> It's insane they'd put something that brazen in a film. Literally telling you what they do.
The process is to create characters, have them say something based/true, and then ruin their reputation in some way, and thus ruin the ideas they expressed by association. For example they commit something openly malevolent and become overtly antagonists. It's meant to villainize ideas via association (it includes other logical fallacies as well).
So when someone says "Since the beginning of time, The Jew is using the black as muscle against you", you'll think - that's what the bad guys said in the movie, right?
The association with Nazis is another way to do it. EVERYTHING they say or stand for is already villainized because they are of a group that has been thoroughly villainized before. So the viewer will by default always consider what evil plan they have when they do anything first. It's basically expected in movies that Nazis do something evil, and indeed *in movies* it usually is that way.
Just from the top of my head - Breaking Bad. There is a group of Nazis (or "White Supremacists"), whereas that barely matters for the plot, but then a White child shows up on a bike who witnessed how they did a heist from a train. Todd immediately shoots him, the protagonists are shocked, but the Nazis do not care much.
Intent: Walter White became oh-so evil as to cooperate with Nazis; also look how evil Nazis are.
> A faux pas that went right over the heads of everyone who watched it.
It was fully intentional, and without context, it's easy to dismiss as well. And this fuels the idea that you can dismiss what "Nazis" say without thinking, simply because they are evil.
This raises the bar higher as to introduce people to the jewish problem.
The process is to create characters, have them say something based/true, and then ruin their reputation in some way, and thus ruin the ideas they expressed by association. For example they commit something openly malevolent and become overtly antagonists. It's meant to villainize ideas via association (it includes other logical fallacies as well).
So when someone says "Since the beginning of time, The Jew is using the black as muscle against you", you'll think - that's what the bad guys said in the movie, right?
The association with Nazis is another way to do it. EVERYTHING they say or stand for is already villainized because they are of a group that has been thoroughly villainized before. So the viewer will by default always consider what evil plan they have when they do anything first. It's basically expected in movies that Nazis do something evil, and indeed *in movies* it usually is that way.
Just from the top of my head - Breaking Bad. There is a group of Nazis (or "White Supremacists"), whereas that barely matters for the plot, but then a White child shows up on a bike who witnessed how they did a heist from a train. Todd immediately shoots him, the protagonists are shocked, but the Nazis do not care much.
Intent: Walter White became oh-so evil as to cooperate with Nazis; also look how evil Nazis are.
> A faux pas that went right over the heads of everyone who watched it.
It was fully intentional, and without context, it's easy to dismiss as well. And this fuels the idea that you can dismiss what "Nazis" say without thinking, simply because they are evil.
This raises the bar higher as to introduce people to the jewish problem.
It's television "programming". Don't forget it.