Originally posted by Eleison Zeitgeist:
conclusion: what a dork... will not respect anyone who will use his name in any argument...
Now that is scary! Perhaps Map will let you join her Chomsky fan club!Originally posted by Tonny Tssagovic:
Well, I would not state that I have read all of Noams' books (nor a full book actually), but what I have read made sense to me.
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Uncontrolled vocabularies
"I try my best to make *all* my posts nice, even when I feel upset" -- Philippe Maquet
Spot false dilemmas now, ask me how!
(If you're not on the edge, you're taking up too much room.)
Originally posted by Bert Bates:
You're not apt to hear Chomsky quoted very often on CBS, NBC, or ABC :roll:
However, if you're convinced that you have to do a little searching to really get a "fair and balanced" view of the world, Chomsky adds a great perspective.
Throughout his engagements Chomsky spoke highly of journalists Alex Carey, Alexander Cockburn and John Pilger, amongst others. He strongly criticised people who asked him for guidance in selecting reliable source material, saying on several occasions that, "You have to use your own critical judgement and common sense. I can't tell you and why should you listen to me anyway? I could be lying about all this! That's the wrong question to ask me.
http://www.disinfo.com/archive/pages/article/id589/pg3/
Uncontrolled vocabularies
"I try my best to make *all* my posts nice, even when I feel upset" -- Philippe Maquet
To be quite honest, the man is a waste of space that could better be filled with a large house plant or something. At least the plant serves a purpose.
Spot false dilemmas now, ask me how!
(If you're not on the edge, you're taking up too much room.)
Originally posted by Bert Bates:
Hmmm... I don't recall anyone saying that we should hang on the man's every word, merely that he tends to offer a different perspective than the consistent drek served up by the mainstream media. Why are we so touchy about hearing a different opinion? No one else is talking about places like East Timor - I'd prefer to get the full story, not just those portions deemed appropriate by the current power base.
Originally posted by Richard Hawkes:
I don't understand critisisms of Chomsky based on the fact that he is primarily a linguist. So what. That in itself doesn't invalidate his views. What does it take to be a so-called "expert" on political affairs anyway? In my book all it takes is alot of observation, reading and some imagination. You can critisise him if you think he speaks tripe but not because of his background.
Next people will be saying Bush is unfit to be president because he was originally an oil business man ...
Originally posted by Jason Menard:
As I have said before, Chomsky plays well overseas, and there's good reason for this. He caters to a very particular type of audience that may be found in abundance in places such as Europe.
Heavily based on posted by herb slocomb (some minor changes by myself
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Well, if you begin with the presumption that all of the [s]US[/s] European media and society is controlled by a vast [s]right wing corporate conspiracy[/s] left wing warm-fuzy-feeling conspiracy then....
Originally posted by Axel Janssen:
No, Chomsky does not play an important role in European media.
It might have been different in the 70ties.
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"....bigmouth strikes again, and I've got no right to take my place with the human race...."<p>SCJP 1.4
Spot false dilemmas now, ask me how!
(If you're not on the edge, you're taking up too much room.)
Originally posted by Jason Menard:
As I have said before, Chomsky plays well overseas, and there's good reason for this.
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Intellectuals and academics are generally those who haven't come out of their university libraries long enough to catch a clue as to how life really works.
[ January 28, 2004: Message edited by: Jason Menard ]
Morgan
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Originally posted by Frank Silbermann:
Later, when the death tally was finally computed (and it turned out that the communists' attempt at social engineering had murdered a full third of the entire country's population), Chomsky used his brilliant intelligence to construct a complicated theory of how it was all really America's fault.
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I just have to respond. The fact that the man is a higly respected linguist does not mean that he should devote himself to linguitics alone. If he has an opnion, he deserves to be heard just like anyone else. If he is well known because of his work in linguistica then so be it, everyone is entitled to his claim to fame.Originally posted by Jason Menard:
As I have said before, Chomsky plays well overseas, and there's good reason for this. He caters to a very particular type of audience that may be found in abundance in places such as Europe. You can tell a lot about the man by the people who follow him. Just check out the types who cite him on the web. To be quite honest, the man is a waste of space that could better be filled with a large house plant or something. At least the plant serves a purpose.
Intellectuals and academics are generally those who haven't come out of their university libraries long enough to catch a clue as to how life really works.
[ January 28, 2004: Message edited by: Jason Menard ]
"I'm not back." - Bill Harding, Twister
Make visible what, without you, might perhaps never have been seen.
- Robert Bresson
Make visible what, without you, might perhaps never have been seen.
- Robert Bresson
Originally posted by Paul Stevens:
Here is someone who had an opinion but was unheard. This happens on colleges all across america. It happens at newspapers and tv news rooms.
Responding to a female columnist who claimed that possession of a firearm made every gun owner a potential murderer, I pointed out by way of analogy that her possession of an unregistered sexual organ made her a potential prostitute. (emphasis added)
Michael Ernest: "If Deming feels he has the unfettered right to tell a student that calling gun owners in the abstract "potential murderers" is the same as telling her that she's a prostitute, he's got an uphill battle, at best."
Eleison Zeitgeist: "Dude, what do you expect if you make these types of analogies?
Eleison Zeitgeist: "Why not compare unregistered guns to something more sensible? Unregistered knives???"
Originally posted by Richard Hawkes:
Originally posted by Frank Silbermann:
[qb]He didn't tell her that she's a prostitute. He told her that she's a POTENTIAL prostitute -- in the same sense that gun owners are potential murderers. Which is a perfectly good analogy. Ownership of guns and vaginas are, in general, both perfectly innocent behaviors. By mocking her rhetoric, he was merely revealing her ignorant intolerance.
Should've followed the no 'YOU' rule!
He could quite easily've said that "WOMEN are potential prostitutes and men are potential rapists" to make his point less personal, but still, people don't choose their sexual organs anyway so its already a dodgy comparison. He could've refuted her own shaky argument and made his point clearer by using a more accurate analogy (all car drivers are potential killers) and saved himself a world of trouble.[/QB]
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