You're right about exactly one thing.
This is the one thing you're right about.
He's got a simple but useless criterion for these things: is an intervention likely to do more good than harm? Apparently he thought the Haiti intervention fit that. Given events since, that's debatable.
You were right at the start: Chomsky is simple. He's good at one thing: demonstrating that the U.S. political establishment - in all its factions - is just like most regimes. It's concerned with power and interests, not any of its noble-sounding self-justifications. He's good at stripping away those justifications.
As far as what to do about it, or even an in-depth understanding of what those interests are - he's not really much use.
I didn't say the situation in the world is simple, or that the relation between workers and capital is simple. I said that Chomsky's political views are simple.
This is the one thing you're right about.
Hardly. You're constructing a straw man. Chomsky does not in fact endorse all adversaries of the U.S. He can be pretty scathing about some.It's a rather simple worldview: capitalism bad, USA bad, anybody who opposes either, good.
In fact, Chomsky has endorsed some U.S. military interventions: the invasion of Haiti during the Clinton administration, for example.but there is about as much chance of him deciding the USA did anything right as there is of, say, Michael Behe (of "intelligent design" notoriety) deciding there is no God.
He's got a simple but useless criterion for these things: is an intervention likely to do more good than harm? Apparently he thought the Haiti intervention fit that. Given events since, that's debatable.
Chomsky's not a Marxist. He has - a much simpler worldview. (He sometimes describes himself as an anarchist, though this doesn't necessarily have much to do with other self-described anarchists.) If you think Marxism is simple - you know even less about it than you do about Chomsky.what drives Chomsky is an attempt to find something--anything--that Marxism got right about capitalism,
You were right at the start: Chomsky is simple. He's good at one thing: demonstrating that the U.S. political establishment - in all its factions - is just like most regimes. It's concerned with power and interests, not any of its noble-sounding self-justifications. He's good at stripping away those justifications.
As far as what to do about it, or even an in-depth understanding of what those interests are - he's not really much use.
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