Language
Deliberately deceptive language manipulates the audience. This is as true for the use of propaganda for nefarious political purposes, such as voter manipulation, as it is for good old-fashioned maintenance of prejudices via the proliferation of stereotypes. Advertising is replete with manipulative language constructed to sell products and services. Language can be used to distract, impress, persuade, and achieve goals other than the direct communication of thoughts and ideas. Specific techniques such as vicious abstraction, weasel words, and suppressed quantification used to manipulate and deceive for the purposes of social control.
Some specific techniques of manipulative language are used so often, that they seem like a natural part of human discourse. Becoming aware of deceptive language can be summarily difficult. Suppressed quantification is one deliberately deceptive use of language that is common enough in everyday discourse that it can go unnoticed. As Harris (2000) points out, "Suppressed quantification occurs quite commonly in everyday discourse, largely because it has become an ingrained...
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