Indeed, it was nationalist propaganda, at the service of leaders who still dominate the main political parties, that fueled the war.
Consequently, most focused on generating nationalist propaganda through the distribution of underground newspapers.
Since that dream cannot come true for many, if not most people, they are now subjected to aggressive nationalist propaganda.
But the coming of the war and the inevitable nationalist propaganda that followed made it difficult to sustain this already nuanced position.
From 1930, he began to express extreme nationalist propaganda and became a follower of Nazism.
During the Irish War of Independence he wrote nationalist propaganda.
"We do not find it easy to abandon several hundred years of nationalist propaganda."
In 1951, while still a student, he was arrested by Soviet authorities and accused of religious and nationalist propaganda.
It lasted six months before he was tossed out for spreading nationalist propaganda.
Mais would also include nationalist propaganda demonstrating forgotten Jamaican culture and history.