Post by UnumPost by CatoniPost by UnumPost by CatoniPost by Unumhttps://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/dec/03/world-bank-invest-climate-change
The World Bank is to make about $200bn (lb157bn) available to fund action on
climate change from 2021-25, helping countries adapt to the effects of warming
and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
What a sickening total waste of money..... The elite bureaucrats running that internationalist insitution are mentally damaged brainwashed morons...
Yawn, cartooni is just a stinking pile of hate.
Prove my facts wrong..... or is ad hominem avoidance all you have left.. ? ? ?
Never have seen cartooni come up with any facts. Prove that your
brainless rant is right, you tedious pile of hate.
He's too busy playing the victim after his rant about
"mentally damaged brainwashed morons".
Total waste of O2.
--
[PR failure; how to avoid own goals:]
Tiger Woods' Public Relations Failures
technorati.com/business/article/tiger-woods-public-relations-failures/
12 Dec 2009 ... A case study on how not to handle a public relations
crisis. ... you may think of him being back on the golf course in the
distant future, one thing ...
When PR failures go viral: lessons to be learned
www.theglobeandmail.com/...failures...lessons.../article4389586/
19 Jul 2012 ... Public relations and marketing professionals spend a lot of
time looking for ways to amplify their story. A home run is hit when they
can extend ...
[The long version:]
PR Crisis Communication and Mistakes
marketing.about.com/od/crisis_communication/
Learn what you need to know about developing a crisis communication
plan for your business and how to avoid common PR mistakes that
companies make.
Palin Goes Rogue on Paul Revere's Ride
When you're running for president -- or doing a national bus tour
while teasing the press that you might run for president -- everything
you say is fair game. Especially whatever you say in front of a TV
camera. So when Sarah Palin was asked about Paul Revere and gave a
mangled summary of his ride, it made the news. Gaffes happen to every
public...
3 Key Lessons from the Charlie Sheen PR Debacle
When professional athletes, politicians or rock stars self-destruct,
people naturally pay attention to the celebrity train wreck. Charlie
Sheen's fiery wreckage certainly caught our attention. He did things
different -- he didn't go into hiding or rehab. He took control of his
own publicity and media appearance. He created internet memes at...
Egypt: The First Twitter Revolution?
We may be witnessing the first revolution that started out with a
Twitter hashtag: #jan25. If it succeeds, it will be in no small part
due to a public relations failure by Hosni Mubarak, ruler of Egypt
since 1981. Organizers used Twitter and other social media to start
protests on January 25, despite the fact that such protests are not
allowed...
Arnold Schwarzenegger Terminates His Good Public Image
Scandals involving public figures usually revolve around two things:
money or sex. The worst ones, however, are really about something else
entirely: secrecy, betrayal and hypocrisy. The cover-up is worse than
the crime. Arnold Schwarzenegger hid the fact that he fathered a child
with a maid who worked for his family for 20 years. This scandal...
Weinergate: The Fall of a Promising Politician
How does a random photo on Twitter become fodder for scandal that
might bring down a member of Congress -- a man who many expected to be
the next mayor of New York City? There are key differences between the
kinds of mistakes that get forgiven by the press and public and the
kind that don't. The two key questions are these: First, can you see...
How Lies Work
A rumor can persist when there's a vacuum, especially when it's
referring to events that haven't happened yet. Lies are different. The
facts are known. The tough thing is for a lot of people -- because of
ideology, personal beliefs and other reasons -- don't care about proof
and evidence and facts. They want to believe certain things, whether
they are true or not.
Examples of Rumors and Public Relations
The biggest corporations in the world use rumors. Every day, rumors
cause stock prices to rise and fall, competitors to start madly
developing products -- or abandoning them. Public officials, political
campaigns and advocacy groups traffic in rumors to hurt rivals, kill
legislation or advance an agenda. Many big corporations and public
figures have a policy of never commenting on rumors. This is typically
smart, because rumors only get stronger when you feed them with
attention.