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big lie
noun
- a false statement of outrageous magnitude employed as a propaganda measure in the belief that a lesser falsehood would not be credible.
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of big lie1
Example Sentences
Next, Dahlia Lithwick talks to Wendy Weiser, vice president for democracy at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law School, about another Trumpian inversion of reality: his executive order titled âPreserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Electionsâ, which in fact is not about election integrity, but instead an extension of the Big Lie election theory that could disenfranchise millions of eligible voters.
It's just that now that he believes that he's achieved vindication for his Big Lie about the 2020 election and all the criminal and civil investigations from which he escaped, he's demonstrating that he'll use the power of the United States government to punish any offender if they look at him sideways.
It sounded like a new Trumpian Big Lie â a story invented to justify siding with Putin.
As I stated recently, the new big lie is that Trump won in a landslide and this authorizes him to turn the world upside down.
Trump's Diet Coke addiction has long been used by the grifter-in-chief to sell his fans on the big lie of his career: that, beneath all the private jets and over-the-top gilded decor, he's a "regular" guy just like them.
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More About Big Lie
What doesÌębig lie mean?
The term big lie refers to a false claim (especially a particularly outrageous one) thatâs contrary to something that is firmly established or widely known to be true.
The term is also used as the name of a tactic (often called the big lie) that relies on the telling of a big lie for the purpose of propagandaâthe spread of information to promote or support a particular agenda, especially a political one.
The term and the tactic are closely associated with Adolf Hitler and Nazi propaganda. In this context, the term is sometimes capitalized as Big Lie.Ìę
A big lie is often one that can be easily disproved with even a small amount of effort or research. However, the outrageousness of the lie is part of how it works.
The theory behind the use of a big lie is that those who hear it are more likely to believe it (or less likely to question it) simply because it sounds so outrageous. In other words, a person who accepts a big lie as true probably does so because they think it would be absurd for those making the claim to be so bold as to tell a lie thatâs so obviously false.
Telling a big lie often involves telling it repeatedly and shamelesslyâwith the attitude that it is not only true but obvious. A big lie allows the teller to use it to cover all kinds of âsmallerâ lies and justify wrongdoing in the context of the false reality that the big lie creates.
Example: When reality doesnât suit their needs, some politicians use a big lie to create an alternative reality in which they are right and everyone else is wrong.
Where doesÌębig lie come from?
The first records of the term big lie in English come from around the 1940s. The term is thought to have first appeared in the English translation of Adolf Hitlerâs 1925 autobiography Mein Kampf.
In the book, Hitler states his belief that the propaganda tactic he identifies as âthe big lieâ is effective because the common people are used to using and hearing small lies but not âlarge-scale falsehoodsââthus making it more likely that they will believe a big lie when they hear it. Hitler claims that this is true even when people are presented with contradictory evidence, because they tend to believe those in authority.
The passage in which he discusses the concept appears in the context of the bookâs pervasive anti-Semitism. In a stunningly brazen (but representative) example of the use of a big lie, Hitler makes the obviously false claim that the concept of the big lie was invented and was being actively used by the Jewsâthe very people he was wielding it against.
The further use of such misinformation and propaganda tactics by Nazi Germany and its leaders (including Nazi propaganda director Joseph Goebbels) is well documented. Chief among the big lies spread by the Nazis were claims that Jews were to blame for Germanyâs troubles, including its defeat in World War I and its subsequent economic devastation. In this way, the big lie helped Hitler and the Nazis to perpetrate the Holocaust. Holocaust denialâthe claim that the Holocaust and the Nazisâ systematic murder of millions of people never actually occurredâis another example of a big lie.
Why isÌębig lie trending?
The term gained widespread attention in early 2021 in the U.S., where it was used in criticisms of President Donald Trumpâs false claims about widespread election fraud in the 2020 presidential election. Trump was defeated in the election by Joseph Biden but repeatedly claimed that the election had been âstolen,â despite no evidence supporting his claims. Biden himself used the term big lie in reference to the repetition of such false claims by Trump and many of his supporters.
Did you know ... ?
What are some other forms related to big lie?
- Big Lie (alternate capitalized spelling)
What are some words that share a root or word element with big lie?Ìę
What are some words that often get used in discussing big lie?
How isÌębig lie used in real life?
The term big lie is typically used in the context of politics and propaganda. Itâs especially associated with Hitler and the Nazi Party. For this reason, accusing someone of using the tactic is serious and often controversial.
Biden invokes Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and says Hawley and Cruz are as much a party to The Big Lie as Trump himself. âItâs the Big Lie,â he says. âThe Big Lie.â
â James Hohmann (@jameshohmann)
1/10. The claim that Trump won the election is a big lie.
â Timothy Snyder (@TimothyDSnyder)
A fascinating, well-researched and terrifying article. What if Stalin & Hitler, impresarios of âthe big lieâ, had had the Internet? When millions believe a lie so deeply that that any contrary evidence must by definition be faked, what is to be done?
â Richard Dawkins (@RichardDawkins)
Ìę
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