[77930] in Daily_Rumour
She Was Fine at Breakfast... Dead by Dinner (Doctor Warning)
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Paul)
Fri May 9 10:52:05 2025
Date: Fri, 9 May 2025 16:37:03 +0200
From: "Paul" <Paul@medicinalkit.shop>
Reply-To: "Laura" <Betty@medicinalkit.shop>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>
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She Was Fine at Breakfast... Dead by Dinner (Doctor Warning)
http://medicinalkit.shop/o9eUBI8qxUKEe_BvHbzyUMPjEhROpW42TK_vF0FR6X_1MTUV
http://medicinalkit.shop/T4H5aupzBld0U4kMsp9hARJqpU4QnYHWXRQdFJ1Bu3YmlMkZZA
es in a negative light, including material that made Americans seem "oblivious to the war or anti-war." Elmer Davis, the head of the OWI, said that "The easiest way to inject a propaganda idea into most people's minds is to let it go through the medium of an entertainment picture when they do not realize they're being propagandized".
The OWI suffered from conflicting aims and poor management. For instance, Elmer Davis, who wanted to "see that the American people are truthfully informed," clashed with the military that routinely withheld information for "public safety". Further, OWI employees grew ever more dissatisfied with "what they regarded as a turn away from the fundamental, complex issues of the war in favor of manipulation and stylized exhortation". On April 14, 1943, several OWI writers resigned from office and released a scathing statement to the press explaining how they no longer felt they could give an objective picture of the war because "high-pressure promoters who prefer slick salesmanship to honest information" dictated OWI decision-making. President Roosevelt's "wait-and-see" attitude and wavering public support for OWI damaged public opin
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">es in a negative light, including material that made Americans seem "oblivious to the war or anti-war." Elmer Davis, the head of the OWI, said that "The easiest way to inject a propaganda idea into most people's minds is to let it go through the medium of an entertainment picture when they do not realize they're being propagandized". The OWI suffered from conflicting aims and poor management. For instance, Elmer Davis, who wanted to "see that the American people are truthfully informed," clashed with the military that routinely withheld information for "public safety". Further, OWI employees grew ever more dissatisfied with "what they regarded as a turn away from the fundamental, complex issues of the war in favor of manipulation and stylized exhortation". On April 14, 1943, several OWI writers resigned from office and released a scathing statement to the press explaining how they no longer felt they could give an objective picture of the war because "high-pressure promoters who prefer slick salesmanship to honest information" dictated OWI decision-making. President Roosevelt's "wait-and-see" attitude and wavering public support for OWI damaged public opin</div>
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