Good article. The section on criticism of Chomsky in the field of linguistics is also well worth reading.
From your source (bolding mine):Besides, Chomsky has been proven wrong over the Balkans and ran apologia fro the Bosnian serb military.
http://www.glypx.com/balkanwitness/Chomsky-Norris.htm
(bolding mine)Noam Chomsky is a liar.
For example, Noam Chomsky says:
On the NATO Bombing of Yugoslavia, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Danilo Mandic: Director of Communications [for Clinton Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott], John Norris.... [T]ake a look on John Norris's book and what he says is that the real purpose of the war had nothing to do with concern for Kosovar Albanians. It was because Serbia was not carrying out the required social and economic reforms, meaning it was the last corner of Europe which had not subordinated itself to the US-run neo-liberal programs, so therefore it had to be eliminated. That's from the highest level...
Here's the passage from John Norris (2005), Collision Course: NATO, Russia, and Kosovo (New York: Praeger), that Chomsky is mis-citing, p. xxii ff.:
...
It was Yugoslavia's resistance to the broader trends of political and economic reform--not the plight of the Kosovar Albanians--that best explains NATO's war.
...


Once again you respond by posting links and saying nothing. Unbelievable.
Uhhh what? When did I say anything about Yugoslavia? All I did was show that your source owned itself.Besides you are just parroting the Michael Parenti Line that Yugoslavia could ahve been saved. It's collapse was inevitable long before tito's death.
No, you merely demonstrated the same quote-out-of-context deceit that Chomsky is guilty of.Uhhh what? When did I say anything about Yugoslavia? All I did was show that your source owned itself.
Chomsky here is clearly dishonest.Having seen the repeated use, and frankly misuse, of this particular passage from by book by Noam Chomsky, I am happy to weigh in to set the record straight. I agree with Strobe that your authors have it just plain wrong. If one reads the analysis I present in my book, including the longer passage from which the quote is directly pulled, it is clear that I am in no way arguing that "market forces" drove the war. In making the case that Serbia was at odds with the broader trends in Europe, I argued that the western powers had gotten fed up with Milosevic for reasons that stretched back to the war in Bosnia, Srebrenica, the brutal treatment of political opposition and numerous other outrages. The broader trends sweeping Europe were increasing respect for the rule of law, fulfillment of basic standards of human rights and yes, economic integration, but the economic imperatives for any conflict with Kosovo were never raised by any senior official anywhere in the book or any of my research.
For whatever reasons, Mr. Chomsky seems simply unwilling to accept that there were justifiable humanitarian reasons for the conflict in Kosovo. That is certainly his prerogative, but I would greatly appreciate it if he no longer quoted my book both selectively and out of context to advance his polemic.
This absolutism argument can easily be challenged. We are a gregarious species. We clearly evolved with altruism and cooperation traits benefiting the group.....Capitalism is the "natural" evolutionary outcome, and communism a clear dead end....
I agree, though you're drawing a broader point than I was. Specifically in terms of economic efficiency, capitalism will always beat socialism, and in large economies (a million people or more) the difference becomes enormous. There's no "evolutionary path" from capitalism to socialism, because socialism is less well adapted to survive.This absolutism argument can easily be challenged. We are a gregarious species. We clearly evolved with altruism and cooperation traits benefiting the group.
On the other hand, selfish aggression has its moments of success as well.
Both traits would appear to have been naturally selected.
A combination of capitalism with some socialism would seem to me to be the evidence supported ideal system of cultural interaction. I don't want police, fire, or military to be privatized. Education, medical services, and utilities using combined capitalist and socialist systems such as public regulation of private systems provides is one solution in this area.
Certain products are bast produced under a competitive capitalist system such as cars and computers.
Drawing knee jerk conclusions about the best system means people opt for their image of that system rather than the actual system which would be apparent if only people would look past their black and white images.
No, you merely demonstrated the same quote-out-of-context deceit that Chomsky is guilty of.
Yes.I "demonstrated deceit"?
Keep reading. You're still quoting out of context.Actually if you read the whole paragraph it reinforces Chomsky's interpretation if anything:
It's background, which Chomsky is trying to represent as the whole of the argument, which is patently false and deliberately dishonest. Chomsky's premises are false, his conclusions are false, and his methods deceitful.What's your interpretation?
Yes, Chomsky is a liar. There's more than one way to tell a lie.ETA: The alleged "lie" in question:
"Noam Chomsky is a liar.
For example, Noam Chomsky says:
'On the NATO Bombing of Yugoslavia, Noam Chomsky interviewed by Danilo Mandic: Director of Communications [for Clinton Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott], John Norris.... [T]ake a look on John Norris's book and what he says is that the real purpose of the war had nothing to do with concern for Kosovar Albanians. It was because Serbia was not carrying out the required social and economic reforms, meaning it was the last corner of Europe which had not subordinated itself to the US-run neo-liberal programs, so therefore it had to be eliminated. That's from the highest level...'"
You are confusing two concepts here, economic efficiency and survival adaptation. The two are not equivalent.I agree, though you're drawing a broader point than I was. Specifically in terms of economic efficiency, capitalism will always beat socialism, and in large economies (a million people or more) the difference becomes enormous. There's no "evolutionary path" from capitalism to socialism, because socialism is less well adapted to survive.
That doesn't necessarily mean that in all respects capitalism is the best way to deliver all goods and services; it's sometimes impractical (or has been, historically) or prone to specific failures (e.g. tragedy of the commons, positive feedback cycles, perverse incentives). Mind you, most of those flaws can be found in socialism too - just not always in the same circumstances, which is why leavening capitalism with a little socialism does seem to work pretty well.
It appears to me that you are having a hard time determining which of Chomsky's statements are about facts, and which are his opinions. When you don't agree with his opinions, you report that Chomsky's facts are erroneous.I was citing articles by people who specialise in the history of the former yugoslavia.
I was citing War Crimes Prosecutor Marko Atilla Hoare.
I was making the point that chomsky is an unreliable source on the former yugoslavia.
For economic systems, they are equivalent.You are confusing two concepts here, economic efficiency and survival adaptation. The two are not equivalent.
Well, there's one thing we know: It's never going to be communism, unless you classify "crushing poverty" and "mass starvation" as products or services.What I'm saying is you are better off looking at the specific product or service to determine which economic model is most beneficial for survival (IE natural selection).
It's clear that Chomsky is distorting the facts when he quoted Norris. It's not an error, it's obviously deliberate.It appears to me that you are having a hard time determining which of Chomsky's statements are about facts, and which are his opinions. When you don't agree with his opinions, you report that Chomsky's facts are erroneous.
Great source on linguistics. I'm not sure of his other expertise.