Hypocrisy of Noam Chomsky

I think too many people get hung up on Chomsky and the thimble-full of people who agree with him.

Absolutely. I'd have thought that after Chomsky spit forth his view that the U.S. was committing systematic "savage, silent genocide" in Afghanistan and that at least a million innocent people would die from it, that nobody would even bother to waste their time on him anymore. However, not unlike the dupes who follow the various psychics, leftist Chomskyites simply forget about his misses and focus on the hate-America venom he's currently pushing.
 
Nie Trink Wasser said:



here's one to start you off :


Well, a few things...

David Horowitz... who is that guy? I know the name....


The first 6 or so paragraphs amount to merely a character assasination, so require no refutation (no facts being given). So I will proceed to the 7th paragraph:

In What Uncle Sam Really Wants, Chomsky begins with the fact of America’s emergence from the Second World War. He describes this fact characteristically as the United States having "benefited enormously" from the conflict in contrast to its "industrial rivals" -- omitting in the process any mention of the 250,000 lives America lost, its generous Marshall Plan aid to those same rivals or, for that matter, its victory over Nazi Germany and the Axis powers. In Chomsky’s portrait, America in 1945 is, instead, a wealthy power that profited from others’ misery and is now seeking world domination. "The people who determine American policy were carefully planning how to shape the postwar world," he asserts without evidence. "American planners – from those in the State Department to those on the Council on Foreign Relations (one major channel by which business leaders influence foreign policy) – agreed that the dominance of the United States had to be maintained."

The first, incorrect assumptiom is that the loss of 250,000 americans is a "loss" in terms of the powerful elite that sent them to their deaths. That is not a loss to them. It did not cost them money, their wives, their property, wealth or other things that matter to them. The people that send soldiers to their deaths consider such 'sacrifices' as about as meaningful as they would the 'sacrifice' of stepping on a cockroach. It is not of insterest as long as it does not effect them in any direct way. What is also clear is that the US gained the significant role as governor of middle east oil reservers "the larget material prize in the history of warfare". As to the 'generous' marshall plan, chomsky writes:

"In his comprehensive study of this program, Michael Hogan outlines its primary motivation as the encouragement of a European economic federation much like the United States, with over $2 billion annually in U.S. aid in the early years "to avert `economic, social and political' chaos in Europe, contain Communism (meaning not Soviet intervention but the success of the indigenous Communist parties), prevent the collapse of America's export trade, and achieve the goal of multilateralism." Such an economic stimulus was required "to protect individual initiative and private enterprise both on the Continent and in the United States." The alternative would be "experiments with socialist enterprise and government controls," which would "jeopardize private enterprise" in the United States as well. A major concern was the "dollar gap," which prevented Europe from purchasing U.S. manufactured goods, with grave implications for the domestic economy."

Not entirely altruistic, if you believe Hogan's assessment.

Chomsky never names the actual people who agreed that American policy should be world dominance, nor how they achieved unanimity in deciding to transform a famously isolationist country into a global power.

Well... Just look at PNAC (Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, Perle ...) for the current manefesto on world domination. Hell, just listen to GWB if you're not too bright. In any case, it's been clear for 50 years that the US has relied on military perponderance for interntati0nal domination. The reasons are not too subtle either.

Back in the 50s for instance:


In the early Cold War years, Dean Acheson and Paul Nitze planned to "bludgeon the mass mind of `top government'," as Acheson put it with reference to NSC 68. They presented "a frightening portrayal of the Communist threat, in order to overcome public, business, and congressional desires for peace, low taxes, and `sound' fiscal policies" and to mobilize popular support for the full-scale rearmament that they felt was necessary "to overcome Communist ideology and Western economic vulnerability," William Borden observes in a study of postwar planning. The Korean War served these purposes admirably. The ambiguous and complex interactions that led to the war were ignored in favor of the more useful image of a Kremlin campaign of world conquest. Dean Acheson, meanwhile, remarked that in the Korean hostilities "an excellent opportunity is here offered to disrupt the Soviet peace offensive, which...is assuming serious proportions and having a certain effect on public opinion." The structure of much of the subsequent era was determined by these manipulations, which also provided a standard for later practice


And it goes on of course...

- A
 
alancarre said:
The first, incorrect assumptiom is that the loss of 250,000 americans is a "loss" in terms of the powerful elite that sent them to their deaths. That is not a loss to them. It did not cost them money, their wives, their property, wealth or other things that matter to them.

Which powerful elite are do you speak of?

People like the Kennedy family or the Bush family? Some other powerful elite that did not risk their families in the war, perhaps?
 
aerocontrols said:


Which powerful elite are do you speak of?

People like the Kennedy family or the Bush family? Some other powerful elite that did not risk their families in the war, perhaps?

For instance, ya. Who else?
 
alancarre said:


For instance, ya. Who else?

All four of Roosevelt's sons went to war, as well.

That would be the Bush family, the Kennedy family, and the Roosevelt family who sent their sons to war.
 
More of the same nonsense.

The narrative:

Chomsky is a habitual liar. I'm sure he's a brilliant linguist, but his views on foreign policy and media control can only be described as imbecilic.

What's the evidence?

Passages from a book he co-authored 25 years ago with Ed Herman dealing with the Khmer Rouge.

Anything else?

It's so easy to caricature claims from a text (that few people seem to own) written umpteen years ago. Nevertheless, Chomsky has dealt with these criticisms extensively. You can even send him a letter.

Since Chomsky's views on foreign policy are clearly moronic, feel free to expose the lies and falsehoods in anything recent (preferably something most people have read).

Alan Sokal refers to Chomsky in _Fashionable Nonsense_ about the qualifications required by political "scientists" to prove a larger point (relating to postmodernism), but it's relevant here:

"Chomsky states that when he made certain political remarks, he was immediately attacked by political scientists for not having formal training in political science. However, when he gave a lecture at the Harvard University Mathematics department, no one in the audience cared about his lack of formal mathematical credentials, they merely listened to what he had to say, and made up their minds solely based on the content of his lecture. According to Chomsky, this was because of the fact that mathematics is a real subject in which credentials are developed based on verifiable results, especially when compared to political science."
 
Cleopatra said:
The one expert ( Lord Emsworth )says:


And the other expert( Supercharts) replies...





Can you, gentelmen, inform me on the contribution of Professor Chomsky in the science of linguistics? I always wondered in which field does he specialize.

A coherent definition of the term language, for example:
From now on I will consider a language to be a set (finite or infinite) of sentences, each finite in length and constructed out of a finite set of elemnets
Syntactic structures (1957: 13)

Although N. Chomski has not himself studied Linguistics, I, as a stundent, have to study him and know, for example, about Structuralism.
So I might very well consider him as an intellectual on that subject, mightn't I
But I apologise for using the term "field". That was a little rash.
 
aerocontrols said:


All four of Roosevelt's sons went to war, as well.

That would be the Bush family, the Kennedy family, and the Roosevelt family who sent their sons to war.

Which war did the Bush family sons go to when they were in power? I'm not being sarcastic, it's just that so far as I know at least gwb hasn't served in a war so is it Jeb then or who and when?
 
svero said:


Which war did the Bush family sons go to when they were in power? I'm not being sarcastic, it's just that so far as I know at least gwb hasn't served in a war so is it Jeb then or who and when?

alancarre was talking about WWII:

The first, incorrect assumptiom is that the loss of 250,000 americans is a "loss" in terms of the powerful elite that sent them to their deaths. That is not a loss to them. It did not cost them money, their wives, their property, wealth or other things that matter to them. The people that send soldiers to their deaths consider such 'sacrifices' as about as meaningful as they would the 'sacrifice' of stepping on a cockroach.

MattJ
 
aerocontrols said:


alancarre was talking about WWII:

MattJ

Well then in that context wouldn't be more relevent to look at Roosevelt's family or the people in his cabinet than to look at Bush or the Kennedys? or were they political elite during the time of ww2 as well?
 
svero said:

or were they political elite during the time of ww2 as well?

Well, he didn't say 'political' - only 'powerful' elite. But that hardly matters:

In the 20th century, Bush's family didn't hobnob with kings, but they certainly mingled with presidents before taking over the White House themselves. Bush's great-grandfather was a steel and railroad magnate who became a personal advisor to President Hoover, who was in fact a distant relative. Grandfather Prescott Bush, the Connecticut senator, was a favored golf partner of President Eisenhower (not a relative). Grandmother Dorothy Walker Bush's father founded a Wall Street investment house and was a close advisor to FDR, another Bush relative.

source

Surely these were people who would not have had to risk their family members in WWII had they chose not to.

Edit: The Kennedys were also part of the powerful elite (and political elite). I believe I've read that JFK's father (Joe Sr., a powerful senator, at the time) promised to support Roosevelt in exchange for Roosevelt's promise to support his son, (Joe Jr.) when he eventually ran for political office. Joe Jr. died when his bomber was shot down over Europe.

MattJ
 
aerocontrols said:
All four of Roosevelt's sons went to war, as well.

That would be the Bush family, the Kennedy family, and the Roosevelt family who sent their sons to war.
Thanks aerocontrols,

I get so damn sick of that old saw. The rich and powerful send "others" off to war. Bull$hit! Yes there those who get out of the war but such a broad brush is simple intelectual dishonesty.
 
svero said:
Which war did the Bush family sons go to when they were in power?
I'm not sure what you mean by "in power" but Prescott Bush was elected a Senator from Connecticut in 1952 and was an influential busisness man and banker when his son George H. W. Bush enlisted in the armed forces. George was a pilot who flew 58 combat missions during World War II.
 
alancarre said:
...in terms of the powerful elite that sent them to their deaths.

e·lite or é·lite ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-lt, -lt)
n. pl. elite or e·lites

A group or class of persons or a member of such a group or class, enjoying superior intellectual, social, or economic status: “In addition to notions of social equality there was much emphasis on the role of elites and of heroes within them” (Times Literary Supplement).

I would propose that the Bush family were members of the elite.
 
RandFan said:

No I said bump up jk’s threads don’t make me have to declare a bumping war!!:mad:

Well I was actually kidding but I have to ask why are you bumping all of these threads?
 
alancarre said:


Well, a few things...

David Horowitz... who is that guy? I know the name....

The first 6 or so paragraphs amount to merely a character assasination, so require no refutation (no facts being given). So I will proceed to the 7th paragraph:

The first, incorrect assumptiom is that the loss of 250,000 americans is a "loss" in terms of the powerful elite that sent them to their deaths. That is not a loss to them. It did not cost them money, their wives, their property, wealth or other things that matter to them. The people that send soldiers to their deaths consider such 'sacrifices' as about as meaningful as they would the 'sacrifice' of stepping on a cockroach. It is not of insterest as long as it does not effect them in any direct way. What is also clear is that the US gained the significant role as governor of middle east oil reservers "the larget material prize in the history of warfare". As to the 'generous' marshall plan, chomsky writes:


Others have mostly tackled this one. I will ask how having two countries declare war on the U.S. results in an analysis that U.S. 'power elites' sent Americans to their deaths? We were attacked remember. (Don't even try to go down the FDR knew about Pearl Harbor road. I completely disagree with that position, but say it's moot even if true... the Japanese planned and carried out that attack all on their own.) And do you just ignore the fact that many Americans volunteered to fight? Or that many of those industrial power elites invested their own fortunes, at some substantial risk, into the American war machine? And in what way did the end of WWII result in the U.S. "role as governor of middle east oil reservers[sic]"?

quote: "In his comprehensive study of this program, Michael Hogan outlines its primary motivation as the encouragement of a European economic federation much like the United States, with over $2 billion annually in U.S. aid in the early years "to avert `economic, social and political' chaos in Europe, contain Communism (meaning not Soviet intervention but the success of the indigenous Communist parties), prevent the collapse of America's export trade, and achieve the goal of multilateralism." Such an economic stimulus was required "to protect individual initiative and private enterprise both on the Continent and in the United States." The alternative would be "experiments with socialist enterprise and government controls," which would "jeopardize private enterprise" in the United States as well. A major concern was the "dollar gap," which prevented Europe from purchasing U.S. manufactured goods, with grave implications for the domestic economy."


Not entirely altruistic, if you believe Hogan's assessment.
I don't particularly "believe" Hogan's assessment, but let's take it at at face value:
- 'to avert economic, social and political' chaos in Europe
Excuse me? Isn't this just as good for the Europeans as for us? Sure, if they don't descend into chaos they can afford to buy more of our stuff, but they also don't continue to die in droves... poor old Europe really suffered under all that free aid. Should we have not done it because we also stood to gain?
- contain Communism (meaning not Soviet intervention but the success of the indigenous Communist parties)
Except that we now know that nearly all 'indigenous' communist parties were directly supported, funded, and even controlled by Moscow, with the Soviets going so far as to kidnap and murder communist leaders it found unacceptable. This is all documented in the KGBs own archives as smuggled out by Mitrokhin and documented in the book "The Sword and the Shield". Given the alternative, and all that we now know about the Soviet methods of control through terror, which system would you rather live in?\
- prevent the collapse of America's export trade
- A major concern was the "dollar gap," which prevented Europe from purchasing U.S. manufactured goods, with grave implications for the domestic economy." I'll tackle these two together by asking the simple question: Doesn't the U.S. currently have a trade deficit, and haven't we for several decades now? Boy, those evil American industrialists really screwed the pooch on that plan... FYI - 'American Materialism' keeps most of the rest of the world employed.
- and achieve the goal of multilateralism
I don't get it, what's wrong with multilateralism? I mean we did create the U.N. and all right? Oh we should have been unilateral after WWII when we could have been, but not now? I don't understand why this should be a criticism.
- Such an economic stimulus was required "to protect individual initiative and private enterprise both on the Continent and in the United States." The alternative would be "experiments with socialist enterprise and government controls," which would "jeopardize private enterprise" in the United States as well
Yeah? Well, I happen to like individual initiative and private enterprise. Given how the Soviet system worked soooo well, I'll keep it.

Well... Just look at PNAC (Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, Perle ...) for the current manefesto on world domination. Hell, just listen to GWB if you're not too bright. In any case, it's been clear for 50 years that the US has relied on military perponderance for interntati0nal domination. The reasons are not too subtle either.

Really? I guess I must be one of those, 'not too bright people'. Where is this manifesto, have they posted it somewhere? We're doing a bang-up job of stealing all that Iraqi oil and installing a puppet regime.

Back in the 50s for instance:
In the early Cold War years, Dean Acheson and Paul Nitze planned to "bludgeon the mass mind of `top government'," as Acheson put it with reference to NSC 68. They presented "a frightening portrayal of the Communist threat, in order to overcome public, business, and congressional desires for peace, low taxes, and `sound' fiscal policies" and to mobilize popular support for the full-scale rearmament that they felt was necessary "to overcome Communist ideology and Western economic vulnerability," William Borden observes in a study of postwar planning. The Korean War served these purposes admirably. The ambiguous and complex interactions that led to the war were ignored in favor of the more useful image of a Kremlin campaign of world conquest. Dean Acheson, meanwhile, remarked that in the Korean hostilities "an excellent opportunity is here offered to disrupt the Soviet peace offensive, which...is assuming serious proportions and having a certain effect on public opinion." The structure of much of the subsequent era was determined by these manipulations, which also provided a standard for later practice
Again, their fears of Soviet style rule and leadership turned out to be well founded. Did those Soviet peace initiatives include the brutal repression of independent revolts against Soviet backed regimes in Eastern Europe? Yes, the Soviet tanks rolling through Prague looked very peaceful. Given that the chief Soviet method of rule and control, by their own admission, was unbridled terror, I don't really understand why people don't see them as the threat to humanity that they were. Continuing: Wasn't the Korean war started by the North Koreans? Once again a model example of enlightened leadership, with prison camps bigger than Rhode Island it's a wonder more people aren't trying to get in to the country. Wow, I just don't understand the apologists for brutally murderous, dictatorial regimes. For cripes sake the Soviets and Communist Chinese killed more of their own people than Hitler killed non-Germans... yet Nazi apologists are nearly universally ridiculed. Really, am I missing something here?
 

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