by Kaj » Sat 17 Oct 2009, 09:56:47
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cloud9', 'I')solated individuals can do little, reread your history of the first world war.
Absolutely. Thus the imperative of networks amongst activist groups, even if their causes do not frame the whole problem.
Btw. are you talking about WW1 war propaganda or what? WW1 is quite a big topic.
Civil society has grown massively for the better in the past 100 years.
In 1914 was common knowlege that Europe owned the world, that women and ethnic minorities were inferior underlings, that gassing bombing and otherwise massacring third-worlders was acceptable. The term 'propaganda' was used openly. There was no need to hide these facts.
Well people don't stand for these things anymore when they see them. I'm not saying barbarity doesn't go on to some degree, but it is certainly more constrained. This is thanks to social movements which are out there and still growing, but are often unseen because of the corporate media screen.