Heavily minimal, a middle ground between theory and research it seems

"That's the whole point of good propaganda. You want to create a slogan that nobody's going to be against, and everybody's going to be for. Nobody knows what it means, because it doesn't mean anything."
reflective medium-paced

3.5/4
informative reflective medium-paced
informative inspiring fast-paced

Short and concise, it's educational on manufactured consent and on how democracies (particularly the US) must subject themselves to the same moral standards that they preach.
challenging informative reflective fast-paced
informative reflective medium-paced

Noam deserves his own public holiday.

Detailed examples of American atrocities inflicted throughout the 20th century thanks to propoganda. Only a little detail in how such propoganda develops, who by and how to keep it evolving (but it is a little dated). 

The book was quite disappointing given the author's reputation. There was nothing particularly revelatory inside, it contained lots of vague assertions that begged the question, lacked sufficient context to be accessible to a variety of audiences, and it had a thoroughly distressing lack of references and supporting citation. The questions it suggested we ask and the introspection it stated we fail to perform is appropriate but the rhetorical trappings leave much to be desired.