aeon | Over the past century, more than a few great writers have expressed
concern about humanity’s future. In The Iron Heel (1908), the American
writer Jack London pictured a world in which a handful of wealthy
corporate titans – the ‘oligarchs’ – kept the masses at bay with a
brutal combination of rewards and punishments. Much of humanity lived
in virtual slavery, while the fortunate ones were bought off with
decent wages that allowed them to live comfortably – but without any
real control over their lives.
In We (1924), the brilliant Russian writer Yevgeny Zamyatin,
anticipating the excesses of the emerging Soviet Union, envisioned a
world in which people were kept in check through pervasive monitoring.
The walls of their homes were made of clear glass, so everything they
did could be observed. They were allowed to lower their shades an hour
a day to have sex, but both the rendezvous time and the lover had to be
registered first with the state.
In Brave New World (1932), the British author Aldous Huxley pictured a
near-perfect society in which unhappiness and aggression had been
engineered out of humanity through a combination of genetic engineering
and psychological conditioning. And in the much darker novel 1984
(1949), Huxley’s compatriot George Orwell described a society in which
thought itself was controlled; in Orwell’s world, children were taught
to use a simplified form of English called Newspeak in order to assure
that they could never express ideas that were dangerous to society.
These are all fictional tales, to be sure, and in each the leaders who
held the power used conspicuous forms of control that at least a few
people actively resisted and occasionally overcame. But in the
non-fiction bestseller The Hidden Persuaders (1957) – recently released
in a 50th-anniversary edition – the American journalist Vance Packard
described a ‘strange and rather exotic’ type of influence that was
rapidly emerging in the United States and that was, in a way, more
threatening than the fictional types of control pictured in the novels.
According to Packard, US corporate executives and politicians were
beginning to use subtle and, in many cases, completely undetectable
methods to change people’s thinking, emotions and behaviour based on
insights from psychiatry and the social sciences.
Most of us have heard of at least one of these methods: subliminal
stimulation, or what Packard called ‘subthreshold effects’ – the
presentation of short messages that tell us what to do but that are
flashed so briefly we aren’t aware we have seen them. In 1958,
propelled by public concern about a theatre in New Jersey that had
supposedly hidden messages in a movie to increase ice cream sales, the
National Association of Broadcasters – the association that set
standards for US television – amended its code to prohibit the use of
subliminal messages in broadcasting. In 1974, the Federal
Communications Commission opined that the use of such messages was
‘contrary to the public interest’. Legislation to prohibit subliminal
messaging was also introduced in the US Congress but never enacted.
Both the UK and Australia have strict laws prohibiting it.
Subliminal stimulation is probably still in wide use in the US – it’s
hard to detect, after all, and no one is keeping track of it – but it’s
probably not worth worrying about. Research suggests that it has only a
small impact, and that it mainly influences people who are already
motivated to follow its dictates; subliminal directives to drink affect
people only if they’re already thirsty.
Packard had uncovered a much bigger problem, however – namely that
powerful corporations were constantly looking for, and in many cases
already applying, a wide variety of techniques for controlling people
without their knowledge. He described a kind of cabal in which
marketers worked closely with social scientists to determine, among
other things, how to get people to buy things they didn’t need and how
to condition young children to be good consumers – inclinations that
were explicitly nurtured and trained in Huxley’s Brave New World.
Guided by social science, marketers were quickly learning how to play
upon people’s insecurities, frailties, unconscious fears, aggressive
feelings and sexual desires to alter their thinking, emotions and
behaviour without any awareness that they were being manipulated.
By the early 1950s, Packard said, politicians had got the message and
were beginning to merchandise themselves using the same subtle forces
being used to sell soap. Packard prefaced his chapter on politics with
an unsettling quote from the British economist Kenneth Boulding: ‘A
world of unseen dictatorship is conceivable, still using the forms of
democratic government.’ Could this really happen, and, if so, how would
it work?
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