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Left Wing Hypocrisy

RimRod | 03.06.2003 15:06

Noam "The Man"

The hypocrisy of Noam Chomsky
by Keith Windschuttle

There’s a famous definition in the Gospels of the hypocrite, and the hypocrite is the person who refuses to apply to himself the standards he applies to others. By that standard, the entire commentary and discussion of the so-called War on Terror is pure hypocrisy, virtually without exception. Can anybody understand that? No, they can’t understand it.
—Noam Chomsky, Power and Terror, 2003
Noam Chomsky was the most conspicuous American intellectual to rationalize the Al Qaeda terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. The death toll, he argued, was minor compared to the list of Third World victims of the “far more extreme terrorism” of United States foreign policy. Despite its calculated affront to mainstream opinion, this sentiment went down very well with Chomsky’s own constituency. He has never been more popular among the academic and intellectual left than he is today.

Two books of interviews with him published since September 11, 2001 both went straight onto the bestseller lists.[1] One of them has since been turned into a film entitled Power and Terror, now doing brisk business in the art-house movie market. In March 2002 the film’s director, John Junkerman, accompanied his subject to the University of California, Berkeley, where in a five-day visit Chomsky gave five political talks to a total audience of no fewer than five thousand people.

Meanwhile, the liberal news media around the world has sought him out for countless interviews as the most promi- nent intellectual opposed to the American response to the terrorist attacks. Newspaper articles routinely open by reminding readers of his awesome intellectual status. A profile headlined “Conscience of a Nation” in the English daily The Guardian declared: “Chomsky ranks with Marx, Shakespeare, and the Bible as one of the ten most quoted sources in the humanities—and is the only writer among them still alive.” The New York Times has called him “arguably the most important intellectual alive.”

Chomsky has used his status, originally gained in the field of linguistics, to turn himself into the leading voice of the American left. He is not merely a spokesman. His own stance has done much to structure left-wing politics over the past forty years. Today, when actors, rock stars, and protesting students mouth anti-American slogans for the cameras, they are very often expressing sentiments they have gleaned from Chomsky’s voluminous output.

Hence, to examine Chomsky’s views is to analyze the core mindset of contemporary radicalism, especially the variety that now holds so much sway in the academic and arts communities.

Chomsky has been a celebrity radical since the mid-1960s when he made his name as an anti-Vietnam War activist. Although he lost some of his appeal in the late-1970s and 1980s by his defense of the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia, he has used September 11 to restore his reputation, indeed to surpass his former influence and stature. At seventy-four years of age, he is today the doyen of the American and much of the world’s intellectual left.

He is, however, an unconventional academic radical. Over the past thirty years, the left in the humanities has been smitten by high theory, especially neo-Marxist, feminist, and postmodernist philosophy out of Germany and France. Much of this material was arcane enough in its own language but in translation it elevated obscurantism to a badge of prestige. It inundated the humanities with relativism both in epistemology and moral philosophy.

In contrast, Chomsky has produced no substantial body of political theory of his own. Nor is he a relativist. He advocates the pursuit of truth and knowledge about human affairs and promotes a simple, universal set of moral principles. Moreover, his political writings are very clear, pitched to a general rather than specialist audience. He supports his claims not by appeals to some esoteric conceptual apparatus but by presenting plain, apparently factual evidence. The explanation for his current appeal, therefore, needs to be sought not in recent intellectual fashions but in something with a longer history.

Chomsky is the most prominent intellectual remnant of the New Left of the 1960s. In many ways he epitomized the New Left and its hatred of “Amerika,” a country he believed, through its policies both at home and abroad, had descended into fascism. In his most famous book of the Sixties, American Power and the New Mandarins, Chomsky said what America needed was “a kind of denazification.”

Of all the major powers in the Sixties, according to Chomsky, America was the most reprehensible. Its principles of liberal democracy were a sham. Its democracy was a “four-year dictatorship” and its economic commitment to free markets was merely a disguise for corporate power. Its foreign policy was positively evil. “By any objective standard,” he wrote at the time, “the United States has become the most aggressive power in the world, the greatest threat to peace, to national self-determination, and to international cooperation.”

As an anti-war activist, Chomsky participated in some of the most publicized demonstrations, including the attempt, famously celebrated in Norman Mailer’s Armies of the Night, to form a human chain around the Pentagon. Chomsky described the event as “tens of thousands of young people surrounding what they believe to be—I must add that I agree—the most hideous institution on this earth.”

This kind of anti-Americanism was common on the left at the time but there were two things that made Chomsky stand out from the crowd. He was a scholar with a remarkable reputation and he was in tune with the anti-authoritarianism of the student-based New Left.

At the time, the traditional left was still dominated by an older generation of Marxists, who were either supporters of the Communist Party or else Trotskyists opposed to Joseph Stalin and his heirs but who still endorsed Lenin and Bolshevism. Either way, the emerging generation of radical students saw both groups as compromised by their support for the Russian Revolution and the repressive regimes it had bequeathed to eastern Europe.

Chomsky was not himself a member of the student generation—in 1968 he was a forty-year-old tenured professor—but his lack of party membership or any other formal political commitment absolved him of any connection to the Old Left. Instead, his adherence to anarchism, or what he called “libertarian socialism,” did much to shape the outlook of the New Left.

American Power and the New Mandarins approvingly quotes the nineteenth-century anarchist Mikhail Bakunin predicting that the version of socialism supported by Karl Marx would end up transferring state power not to the workers but to the elitist cadres of the Communist Party itself.

Despite his anti-Bolshevism, Chomsky remained a supporter of socialist revolution. He urged that “a true social revolution” would transform the masses so they could take power into their own hands and run institutions themselves. His favorite real-life political model was the short-lived anarchist enclave formed in Barcelona in 1936–1937 during the Spanish Civil War.

The Sixties demand for “student power” was a consequence of this brand of political thought. It allowed the New Left to persuade itself that it had invented a more pristine form of radicalism, untainted by the totalitarianism of the communist world.

For all his in-principle disdain of communism, however, when it came to the real world of international politics Chomsky turned out to endorse a fairly orthodox band of socialist revolutionaries. They included the architects of communism in Cuba, Fidel Castro and Che Guevera, as well as Mao Tse-tung and the founders of the Chinese communist state. Chomsky told a forum in New York in December, 1967 that in China “one finds many things that are really quite admirable.” He believed the Chinese had gone some way to empowering the masses along lines endorsed by his own libertarian socialist principles:

China is an important example of a new society in which very interesting and positive things happened at the local level, in which a good deal of the collectivization and communization was really based on mass participation and took place after a level of understanding had been reached in the peasantry that led to this next step.
When he provided this endorsement of what he called Mao Tse-tung’s “relatively livable” and “just society,” Chomsky was probably unaware he was speaking only five years after the end of the great Chinese famine of 1958–1962, the worst in human history. He did not know, because the full story did not come out for another two decades, that the very collectivization he endorsed was the principal cause of this famine, one of the greatest human catastrophes ever, with a total death toll of thirty million people.
Nonetheless, if he was as genuinely aloof from totalitarianism as his political principles proclaimed, the track record of communism in the USSR—which was by then widely known to have faked its statistics of agricultural and industrial output in the 1930s when its own population was also suffering crop failures and famine—should have left this anarchist a little more skeptical about the claims of the Russians’ counterparts in China.

In fact, Chomsky was well aware of the degree of violence that communist regimes had routinely directed at the people of their own countries. At the 1967 New York forum he acknowledged both “the mass slaughter of landlords in China” and “the slaughter of landlords in North Vietnam” that had taken place once the communists came to power. His main objective, however, was to provide a rationalization for this violence, especially that of the National Liberation Front then trying to take control of South Vietnam. Chomsky revealed he was no pacifist.

I don’t accept the view that we can just condemn the NLF terror, period, because it was so horrible. I think we really have to ask questions of comparative costs, ugly as that may sound. And if we are going to take a moral position on this—and I think we should—we have to ask both what the consequences were of using terror and not using terror. If it were true that the consequences of not using terror would be that the peasantry in Vietnam would continue to live in the state of the peasantry of the Philippines, then I think the use of terror would be justified.
It was not only Chomsky who was sucked into supporting the maelstrom of violence that characterized the communist takeovers in South-East Asia. Almost the whole of the 1960s New Left followed. They opposed the American side and turned Ho Chi Minh and the Vietcong into romantic heroes.

When the Khmer Rouge took over Cambodia in 1975 both Chomsky and the New Left welcomed it. And when news emerged of the extraordinary event that immediately followed, the complete evacuation of the capital Phnom Penh accompanied by reports of widespread killings, Chomsky offered a rationalization similar to those he had provided for the terror in China and Vietnam: there might have been some violence, but this was understandable under conditions of regime change and social revolution.

Although information was hard to come by, Chomsky suggested in an article in 1977 that post-war Cambodia was probably similar to France after liberation at the end of World War II when thousands of enemy collaborators were massacred within a few months. This was to be expected, he said, and was a small price to pay for the positive outcomes of the new government of Pol Pot. Chomsky cited a book by two American left-wing authors, Gareth Porter and George Hildebrand, who had “presented a carefully documented study of the destructive American impact on Cambodia and the success of the Cambodian revolutionaries in overcoming it, giving a very favorable picture of their programs and policies.”

By this time, however, there were two other books published on Cambodia that took a very different line. The American authors John Barron and Anthony Paul called their work Murder of a Gentle Land and accused the Pol Pot regime of mass killings that amounted to genocide. François Ponchaud’s Cambodia Year Zero repeated the charge.

Chomsky reviewed both books, together with a number of press articles, in The Nation in June 1977. He accused them of publishing little more than anti-communist propaganda. Articles in The New York Times Magazine and The Christian Science Monitor suggested that the death toll was between one and two million people out of a total population of 7.8 million. Chomsky mocked their total and picked at their sources, showing some were dubious and that a famous photograph of forced labor in the Cambodian countryside was actually a fake.

He dismissed the Barron and Paul book partly because it had been published by Reader’s Digest and publicized on the front page of The Wall Street Journal, both of them notorious anti-communist publications, and partly because they had omitted to report the views of journalists who had been to Cambodia but not witnessed any executions.

Ponchaud’s book was harder to ignore. It was based on the author’s personal experience in Cambodia from 1965 until the capture of Phnom Penh, extensive interviews with refugees and reports from Cambodian radio. Moreover, it had been favorably reviewed by a left-wing author in The New York Review of Books, a publication for which Chomsky himself had often written. Chomsky’s strategy was to undermine Ponchaud’s book by questioning the credibility of his refugee testimony. Acknowledging that Ponchaud “gives a grisly account of what refugees have reported to him about the barbarity of their treatment at the hands of the Khmer Rouge,” Chomsky said we should be wary of “the extreme unreliability of refugee reports”:

Refugees are frightened and defenseless, at the mercy of alien forces. They naturally tend to report what they believe their interlocutors wish to hear. While these reports must be considered seriously, care and caution are necessary. Specifically, refugees questioned by Westerners or Thais have a vested interest in reporting atrocities on the part of Cambodian revolutionaries, an obvious fact that no serious reporter will fail to take into account.
In 1980, Chomsky expanded this critique into the book After the Cataclysm, co-authored with his long-time collaborator Edward S. Herman. Ostensibly about Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, the great majority of its content was a defense of the position Chomsky took on the Pol Pot regime. By this time, Chomsky was well aware that something terrible had happened: “The record of atrocities in Cambodia is substantial and often gruesome,” he wrote. “There can be little doubt that the war was followed by an outbreak of violence, massacre and repression.” He mocked the suggestion, however, that the death toll might have reached more than a million and attacked Senator George McGovern’s call for military intervention to halt what McGovern called “a clear case of genocide.”

Instead, Chomsky commended authors who apologized for the Pol Pot regime. He approvingly cited their analyses that the forced march of the population out of Phnom Penh was probably necessitated by the failure of the 1976 rice crop. If this was true, Chomsky wrote, “the evacuation of Phnom Penh, widely denounced at the time and since for its undoubted brutality, may actually have saved many lives.” Chomsky rejected the charge of genocide, suggesting that

the deaths in Cambodia were not the result of systematic slaughter and starvation organized by the state but rather attributable in large measure to peasant revenge, undisciplined military units out of government control, starvation and disease that are direct consequences of the US war, or other such factors.
After the Cataclysm also presented a much more extended critique of refugee testimony. Chomsky revealed his original 1977 source for this had been Ben Kiernan, at the time an Australian graduate student and apologist for the Pol Pot regime, who wrote in the Maoist-inspired Melbourne Journal of Politics. What Chomsky avoided telling his readers, however, was that well before 1980, the year After the Cataclysm was published, Kiernan himself had recanted his position.
Kiernan had spent much of 1978 and 1979 interviewing five hundred Cambodian refugees in camps inside Thailand. They persuaded him they were actually telling the truth. He also gained a mass of evidence from the new Vietnamese-installed regime. This led him to write a mea culpa in the Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars in 1979. This was a left-wing journal frequently cited by Chomsky, so he must have been aware that Kiernan wrote: “There can be no doubting that the evidence also points clearly to a systematic use of violence against the population by that chauvinist section of the revolutionary movement that was led by Pol Pot.” Yet in After the Cataclysm, Chomsky does not acknowledge this at all.

Kiernan later went on to write The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power and Genocide under the Khmer Rouge 1975–79, a book now widely regarded as the definitive analysis of one of the most appalling episodes in recorded history. In the evacuation of Phnom Penh in 1975, tens of thousands of people died. Almost the entire middle class was deliberately targeted and killed, including civil servants, teachers, intellectuals, and artists. No fewer than 68,000 Buddhist monks out of a total of 70,000 were executed. Fifty percent of urban Chinese were murdered.

Kiernan argues for a total death toll between April 1975 and January 1979, when the Vietnamese invasion put an end to the regime, of 1.67 million out of 7.89 million, or 21 percent of the entire population. This is proportionally the greatest mass killing ever inflicted by a government on its own population in modern times, probably in all history.

Chomsky was this regime’s most prestigious and most persistent Western apologist. Even as late as 1988, when they were forced to admit in their book Manufacturing Consent that Pol Pot had committed genocide against his own people, Chomsky and Herman still insisted they had been right to reject the journalists and authors who had initially reported the story. The evidence that became available after the Vietnamese invasion of 1979, they maintained, did not retrospectively justify the reports they had criticized in 1977.

They were still adamant that the United States, who they claimed started it all, bore the brunt of the blame. In short, Chomsky still refused to admit how wrong he had been over Cambodia.

Chomsky has persisted with this pattern of behavior right to this day. In his response to September 11, he claimed that no matter how appalling the terrorists’ actions, the United States had done worse. He supported his case with arguments and evidence just as empirically selective and morally duplicitous as those he used to defend Pol Pot. On September 12, 2001, Chomsky wrote:

The terrorist attacks were major atrocities. In scale they may not reach the level of many others, for example, Clinton’s bombing of the Sudan with no credible pretext, destroying half its pharmaceutical supplies and killing unknown numbers of people.
This Sudanese incident was an American missile attack on the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in Khartoum, where the CIA suspected Iraqi scientists were manufacturing the nerve agent VX for use in chemical weapons contracted by the Saddam Hussein regime. The missile was fired at night so that no workers would be there and the loss of innocent life would be minimised. The factory was located in an industrial area and the only apparent casualty at the time was the caretaker.

While Chomsky drew criticism for making such an odious comparison, he was soon able to flesh out his case. He told a reporter from salon.com that, rather than an “unknown” number of deaths in Khartoum, he now had credible statistics to show there were many more Sudanese victims than those killed in New York and Washington: “That one bombing, according to estimates made by the German Embassy in Sudan and Human Rights Watch, probably led to tens of thousands of deaths.” However, this claim was quickly rendered suspect. One of his two sources, Human Rights Watch, wrote to salon.com the following week denying it had produced any such figure. Its communications director said: “In fact, Human Rights Watch has conducted no research into civilian deaths as the result of US bombing in Sudan and would not make such an assessment without a careful and thorough research mission on the ground.”

Chomsky’s second source had done no research into the matter either. He was Werner Daum, German ambassador to Sudan from 1996 to 2000 who wrote in the Harvard International Review, Summer 2001. Despite his occupation, Daum’s article was anything but diplomatic.

It was a largely anti-American tirade criticizing the United States’ international human rights record, blaming America for the 1980s Iran-Iraq war, accusing it of ignoring Iraq’s gassing of the Kurds, and holding it responsible for the purported deaths of 600,000 Iraqi children as a result of post-1991 economic sanctions. Nonetheless, his comments on the death toll from the Khartoum bombing were not as definitive as Chomsky intimated. Daum wrote:

It is difficult to assess how many people in this poor African country died as a result of the destruction of the Al-Shifa factory, but several tens of thousands seems a reasonable guess. The factory produced some of the basic medicines on the World Health Organization list, covering 20 to 60 percent of Sudan’s market and 100 percent of the market for intravenous liquids. It took more than three months for these products to be replaced with imports.
Now, it is hard to take seriously Daum’s claim that this “guess” was in any way “reasonable.” He said there was a three-month gap between the destruction of the factory and the time it took to replace its products with imports. This seems an implausibly long interval to ship pharmaceuticals but, even if true, it is fanciful to suggest that “several tens of thousands” of people would have died in such a brief period.

Had they done so, they must have succumbed to a highly visible medical crisis, a pandemic to put the SARS outbreak in the shade. Yet no one on the spot, apart from the German ambassador, seems to have heard of it.

Anyone who makes an Internet search of the reports of the Sudanese operations of the several Western aid agencies, including Oxfam, Médecins sans Frontières, and Norwegian People’s Aid, who have been operating in this region for decades, will not find any evidence of an unusual increase in the death toll at the time. Instead, their major health concern, then and now, has been how the Muslim Marxist government in Khartoum was waging civil war by bombing the civilian hospitals of its Christian enemies in the south of the country.

The idea that tens of thousands of Sudanese would have died within three months from a shortage of pharmaceuticals is implausible enough in itself. That this could have happened without any of the aid organizations noticing or complaining is simply unbelievable.

Hence Chomsky’s rationalization for the September 11 attacks is every bit as deceitful as his apology for Pol Pot and his misreading of the Cambodian genocide.

“It is the responsibility of intellectuals to speak the truth and to expose lies,” Chomsky wrote in a famous article in The New York Review of Books in February 1967. This was not only a well-put and memorable statement but was also a good indication of his principal target. Most of his adult life has been spent in the critique of other intellectuals who, he claims, have not fulfilled their duty.

The central argument of American Power and the New Mandarins is that the humanities and social sciences had been captured by a new breed of intellectuals. Rather than acting as Socratic free thinkers challenging received opinion, they had betrayed their calling by becoming servants of the military-industrial state. The interests of this new mandarin class, he argued, had turned the United States into an imperial power. Their ideology demonstrated

the mentality of the colonial civil servant, persuaded of the benevolence of the mother country and the correctness of its vision of world order, and convinced that he understands the true interests of the backward peoples whose welfare he is to administer.
Chomsky named the academic fields he regarded as the worst offenders—psychology, sociology, systems analysis, and political science—and held up some well-known practitioners, including Samuel Huntington of Harvard, as among the worst examples. The Vietnam War, Chomsky claimed, was designed and executed by the new mandarins.
In itself, Chomsky’s identification of the emergence of a new type of academically trained official was neither original nor radical. Similar critiques had been made of the same phenomenon in both western and eastern Europe for some time. Much of his critique had been anticipated in the 1940s in a book from the other end of the political spectrum, Friedrich von Hayek’s Road to Serfdom, which identified the social engineers of the welfare state as the greatest internal threats to Western liberty. Chomsky offered a leftist version of the same idea, writing:

There are dangerous tendencies in the ideology of the welfare state intelligentsia who claim to possess the technique and understanding required to manage our “postindustrial society” and to organize the international society dominated by the American superpower.
Yet at the very time he was making this critique, Chomsky himself was playing at social engineering on an even grander scale. As he indicated in his support in 1967 for the “collectivization and communization” of Chinese and Vietnamese agriculture, with its attendant terror and mass slaughter, he had sought the calculated reorganization of traditional societies. By his advocacy of revolutionary change throughout Asia, he was seeking to play a role in the reorganization of the international order as well.

Hence, apart from occupying a space on the political spectrum much further to the left than the academics he criticized, and apart from his preference for bloodshed over more bureaucratic techniques, Chomsky himself was the very exemplar of the new mandarin he purported to despise.

He was, in fact, one of the more successful examples of the breed. There has now been enough analysis of the Vietnam War to demonstrate conclusively that the United States was not defeated militarily. South Vietnam was abandoned to its fate because of the war’s political costs at home. The influence of radical intellectuals like Chomsky in persuading the student generation of the 1960s to oppose the war was crucial in elevating these political costs to an intolerable level.

The result they helped produce, however, was far worse than any bureaucratic solution that might have emanated from the behavioral sciences of the 1960s. From our present vantage point, we can today see the long-term outcome of the choice Chomsky posed in 1967 between the “comparative costs” of revolutionary terror in Vietnam versus the continuation of private enterprise agriculture in the Philippines.

The results all favor the latter. In 2001, the average GDP per head in the Philippines was $4000. At the same time, twenty-five years of revolution in Vietnam had produced a figure of only half as much, a mere $2100. Even those Vietnamese who played major roles in the transformation are now dismayed at the outcome. The former Vietcong General Pham Xuan An said in 1999: “All that talk about ‘liberation’ twenty, thirty years ago, all the plotting, all the bodies, produced this, this impoverished broken-down country led by a gang of cruel and paternalistic half-educated theorists.”

These “half-educated theorists” were the very mandarins Chomsky and his supporters so badly wanted to succeed and worked so hard to install.

As well as social science practitioners and bureaucrats, the other representatives of the intelligentsia to whom Chomsky has long been hostile are the people who work in the news media.

Although his politics made him famous, Chomsky has made no substantial contribution to political theory. Almost all his political books are collections of short essays, interviews, speeches, and newspaper opinion pieces about current events. The one attempt he made at a more thoroughgoing analysis was the work he produced in 1988 with Edward S. Herman, Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media. This book, however, must have been a disappointment to his followers.

Media studies is a huge field ranging from traditional defenses of the news media as the fourth estate of the democratic system, to the most arcane cultural analyses produced by radical postmodernist theorists. Chomsky and Herman gave no indication they had digested any of it.

Instead, their book offers a crude analysis that would have been at home in an old Marxist pamphlet from the 1930s. Apart from the introduction, most of the book is simply a re-hash of the authors’ previously published work criticizing media coverage of events in central America (El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua) and in south-east Asia (Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia), plus one chapter on reporting of the 1981 KGB-Bulgarian plot to kill the Pope.

To explain the role of the mass media, Chomsky and Herman offer their “propaganda model.” This claims the function of the media is

to amuse, entertain and inform, and to inculcate individuals with the values, beliefs and codes of behavior that will integrate them into the institutional structures of the larger society. In a world of concentrated wealth and major conflicts of class interest, to fulfil this role requires systematic propaganda.
This is true, they maintain, whether the media operate in liberal democracies or under totalitarian regimes. The only difference is that in communist and other authoritarian societies, it is clear to everyone that the media are instruments of the dominant elite. In capitalist societies, however, this fact is concealed, since the media “actively compete, periodically attack and expose corporate and governmental malfeasance, and aggressively portray themselves as spokesmen for free speech and the general community interest.”
Chomsky and Herman argue that these attacks on authority are always very limited and the claims of free speech are merely smokescreens for inculcating the economic and political agendas of the privileged groups that dominate the economy.

The media, they note, are all owned by large corporations, they are beholden for their income to major national advertisers, most news is generated by large multinational news agencies, and any newspaper or television station that steps out of line is bombarded with “flak” or letters, petitions, lawsuits, and speeches from pro-capitalist institutes set up for this very purpose.

There are, however, two glaring omissions from their analysis: the role of journalists and the preferences of media audiences. Nowhere do the authors explain how journalists and other news producers come to believe they are exercising their freedom to report the world as they see it. Chomsky and Herman simply assert these people have been duped into seeing the world through a pro-capitalist ideological lens.

Nor do they attempt any analysis of why millions of ordinary people exercise their free choice every day to buy newspapers and tune in to radio and television programs. Chomsky and Herman fail to explain why readers and viewers so willingly accept the world-view of capitalist media proprietors. They provide no explanation for the tastes of media audiences.

This view of both journalists and audiences as easily-led, ideological dupes of the powerful is not just a fantasy of Chomsky and Herman’s own making. It is also a stance that reveals an arrogant and patronising contempt for everyone who does not share their politics. The disdain inherent in this outlook was revealed during an exchange between Chomsky and a questioner at a conference in 1989 (reproduced in Chomsky, Understanding Power, 2002):

Man: The only poll I’ve seen about journalists is that they are basically narcissistic and left of center. Chomsky: Look, what people call “left of center” doesn’t mean anything—it means they’re conventional liberals and conventional liberals are very state-oriented, and usually dedicated to private power.
In short, Chomsky believes that only he and those who share his radical perspective have the ability to rise above the illusions that keep everyone else slaves of the system. Only he can see things as they really are.
Since the European Enlightenment a number of prominent intellectuals have presented themselves as secular Christ-like figures, lonely beacons of light struggling to survive in a dark and corrupting world. This is a tactic that has often delivered them followers among students and other idealistic youths in late adolescence.

The phenomenon has been most successful when accompanied by an uncomplicated morality that its constituency can readily absorb. In his ruminations on September 11, Chomsky reiterated his own apparently direct and simple moral principles. Reactions to the terrorist attacks, he said, “should meet the most elementary moral standards: specifically, if an action is right for us, it is right for others; and if it is wrong for others, it is wrong for us.”

Unfortunately, like his declaration of the responsibility of the intellectual to speak the truth and expose lies, Chomsky himself has consistently demonstrated an inability to abide by his own standards. Among his most provocative recent demands are for American political and military leaders to be tried as war criminals. He has often couched this in terms of the failure by the United States to apply the same standards to itself as it does to its enemies.

For instance, America tried and executed the remaining World War Two leaders of Germany and Japan, but failed to try its own personnel for the “war crime” of dropping the atomic bomb on Japan. Chomsky claims the American bombing of dams during the Korean War was “a huge war crime … just like racist fanaticism” but the action was praised at home. “That’s just a couple of years after they hanged German leaders who were doing much less than that.”

The worst current example, he claims, is American support for Israel:

virtually everything that Israel is doing, meaning the United States and Israel are doing, is illegal, in fact, a war crime. And many of them they defined as “grave breaches,” that is, serious war crimes. This means that the United States and Israeli leadership should be brought to trial.
Yet Chomsky’s moral perspective is completely one-sided. No matter how great the crimes of the regimes he has favored, such as China, Vietnam, and Cambodia under the communists, Chomsky has never demanded their leaders be captured and tried for war crimes. Instead, he has defended these regimes for many years to the best of his ability through the use of evidence he must have realized was selective, deceptive, and in some cases invented.
In fact, had Pol Pot ever been captured and tried in a Western court, Chomsky’s writings could have been cited as witness for the defense. Were the same to happen to Osama bin Laden, Chomsky’s moral rationalizations in his most recent book—“almost any crime, a crime in the street, a war, whatever it may be, there’s usually something behind it that has elements of legitimacy”—could be used to plead for a lighter sentence.

This kind of two-faced morality has provided a model for the world-wide protests by left-wing opponents of the American-led coalition’s war against Iraq. The left was willing to tolerate the most hideous acts of state terrorism by the Saddam Hussein regime, but was implacable in its hostility to intervention by Western democratic governments in the interests of both their own security and the emancipation of the Iraqi people. This is hypocrisy writ large.

The long political history of this aging activist demonstrates that double standards of the same kind have characterized his entire career.

Chomsky has declared himself a libertarian and anarchist but has defended some of the most authoritarian and murderous regimes in human history. His political philosophy is purportedly based on empowering the oppressed and toiling masses but he has contempt for ordinary people who he regards as ignorant dupes of the privileged and the powerful. He has defined the responsibility of the intellectual as the pursuit of truth and the exposure of lies, but has supported the regimes he admires by suppressing the truth and perpetrating falsehoods. He has endorsed universal moral principles but has only applied them to Western liberal democracies, while continuing to rationalize the crimes of his own political favorites. He is a mandarin who denounces mandarins. When caught out making culpably irresponsible misjudgments, as he was over Cambodia and Sudan, he has never admitted he was wrong.

Today, Chomsky’s hypocrisy stands as the most revealing measure of the sorry depths to which the left-wing political activism he has done so much to propagate has now sunk.

RimRod

Comments

Hide the following 23 comments

worst critic i've ever heard

03.06.2003 15:20

that was the worst criticism of Chomsky i'v ever read, what a total right wing idiot.

get an education, try not to be so f****** ignorant.


when will the american right face up to their slaughter; you supported tyranny, you smiled at the dictators, sold them weapons, you kill families because you need the oil, its very valuable; end of story.

The right is always wrong.

ser


uhh

03.06.2003 15:37

I'm ser's dad, please forgive my son, he's not very bright, he can't make any real points with any sort of balance or perspective, and he just to just hurl shock-value statements to make his "point."

ser's dad


Bullshit

03.06.2003 15:37

I've been reading Chomsky for years and am critical of his approach, particularly his notion that the world is dominated by monolithic capitalism which determines our existence. But I've never heard him defend totalitarianism or dictatorial regimes. This is just black propaganda.

Dan


Well Done

03.06.2003 15:38

A balanced mature response. Your put forward your argument well "The right is always wrong". BRILLIANT!!!!

too scared


i'm not chomsky u know

03.06.2003 16:02

i can't be arsed to write an essay.going out.

ser


...........

03.06.2003 16:07

Chomsky's hypocrisy is far less than the right-wingers. With the whole New Left thing its true that many wrongly identified with people like guevera, ho, mao, etc, which is a shame but thats because it was a very marxist movement. That however does not change the fact that the US had no right to do what it was doing. If the vietnam war was to save the vietnamese from communism then why was it neccessary to force them into concentration camps and kill millions of them?? Both the US and the soviets/communists were counter-productive to the real aims of the people, and the stalinists etc should have been opposed as much as the imperialists. If the rightists are telling the truth, and the cold war was to save the world from the evils of communism, then why the hell do they lie so much?? The rightists still try to deny the crimes committed by america, like the massacre of over a million people in Indonesia. And btw with the cambodia thing chomsky was pointing out that the cambodian genocide stuff was from quite dubious sources, although it may well be true, but the media was leaping on it as fact and concoting huge figures out of nowhere- in contrast to their silence on the US-committed genocides in the area, like the secret mass bombings of peasants etc.

nin


lets deal with the issue of hypocracy

03.06.2003 16:20

o.k. the author used the term hypocracy to define Chomsky's behavior, but the author fails to notice or mention the fact that Chomsky is not a fortune teller, he is a writer. The author talks about Chomsky's overlooking the Kmher Rouge or problems in East Timor/South Pacific. Hey, I know this guy is distorting evidence. I heard Chomsky talk about those situations and was saddened because he felt he had little power to stop the events from happening. Isn't that a lot different from Cheney/Rumsfeld's hypocracy, or worse yet Henry Kissinger's. Politicians who gain profits from world devistation and ownership of multinational corporations are to blame, not people like Chomsky who comment on world history. To his credit Chomsky has given the world a much clearer view of world history than Dick Cheney. The writer wants political/leftist writers to solve the world's problems? isn't that hypocritical?

anonymous


porque?

03.06.2003 16:20

"many wrongly identified with people like guevera"

qué es malo con Ché?

what is wrong with Guevara?

comandante


new york times

03.06.2003 16:21

When the new york times called him arguably the most important intellectual alive, it was actually a negative comment with something like 'so why is he such an idiot?' or something.

nin


guevera

03.06.2003 17:51

Guevera was a tyrant. His guerrilla things were incredibly hierachal and ridiculously disciplined, a real army. 'deserters' shot, more tyrannical stuff than that. He helped Castro set up a dictatorship in Cuba. He was a hardline Stalinist also. With the missile crisis, he was really pissed off with castro and krushchev for not going through with it and nuking america, possibly ending mankind, but there you go. Sam Dolgoff's The Cuban Revolution: A Critical Perspective is really good everyone should read it. Its about Cuba, and anarchism in it, Castro's dictatorship, etc. Its a monstrous tyranny just like Eastern Europe, and Guevera helped establish it. You can read it online for free.

nin


why do people make such silly arguments

03.06.2003 18:17

I don't understand how being against the war automatically means that you're in support of Saddam Hussein. This is such bad logic. Also, how does not speaking up for trying one government for war crimes while speaking up for trying another automatically mean that you don't think both should be tried for war crimes? How is this an argument for hypocrisy? There's a kind of reasoning that I see in people that is very disturbing. Some people seem to think that making an argument that somebody else is evil, or worst than you, will make you good and not responsible for the harm that you do. If you are a government that claims to save a people from the evils of another government, that doesn't mean that you're not responsible for the harm that YOU bring to those people when you do your thing. If you kill a child to bring democracy for the next child, don't forget that you've just killed a child. Is this right? It's a matter of values. To me, it is NEVER OK to kill a living, breathing, thinking, and feeling child, whatever your reason. If you think it's OK, then you trouble me and I hope to never be your friend.

curious


totalitarian capitalist world gone mad

03.06.2003 21:11

Who cares about Chomsky, nobody reads him. What are neo capitalists so afraid of chomsky for, they spend hours dedicated to counter spinning against chomsky criticisms. chomsky may a good kind well meaning oul lad jumping on the anti capitalist bandwagon, but he speaks only theoretically, the poor don't need an intellectual to tell them, the rich minority greedy selfish few are fuking us and this whole world over. The poor live the nightmare reality of the ultra capitalist dog eat dog existence the rich have forced upon us. The street children of brazil, the tin shack shanty town slums of the poor are testiment to the uber capitalist dream/nightmare. The ultra capitalist dog eat dog world, where children, people and whole countries are for sale, to be exploited as slave labour, whose resources are stolen and whose land is rendered barren and desolate by GM corporate speculators. Where the children of the poor are condemned to live out the vile fantasies of decrepit fat cat western/capitalist buisnessmen as child sex slaves or unwitting guinea pigs for multinational pharmacutical companies.

a price for everyone


Of human bondage

03.06.2003 21:35

Capitalist sex tourist heaven=third world child abuse hell. Children of the third world poor, are sold as commodities, like pieces of meat, to drooling predatory capitalist sex tourists. This is the reality of dog eat dog uber capitalism. As aryans find the route to abuse their own local children blocked, so they turn to the children of the third world for easy pickings. The desperate starving third world poor, brutalised, dehumanised and hungry sell their own children into sex slavery as all hope of liberation, rebellion, and the reinstatement of human dignity and human rights are extinguished by the junta. They don't know that the guerilla fighter in the jungle, fights for their liberation, to break the chains of human bondage and capitalist sex slavery, to lift us out of degradation and poverty. To lift us up off the vicious ultra competitive dog eat dog capitalist mean streets and into a libertarian heaven of equals, no masters no slaves.

break every chain


The Right has no moral leg to stand on

03.06.2003 23:14

Political/social thinkers make analysis on the basis of the information available at the time. Their point of departure is a vision of the world and the future which is either conservative or progressive , a vision which in turn is guided by some principles. It is obvious that this writer's project and point of departure is conservative and that he is criticizing Chomsky with the hope that people who are fence sitters or just plainly confused(thanks to the school system and the mass media) will never bother reading him. Chomsky is not a god. He can make mistakes or he can obtain some wrong information just like anyone of us. His analyses can sometimes be flawed. He does not claim papal infallibility. But it can never be denied that the man has strong moral principles from which he never waivers because he is a progressive. His writings are guided by his sincere desire for a more just and a freer world for all -not just for Americans and the industrialized countries. Personally, I also have some criticisms of Chomsky. But they are from a progressive position. I do not understand why Chomsky says that all governments are violent institutions yet he still believes that governments can be taken over by the progressives elements in a capitalist system. 1973-Chile tried but the right wing of the US smashed it. Cuba was not even given the chance. Etc. etc. Chomsky made a point very clearly: the right wing controlling the States will never allow a socialist government to exist or any semblance of socialism to bloom. THis conclusion of his is based on the history of America (its birth by the racist slaughter of the Natives) and its interference in other nation's affairs for its own monetary interest.
Also with regards to 9-11, I do not understand why Chomsky accepts the official version of Arab terrorism. This is
out of step. He does not even speculate that it might have been done by the Carlyle group to which the Bush family belongs. He does not even venture to think that the Right wing Israel government might have helped. But then again Chomsky is careful because of lack of information here. Perhaps he fears the violence of the American Right wing. This is confusing to me. I am also confused with his acceptance of all these "official" university degrees - given his knowledge of the role of capitalist education. "Imposed ignorance" he said of the educational system. So why not do what French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre did and refuse to be crowned by these guardians of the violent state and of capitalist exploitation. (Sartre refused the Nobel prize for literature because the men offering it represent the same vile capitalists that Sartre criticized). This is where I am critical of him. Hypocrisy on his part? I doubt it. Contradictions that he is living and grappling with? Perhaps. But to attack him or claim that he is insincere or somewhat immoral is surely a sign of a conservative mean spirited mind. (I suppose the man writing this piece is some academic seeking right wing approbation or some corporate job).

anti-authoritarian


no moral leg to stand on

03.06.2003 23:24

Political/social thinkers make analysis on the basis of the information available at the time. Their point of departure is a vision of the world and the future which is either conservative or progressive , a vision which in turn is guided by some principles. It is obvious that this writer's project and point of departure is conservative and that he is criticizing Chomsky with the hope that people who are fence sitters or just plainly confused(thanks to the school system and the mass media) will never bother reading him. Chomsky is not a god. He can make mistakes or he can obtain some wrong information just like anyone of us. His analyses can sometimes be flawed. He does not claim papal infallibility. But it can never be denied that the man has strong moral principles from which he never waivers because he is a progressive. His writings are guided by his sincere desire for a more just and a freer world for all -not just for Americans and the industrialized countries. Personally, I also have some criticisms of Chomsky. But they are from a progressive position. I do not understand why Chomsky says that all governments are violent institutions yet he still believes that governments can be taken over by the progressives elements in a capitalist system. 1973-Chile tried but the right wing of the US smashed it. Cuba was not even given the chance. Etc. etc. Chomsky made a point very clearly: the right wing controlling the States will never allow a socialist government to exist or any semblance of socialism to bloom. THis conclusion of his is based on the history of America (its birth by the racist slaughter of the Natives) and its interference in other nation's affairs for its own monetary interest.
Also with regards to 9-11, I do not understand why Chomsky accepts the official version of Arab terrorism. This is
out of step. He does not even speculate that it might have been done by the Carlyle group to which the Bush family belongs. He does not even venture to think that the Right wing Israel government might have helped. But then again Chomsky is careful because of lack of information here. Perhaps he fears the violence of the American Right wing. This is confusing to me. I am also confused with his acceptance of all these "official" university degrees - given his knowledge of the role of capitalist education. "Imposed ignorance" he said of the educational system. So why not do what French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre did and refuse to be crowned by these guardians of the violent state and of capitalist exploitation. (Sartre refused the Nobel prize for literature because the men offering it represent the same vile capitalists that Sartre criticized). This is where I am critical of him. Hypocrisy on his part? I doubt it. Contradictions that he is living and grappling with? Perhaps. But to attack him or claim that he is insincere or somewhat immoral is surely a sign of a conservative mean spirited mind. (I suppose the man writing this piece is some academic seeking right wing approbation or some corporate job).

a leftie


anti-war/anti-capitalism hypocrisy

04.06.2003 10:53

"curious" has made the most intelligent argument so far.

> I don't understand how being against the war automatically means that you're in support of Saddam Hussein.
Because if u're against the war, u're effectively preventing the removal of a ruthless dictator. one who has oppressed, tortured and murdered hundreds of thousands of people, and would undoubtedly continued to do so.

> This is such bad logic.
Why is it bad logic?

> Also, how does not speaking up for trying one government for war crimes while speaking up for trying another automatically mean that you don't think both should be tried for war crimes?
Saddam Hussein had ample opportunity - 12 years in fact - to surrender weapons that we KNOW he had. the UN KNEW he had them. France, Germany Russia and Syria KNEW he had them. its not speculation. those weapons existed, and noone disputes that. that's why resolution 1441 said Saddam Hussein "...is and continues to be in breach of this resolution..." unless he proves to the UN that he destroyed those weapons. the resolution also called for "serious consequences" if he didnt. what do u suppose this means? the point is, if he destroyed them, as many apparently believe, why didn't he show us he destroyed them? this would've prevented the war. why didn't he? and why didn't those 'peace' protesters march in Baghdad against the fact that he didnt??? why??? dont u see? its SADDAM HUSSEIN u should've protested against. but u chose to protest against people who were prepared to take action against him.

> How is this an argument for hypocrisy?
Because u say that u want 'peace'. on the other hand, leaving Saddam Hussein in power is NOT 'peace'. leaving Saddam Hussein in power does NOT stop the suffering of his people, whom he has oppressed, raped and murdered for decades, and would continue to do so if he was left in power. Plus, Hitler was not a threat to Britain in 1936. in 1939 he was. i find it amazing that considering Britain's history with regard to brutal and ruthless dictators, that many in this country refuse to learn by our previous mistakes.

> If you kill a child to bring democracy for the next child, don't forget that you've just killed a child. Is this right?
Well that's the best argument i've heard so far. and u're right, it is a matter of values. i believe that far fewer people will be tortured or murdered in Iraq, now that Hussein is gone, than were killed in the war itself. while i can understand where u're coming from, i believe we did the right thing.

> To me, it is NEVER OK to kill a living, breathing, thinking, and feeling child, whatever your reason.
i respect your opinion.

> If you think it's OK, then you trouble me and I hope to never be your friend.
i doubt we ever will be friends. i also find it extremely difficult to relate to people who took an anti-war stance.


as for the 'anti-capitalists' on this website. well, they're all posting on this forum using a product of capitalism. they're sitting on a seat that is the product of capitalism. they're wearing clothes that are the products of capitalism. they eat food that is the product of capitalism. they drive cars that are the products of capitalism. basically, their whole lives are the products of capitalism. if u want communism, move to N.Korea or China, or a Kibbutz.
i expect to see u moving back to the good ol' capitalist UK within a year or two.

Jamie


Lamie Jamie

04.06.2003 14:31

"well, they're all posting on this forum using a product of capitalism. they're sitting on a seat that is the product of capitalism. they're wearing clothes that are the products of capitalism. they eat food that is the product of capitalism. they drive cars that are the products of capitalism. basically, their whole lives are the products of capitalism blah blah blah"

Soz Jamie, but everything you mentioned is NOT a "product of capitalism."

All these things are products of WORKING PEOPLE.

Bosses do not sit in their boardrooms and conjure products out of thin air, things are made by real people, who are then stiffed out of their share of the wealth by the "double robbery" of wages and retail prices.

Science and technology also exist in so-called "socialist" countries, you know. The first person in space was a Soviet cosmonaut and Cuba has developed anti-HIV drugs way ahead of the likes of Glaxo and co.

You are mistaking the people who do things for the leeches that get fat off of them. But you are a tool of the establishment and this is not surprising.

This "oh you all live under capitalism so you are hypocrites to disagree with it" argument is specious and lame.

Its as pathetic as saying that peasants should have accepted feudalism and the oppression of the aristos because all their food and clothing was "a product of feudalism." Its bullshit and it doesn't make sense.

Sorry, but I'm not going to go and live in a cave just because I disagree with the power structure under which today's creature comforts have been made in order to make you feel better.

Working people made and developed all the stuff in the world and talentless fat bastards make the profit off it while screwing people unto starvation and death.

That is the truth of the matter.

I'm a progressive lefty. I'm not a Marxist but I agree with Marx that capitalism is better than feudalism and feudalism was better than barbarism. That's where the "progress" bit comes in.

However being a progressive I DO NOT hold to the irrational belief that capitalism represents some exalted "highest stage of development."

With two thirds of the world starving and poverty even in the richest countries this is clearly not true. If capitalism is so great how come we ain't all rich? Answer: because the system relies on most people being very poor. This is another reason why it is a flawed system WHICH MUST BE CHANGED.

And don't witter on about North Korea or China - these are NOT socialist states - they have no equality or freedom, they are capitalist dictatorships who find it useful to parrot revolutionary phrases.

And if YOU like unbridled capitalism so much why don't you piss off to Russia and see how it works first hand.

Mad Monk


capitalism

04.06.2003 15:26

> things are made by real people, who are then stiffed out of their share of the wealth by the "double robbery" of wages and retail prices.
stiffed? they have the choice to work for a company or not. they have the choice to pursue other careers, or go to uni to improve their prospects. they're not stiffed out of anything.

> Science and technology also exist in so-called "socialist" countries, you know.
the point i was making is that your computer, the chair u're sat on, the clothes u're wearing, etc. are all manufactured under the capitalist system. people are paid to manufacture and assemble the goods, which u buy. those people do not HAVE to work, of course. and u dont HAVE to buy the goods.

> But you are a tool of the establishment and this is not surprising.
am i? if u say so then it must be true.

> This "oh you all live under capitalism so you are hypocrites to disagree with it" argument is specious and lame.
what im saying is that if u dislike the capitalist system that we live under in the UK, which I and many others are perfectly happy with, u have the choice not to live here. u could go and find a place where communism rules, although i defy u to find a place where communism rules SUCCESSFULLY and without corruption.

> Its as pathetic as saying that peasants should have accepted feudalism and the oppression of the aristos because all their food and clothing was "a product of feudalism."
ok, i'll concede that point.

> Sorry, but I'm not going to go and live in a cave just because I disagree with the power structure under which today's creature comforts have been made in order to make you feel better.
well, the choice is yours. that's the whole point.

> Working people made and developed all the stuff in the world and talentless fat bastards make the profit off it
i assure u, if they were talentless they wouldn't be paid so much. employees NEED those "talentless fat bastards" to run companies in order to keep people employed. if they think they can do better, they have the option to prove it or to be elected to the post.

> while screwing people unto starvation and death.
which people are u talking about here? are u sure its not the droughts, floods, earthquakes and over-population that's screwing people unto starvation and death?

> I DO NOT hold to the irrational belief that capitalism represents some exalted "highest stage of development."
i accept that no system is perfect. why dont u offer your suggestions to improve the capitalist system?

> the system relies on most people being very poor.
false statement. it doesn't RELY on this at all.

> And don't witter on about North Korea or China - these are NOT socialist states - they have no equality or freedom, they are capitalist dictatorships who find it useful to parrot revolutionary phrases.
ah well there's the kicker. they're communist wannabes, but like the Soviet Union, they've discovered that communism doesn't really work. human greed and corruption makes sure of that.

> And if YOU like unbridled capitalism so much why don't you piss off to Russia and see how it works first hand.
err, according to the anti-capitalists the UK is a good example of unbridled capitalism so why can't i just stay here and see how it works first hand??

Lamie Jamie


capitalism and right-wing lies about socialis

04.06.2003 15:56

Right-wing arguments that socialism has been tried and failed because of human corruption and greed are utter bullshit. Socialist ideas have been tried and have failed because generally of military force or because of trust in parties/not enough confidence in working class self-rule. Eg. in Spain, where the fascists were prepared to wipe the anarchists of the face of the earth rather than have them succeed in running society with principles of direct democracy and worker's control.

Lenin EXPLICITLY stated that he was establishing a party dictatorship- because he considered the masses to ignorant, and that this would be state capitalist- in his own words- and how they must copy German war state capitalism. He said things like majority rule were a myth. He said that by worker's control he meant control by the state and ordinary one-man management (appointed bosses etc). Trotsky said that a democratic army was pointless and abolished it. Right-wingers who try to use pathetic arguments like 'it was tried and failed because of human corruption and greed, like we said' obviously either have no knowledge of history, or more likely are deliberately ingoring it to make their pathetic arguments.

If you explained to everybody on this planet what socialism was and what capitalism was, the vast, vast majority would choose socialism. In fact, if you just said do you like capitalism, this current situation etc? At least 2/3s would say no, pretty much everyone in the third world etc. People do not like capitalism but think there is no alternative. Do people like being bossed around at work, doing pointless work for no reason, being bossed around at school and indoctrinated, etc? And then theres the vast majority of the world's population who live in poverty and they certainly won't say enjoy the wonders of capitalism. And those in Africa dying from easily curable diseases because its not profitable to make them for them. And btw there is no population problem, the rich countries are far more populated than the poor, and there is no problem with there not being enough stuff- there's just a problem with how its distribruted and what we spend our time working on.

aifj


socialism

04.06.2003 16:27

oh and one last thing. Rightists always say that human corruption and greed mean socialism will always fail. Well hypothetically, if everyone is always really corrupt and greedy etc, then surely it makes sense to NOT give anyone power over others and power to exploit etc? Surely it makes sense to construct society on principles of direct democracy, in the factories as well, so NO-ONE can be exploiting or corrupting, because NO-ONE will be ruling. Rightists mistake socialism as needing some managing bureaucracy or something. The state capitalist party Leninist dictatorships had the bureaucracy, which was one of socialists's many criticisms of it, how it was now a new ruling class, some call it the co-ordinating class. Socialism is a system of worker's councils where the workers/employees directly construct the higher organs from below and direct the enterprises themselves in coordination with what people want and need. State socialism just creates a set of new masters. State socialism is tyranny, but there is no conceivable way how abolishing the state and creating a directly democratic society can become a tyranny.

gjkhgk


old song

05.06.2003 09:51

F is for Freedom
That the Tories shout about
If you can't afford your dinner
You're free to go without!

kurious


lamie jamie for nobel prize for economics

05.06.2003 15:35

this guy deserves the nobel prize for economics with his;

"without corruption." statement,
like capitalist states are not corrupt.
you are right there is no corruption in the UK.

killing iraqi's with the support of america is irrelevant.
killing them now is freedom.
if you're not a capitalist then you're obviously a communist.
CIA supporting dictators is morally good.
chocolate is better than sex

and david beckham is an intelectual.

so is the new world order.

ser


Why the Capitalist Right lied and bullied...

09.10.2003 01:58

The essay is brilliant because it is like the eye of a hurricane. Calmly we discuss the anguished realizations of decades. Of course the right appeared to lie, exaggerate, and much worse...it had a deep gut feeling that maybe the socialists would be noble revolutionaries who would then sweep the world with change, but it also knew human nature, and just as deep, knew that these ideas had to be put in effect by humans just as flawed as most everyone else. Rapid change does not bring out the best in humanity. The best seems to move so very intolerably slow. I appreciate democracy because it works so slowly. The slower the better. Terrorists want rapid change. The Iraq war was not as much a war as a police action. Of course, with WMD all could rapidly spin out of control.

joe sobotka
mail e-mail: genieman46@yahoo.com