Post-War Propaganda
Post-war propaganda continued to portray, argue, and advertise ideas from during a war even after the war ended. Many examples of Post-war propaganda were threats to the citizens. This poster which was shown to the US citizens in the 1950s portrays a clear form of Post-War Propaganda because the government did not want the citizens to question the government. It was published after the World War II ended, during the Cold War, in which both the Soviet Union and the US tried to amalgamate resources in hopes of threatening each other with nuclear power. Because they were threatening each other which caused possible danger, the United States issued many forms of Post-War Propaganda which forced the citizens to listen to the government or else there will be great peril. The problem was that these slogans were treated as if they were actual policies for dealing with social needs, which was not always the case. This type of propaganda also collided with the Democratic theory which stated that citizens could form respectable opinions because many of the propaganda were forcing the citizens to feel or act in a specific way.