Public Opinion Essays

  • Public Opinion and Television

    5266 Words  | 11 Pages

    Public Opinion and Television The paper explores how dangerous such an important mass media as TV can be, if too many power is concentrated in just a few hands, and how our perception of reality can be manipulated by the selection and manipulation of information presented on TV. Introduction The following term paper deals with the development of television from its early beginnings in the 1920s up to now. My attention focuses on the powers which influence what is shown on TV and the analysis

  • Capital Punishment and Public Opinion

    915 Words  | 2 Pages

    Capital Punishment and Public Opinion What does the public think about capital punishment in various countries around the world? This paper will examine the outcomes of recent surveys and polls. In Guatemala, a poll on the death penalty taken in Guatemala City, the capital, in June, found that 74% of those interviewed were in favour of the death penalty. 78.5% supported the execution of two men the previous week, who had been sentenced to death for kidnapping. However only 20.5% thought that

  • Public Opinion

    780 Words  | 2 Pages

    can learn about new events, share their opinions, or tell about their day. People now depend on information to keep their lives moving with activities like work, school, traveling, and other regular events. Not only does the media inform the general population, it also tries to persuade and tries to shape the general opinions. The media does this in different shapes and forms like through the internet, television, newspapers, radio, and magazines. Public opinion is known as the attitudes shared by many

  • Public opinion on Gun Control

    2585 Words  | 6 Pages

    Public Opinion on Gun Control The twentieth century was a time of many political assassinations and violent shootings. A nation in shock mourned the deaths of President John Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. At the end of the twentieth century the nation endured rising rates of violent crime, with young people frequently involved as victims and perpetrators and often armed with guns. Between July 1992, and June 30, 1999, there were 358 school-associated violent deaths in the

  • Public Opinion Poll

    997 Words  | 2 Pages

    what exactly a political opinion poll is, and how it works, is something shady and worth some attentions. ‘Public opinion polls are but a statistical snapshot of a certain moment in time’ (Newport, F. et al.,2009). The definition given by Newport is the one I believe get the closest to what an opinion poll is. It is short, but provides profound information. However, some additional conceptualization results necessary: an opinion poll is based on the idea that public opinion,

  • Survey of Public Opinion Regarding Immigrants and Immigration

    1508 Words  | 4 Pages

    Survey of Public Opinion Regarding Immigrants and Immigration My perspective on the issue of US immigration is different than most Americans because I came to the United States as an immigrant. Firsthand, I know what it's like to stand in long lines at the immigration office, hoping to have my number called to speak with a screening officer. I know how hard it is to survive the jobless 6-month parole period while waiting for an immigration interview. And I know what it's like to have my immigration

  • The Pros and Cons of Media Influence of Public Opinion during War

    4350 Words  | 9 Pages

    Media Influence of Public Opinion during War: A Good or Bad Capability? Introduction “More people get their news from ABC News than from any other source,” ABC News proudly boasts. But what exactly do they get? As America delves deeper into the 21st century with an array of social and technological advancements, one facet that continues to impress, revolutionize, and greatly impact American society as we know it comes from the evolution of communication, most notably the digital media.

  • Policy Memo on Recent French Public Opinion Polls

    1578 Words  | 4 Pages

    PS 361 Policy Brief TO: President Barack Obama FROM: Undersecretary of State for European Affairs, Chad Johnson RE: Requested policy memo on recent French public opinion polls. Mr. President, The National Front (aka. Front National, FN) is Frances largest far-right party. In France's 2002 presidential elections, they surprised that nation by coming in second to Jaque Chirac (RPR party.) This was a surprise because polling at the time indicated that the first round would result in the second

  • How Media Influences Public Opinion

    1625 Words  | 4 Pages

    driving force of public opinion. Media sources such as Internet, newspaper, news-broadcasts, etc, play significant roles in shaping a person’s understanding and perception about the events occurred in our daily lives. As long as the newspapers, internet, network television, etc, continued to be easily accessible to the public, the media will continue to have an influence in shaping its opinions. Factors such as agenda-setting, framing and priming help shape the public opinions. Agenda-setting

  • Public Opinion

    1931 Words  | 4 Pages

    the president. And in order to avoid many principal-agent dilemmas, it must be necessary for the people to maintain control of their agent more than once every four years at the ballot box. This control takes the form of public opinion on a daily basis. How exactly does public opinion shape the expansive powers for the President of the United States? Is it more beneficial to the president for achieve policy goals or is it more necessary to constrain the already growing power of the presidency? Over

  • Public Opinion Extraction

    2033 Words  | 5 Pages

    works have been done in the area of public opinion extraction, some works went to find the polarity and others find both polarity and subjectivity. The work has been done for many languages and to serve many of purposes like politics, social services, movie reviews…etc., but unfortunately there is no work has been done for Arabic language. In the following we browsing some of these works: OSVision Opinion Mining [6] is an automatic system which can extract opinions from the Web. The system uses advanced

  • Race Public Opinion

    1066 Words  | 3 Pages

    To fully understand the effects of race on public opinion, one must first define several components of race and racism. First, prejudice refers to some negative attitude against a group to which one does not think that he/she belongs. Second, out-group opinions are those opinions that one group has against members of another group to which the former does not belong. Last, an in-group attachment describes how strongly one identifies with a given group. This attachment can transcend identity into

  • Public Opinion and Polling

    1206 Words  | 3 Pages

    Public Opinion and Polling Americans are showing signs of disaffection with a presidential campaign that is just beginning. The public thinks the press and large campaign contributors are having too much influence on who gets nominated, and a 60% majority thinks voters themselves have too little say. The latest Federal Election Commission, conducted on the heels of protracted controversy about coverage of alleged cocaine use by George W. Bush, found public reservations about news

  • The Impact of the Media on the Vietnam War

    1726 Words  | 4 Pages

    the late 1960s, the low-intensity conflict in Indochina that had been in progress since the end of the Second World War became a full-scaled war. In order for the transition from low-intensity conflict to war to have taken place, a change in the public opinion surrounding the war must have taken place, resulting in the politicians of the time having support for the conflict. When the invasion was initiated, it was proved that the politicians in effect had the press in their pockets: the American press

  • Exploring Frontiers of Thought in Walden

    1144 Words  | 3 Pages

    truth and self in nature. One way that Thoreau urges his readers to find their true selves is making one's self the most important aspect of one's life.  He does this by disregarding public opinion in favor of private opinion.  He says, "Public opinion is a weak tyrant compared with our own private opinion.  What a man thinks of himself that it is which determines, or rather indicates his fate (110)."  In other words, soci... ... middle of paper ... ...nd their connection with it to find

  • Failure of Democracy

    865 Words  | 2 Pages

    reconstruction, the government was far from this philosophy. Public opinion was all but ignored, and all matters were decided by either President or Congress. Southern voice in government policy was essentially nonexistent, and the former states were compelled by military rule to accept northern laws. Lincoln understood that in a democratic nation, the will of the public was very important, and he strove to act in accordance with their opinions. However, with the death of Lincoln, came a temporary end

  • Animal Farm, by George Orwell

    568 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the novel Animal Farm by George Orwell, the pig Napoleon uses specific tactics to gain power and control over the animal farm. Some of these techniques include controlling information through education, scapegoating, use of fear, swaying public opinion and blind obedience. Throughout the novel, the most prominent way that Napoleon gained power was through controlling the education that the animals received. In the beginning of the novel, Snowball believes in educating all of the animals on Animal

  • The Witch Hunt in The Crucible and During the Time of McCarthyism

    1369 Words  | 3 Pages

    hysterical accusation and large scale attacks on a minority. This anticommunist crusade stumbled in 1954, when the hearings were televised allowing the press and public to view McCarthy’s bullying tactics. He suffered a backlash in public opinion, and was then, himself investigated and McCarthy faded from the spotlight overnight. In my opinion, Arthur Miller’s The Crucible takes two of the worst moments in American history, and uses them to demonstrate the pressure on people from society, to conform

  • Habermas’ Between Facts and Norms: Legitimizing Power?

    3383 Words  | 7 Pages

    ABSTRACT: To overcome the gap between norms and facts, Habermas appeals to the medium of law which gives legitimacy to the political order and provides it with its binding force. Legitimate law-making itself is generated through a procedure of public opinion and will-formation that produces communicative power. Communicative power, in turn, influences the process of social institutionalization. I will argue that the revised notion of power as a positive influence that is produced in communicative

  • The Atomic Bomb Changed the World Forever

    2532 Words  | 6 Pages

    Introduction The development and usage of the first atomic bombs has caused a change in military, political, and public functionality of the world today. The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki revolutionized warfare by killing large masses of civilian population with a single strike. The bombs’ effects from the blast, extreme heat, and radiation left an estimated 140,000 people dead. The bombs created a temporary resolution that lead to another conflict. The Cold War was a political standoff between