Similarities Between Squealer and Propaganda during the Russian Revolution Jokes told about the Soviet Union during the Stalin Era were not just jokes. A joke about a political official could have someone sent to a dredded gulag for up to three year where they did hard work, and had very little to eat. This heavy censorship of negative comments of officials allowed the government to run without any problems, and allowed them to influence the minds of Soviet people to believe the propaganda by Soviet artists and common people. In the book Animal Farm, Squealer, the second in command to leader Napoleon, represents propaganda of the Russian Revolution because they both used manipulative tactics to take advantage of their subjects, played …show more content…
The most used propaganda was artwork that depicted everyday life in the USSR. Many times this propaganda was inaccurate and was only used to better inform the viewer of communist ideals and main goals of the state (Penn). Stalin made the propaganda in his state show the life as he believed it should be, not how it truly is for the people of his country. The main goal was to help the viewer grow in its faithfulness to the communist party and its ideal world. In Animal Farm, Squealer explains to the other animals why the pigs get special privileges on the farm, “The whole management and organization of this farm depend on us…. It is for your sake that we drink that milk and eat those apples”(Orwell 42). The point of view of the working class animals is that if the pigs don’t drink the cows milk, and eat the apples the whole farm will not be able to run accordingly, and that is constantly what Squealer preaches throughout the entire novel. That is what scares the animals the most, because they want the ability to rule themselves and have them all be equals. Squealer and propaganda of the Stalin era was made to manipulate the people to make sacrifices to better the communist idea. If these sacrifices were not made, then the whole country or farm could not run