âDespite the abundant evidence of media scholarship over many decadesâfamously presaged by Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky in their 1988 study, Manufacturing Consentâthe majority of citizens in the NATO orbit, and too many beyond it, subscribe to a picture of the world that depends on mainstream media presumptions, fallacies, and fantasies, pedalled to journalists by people in power, usually including State intelligence agencies whose very business is deception. With forensic precision, Simon Foley dissects the consequent journalistic perfidies perpetrated in media coverage of some of the most egregious âBig Liesâ of our time, including the fables of Russia-gate, allegations of Syrian chemical weapons attacks, the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal, âRussian Bountyâ payments and others. To sum up, Understanding Media Propaganda in the 21st Century: Manufacturing Consent Revisited and Revised is a hugely important addition to the critical literature on mainstream journalism.âProfessor Emeritus Oliver Boyd-BarrettAuthor, Media Imperialism and Russia-Gate and Propaganda: Disinformation in the Age of Social MediaâSimon Foleyâs Understanding Media Propaganda in the 21st Century: Manufacturing Consent Revisited and Revised offers an excellent and much-needed critical examination and analysis of how the mainstream media function as a vehicle for official propaganda in our increasingly corporation-dominated post-Cold War world. Covering Russia-gate, the Trump-as-Literal-Hitler narrative, the Skripal affair, the Syrian gas attacks, the official COVID narrative, among other subjects, it is a welcome reappraisal of Herman and Chomskyâs Manufacturing Consent and an essential tool for anyone interested in understanding the production of official ideology and propaganda today.âC.J. HopkinsAward-winning playwright, novelist, and political satiristâThis timely book sets out and then tests Chomskyâs propaganda model through careful analysis of the reporting of seven complex events of international relevance by two left/liberal newspapers: The Guardian and The Irish Times. Foley does not tell you what to think about the events themselves and offers no right/wrong verdicts. Instead, he systematically demonstrates how we can subtly be denied the tools to see beneath the presentational surface, to entertain alternative ways of thinking, and so have more open debates. He exposes and explains how the reporting consistently falls short of ostensive aims to speak truth to power. The mechanisms employed include selection, omission, conflation, and contradiction, as well as the persistent use of interpretation masquerading as fact. Foley shows the ongoing value of the propaganda model, some revisions, and a clear-eyed application.âProfessor Alison EdgleyAuthor, The Social and Political Thought of Noam ChomskyâSimon Foleyâs Understanding Media Propaganda in the 21st Century is a worthy successor to Herman and Chomskyâs Manufacturing Consent. The book meticulously traces the origins and arcs of recent instances of âfake newsâ such as Russia-gate, the gas attacks allegedly perpetrated by the Syrian government and the alleged poisoning of the Skripals in order to demonstrate how the new media propaganda system works, and the role it plays in perpetuating political and economic power relationships. The result is an illuminating and important study of the contemporary media landscape.âDr George SzamuelyJournalist; author of Bombs for Peace: NATOâs Humanitarian War on YugoslaviaâSimon Foley professionally and systematically critically tackles the issue and effect of mass organised persuasive communications by elite political establishment politics on global publics. This is a must-read book for those in need of a critical evaluation and analysis of the contemporary level of cognitive deception and manipulation presently used in Western democracies. The book is every bit as frightening as it is illustrative in its findings. The engineering of public consent is laid bare for the reader.âProfessor Greg SimonsAuthor, The What, How, and Why of Fake NewsâGreat to see this wonderful new book by Simon Foley examining the media as vehicle of elite propaganda question. In line with Herman and Chomskyâs methodology the case studies chosen by the author are suitably taboo-breaking. Similarly, the analysis Foley engages in, via his augmented application of the Propaganda Model, throws up an array of fascinating and illuminating insights into the propaganda role played by the contemporary mainstream media.âDr Matthew AlfordAuthor, Union Jackboot: What Your Media and Professors Don't Tell You about British Foreign PolicyâChallenging liberal assumptions, especially in the media, is always a valuable exercise. Here Simon Foley turns the Herman/Chomsky propaganda thesis round from its more usual targets and deconstructs the Irish Times and the Guardianâs coverage of recent foreign policy controversies. Some of the conclusions about, for example, Syria will ruffle feathers. This book provides a counterpoint to challenge lazy thinking about who is right and who is wrong on coverage of some of the most controversial foreign policy issues of the last decade. Even if I do not agree with many of Simon Foleyâs conclusions it had made me reassess the rigour of my own thinking. A most interesting use of the Herman and Chomsky model.âDr Paul LashmarHead of the Department of Journalism, University of London; investigative journalist; author of Spies, Spin, and the Fourth EstateâSimon Foleyâs Understanding Media Propaganda in the 21st Century: Manufacturing Consent Revisited and Revised provides a tour-de-force of the numerous propaganda narratives of the last five years, ranging from Russia-gate to Syria and COVID-19. If youâve ever wanted to see corporate press narratives debunked and thoroughly analyzed as to the how and the why of their operation and intent, look no further. Foley provides a birdâs eye view of multiple hot-button issues and dissects the operation and motive behind multiple propaganda campaigns of recent memory: that he does so effectively, without engaging in partisanship, is a testimony to the quality of his analysis.âElizabeth VosInvestigative journalist; co-host of Consortium News Live