> Sue Ellen Browder wrote fake news before “fake news” was ever a thing. Except she prefers not to call it that—not because she’s embarrassed to admit she wrote fake news (although she’s certainly not proud), but because she thinks the term “fake news” is too vague to understand.
> Browder, a Cosmopolitan magazine writer for 20 years, describes what she wrote as “propaganda.”
> The goal? To sell women on the idea that sexual liberation is the path to the single woman’s personal fulfillment.
> “Propaganda is very sophisticated,” Browder tells The Daily Signal. “It’s half-truth, selected truth, and truth out of context.”
> “Propaganda is used not to sell just products,” she adds. “It’s also used to sell ideas.”
>> Sue Ellen Browder wrote fake news before “fake news” was ever a thing. Except she prefers not to call it that—not because she’s embarrassed to admit she wrote fake news (although she’s certainly not proud), but because she thinks the term “fake news” is too vague to understand.
>> Browder, a Cosmopolitan magazine writer for 20 years, describes what she wrote as “propaganda.”
>> The goal? To sell women on the idea that sexual liberation is the path to the single woman’s personal fulfillment.
>> “Propaganda is very sophisticated,” Browder tells The Daily Signal. “It’s half-truth, selected truth, and truth out of context.”
>> “Propaganda is used not to sell just products,” she adds. “It’s also used to sell ideas.”
(post is archived)