really made of soybeans once they bite
into it will not likely repeat their mistake. Moreover, every time
such customers hear or read one of the ads by the fraudulent hotdog
salesman they will be reminded that they were swindled. They will
be motivated to tell their friends and neighbors about it, and the
swindler will then receive his just financial desserts. He will
not have many repeat customers, the lifeblood of any successful
business.
This
is one way in which the free market penalizes fraud and encourages
truth in advertising. In addition, economic research shows that
it is the companies with the most successful products that tend
to advertise the most intensely, not the companies with marginal
or lousy products. In business, liars understand that at best, they
might get away with it only once.
But
this is not true of government advertising since there is
no free market feedback mechanism in operation. Politicians understand
that voters (their "customers") tend to only remember
what they have said and done over the past couple of months, at
most. They are "rationally ignorant" of most everything
else. Consequently, politicians know that they can lie through their
teeth over and over, as long as they cool it around election time,
when their opponents have every incentive to point out all their
lies and broadcast them to the public.
In
addition, the government has such a loud "voice" that
whenever it wants to, it can drown out all other voices. Every government
bureaucrat is a relentless propagandist for his agency or department;
and the government-run school system has long been designed to indoctrinate
the population in the myth of the benevolent state and the "imperfect"
and "failing" free market. The entire state university
system in America is one giant "think tank" for the promotion
of statism. In short, lying pays in politics much more than it does
in business. It is not just a funny joke to say of a politician,
"if his lips are moving, he’s lying"; it’s generally true
most of the time.
Which
brings us to the latest Big Lie Campaign that is currently
being planned by the Bush administration. According to a September
24 article in the Washington Post entitled "Report:
U.S. Image in Bad Shape," undersecretary of state Karen Hughes,
the Texas political hack and George W. Bush crony who has been rewarded
for her hackspertise with a cushy state department job, will soon
embark on a "listening tour" of the Middle East. The "tour"
is a response to a congressionally-mandated study of "America’s
image" in the Middle East. And guess what: Our image is not
very good.
In
fact, according to the study mandated by the Republican-controlled
Congress, "America’s image and reputation abroad could hardly
be worse." "There is a deep and abiding anger toward U.S.
policies and actions," said the report, written by a panel
that includes a number of former Bush administration State Department
bureaucrats. "[L]arge majorities in Egypt, Morocco and Saudi
Arabia view George W. Bush as a greater threat to the world order
than Osama bin Laden." "In much of the world, the United
States is viewed as less a beacon of hope than a dangerous force
to be countered." (One begins to think that Dick Cheney just
may have been mistaken when he said of the impending invasion of
Iraq on March 16, 2003: "We will in fact, be greeted as liberators.")
The
people of the Middle East see through the neocon lies about a supposed
devotion to "democracy" as the guiding principle of American
foreign policy. "Not only are U.S. policies in the Arab world
scorned," writes the Post, "but the administration’s
promotion of democracy while supporting autocratic governments is
seen as hypocritical . . ." Good point: Why has there been
no criticism of the absence of democracy in Saudi Arabia or Egypt
(where we send our prisoners to be tortured since they are beyond
the protection of the U.S. Constitution there)? One scholar of the
Middle East is quoted as saying that the level of anti-Americanism
is "10 times what it was just a year ago."
The
whole world understands that the Bush administration lied the U.S.
into a war that has needlessly cost almost 2000 American lives,
tens of thousands of civilian deaths in Iraq, and has squandered
hundreds of billions of dollars (everyone, that is, but the editors,
columnists and readership of William F. Buckley, Jr.’s National
Socialist Review). The people of the Middle East are understandably
distrustful of a regime that invades one of their sister countries
in a non-defensive war under false pretenses and then commences
a permanent occupation by building numerous military bases there.
The
only way to improve America’s image abroad is to end the war and
bring all the troops home not only from Iraq, but from the more
than 100 other countries in which the U.S. government meddles with
its "military presence." This will never happen as long
as the Republican Party exists, however, and the Democrats are hardly
any better. One member of the panel that published the study of
America’s image abroad is one F. William Smullen III, Colin Powell’s
former chief of staff. He told the Post in MBA-style business
lingo that ‘It is clear the American brand has been badly damaged."
No kidding. But, Smullen said, "I’m not suggesting we have
to change our policy, but we do need to take and assessment of the
attitudes toward us by people around the world."
So
there you have the Official Line: Don’t even consider changing the
policy that has led to this problem; lie about it. Smullen doesn’t
suggest lying in so many words, but that’s what the administration
obviously intends to do – to create what one of Karen Hughes’s assistants
calls "rapid-response teams" to "counter rumors"
(i.e., cover up the truth). This is reminiscent of the Clinton administration’s
White House "war room" that served a similar purpose.
Condoleezza
Rice has also said that "improving the U.S. image abroad is
one of her top priorities," which is why she recruited Hughes,
Bush’s old campaign propaganda chief. This will not be achieved
by a less belligerent and imperialistic foreign policy, but by a
barrage of Orwellian propaganda that will be faithfully repeated
over and over again by Republican Party media stooges such as Rush
Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, G. Gordon Liddy, The Weekly Standard,
Wall Street Journal editorial board, and others.
For
their complicity in enabling a bumbling fool of a president to wage
an unnecessary war, and for their continued lying about it, every
one of these individuals deserves to be bullwhipped in public.
September
26, 2005
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is
the author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His latest book is How
Capitalism Saved America: The Untold Story of Our Country’s History,
from the Pilgrims to the Present
(Crown Forum/Random House, August 2004).
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
Thomas
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