Top 14 Quotes & Sayings by Vance Packard

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American writer Vance Packard.
Last updated on November 19, 2024.
Vance Packard

Vance Oakley Packard was an American journalist and social critic. He was the author of several books, including The Hidden Persuaders and The Naked Society. He was a critic of consumerism.

The Christian notion of the possibility of redemption is incomprehensible to the computer.
The difference between a top-flight creative man and the hack is his ability to express powerful meanings indirectly.
Rock and roll might be summed up as monotony tinged with hysteria. — © Vance Packard
Rock and roll might be summed up as monotony tinged with hysteria.
Leadership appears to be the art of getting others to want to do something you are convinced should be done.
You can't tell a millionaire's son from a billionaire's.
The most common characteristic of all police states is intimidation by surveillance. Citizens know they are being watched and overheard. Their mail is being examined. Their homes can be invaded.
Leadership appears to be the art of getting others to want to do something you are convinced should be done
In the field of marketing . . . the trend toward selling [has] reached something of a nadir with the unveiling . . . of so-called subliminal projection. That is the technique designed to flash messages past our conscious guard.
Rock 'n Roll is monotony tinged with hysteria.
Furthermore, unlike Man's other great good friend the horse, the cat is no sweating serf of Man. The only labor she condescends to perform is to catch mice and rats, and that's fun.
If the person you are trying to diagnose politically is some sort of intellectual, the chances are two to one he is a Democrat.
As businessmen caught a glimpse of the potentialities inherent in endlessly expanding the wants of people under consumerism, forced draft or otherwise, many began to see blue skies... What was needed was strategies that would make Americans in large numbers into voracious, wasteful, compulsive consumers-and strategies that would provide products assuring such wastefulness. Even where wastefulness was not involved, additional strategies were needed that would induce the public to consume at ever-higher levels.
New pressures are causing ever more people to find their main satisfaction in their consumptive role rather than in their productive role. And these pressures are bringing forward such traits as pleasure-mindedness, self-indulgence, materialism, and passivity as conspicuous elements of the American character.
At one of the largest advertising agencies in America psychologists on the staff are probing sample humans in an attempt to find how to identify, and beam messages to, people of high anxiety, body consciousness, hostility, passiveness, and so on.
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