Answer:
"Bandwagon Propaganda" Jump on the bandwagon! Everyone is doing that! Can you think of a time when someone tried to make someone join the crowd against their will?" If so, that's a type of propaganda called "Bandwagon Propaganda." "Over 10 billion sold" is a famous slogan for McDonald's that could be used as a modern example. Since everyone does it, it must be nice, right?
"Testimonial propaganda" is like an Air Jordan sneaker. It's a recommendation for a well-known person. A product is better because a well-known person says it is. In the play The Crucible, "This can happen when a good person lends their good name to a cause or testifies on behalf of someone else."
"Propaganda based on stereotypes" Think of any possible racial or sexist stereotypes. Are all of these used to attack people during the trial? In particular, look at how female characters and characters who are not white are portrayed.
"Appeal to Fear or Appeal to Prejudice" comes from the propaganda of "stereotyping," which we already talked about. Who is "us" when it's "them," and who is "us versus them?"
Explanation:
It could be helpful to think about the "goals" of propaganda in general. Propaganda plays on people's feelings to try to change the way they think. Over time, the types of propaganda and media (plays, radio, TV, and the Internet) that have been used have changed, but the role of propaganda has stayed the same.
This is my opinion only so please feel free to alter as you see fit.
(Open a book) is the answer to your question.
What are you looking for an answer or what is your question?
Answer:
The Fourteenth Amendment fails to reference education.
Explanation:
plaintiffs and others similarly situated
Answer:
In this situation you would want to send this screenshot to your teacher because this question is broken, the underlined part is the name of the excerpt which would not work with the question. I've had to do this myself plenty of times in K12 because no one checked question before they go to students. :/