Squealer uses tactics instead of manipulation when he speaks to the animals in "Animal Farm" to justify the actions of the pigs and maintain their power by persuading the other animals that the pigs' decisions are for the greater good of the farm. By using tactics like logic and rhetoric, Squealer is able to present the pigs as capable leaders and deceive the other animals into believing their lies.
Squealer is the one who set the record straight that the animals had never passed a rule against dealing with humans. Squealer is a pig in the book, Animal Farm, by George Orwell.
Boxer was the one who disagree with the explanation that Squealer said about Snowball.
In Chapter 8 of Animal Farm the animals, except Boxer, don't know why Squealer fell off the ladder because they don't understand that he has been changing the Seven Commandments to suit the purposes of Napoleon the entire time. The also don't know that he is drunk, which was previously a commandment punishable by death.
The animals are more realistically drawn than the humans.
the pigs fool the other animals by manipulating facts and figures to prove they are producing more and are much better off than they have ever been before. Nobody can dispute facts! Not even today.
Squealer.
Squealer represents the media. Squealer continually changes his story in order to get the animals to believe what Napoleon wants them to believe. Every time the animals think that things are not right, Squealer comes to tell them a new story that explains how everything is ok. For example, when the animals see the pigs breaking the "No Animal Shall Sleep in a Bed" commandment, Squealer alters the story slightly to "No Animal Shall Sleep in a bed with sheets" making the pigs in compliance with the rules of Animal Farm.
he is the man behind the curtain
Squeler
Squealer is the pig responsible for spreading the propaganda of Napoleon to the other residents of the farm. Squealer uses his skill at jargon and speech to keep the animals firmly under napoleons control.
Squealer (a persuasive propagandist) says that Napoleon would let the animals make their own decisions, but that they might make some "wrong" ones that would be harder to undo.
Squealer tries to portray Snowball as a traitor and a threat to the farm by spreading lies and manipulating the animals' perceptions. He blames Snowball for all the farm's problems and claims that Snowball was in league with humans to destroy Animal Farm. Squealer uses fear tactics and propaganda to paint Snowball in a negative light, turning the animals against him completely.
Squealer uses tactics instead of manipulation when he speaks to the animals in "Animal Farm" to justify the actions of the pigs and maintain their power by persuading the other animals that the pigs' decisions are for the greater good of the farm. By using tactics like logic and rhetoric, Squealer is able to present the pigs as capable leaders and deceive the other animals into believing their lies.
When George Orwell describes Squealer as being able to "turn black into white", he is in fact referring to Squealer's persuasive skill. In other words, Squealer has enough persuasive talent to be able to convince the animals in Animal Farm that black is white or vice-versa.
just beacause
In George Orwell's "Animal Farm," Squealer misleadingly informs the other animals that Boxer, the hardworking cart-horse, is being taken to a veterinary hospital after he collapses. In reality, Boxer is being sent to a glue factory. Squealer manipulates the truth to maintain control and prevent panic among the animals, showcasing the theme of propaganda in the story.