“Selling Apartheid” focuses on the public relations campaign that South Africa’s apartheid government conducted over a period of decades: creating supposedly neutral front groups that secretly backed South Africa, recruiting Black spokespersons in support of the apartheid government, co-opting reporters and editors through soft bribes such as free trips to Africa.
All of this took place many years ago. But as I read it, I kept thinking about the present day.
At the most fundamental level, “Selling Apartheid” illustrates how a surprising number of people are willing to sell out their values and shill for a horrible government in exchange for cash.
We see echoes of all this in today’s public relations campaigns in favor of obviously bad things: for the tobacco lobby, for unlimited use of fossil fuels, for the governments of dictatorships such as China and Russia.
Yes, this is a book about a South African government that no longer exists. But "Selling Apartheid" offers broader insights into human avarice and unethical public relations campaigns – insights that will help this book remain relevant for many years to come.