Messaging & Intro to George Lakoff
Some ideas from George Lakoff include:
đ§© 1. The Core Idea of âFramingâ
Lakoffâs central claim is that the way we think is shaped by mental âframes.â
A frame is a structure of concepts that organizes how we perceive and interpret the world.
- A frame defines what counts as relevant, what causes what, who is responsible, and what moral lessons are drawn.
- When we hear or use words, those words activate certain frames in our minds â often unconsciously.
Example:
âTax reliefâ
This phrase activates a frame in which taxes are an affliction, the taxpayer is a victim, and the government is a villain â implying that cutting taxes is âhelpingâ or ârescuing.â
By contrast:
âPublic investmentâ
activates a frame in which taxes fund shared goods, cooperation, and future benefit.
So, frames shape political reasoning before facts are even considered.
đ 2. How Frames Work in the Mind
- Lakoff draws from cognitive linguistics â meaning and reasoning arise from embodied experience, not just logic or abstract rules.
- Frames are stored in neural circuits: repeated language and experience make them stronger.
- When a frame is activated, it inhibits competing frames.
â Hearing one kind of story about an issue (âcrime as warâ) makes it harder to think in another (âcrime as public healthâ).
Thatâs why Lakoff warns: âDonât negate your opponentâs frame.â
If you say âDonât think of an elephant,â youâve already activated the âelephantâ frame.
đ§ 3. âValuesâ and Moral Systems
Lakoff argues that politics is really a conflict of moral worldviews, each built on different core values â and these are structured by family metaphors.
Two main moral models (especially in U.S. politics):
| Model | Metaphor | Core Values | Typical Associations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strict Father | The nation as a family with a strong father who enforces discipline | Authority, self-reliance, punishment for wrongdoing, moral order | Conservative worldview |
| Nurturant Parent | The nation as a family where parents care and empower | Empathy, fairness, protection, helping others grow responsibly | Progressive worldview |
Each side sees its values as moral truths.
So, for example, âfreedomâ means different things depending on the frame:
- For conservatives: freedom from government interference (strict-father autonomy).
- For progressives: freedom to realize oneâs potential (nurturant support).
đ§ 4. Why âFramingâ Matters Politically
Lakoffâs point is that facts alone rarely change minds.
People interpret facts through frames that align with their moral values.
Thus, successful political communication requires:
- Knowing which frames your audience uses,
- Framing your own ideas in terms of shared values, not just data,
- Avoiding the repetition of opponentsâ frames (which strengthens them).
đ 5. Key Books
If you want to go deeper, Lakoffâs main works on this are:
- Donât Think of an Elephant! (2004, updated 2014) â practical, political focus.
- Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think (1996, expanded 2016) â theoretical foundation.
- The Political Mind (2008) â about cognitive science, metaphors, and how the brain processes politics.
- Metaphors We Live By (with Mark Johnson, 1980) â not political per se, but introduces the idea that metaphor is conceptual, not just linguistic.

Guide to how this becomes practical ie;
Hereâs how to recognize and decode frames when you encounter political language, news coverage, or even everyday conversations.
đ§ 1. Look for the Metaphors Behind the Words
Frames are often built from conceptual metaphors â everyday images that structure complex issues.
| Example phrase | Hidden metaphor (frame) | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| âWar on drugsâ | Crime is war | We must defeat an enemy, not heal addiction. |
| âMoral decayâ | Society is a body | Immorality is a disease; needs cleansing or discipline. |
| âEconomic engineâ | The economy is a machine | Needs to be fueled, tuned, fixed â people are parts. |
| âTax reliefâ | Tax is an affliction | Government is a burden, taxpayers are victims. |
When you hear strong metaphorical words â war, fight, drain, fix, cleanse, save â ask yourself:
âWhat picture of the world is this activating?â
đïž 2. Notice Who the Actors Are
Frames often assign roles: hero, victim, villain, rescuer.
- âHardworking taxpayersâ â hero
- âWelfare cheatsâ â villain
- âGovernment handoutsâ â villainous rescuer
- âSmall businessesâ â virtuous underdogs
Ask:
âWho is being made morally good or bad in this story?â
âWhose agency is emphasized or erased?â
If government is always the villain and the market the hero, thatâs a Strict Father moral frame.
If government is the caring parent that ensures fairness, thatâs a Nurturant Parent frame.
đ° 3. Check for Moral Language Disguised as Facts
Lakoff says thereâs no such thing as purely neutral language in politics â words carry values.
Example:
- âEntitlement programsâ implies undeserved claims.
- âSocial insuranceâ implies shared protection.
Both describe the same thing (Social Security, Medicare) but invoke different moral logic.
So, when reading headlines, notice adjectives:
- âburdensome,â âreckless,â âresponsible,â âjob-killing,â âfamily-friendlyâ â each reflects a value, not just a fact.
đ§© 4. Identify Implicit Goals and Causation
Frames determine what counts as the cause of a problem and what the âsolutionâ looks like.
Example:
- âCrime is caused by moral weaknessâ â solution = punishment.
- âCrime is caused by poverty and neglectâ â solution = social support.
Different frames produce completely different policy conclusions even with the same data.
Ask:
âWhat is being assumed about why this problem exists?â
âWhat kind of solution sounds ânaturalâ in this frame?â
đ§ 5. Be Aware of Negations and Traps
Lakoff warns: âDonât use your opponentâs language to rebut them.â
When someone says âDonât think of an elephant,â your brain activates the âelephantâ frame â even if youâre denying it.
So instead of saying:
âWeâre not against freedom.â
You would reframe:
âWe stand for the freedom to live with dignity.â
That is, replace the frame â donât argue within it.
đ° 6. Watch for Journalistic Neutrality Framing
Even âobjectiveâ reporting often adopts dominant frames unconsciously:
- âLaw and orderâ frame: emphasizes crime as moral threat, legitimizes crackdowns.
- âMiddle class tax reliefâ frame: presumes taxes are harm, not contribution.
- âBorder crisisâ frame: activates invasion metaphor, fear, defense.
Journalists often inherit these metaphors from official sources.
Lakoff calls this the âframing trap of balanceâ â appearing neutral but reinforcing one moral systemâs assumptions.
đ§© 7. Practice Reframing
Once you spot a frame, try rewriting it with a different moral logic.
Example:
| Original | Reframed |
|---|---|
| âWelfare dependencyâ | âEconomic securityâ |
| âClimate change regulationâ | âClean energy freedomâ |
| âTax burdenâ | âShared investment in our futureâ |
| âBorder protectionâ | âFair and humane immigration systemâ |
Youâre not changing facts â youâre changing the story those facts live in.
đȘ¶ 8. How to Train Your Ear
- Highlight key nouns and verbs in an article.
Ask what metaphors they imply. - Look for repetition. Frames are strengthened by repeated phrases.
- Compare two sidesâ language on the same issue â note how each defines morality, responsibility, and identity.
- Write both frames side by side. This makes their moral contrast visible.
Would you like me to make a practical worksheet (in table format) you could print â with columns like âPhrase,â âFrame it invokes,â âOpposing frame,â âYour reframe versionâ?
Itâs an easy way to practice spotting and reshaping frames in real-world examples (news headlines, campaign slogans, etc.).

