I am an electronics technician, an engineer, a college professor, a wood worker, and a pilot therefore I think that I am reasonably well qualified to make up my own mind as to what I buy.
Wow, I'm sorry, I underestimated your relevant experience in advertising and marketing.
Er, as for me I have purchased three orders of McNuggets in my life some years ago because they were something that I had not had before and they only cost one dollar. By the way, I understand that McDonalds is having revenue problems that all of there increased advertising has not helped a great deal restoring their market share. P.S.: I hardly eat at McDonalds at all any more, since there food is not really all that good.
You missed the point. Why would anyone buy them? Because they obviously do. Oh, BTW, McD's is doing quite well, with same-store sales up 7% in April. And their market share still hovers in the 42% range, in spite of increasing competition and aggressive territorial expansion. Why? Because they have the strongest brand. They invest in it heavily and it pays dividends.
Thanks for admitting your fallibility and I do think that is fair to say that advertising has a bit to do with my buying habits. However you original statement said something far more powerful about the influence of advertising and that is the something which I disagree with.
Sorry, but you're saying you don't think it's happening doesn't contradict my point that you're not SUPPOSED to think it's happening. Think of it like hypnosis... your behavior can be modified, tweaked and exploited, but not forced to do something it would never do consciously.
And that, in conclusion, is why radical madrasses are a real concern and a real threat. They exploit the prejudices, ignorance and fear found in the ir students' own homes. They don't create it, but they reinforce it.