Policenaut
Infidel Defiler
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2007
- Messages
- 2,191
Are they also planning to do polls to test its effectiveness? That would be interesting. I am inclined to believe that it will be seen as ineffective propaganda but who knows.
It's the government. Aren't YOU paying for it in the end?If they follow the regulations they are quite welcome to advertise whatever they want on British TV if they pay for it.
The British government will air ads on Pakistani television urging terrorists to not attack Britain.
I guess they could put up signs with "_____workdays without a suicide attack"Are they also planning to do polls to test its effectiveness? That would be interesting. I am inclined to believe that it will be seen as ineffective propaganda but who knows.
I don't get it either. If what you believe is true then why in the hell publish this article directed at Pakistan? If it will not change anyone's mind then why bother?
Darat was responding to the question "how would you feel if Pakistan started running similar commercials in the UK".It's the government. Aren't YOU paying for it in the end?
There are a LOT of Moslems in pre 1967 Israel, that does not keep Hamas from lobbing rockets into Israel....
Er, how would it "benefit" them?
The approach lacks any obvious pragmatic basis. The Islamic extremists (who I presume are the primary targets) will spin it in one or two of two ways:
...snip...
It has significant propaganda value for the Islamists. They can simultaneously play the "The coward infidels are so weakened they beg us to leave them alone" and the "The imperialists infidels seek to fool you with propaganda, and the Pakistani government allows them for it too is run by infidels".
Combine that with "the government is letting the American and British infidel operate in our country, violating our sovereignty" and you have some good recruiting material.
People in Pakistan can see that headline also.Folks seem to be getting rather carried away with the headline the journalist has used, there is no indication from the article that the adverts will be saying anything like "please don't attack us".
I'm still not getting it; I may just be ignorant, I don't know. I don't get how it would make them any more likely to attack anyone than they already were
That's not the correct quote in the first place.Darat was responding to the question "how would you feel if Pakistan started running similar commercials in the UK".
If this was the case then the Pakistani government would be paying for the commercials run in the UK.
Folks seem to be getting rather carried away with the headline the journalist has used, there is no indication from the article that the adverts will be saying anything like "please don't attack us".
From the article I would say that is not who the campaign is aimed at, it is aimed at providing a counter-balance to the propaganda from the Islamic extremists.
The campaign, the paper said, will be targeted at ‘15-25-year-old males who are less than well-educated and worldly wise, but potentially susceptible to extremist doctrines’.
Hot damn! Britain can be compared to Br'er Rabbit? Wow. I guess it's not much of a "benefit" for terrorists at all, then!"Oh please Brer Fox, whatever you do, please don't throw me into the briar patch."
Hot damn! Britain can be compared to Br'er Rabbit?
Sorry, I did skip a few steps. I was projecting towards (what I thought was) the logical end target of the campaign.
From the article:
If the point of the campaign is to counterbalance oppositional propaganda (presumably to keep the Muslims who are "on the fence" from becoming extremists) then my point stands. People seriously entertaining the perspectives that 1) the Western world is the great Satan and/or 2) Muslims living comfortably in the Western world are not worthy of being considered "true" Muslims will not, in my estimation, be swayed into taking less extreme perspectives by statements to the contrary.
You have stated that you think the intentions of the campaign are worthy; I agree. I have stated that I don’t see how the campaign will effectively result in fewer/no attacks on the UK/extremism/terrorists due to the fact that the extremists will play this campaign like a fiddle to those they recruit and with whom they conspire.
If you think this doesn’t play into the extremists’ sales pitches and motivational doctrines, or that the campaign will in any way make the UK more safe from terrorism, why so?