Mediacracy: Difference between revisions

From Polcompball Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Content deleted Content added
JoeyFloppa (talk | contribs)
JoeyFloppa (talk | contribs)
Line 9: Line 9:
| speaker = Oscar Wilde
| speaker = Oscar Wilde
| source = [https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/wilde-oscar/soul-man/ Soul of Man Under Socialism]
| source = [https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/wilde-oscar/soul-man/ Soul of Man Under Socialism]
}}With the introduction of the radio, television and later the internet in the 20th century the concept of media rule was later expanded upon. Including writers such as the [[File:Conserv.png]] [[Conservatism|conservative]][[File:Con-t.png]] political pundit Kevin P. Philips (who coined the term "Mediacracy"), the [[File:Libsoc.png]] [[Libertarian Socialism|libertarian socialist]] activist Noam Chomsky, the libertarian author Fabian Tassano (who argued that dumbing down of mass media is an effect that ultimately leads to the a society of faux-egalitarianism) and the [[File:Nrx.png]] [[Neoreactionarism|neoreactionary]] blogger Mencius Moldbug (Who argued that the media (along with universities) ultimately have the power to decide the intellectual hegemony of entire countries a power previously afforded to religious institutions).
}}With the introduction of the radio, television and later the internet in the 20th century the concept of media rule was later expanded upon. Including writers such as the [[File:Conserv.png]] [[Conservatism|conservative]] [[File:Con-t.png]] political pundit Kevin P. Philips (who coined the term "Mediacracy"), the [[File:Libsoc.png]] [[Libertarian Socialism|libertarian socialist]] activist Noam Chomsky, the libertarian author Fabian Tassano (who argued that dumbing down of mass media is an effect that ultimately leads to the a society of faux-egalitarianism) and the [[File:Nrx.png]] [[Neoreactionarism|neoreactionary]] blogger Mencius Moldbug (Who argued that the media (along with universities) ultimately have the power to decide the intellectual hegemony of entire countries a power previously afforded to religious institutions).


== Foundations ==
== Foundations ==