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The Full Chomsky
by Bernard Chapin
01 December 2004
Until recently, there have been few antidotes for Noam Chomsky's morass of accusations and allegations, but now we have The Anti-Chomsky Reader.
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Question: How could
a linguist working as a college professor have omniscient insight regarding
the inner workings of the American government and exclusive knowledge concerning
the hidden motivations of every government official in our nation’s history?
Answer: There’s no way he could.
Yet, such common sense does little to refute the fact that Noam Chomsky is
one of the ten most quoted figures in the humanities. He has published
screed after screed deconstructing American foreign policy positions and
never has given any indication that his insinuations may somehow be limited
by lack of connections or first hand evidence (or, in some cases, any evidence
whatsoever). Since the 1960s, he has fully played the role of
Wizard Professor and created an entire library’s worth of “pseudo-academic
smog.”i
Until recently, there have been few antidotes for his morass of accusations and allegations, but now we have The Anti-Chomsky Reader,
edited by David Horowitz and Peter Collier, which offers purchasers the service
of deconstructing the deconstructor. Once you’ve finished reading it,
you’ll be highly grateful, as Chomsky’s lies are so pervasive and counter-intuitive
that it’s a wonder anyone but the paranoid ever read him in the first place.
The Anti-Chomsky Reader is a compilation of essays outlining
and refuting the travesties that the M.I.T. linguist has passed off as truth.
It does not confine itself to politics alone. Substantial space is
given to the analysis of his scholarly publications in linguistics.
These are addressed in two chapters called, “A Corrupted Linguistics” and
“Chomsky, Language, World War II and Me.” In the area of his chosen
field, many have given him an intellectual pass, but this work does not.
His linguistic ideas may be as spurious as his political tomes. All
sources give him initial credit for his core academic assumption about the
“biological basis of grammar,” but it seems that he has engaged in little
in the way of scientifically verifiable work over the course of the last
fifty years. Chomsky’s creative terminology dazzles admirers but his
new theories inevitably amount to nothing
Overall, the compendium leaves no region of his reputation left unexamined.
Anti-Americanism is central to his worldview. He never sees this nation
as being superior to any other. At best, we mirror the pathologies
of totalitarian states. We can discern this clearly in Stephen Morris’s “Whitewashing
Dictatorship in Communist Vietnam and Cambodia.” The author sums up
Chomsky’s fetish for defending the Vietnamese and Democratic Kampuchea aptly
when he argues that,
As
a radical political ideologue, he is crippled by an intense emotional commitment
to the cause of anti-Americanism. Operating on the principle that ‘my
enemy’s enemy is my friend,’ he wholeheartedly embraced the struggle of two
of the world’s most ruthlessly brutal regimes.
Chomsky’s
hopes for mankind are vested in murderous revolutionaries and not in his
own nation. It is our nation, and never the Khmer Rouge, which gives
its citizens the freedom to vote, the freedom to trade, and, most obviously,
the freedom to spread the type of sedition that Noam Chomsky has been disseminating
for close to 40 years.
He does not limit himself to Asia, however. The professor has constantly
minimized the acts of many totalitarian states. Chomsky regarded Soviet
control of eastern Europe, when compared to the American presence in Vietnam,
as being “practically a paradise”ii
We see a man who cares far more about Holocaust deniers than the six
million who were exterminated in gas chambers or desolate Russian ravines.
After 9/11, he was more concerned about a fictitious famine in Afghanistan
than about the nearly 3,000 incinerated in the World Trade Center attacks.
He predicted that the toppling of the Taliban would result in 3 to
4 million famine deaths. When no such famine occurred, he did not issue
an apology or retraction. He simply chose to say nothing.
There is not much about this world famous ideologue that is genuine.
He has ardently defended the right of free speech for anti-Semitic, Holocaust-denying
cranks like Robert Faurisson and Pierre Guillaume but chose not to say anything,
or sign any petitions, supporting Soviet intellectuals relegated to the gulag
due to their ideas.
Chomsky’s self-proclaimed political orientation is preposterous. He
is enthralled with the socialist ideal but describes himself as a libertarian.
If this were true he would be the first libertarian in history who hated
capitalism and the free market. He also claims to be an anarchist but
seems to love nothing more than strong governments which redistribute the
wealth of its citizens and coerce its people into complying with the socialist
ideal. He is so deeply repulsed by our nation, and so entirely lacking
in perspective, that he believes Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Truman are
war criminals but Pol Pot, who murdered 25 percent of all Cambodians, he
views as having created “constructive achievements for much of the population.”
He has an easy answer for those who dare argue with him. We do not
understand as we have false consciousness.iii Only he, the magician, can know the true workings of the American state.
Stylistically, Chomsky’s works are written with an obfuscating hand and penned
in the language of the opaque. The mechanics of his style: “As a strategy
for creating a Potemkin village of intellectual authenticity, [are] brilliant;
as scholarship it is charlatanism.” Chomsky litters his work with footnotes
yet the footnotes are a parlor game because they often lead to more footnotes
citing other assertions he made in earlier works.
The most egregious passage of them all occurs in John Williamson’s essay,
“Chomsky, Language, World War II and Me.” It concerns Chomsky’s interview
with The New Yorker magazine,iv
where he is quoted as saying to one of his classes that Russian archives
proved that Britain and the United States supported Nazi armies in the hopes
of holding back the Soviet’s eastern advance. When questioned about
the quotation by
Williamson, Chomsky dismissed the reporter as having manufactured his statement
and that she had printed “a ridiculous gossip column.” He then, even
though he claimed not to have said what he did, referred Williamson to a
source that did not support his assertion in the least. Chomsky’s statement
about the reporter turned out to be slanderous as the lecture that the reporter
quoted from is available online via videotape. In it, the linguist
says exactly what the reporter says he did. When confronted with his
mendacity, Chomsky changed tactics and pronounced how absurd it was for someone
to quote from his lecture. The real absurdity is that anyone should
take him seriously at all.
In case one thinks that this was an isolated incident, Chomsky appears to have learned nothing from The New Yorker
scandal, as he lied last month in a speech at the University of Michigan
when he said that the United States had planned an attack on Japan before
Pearl Harbor. No evidence was offered to support his claim as no evidence
exists.
What can one say about Chomsky? As a scholar and shaper of young minds
he is deplorable. He is a Jew-hating Jew who views the Israelis as
Nazis and believes their behavior will result in “a final solution from which
few will escape.”v
His country has made him rich and famous, although he discerns no good
in the sea of prosperity around him. His is a most disturbed, jealous,
and depressed mind. Chomsky has tied his life’s disappointments to
officials in Washington. If the linguist would merely be content to
hate himself rather than project his feelings upon the government, we would
all be much better off.
Endnotes
i. Phrase from “Chomsky and the Cold War” by Thomas M. Nichols, p. 48.
ii. Nichols, p.61.
iii. Argument made by Eli Lehrer in “Chomsky and the Media: A Kept Press and a Manipulated People.” p.82
iv. Recounted by John Williamson in “Chomsky, Language, World War II and Me.” pp. 236-241
v. Chomsky quoted on page 94 of Paul Bogdanor’s “Chomsky’s War Against Israel.”
The Anti-Chomsky Reader is available on Amazon.com.
Bernard Chapin is a writer living in Chicago.
Email Bernard Chapin
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