Martin Lindstrom in Buyology first dives into the concept of subliminal messaging in Advertising. He brings up examples in all sorts of industries. The one that strikes me the most was in politics where deliberate racial messages are thrust upon us and it seems that very few even cared. Lindstrom writes “Corker and the Republican National Committee produced an ad in which every time the narrator talked about Ford, African tom-tom drums beat, just barely audible, in the background. The kicker lay in the final words: ‘Harold Ford: He’s Just Not Right.’ One could infer that what the Republican National Committee actually meant was ‘he’s just not white’“ (p. 75). We have given up on fighting for rights on advertising, but why? Why do we allow commercials be fundamentally racist and not think through the consequences on Society? For example, a company recently posted an ad on a billboard selling their vodka. The ad read, “Christmas quality, Hanukkah pricing. The billboard was quickly torn down because of its obvious inappropriateness.
This is what the normal should be. We should fight ads like these from even being considered. To do this, we need to enlighten our educational system. We have learned repeatedly, and I have even had to write multiple papers on the Holocaust and Anti-Semitism. I think it is safe to say that one would be able to understand when anything is Anti-Semitic. However, because of our inexplicable national avoidance to discussing slavery and the abuse of African Americans and Black Americans in our society during our schooling, we have not been as critical to racism as we are to the openly discussed Anti-Semitism in Germany.
It should be noted that, yes, there are attacks on sayings and mentions that are racist, but these attacks are on people that are blatantly racist such as Mel Gibson or Kramer from Seinfeld. However, what about the racism that is in our high school textbooks. The lack of a complete, analytical view of our founding fathers, and those that have followed their example. There are racial motives in every institution that we observe today including museums, schools, the DMV. Nevertheless, perhaps it is all just ritual.
We are for the most part, subliminally racist. The messages we send to our children and the future are clearly not thought out completely. Lindstrom writes, “In an increasingly standardized, sterilized, homogenous world… rituals help us differentiate one brand from another. And once we find a ritual or brand we like, isn’t there a lot of comfort in having a particular blend of coffee to brew every morning, a signature shampoo with a familiar smell, or a favorite make of running sneaker we buy year after year?” These things make us feel comfortable. It is comfortable for the majority of people to associate black clothing with “the bad guy” as Moore describes in an article in a book titled Beyond Heroes and Holidays. When the next time you are shopping, it is important to look through the ritual of the product, you are buying and instead evaluate the subliminal messages being processed.