Successful propagandists must also discourage dissenters who might disrupt the party line. |
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They rightly insist that the university is not a catechetical school and they are not propagandists. |
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In 1949 George Orwell warned the Foreign Office not to trust 38 people if what it wanted was anti-communist propagandists. |
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Low standards of education have left citizens vulnerable to exploitation by extremists and terrorist propagandists. |
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What this means is that several modern artists no longer wish to see themselves as minions or propagandists of a social mission. |
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Like most propagandists, he measures individuals according to his own rigid standard of how they should have thought and acted. |
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I don't think it was pro-life propaganda, but I do believe that it could be easily used by pro-life propagandists. |
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The propagandists were often as skilful and as devious as the great Prussian Junker himself. |
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The author valuably describes how propagandists depict diplomatic overtures by South Korea and America as quaking capitulations. |
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So why do politicians and their hired economic propagandists say differently? |
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Alone among al-Qaeda propagandists, al-Awlaki was not blindsided by the Arab spring. |
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In this way, they are also the best propagandists of archaeology and can increase support for it in society considerably. |
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Madam Speaker, I am not sure whether the hon. member's speech was his speech or whether it was the propagandists on the other side of the wall. |
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Now, legend has it that the propagandists, leaving the Caucasus, are left with few subjects Chechen to stay a time to Kairouan. |
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Soviet propagandists had none of Mr Kiselev's exaltation, sarcasm and theatricality. |
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Germany under the Kaiser was not the monstrous regime it was made out to be by the propagandists of the British empire at the time the war broke out. |
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What was different from his time on was that propagandists could use mass media such as radio, film and wire services to reach around the world. |
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Kundera was reacting against the efforts of 20th-century totalitarian regimes to refashion novelists as propagandists. |
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Much that passes for discussion is merely the noise made by contending propagandists. |
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Those running the campaign clearly counted on the influence of impressive propagandists and the help they received from an often acquiescent mainstream press. |
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What with talking fetuses, soft-focus lenses, and abortion as a theoretical possibility only, anti-choice propagandists could hardly do it better. |
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This is a lie, and only the most slavish of Russian propagandists are claiming otherwise. |
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There is also the possibility, which in the nature of things must remain shadowy, that military propagandists fostered the rumours as a way of boosting morale. |
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This smacks of the unpleasant tones of revolutionary propagandists of every age, seeing reactionary plots between the cloth and the women in every household rejecting the bright revolutionary future. |
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Ideologists and propagandists, scaremongers and dirigists, backward-thinking patriots and Europhiles from both the right and the left are having a field-day. |
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We send Canadian Department of Justice lawyers around the country like globe-trotting propagandists for the asbestos industry to find new markets and new places to pollute with Canadian asbestos. |
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I think that this should be approached by us, not as PR people or commercial advertisers or propagandists do, that is, to play up an image or particular products or ideas in public. |
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The shock worker campaign propagandists latched on to his achievement, and soon the shock workers became known as Stakhanovites. |
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They were essentially high-ranking propagandists. |
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Soviet propagandists disclaimed responsibility, today Russia evades it. |
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Like most of their countrymen, they are anxious for any information, especially about Iraq itself, that is unfiltered by government propagandists. |
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One outcome is likely to lead to a greater focus on specific areas where propagandists for terrorism are known to be operating, including community centres and gyms. |
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They were, in modern parlance, propagandists and spinmeisters. |
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It is not history if it is written by gossip-mongers and propagandists. |
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Such has been the stuff of dark propagandists throughout the centuries. |
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These messages contain such huge and monstrous distortions of the truth that we have to go back to history's most famous propagandists in order to find exact comparisons. |
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We are not propagandists, but people who wish to share true information. |
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But whatever the validity of these views, they do not justify giving propagandists a mass platform as if what they had to say was normal debate on real issues. |
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Bosnian journalists and other international organisations have taken it to task for treading too softly against flagrant propagandists and for moving too slowly to consolidate a saturated media market. |
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It is this contradiction that the agitators and propagandists of socialism are constantly exposing to the people, in order to prepare them for revolution! |
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They are even here in this House: those propagandists of this demon. |
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On one side were government propagandists like the novelist John Buchan and jingoists like Rudyard Kipling and Arthur Conan Doyle, most politicians and military strategists. |
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Nevertheless, if such political objectives had been met, propagandists could boast of increased vehicle production and the completion of another new hospital. |
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Propagandists exhorted the weary populace to rebuild the country, which they did, brick by brick, despite the harangues. |
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Propagandists and perpetrators were not only from the far Right, but also from the Left. |
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