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Chomsky explains Cold War in 5 min

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2010
  • Cut from an 1985 discussion

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @MrGrass97
    @MrGrass97 6 лет назад +422

    This 5 minute video is infinitely more enlightening and insightful than any 5 hour Jordan Peterson lecture could ever hope to be.

    • @Red-rj7sr
      @Red-rj7sr 5 лет назад +28

      Exactly. Fuck that guy.

    • @thomiashenderson4475
      @thomiashenderson4475 5 лет назад +32

      well yeah. Chomsky is also more enlightening and insightful than an episode of Good Eats. You can compare them if you’d like but it’d be meaningless. Jordan Peterson is enlightening to teenage dudes who don’t have their shit together and have a hard time seeing a positive path ahead of them. JP explains this path and it’s reachability and does so in a way that helps people looking to get their shit together actually get it together.
      I don’t even see how that’s comparable to what Chomsky is or does unless you’ve flattened JP down into another political mouthpiece and judge him in that light only, instead of a complex person with pros and cons just like anybody else.

    • @xcidgaf
      @xcidgaf 5 лет назад +9

      Papa Peterson told me to clean my room, so I did. My life is still shit.

    • @XCriminal1980x
      @XCriminal1980x 5 лет назад +9

      JP just likes to hear himself speak

    • @josephcampbell4724
      @josephcampbell4724 5 лет назад

      JP is more Jew than Jew them self.

  • @TipoQueTocaelPiano
    @TipoQueTocaelPiano 9 лет назад +669

    I feel lucky to live in a time when Noam Chomsky is still alive.

    • @per_ringnes
      @per_ringnes 9 лет назад +7

      +Citriano Torres I feel it is almost like living with Karl Marx.

    • @TheNavigateur
      @TheNavigateur 8 лет назад +1

      +Blunt Force Trauma . chomsky has been very clear that his vision of "anarchism" is defined as legitimacy of law by maximal consent i.e. democracy . According to chomsky, Marx himself was very vague about approaches - most of what he wrote was just an analysis of societies. The lack of a very clear approach is definitely a weakness in Marx's writings, but no more so than many many other writings - but on this basis, chomsky has scoffed at the idea of "marxism" being a real thing. You can hear chomsky on "marxism" by a simple search on youtube or any other search engine

    • @SagesseNoir
      @SagesseNoir 8 лет назад +3

      +Blunt Force Trauma Having read Chomsky on Marxism, I do find it laughable to claim that he is a Marxist. And no Marxist of any kind would regard him as part of the club.

    • @SagesseNoir
      @SagesseNoir 8 лет назад +1

      ***** It is not up to me to prove that he is not a Marxist, which seems silly anyway. (Is it really even worth debating?). But if you want to assume that he is, then it is your job to prove it. No one is obligated at the beginning to prove the negative. To prove it you must have sufficient knowledge both of Marx and Marxian thought, and also the thought of Chomsky himself, in order to even begin proving this. Among other things you'd have to square3 that claim with Noam Chomsky's critique of Marx and Marxism.
      And I think it is not irrelevant that one cannot find ACTUAL, undeniable Marxists (including scholars Marxist scholars in Marxism), who would recognize Chomsky as a Marxist.
      And it won't do even to point out some instance in which Chomsky agrees with Marx or some Marxist on some point or another. Even Martin Luther King who explicitly rejects Marxism as incompatible with his theistic, personalist philosophy, nonetheless found some point here or there where he did agree. Even the stoic Seneca, who rejects epicureanism, nonetheless founds some points of agreement.
      What you must show is that Marxism is Noam Chomsky's basic philosophical position, or at least so central to his position that Chomskyian thought could not be Chomskyan thought if he rejected it.
      When I read Chomsky the first thing that occurs to me with the Marxist label is:"What in his thought indicates a Marxian philosophical commitment? Is it simply that he agrees with Rosa Luxemburg's critique of Lenin.. A lot of people, non-Marxist and Marxist, would agree with her. Anti-Marxist philosopher Bertrand Russell would agree. So what?"

    • @SagesseNoir
      @SagesseNoir 8 лет назад

      ***** I haven't seen your explanation of what way Chomsky is a Marxist. Where is it that you show that Marxism is Chomsky's basic philosophical position? I must have missed it. But I must see and examine your argument, if you have one. If not, then my reply stands. And he burden of responsibility still is with you. Again, I don't find credible evidence in Chomsky's own writings that is he a Marxist, but much of the Anarchist critique of Marx, and some occasional points where he happens to agree with some Marxist (as he does with some ancient Greek thinkers and men of the Enlightenment).

  • @AlexCruz-us2sx
    @AlexCruz-us2sx 8 лет назад +196

    I can listen to noam chomsky videos all day

    • @AlexCruz-us2sx
      @AlexCruz-us2sx 8 лет назад +7

      ***** He just has a really calm way of speaking, I love it

    • @ronnieo9571
      @ronnieo9571 7 лет назад +1

      Alex Cruz I bet Chomsky could listen to his videos all day as well.

    • @luciuspaullus1948
      @luciuspaullus1948 5 лет назад

      You must have a very distorted view of the world

    • @coreycox2345
      @coreycox2345 5 лет назад

      I have Alex Cruz. I find him brilliant.

    • @seppe8156
      @seppe8156 5 лет назад +1

      I listen to Noam Chomsky all day.

  • @rillloudmother
    @rillloudmother 8 лет назад +89

    it took me 2 semesters during college to learn what chomsky says in 5 minutes...

    • @danthefan5378
      @danthefan5378 7 лет назад +3

      More & More People are Recovering from usa School Systems, Like Recovering _ _ _ _ _ (fill in the blank/"Phil n the Blanks"). Noam basher's are Always consistant in their level of truths & Evolvements, Yabba Dabba Doo Your Homework!

    • @holysecret2
      @holysecret2 6 лет назад +2

      rillloudmother probably took him just as long, he doesn't just pluck the information out of thin air. He just is sufficiently confident in his assessment and knows how to articulate it.

    • @MrB1923
      @MrB1923 6 лет назад

      Yumidori Iro
      Indeed. He started very early, but is brilliant none the less.
      High IQ is NOTHING without determination, support and opportunity.
      Chomsky is also a HUGE badass dressed as a school teacher.

    • @villiestephanov984
      @villiestephanov984 6 лет назад

      rillloudmother : He just putting Ezra and Nehemiah in the midst of Ester. It should not take that long..

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 6 лет назад

      Villie Stephanov - There’s something to be said for this proposition...

  • @aggelosSlipKnoTRKO
    @aggelosSlipKnoTRKO 10 лет назад +30

    This should be mandatory to watch in every highschool. This guy explains in five minutes not only how the cold war worked, but how global superpowers work as well. The basic thinking that goes on behind complex foreign policies, propaganda techniques and economic decissions, made simple in just a little over five minutes. Amazing and eye-opening.

  • @Malrynn
    @Malrynn 9 лет назад +307

    You can't place a valuable person like Chomsky in the woods, he could be eaten be a cheetah or something.

    • @joeschmoe1193
      @joeschmoe1193 8 лет назад +8

      +CaresserDundee Not a problem. He's so distasteful even animals avoid him.

    • @Malrynn
      @Malrynn 8 лет назад +17

      Joe Schmoe Pretty funny actually. "Chomsky after-shave, repellent to predators."

    • @erikpaterson1404
      @erikpaterson1404 8 лет назад +4

      +CaresserDundee - he he cheetahs in forests..

    • @Studentofgosset
      @Studentofgosset 8 лет назад +4

      +Joe Schmoe A bitter pill for many.

    • @5eek3r0fknowl3dg3
      @5eek3r0fknowl3dg3 7 лет назад +9

      theyll give him respect naal

  • @MarkoKraguljac
    @MarkoKraguljac 13 лет назад +16

    "We are interested in democracy as much as Russians are interested in socialism"
    Well said.

  • @MonkeyKong21
    @MonkeyKong21 9 лет назад +202

    "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough" -Einstein
    Chomsky doesn't even really need to form an explanation; he just states it as simple facts. That's what happens when you have all of the possible prerequisite knowledge of a topic

    • @CMO999
      @CMO999 9 лет назад +13

      MonkeyKong He's an intelligent and interesting person for sure, but I think you are being foolish by putting him on this god-like pedestal by saying "That's what happens when you have all of the possible prerequisite knowledge of a topic". No one can have all possible knowledge of any topic.

    • @paulb3436
      @paulb3436 8 лет назад +3

      Any scholar of history knows that history repeats itself. Certain fundamentals will thus always be present and you need only ask a few simple questions to understand the simplicity of it... What is the belief system, ideology the ruling elite needs to propagate amongst their society to justify themselves in their actual struggles amongst themselves for power, and the outside for resources. Based on that it's pretty obvious what any government machinery is doing to it's people and the outside World and why. In modern times, take the dominant super power, the US...wtf is it meddling so expensively in the Middle East...a bunch of citizens will say 'freedom' 'democracy' (fighting communism? whatever works for the times...Muslims? let's do the Crusades over again etc )...those are the ideologies propagated as justification to make the masses feel good, get behind it, sacrifice their kids, tax, whatever...'believe'. What are the gains in resources? Oil (in this case). History answers these questions, people are uneducated, thus history repeats itself. Chomsky is a political philosophiser, the greatest of our time... He's showing us how to see through the bullshit we find it so hard to dismiss, yet what we know every Empire in history does over and over.

    • @paulb3436
      @paulb3436 8 лет назад

      +CMO999 my above comment was for you btw

    • @CMO999
      @CMO999 8 лет назад

      Paul B
      I don't necessarily disagree with you, I guess I don't see it that way because I am not exposed to the same ideas as you are, not being of the US.

    • @paulb3436
      @paulb3436 8 лет назад

      CMO999 I'm not of the US either...I just follow World Politics.

  • @Oasix21
    @Oasix21 9 лет назад +58

    Chomsky is such a bright individual. Just by his rate of speech, and the several topics he mentioned you could tell that his brain is just dripping with knowledge, cognizance seems to stream out of his lips.

    • @gamos6698
      @gamos6698 9 лет назад +3

      ***** Well apart from revolutionising the study and interpretation of linguistics

    • @Oasix21
      @Oasix21 9 лет назад +6

      ***** What's wrong with being a writer, he has written books. The word has the power to spark change. He may not have caused a revolution, but it all starts with an idea.

    • @polymath7
      @polymath7 9 лет назад +11

      *****
      You are a fucking moron.
      That is all.

    • @northamericanunion5945
      @northamericanunion5945 9 лет назад +1

      ***** Complete imbecile!

    • @ronnieo9571
      @ronnieo9571 7 лет назад +2

      Oasix21 You forgot that Chomsky is so bright that you can almost feel the warmth coming from his halo, and when he speaks that his dripping knowledge is scented myrrh, and tastes of honey. Nothing is more blissful then to be wrapped in the self knowledge that Chomsky gives to humanity...so dreamy.

  • @wulf67
    @wulf67 8 лет назад +137

    It's really interesting how the people who oppose Chomsky on ideological grounds never cite a single point he makes that they disagree with. They just say ignorant things like "Chumpsky hates America". And when they do try to dispute something he says they show that they never even understood what was said like the guy below who says "if free countries are the most brutal..." He never said that. It's bizarre.

    • @TheRev1269
      @TheRev1269 8 лет назад +1

      That's horse shit. He's a liar. And I WILL point out specifics even though they don't pertain to this subject. On Israel/Palestine, at Harvard he gave a speech and said "nobody believes that Arab leaders told their citizens to evacuate, Benny Morris has proven this to be false." Ironically, if you read Benny Morris's book on the subject, you'll find on literally just the 2nd page that this is only not true, but the opposite of what Benny Morris actually said. He actually said the Arab leaders evacuated at least a dozen villages. But Chomsky has an agenda of blaming the entire Palestinian refugee problem after the war for Independence on the Jews.

    • @wulf67
      @wulf67 8 лет назад +13

      ***** Your statement is incoherent. Why does Israel continue to build illegal settlements in the West Bank?

    • @TheRev1269
      @TheRev1269 8 лет назад +1

      wulf67 That has nothing to do with anything I said, It wasn't incoherent you're just an idiot. What part did you not understand?

    • @maxschlepzig641
      @maxschlepzig641 8 лет назад +23

      It's not bizarre. It's very simple and Chomsky himself has pointed it out. He is "attacking" a form of fundamentalism, which means the people who believe it simply can't hear the critique. Also let's not forget, what Chomsky was saying here in the 80's was so remote from the standard rhetoric, responses like the ones you mentioned were the norm. I can just imagine what it was like for him in the 60's lecturing like this.

    • @wulf67
      @wulf67 8 лет назад +1

      Max Schlepzig That phenomenon is bizarre.

  • @per_ringnes
    @per_ringnes 9 лет назад +24

    watch this over and over until you learn it. this is brilliant!

    • @maharajahdann
      @maharajahdann 7 лет назад +1

      Is this a parrot you have there?

  • @ryanfoley123
    @ryanfoley123 10 лет назад +34

    It simply cannot be overstated how little the Soviet Union resembled democratic socialism or even thorough Marxism.
    I like that he took care to address that.

    • @maharajahdann
      @maharajahdann 7 лет назад

      Yes, because democratic socialism has so little to do with communism.

  • @peoplesrepublican986
    @peoplesrepublican986 7 лет назад +28

    When the US places missiles in Turkey aimed at the USSR its just business but when the USSR reacts by putting missiles in Cuba suddenly its a Cuban Missile Crisis. So is the US saying that pointing nuclear weapons at another country is wrong or just pointing them at America is wrong?

    • @derekrushe
      @derekrushe 5 лет назад

      @Bruno56 you want missiles pointed at an abstract?

    • @joshi3518
      @joshi3518 4 года назад

      @Bruno56 I am with you i hate communisim and Islam but Iran should be left alone, Iran is a powerful country with a relatively educated people, yes iran is islamic but it is not the same islamic as Saudi Arabia or Pakistan, there are parties of Banksters who would love the US to provoke war with Iran as the profits would be phenominal, again Islam is a disease but regardless it is just a religious ideology and not every follower of islam is as disturbed as the ideaology itself, so just research and think as things do not always remain the same, Iran was good in the 1970s moderate islamic country but things did change it became more extreme, and right now any war would push the population of Iran in to extremism best on this note to just stay out of Iran.

  • @paulcrewe3325
    @paulcrewe3325 9 лет назад +18

    The point about the US overthrowing or hindering regimes that prioritise their own interests ahead of conflicting American interests is completely correct. There are so many examples of this.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 9 месяцев назад

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

  • @KenCat1337
    @KenCat1337 13 лет назад +2

    3 people were so shaken by Chomsky's logically sound cold war analysis that they missed the "like" button.

  • @TheHallucinati
    @TheHallucinati 10 лет назад +212

    Hmm...I was born and raised in USSR and I didn't feel I was living in a dungeon. In fact I had a rather content life. Raised under Soviet Socialism we knew that our futures would be taken care of, with all the basic necessities of life provided to us.
    We had a right to be employed, right to housing (provided free of charge by the state), free healthcare and post-secondary education. We knew that we will never end up poor and hungry on the street through no fault of our own, because of lay offs or downsizing etc. Over 99% literacy rates, no unemployment, no homelessness, compulsory Secondary education, nothing like that is possible in Capitalism
    Living in North America right now, I don't feel that I am somehow "more free". In fact I felt a lot more constrained by economic boundaries. I experienced fear I could never imagine in USSR - like fear of going broke and homeless through no fault of my own, fear of disability, terrible isolation and loneliness because unlike USSR, North America has no true sense of community and no true multiculturalism, it is a highly individualistic society with very egotistical, selfish ideals.
    All this talk of "freedom" is for imbeciles. The only definition of freedom and happiness that exist in North American society is MATERIAL GOODS. Whenever you hear "pursuit of happiness and freedom" from your TV screen - the background is nearly always - expensive toys that men and women like. It's not an accident.
    By choosing capitalism USSR traded economic security and social justice for cheap goods in colorful packaging. But the people didn't become "more free" they became broke, hungry and desperate while only select few benefited from this materially. USSR's rich natural resources went to foreign corporations while the people received less than 1% of their market value.
    We don't have "more freedom" we have freedomS (things we can lawfully do with impunity) and they are different in Capitalism and Soviet Socialism. There isn't a single true definition of word freedom except "will bound by law" or an antonym to captivity or slavery. You are no more "free" to alter USA's foreign policy, for example than you are free to alter USSR's foreign policy. And please don't tell me that the 2 Wall Street puppets you can pick from is a better guarantee of "more freedom" than a one-party regional representation system of Soviet Union. The interests of 2 presidential candidates are exactly the same - they are interests of Wall Street not your interests.
    In a sense - by choosing capitalism you are choosing a staggeringly high probability of destitution and as a trade off - you are allowed to publicly express your discontent maybe even call on to armed uprising against the government like Alex Jones. But obviously - you will not be able to change a thing and alter your pathetic condition. Capitalism - is the freedom to rant - the only freedom that is truly yours. And you, and your children are paying a very high price for it.

    • @richwilliam3378
      @richwilliam3378 10 лет назад +15

      Very interesting and (if I may say so) very well written considering that English is not your first language. I would imagine that you have a better command of the language than many of the native speakers you rub shoulders with wherever you are on the North American continent.
      Chomsky, I would guess, must have been speaking round about 1980. At that time it was very difficult for westerners to visit the Soviet Union and other Eastern Bloc countries. If we did, we certainly couldn't travel freely. I remember that time. Probably his "dungeon" perception was in large part influenced by that fact. It is difficult to escape that image - that impression - when one sixth of the earth's surface is effectively closed off to you, though clearly your description trumps his, since you speak from direct experience.
      So perhaps I am wrong when I say this, but in my imagination, the Soviet Union at its worst was a rather dark, oppressive place. I say so because I have read the opinion of a journalist who lived there (в Москве) in the '80s. It is also worth mentioning that the Anglosphere - particularly beyond the United States - was much freer then. Educational standards were higher (again I exclude the U.S.A.), people wrote and spoke better, habeas corpus hadn't been abolished (or as good as), speech and opinion was less proscribed, you couldn't be held indefinitely without trial, torture was unthinkable and in places like Britain, Canada and New Zealand etc., there was a social safety net as well. It was less than forty years ago, but things have changed an awful lot - and largely not for the better. So you are probably - and understandably; inevitably - comparing the Soviet Union then with "the West" now. Unfortunately, it is not possible for either of us to compare the Soviet Union then with the West then by direct experience of both.
      But if I read your post correctly, I concur with the central thrust of it. There is no absolute freedom, it is relative and, in large part, subjective. For my part, I would suggest that if we give people the best education that they are able to absorb and a job with sufficient money, that is about as much 'freedom' as any of us can expect. If you throw in a few less measurable things like family support and an agreed, national social contract, that's about it.

    • @TheHallucinati
      @TheHallucinati 10 лет назад +17

      I happen to be much more familiar with Chomsky's contributions to psychology (in particular - psycholinguistics) then I am with his political lectures....I studied his theories in detail during my university years...
      As far as English is concerned, - I attended a specialized school with early English instruction in USSR. I would have to say that I am equally comfortable with both English and Russian. I actually catch myself having thoughts in both languages. I learned other languages afterwards, but I am not in any way as comfortable with them as I am with English and Russian.
      Partly, it may be because of the overall amount of English literature (both classical and modern) that I went through as well as the fact that I have lived, worked and studied in the West for a long time...
      Interestingly, I found many of the Soviet propaganda statements (then) about American (and generally Capitalist) way of life to be true when I moved to North America. As you can imagine they were somewhat exaggerated (both sides are guilty of that I'm sure), but not baseless or unsubstantiated.

    • @yomamasapeach
      @yomamasapeach 10 лет назад

      On the greater point on the topic of Materialism, you can prescribe that American culture has transformed as once being about strong family tradition and the American dream into a metamorphosis of Luxury brands and cheap products that suckle the life of the American people.
      God in the traditional sense has become dollar bills, and it gives you power and status that gets into the personalities of those who thirst for it. Living in North America, people will spend their whole lives to earn just enough to be able live in a big house on a mortgage and live only 10 hours there a week because they are working.
      However, even the USSR of all places still has a culture of materialism. Yes, as a collectivist society, you would think that people would give up the luxuries for the greater good of the people. However, if you sight that the USSR was more close to an oligarchy, there would be individuals of mass power and wealth who would live comfortable while some areas would remain with famine and poverty.
      It doesn't matter where you are in the world, the people who make up the culture or the education, people will be people, and those who aren't as strong will suffer. Its a series of growth and decay, and I think we are currently in decay

    • @TheHallucinati
      @TheHallucinati 10 лет назад +18

      yomamasapeach
      I would still prefer to live under Soviet Socialism than under Capitalism.
      Regardless how "oligarchical" the system may have been, it was not responsible for anywhere near as much destitution, illiteracy, inadequate healthcare and education and the gap between haves and havenots as USA (and current capitalist Russia) are known for.
      I don't think that "suffering is eternal and unchanging everywhere and at all times" philosophy of fatalism is a good enough reason to stop us from trying to institute a better system than one we currently have in most places of the world.
      And, speaking of freedoms - one isn't free if he has nothing to eat and no place to call home. Maslow's Hierarchy - should be the basic model for any society in my opinion.

    • @MisterAlbertoPiano
      @MisterAlbertoPiano 10 лет назад +5

      TheHallucinati Thank you so much "TheHallucinati" for showing to us your opinion on this issue. I've found it very useful and extremely educational to read "another view" of the way of life we're used to inhabit. It's needless to say that you are a very intellectual person and for that reason I want to ask you, in spite of my poor knowledge, a very open question that I hope you freely discuss in a large way, because is very difficult, in the country where I live, to find someone that really lived in a Communist country (without counting the strange case of "Semi-Communist / Semi-Capitalist" China):
      In which way a person, in the USSR, could choose the way of life that he wanted to live? That is, how important was the money in a Communist country and the relation to property (materials)?
      And about China; what do you think about their political / economical system?
      Sorry for this long questions and thank you very much in advance for your time. And sorry for my dreadful and skill-less english.

  • @francisapple
    @francisapple 8 лет назад +7

    I love how they're having a discussion in the vast recesses of some forrest.

  • @C0dglitcher22
    @C0dglitcher22 9 лет назад +10

    Wow. There is no one I know with this amount of knowledge and precision.

    • @bezdelnicar
      @bezdelnicar 8 лет назад

      +C0dglitcher22 Watch Jacque Fresco.

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel 8 лет назад

      +C0dglitcher22: More like truthiness and pretension. You can easily see why the Left fascists love him so much, however.

  • @Clerkpro
    @Clerkpro 9 лет назад +13

    All true. People misinterpret Chomsky as anti-American. I believe he is more anti-American Imperialism, which used to have a solid foundation in American society. Even Libertarians used to recoil at American Imperialism, until they attached themselves to the Republican Party.

    • @rileylaforge7640
      @rileylaforge7640 9 лет назад +3

      Jeff Johnson To build on that, Chomsky is more American that A LOT of people. American's always cite free speech and freedom of choice and the bill of rights etc. whenever its convenient for them but when someone like Professor Chomsky exercises those rights he gets criticized as being "un-american." I can't think of anything MORE american. The man still pays his taxes and contributes to society and everything else and exercises his rights. He rebels when he doesn't agree and conforms to norms when he does. The man is an amazingly free individual and I respect him so much. Does that mean I agree with everything he says? No. The main reason why I enjoy the man so much is 99% present of what he is just presenting facts and he lets them do the talking. He doesn't rely on emotionally charged rhetoric.

    • @jhsolorz
      @jhsolorz 9 лет назад +1

      Jeff Johnson Another way to look at it is that he's just smart, truthful and non-tribal.

    • @jeffbrown-hill7739
      @jeffbrown-hill7739 5 лет назад

      Agreed, but every Libertarian I know is anti-American imperialism. Ron Paul even endorsed Tulsi Gabbard for President in 2020, for that very reason.

    • @morpheusburess3124
      @morpheusburess3124 4 года назад

      American is bullshit. Us natives know that america and americans have never stood for shit

  • @KalamKhan-cq3jq
    @KalamKhan-cq3jq 6 лет назад +4

    I feel lucky to live in a time when Noam Chomsky is still alive.
    God Bless Forever.

  • @1995tom2010
    @1995tom2010 9 лет назад +163

    Why is this in the woods? Lol

    • @keenanmadams8316
      @keenanmadams8316 9 лет назад +50

      JackJincklesJones Jr. 'From an undisclosed location' Lol.. Noam the gangster..

    • @SensemakingMartin
      @SensemakingMartin 9 лет назад +4

      JackJincklesJones Jr. Haha I didnt even notice this properly until you said it. They're just chilling in some chairs in the middle of a forest or something! :P

    • @1995tom2010
      @1995tom2010 9 лет назад +5

      I love how people actually commented back on this comment of mine haha

    • @ramkumarpadmanaban2274
      @ramkumarpadmanaban2274 8 лет назад +5

      +JackJincklesJones Jr. Metaphorically it is still in the words, unknown to the world, hidden by a cloud of mass propoganda by the MSM

    • @keenanmadams8316
      @keenanmadams8316 7 лет назад +5

      Ramkumar Padmanaban Good observation.

  • @DavidByrne85
    @DavidByrne85 11 лет назад +3

    Chomsky was an outright force of nature in his younger years. The shot at 2:05 reminds me of the slow mo of Ralph Wiggum's heart breaking in 'I love lisa'.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 9 месяцев назад

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

  • @alfredgalat161
    @alfredgalat161 10 лет назад +18

    It's certainly a point of view I never read in the history books in grade school. I used to read the entire books ten times each year, and I still remember the contents. Those Catholic schoolbooks tell nothing from this overall view.

    • @mapleownage27
      @mapleownage27 9 лет назад +1

      ***** I always knew you were the most awesome president. www.scribd.com/doc/3768227/Dodd-Report-to-the-Reece-Committee-on-Foundations-1954

    • @alfredgalat161
      @alfredgalat161 9 лет назад +4

      ***** There's also James Loewen's "Lies My Teacher Told Me". Actually, it's fun finding out what the Catholic hierarchy avoids revealing about church history. As for unseethed, I agree. Andrew Jack should remain the fifth and last of the great presidents in ranking.

  • @jimmutennodesu
    @jimmutennodesu 13 лет назад +1

    Thanks for posting! Please post the entire video.

  • @chronicillz1879
    @chronicillz1879 7 лет назад +8

    1:37 created the image of the soviet threat (now Russia) to maintain its military industrial complex...

    • @shawnfreeman3932
      @shawnfreeman3932 4 года назад

      Oceania was at war with Eastasia. Oceania had always been at war with Eastasia

  • @MatticusPrime1
    @MatticusPrime1 8 лет назад +6

    Chomsky on point as always

  • @LeoWhalen1933
    @LeoWhalen1933 Год назад +1

    What I've noticed about most universally respected pundits like Noam is that they are completely unattached to any official platform, ideology, political platform, etc. There is absolutely no ass kissing.

  • @paulmurphy42
    @paulmurphy42 7 лет назад +1

    "England acted like the Nazis in India"...makes anyone who knows anything about British history want to give up...

  • @RakidulAlam
    @RakidulAlam 8 лет назад +3

    i love this guy.we are lucky to have him still in 2016

  • @Muldoonite
    @Muldoonite 8 лет назад +17

    Any links to the full video?

    • @mhdunknown
      @mhdunknown 8 лет назад +4

      +Muldoonite
      I'm really interested in this too.

    • @remotefaith
      @remotefaith 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/L4WI4H5qF2k/видео.html

    • @Muldoonite
      @Muldoonite 3 года назад

      @@remotefaith cool thanks!

  • @quantummath
    @quantummath 12 лет назад +1

    Chomsky's Consistence in his views are somehow unique; this consistency is and has been his winning edge in his discussions.
    While the opponents try to pinpoint specifics to argue over, Chomsky reminds them of their myopic view out of disregard for the context.
    Chomsky's intelligence and articulateness is really stunning even at the age of 83.

  • @WillieTheWino1
    @WillieTheWino1 13 лет назад +2

    The man fires out ideas like a machine gun, it's incredible!

  • @thetawaves48
    @thetawaves48 8 лет назад +3

    in a nutshell, domestic policy is not foreign policy.

  • @per_ringnes
    @per_ringnes 9 лет назад +3

    Chomsky is my hero!

  • @daliborkment3765
    @daliborkment3765 3 года назад +2

    Don't we all,,Noel Chomsky's experience in philosophy and political issues is second to none.

  • @davefischer2344
    @davefischer2344 7 лет назад +2

    Love Chomsky, very articulate and detailed in his descriptions of political ideologies. Very intellectual and amazing to listen to.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 9 месяцев назад

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

    • @davefischer2344
      @davefischer2344 9 месяцев назад

      yes@@edithbannerman4

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 9 месяцев назад

      @@davefischer2344 How’s your day going and what’re you up to?

    • @davefischer2344
      @davefischer2344 9 месяцев назад

      it is going @@edithbannerman4

  • @veronicav27
    @veronicav27 8 лет назад +13

    I used to live in the soviet union. I don't understand what is evil about it. People get up in the morning and go to work to earn their living. Kids go to school. I used study art and ballet there. Sounds evil enough?

    • @SHAD0WB0LT
      @SHAD0WB0LT 8 лет назад +2

      +veronicav27 because you were russian. It was hell on earth for everyone from germany to korea and from chechnya to afghanistan, unless you were a russian slave master.

    • @veronicav27
      @veronicav27 8 лет назад +1

      +SHAD0WB0LT Maybe, but that was for a reason... Germany was definitely for a reason. Korea a lot of people think was better off then. Other countries too, there were problems there. For soviet citizens was ok.

    • @SHAD0WB0LT
      @SHAD0WB0LT 8 лет назад +1

      veronicav27 better off then? what the hell are you gibbering about? first, north korea still exists, and second, the soviets were responsible for a war that killed 4 million people.

    • @veronicav27
      @veronicav27 8 лет назад

      +SHAD0WB0LT what war? I believe Korea was receiving financing from USSR before

    • @SHAD0WB0LT
      @SHAD0WB0LT 8 лет назад +1

      veronicav27 korea was under japanese colonial rule until the u.s. and ussr invaded, remember? the un created a zone of division. the soviets grabbed the north and decided to rebuild their share of korea in their own image. they created the north korea we know of today and armed them to conquer the rest of the peninsula.

  • @thowell947
    @thowell947 10 лет назад +4

    Mind being blown at 2:07

    • @mikecimerian6913
      @mikecimerian6913 10 лет назад

      His objectivity is disconcerting. I have a similar point of view concerning the MAD doctrine. As it was, each state could have targeted it's own population, it was equivalent.
      The terror was milked on both sides to keep people frozen in the narrative of the state. Some fools make light of nuclear war nowadays. Ordinary people were digging bomb shelters in their backyard during the 60's and it was a direly serious affair.

    • @illegalsmirf
      @illegalsmirf 10 лет назад

      lol!

    • @mikecimerian6913
      @mikecimerian6913 10 лет назад

      ***** Russia did inherit some good management structures. The tradition of bureaus and laboratories has been maintained.
      It is a high spin off economic environment where redundancy is reduced to a minimum and technology transfer opportunities made as available as possible.
      Economic circumstances imposed incremental development which was a blessing in disguise.

  • @benjamintchang3923
    @benjamintchang3923 3 года назад +2

    Learning more from this than i am in my Modern US History class

  • @GazGuitarz
    @GazGuitarz 13 лет назад +1

    What a man! So few with his clarity and knowledge, who are willing to speak out.

  • @DJFLDJFL
    @DJFLDJFL 9 лет назад +8

    An honest question, and if I missed something, please let me know. Did Chomsky just say that Russia wasn't really a threat during the Cold War and that the whole thing was largely US fabrications? I'm thinking specifically of the Cuban Missile Crisis where we came within a hair's breadth at *least* twice to at least one nuke being launched. I'm not a Chomsky fan, but even so, I feel like I simply must be missing something here because to say that Russia wasn't a threat basically outside its borders seems like an indefensible position.

    • @mr1001nights
      @mr1001nights  9 лет назад +23

      DJFLDJFL Quote Chomsky precisely and then say which part of the quotation you disagree with. Otherwise misreadings and unjustified interpretations tend to take place.

    • @DJFLDJFL
      @DJFLDJFL 9 лет назад +3

      mr1001nights I understand and somewhat agree, but unfortunately, that way also eliminates context. He spends the first portion of the video arguing that there is no discernible correlation between a country's internal freedom or repression and how aggressive they behave outside its borders. He cites Nazi Germany and today's USA as contrasting examples of this.
      Building on that, please watch from 1:00 to 2:10. Chomsky builds on his previous point saying that Russia is/was a threat to its own people and government internally. Externally, they were a threat to immediately neighbouring countries like Afghanistan. What he says after about every Russian aggression incident during the Cold War being fabricated. He says this at 1:59.

    • @mr1001nights
      @mr1001nights  9 лет назад +35

      DJFLDJFL
      I think he says that we exaggerated the threat to the US, not that they were no threat. I'm sure you'll agree that there are many cases (Vietnam, Nicaragua etc) where the US liked to claim, without evidence, that these countries were puppets of the Kremlin--always exaggerating Russian influence in order to justify intervention. That the sandinistas would attack the US or that Ho Chi Minh would paddle in his canoe to America and rape your grandmother or something. Now, you say you're referring specifically to the Cuban Missile Crisis when thinking about "Russian aggression". Yet Kennedy had nuclear missiles in Turkey pointing at Russia before Russia put any in Cuba. How then can it be interpreted as anything but a defensive position on the part of the USSR? Certainly, by US standards this was a mild reaction. The US feels justified in using overwhelming force in response to much lesser provocations and considers it outrageous if anyone does to the US a small fraction of what the US does regularly to other countries. In the end Chomsky might tell you that the US was the main expanding imperialist force during the Cold war, and that the USSR had to settle for a strategy of containment. These roles had more to do with the power each country possessed than with their respective degrees of internal freedom.

    • @DJFLDJFL
      @DJFLDJFL 9 лет назад +1

      mr1001nights Thanks for your response. I don't disagree with the thrust, but I think I'm caught up on his use of and emphasis on the phrase "every single time" at 1:59. I can grant that it's a conversational mistake if that's what it is. Otherwise, it sure sounds like Chomsky's famous anti-US bias. He certainly isn't alone, he certainly makes many great points, and I'm glad he's around as a strong and knowledgeable counterpoint. I just don't think that his view of the US is changeable almost regardless of what they do. I realize he's nearly 90 now etc, but he's certainly had "US=bad" glasses on for much of his work that I have seen. Fortunately for him, there is a lot of material on which to base that position.

    • @mr1001nights
      @mr1001nights  9 лет назад +10

      DJFLDJFL
      If the US either invented, or at the very least exaggerated the threat that the Russians posed, this can certainly be described as a "Soviet threat that has been created and usually fabricated". In order to demonstrate that it was a "conversational mistake" you'd have to argue instances where the threat wasn't exaggerated.

  • @willieboy3011
    @willieboy3011 10 лет назад +4

    Read 1984 by Orwell and you will find more truth about the SOVIET Union than anything this communist ever said. Do not be misled. Read the history of the SOVIET Union, Communist China, Cambodia. Read about the "dark totalitarianism" that these people lived through. Read about the 18.5 million who did not survive the slave labor camps in USSR or the 100 million victims of communism worldwide. Try the "Black Book of Communism" or "Communism" by professor Richard Pipes

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 9 лет назад

      Yes, 100 million dead in the name of their god: Communisn could be considered awful. Nothing capitalism did is comparable to this

    • @ProudestMonkey222
      @ProudestMonkey222 9 лет назад

      willieboy3011 yet. wait until capitalist interests do not get what they want. peak oil is coming this year, lets see how that one plays out. and there have been horrific examples of capitalist interests leading to genocide. check out East Timor 1975 and see what happened to the island of peaceful people that didn't want to aid in the capitalist cause. all the -isms just care about their own power, exercising it and expanding it whenever possible

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 9 лет назад

      Excellent work. You have demonatrated how well Communist deniers can ignore inconvenient truths.

    • @AhemLd
      @AhemLd 9 лет назад +1

      willieboy3011 on your original comment:
      1984 says, much to your discredit, *precisely* what Chomsky is saying, namely
      the superstate is fabricating an external threat in order to divert people's attention from the fact that it actually is at war not with an external entity, but with its own people
      (btw, your man Orwell was a socialist, just like Chomsky, in fact one of his major influences)

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 9 лет назад

      Orwell was a socialist, but even he was abhored by the horror that the communist dictator Stalin committed. Does this not make his warning about the danger in 1984 even more remarkable?

  • @LowellBDennyIII
    @LowellBDennyIII 13 лет назад +1

    Thanks for posting this!!! I could have listened to 1001 x 5 minutes of Chomsky.

  • @juniorphiri2561
    @juniorphiri2561 7 месяцев назад +1

    Blistering! Dude woke up feeling level 100 here.

  • @maharajahdann
    @maharajahdann 7 лет назад +3

    He mentions Greece in 1947 as an example of unnecessary american intervention against a non existent Soviet threat. That is completely false. The american intervention in the Greek civil war followed those (interventions) supporting the communists. No historian disputes this today, particularly after the opening of the archives in a number of formerly communist states. What he claims here is simply not true.
    His wider point, which he does not explicitly make, is that Soviet imperialism was, with the exceptions he concedes, practically non-existent. Well, I guess there's a reason he doesn't make this point explicit, it's because it also not true. It was global, and it was aggressive.
    He also says that the Soviet system had a floor that wouldn't allow people to fall through the cracks. How would we know? How does he know? Perhaps he asked those exiled at the Gulags?
    I love Chomsky, and criticism is necessary in any open society, but quite often his is not fair.

    • @dorianphilotheates3769
      @dorianphilotheates3769 6 лет назад +4

      maharajahdann - I’m an historian and I DO dispute it. In 1947 there was no threat of a Soviet intervention or takeover of Greece, whatsoever.
      The Stalinist agenda did not involve Greece. This has been quite clearly documented on both sides. No serious researcher today disputes that the Greek insurrection was exclusively the work of local Communists and other anti-establishment elements. In fact, the leadership of the KKE- The Greek Communist Party- which took its marching orders directly from Moscow, officially condemned the movement and publicly denounced the insurrectionists for taking up arms, thereby absolving itself- and the Soviet Union- of any responsibility. If the movement of the Greek Left were to succeed, Stalin would of course swoop in to claim the prize; otherwise, the partisans were really abandoned to their own devices, and this was primarily why they failed. The Greek Ultra-Right, together with the British, did everything they could to couch the whole thing as an imminent Soviet threat in order to drum up U.S. support for the royalists and pro-fascist elements that controlled the army ( during the War- in marked contrast to the vast majority of the Greek people-many monarchist officers had openly collaborated with the Axis Occupation).
      The United States was only too happy to take up the torch, and deployed Gen. James Van Fleet, together with military advisors, financial support and materiel- including, for the first time, the use of napalm bombs which claimed the lives of many innocent civilians and devastated entire swaths of land in the north. So, Chomsky is absolutely correct on this.

  • @raykaelin
    @raykaelin 10 лет назад +7

    On the surface, he's profound but dig a little deeper, he's superficially dense.

    • @Imhornydadcomeinside
      @Imhornydadcomeinside 10 лет назад +1

      And you based this on what? If Noam Chomsky is dense I must have short term memory loss.

    • @raykaelin
      @raykaelin 10 лет назад

      Imhornydadcomeinside your handle is sick, so I rightly assume you are as well.

    • @TrollPickle
      @TrollPickle 10 лет назад +13

      Ray Kaelin
      If you don't clarify your first point; it is worthless. ''What is asserted without proof can be rejected without proof'' -Hitchens

    • @TheSpiritOfTheTimes
      @TheSpiritOfTheTimes 10 лет назад

      Give explanation, please.

    • @TheJake818
      @TheJake818 10 лет назад +1

      Agreed. Just listening to him I find him to be a well educated douche. Arriving at this realization after reading some of his writings and listening to him. He is a complete Socialist and anything other for him is described in negative light.

  • @rvdrvd1000
    @rvdrvd1000 12 лет назад

    His honesty Is not in question,his accuracy is.

  • @EclecticSceptic
    @EclecticSceptic 12 лет назад +1

    Chomsky is an expression of pure logical and ethical clarity.

  • @marcocalarco7575
    @marcocalarco7575 8 лет назад

    RUclips tip of the day: Don't ever video a meeting in a forest. People will think it's Bohemian grove.

  • @festus569
    @festus569 6 лет назад

    Chomsky explained Cold War correctly in 5 minutes. The Cold War was a struggle for world domination between USA and ex-USSR (see, Julius Evola Ride the Tiger, Part 7: Dissolution in the Social Realm, Chapter 25 States and Parties - Apoliteia).

  • @efarmer385
    @efarmer385 13 лет назад

    Thanks, I'm lovin' these Chomsky videos man. Happy Thanksgiving!

  • @13blanket
    @13blanket 7 лет назад +1

    How was my phone battery literally just at 29% and now it's at 20%?

  • @kurtscholz9384
    @kurtscholz9384 5 лет назад +1

    Where is the longer discussion?

  • @TheMagnaOpera
    @TheMagnaOpera 13 лет назад

    A debate in a forrest!? HOW COOL IS THAT?!!!

  • @RublixCom
    @RublixCom 12 лет назад

    They have the other 3 letters in their name nowadays, but they're happy that a lot of people believe that they don't exist. Makes their work much easier.

  • @goozbaghali
    @goozbaghali 12 лет назад

    WAIT A SECOND....Is this debate taking place in a forrest? That is awesome !!!!

  • @danielskipperrasmussen161
    @danielskipperrasmussen161 7 лет назад

    The Soviet Union: "A dungeon with a certain degree of social services"

  • @macgeek2004
    @macgeek2004 12 лет назад

    In fact, unbeknownst to the Soviets, the missles in Turkey were obsolete anyway and were already (by that point) scheduled to be decommissioned and removed regardless, as they were being replaced by the then-newly developed submarine-launched Polaris SLBM's.

  • @RevolutionaryJam
    @RevolutionaryJam 13 лет назад

    hey what a fantastic post you have made here jonathan! Chopmsky at his most astute! wonderful mash up 10/10

  • @user-it7vn4yb3l
    @user-it7vn4yb3l Год назад +1

    Americans are the last ones who should be talking about not keeping treaties. The U.S. has the same reputation with the Native inhabitants of this country.

  • @zharkoo
    @zharkoo 7 лет назад

    Chomsky never fails to impress, clear, to the point, all based on facts... he's just mesmerizing

  • @visualmedia4us
    @visualmedia4us 12 лет назад

    That's no a parking! That's the edge of the parking lot of the Sheraton.

  • @DClean
    @DClean 11 лет назад

    Because this is the 1985 Grand Jedi Council Meeting, and if you had done your homework, you would have known that it was held on the forest moon, Endor.

  • @jonatandencker1344
    @jonatandencker1344 6 лет назад

    awsome sitting in the forrest for stuff like this :)
    Very relevant, thankyou!

  • @DaHonestAbe
    @DaHonestAbe 13 лет назад +1

    Beyond excellent.

  • @rvdrvd1000
    @rvdrvd1000 12 лет назад

    You can`t be searching for words.

  • @billybobthornton9011
    @billybobthornton9011 7 лет назад

    It'll be a sad day when this great man passes

  • @theghostofhumankindness4312
    @theghostofhumankindness4312 11 лет назад +1

    The claim that the Soviet Union was "just as imperialist as the united states" is completely insane. Yes, they dominated Eastern Europe after 1945 but only because they had been invaded twice in 25 years and lost 27 million people in WW2 and because the US was following an aggressive and threatening line - bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki, expanding military bases all over the world, setting up the world bank etc.

  • @benitomcbenny3684
    @benitomcbenny3684 Год назад +2

    This man is a genius..😯

  • @StJoseph777
    @StJoseph777 11 лет назад

    They were active in Cuba and all over Central and South America as well. They just were. You can argue it was good they were, bad they were, or "just as bad" or "not as bad" or whatever, but they were highly active globally.

  • @prateeksaini5412
    @prateeksaini5412 6 лет назад

    My god, 6 billion people have pint sized observation. This guy is more intelligent and significant than any scientist or inventor

  • @DNesij
    @DNesij 11 лет назад

    Chomsky was at Endor giving a talk after the war.

  • @ashleygb83
    @ashleygb83 11 лет назад

    Chomsky is the truth. You can never argue too much with his logic and what he says. Just wish Western Governments were listening to this guy in the 1980's and not Milton Friedman, then the world might not be in a complete financial/social meltdown!

  • @pleaslucian
    @pleaslucian 12 лет назад

    Russian-American engineer, Dmitry Orlov, addresses that point quite well. In exploring both the similarities and differences between the two natons' respective collapses (the SU collapsed in the 90s while the US is collapsing now) he suggests that SU economic structure and social programs prevented social collapse there in a way that the hyper-privatization in America will not. In the SU, people never lost government issued housing. The bread and soup truck never stopped coming, etc.

  • @keepitsimple123
    @keepitsimple123 11 лет назад

    That's an overplayed inaccuracy. Boers had to be re-homed after their houses were scorched. Instead of sending them out into the desert, the British established holding camps that would hold the families until their new homes were built. While these camps had a high mortality rate, it fell as conditions improved, falling below the rate of British cities, like Glasgow. A distinction must be made. The USA had genuine concentration camps before this in their war in the Philippines,298,000 died.

  • @krolsen4609
    @krolsen4609 7 лет назад

    Could someone post the full video's Url and others to "like" it to make sure it was on the first page..

  • @PsyPhiRevolution
    @PsyPhiRevolution 13 лет назад

    I wish I could hold as much information in my brain as Chomsky does.

  • @ljubog
    @ljubog 11 лет назад

    What a nice place to film a debate! Great idea!

  • @Hands2HealNow
    @Hands2HealNow 11 лет назад

    What an amazing fact and insight filled five minutes on video anywhere.

  • @SuperEagle421
    @SuperEagle421 7 лет назад

    Well spoken, and more importantly, very accurate assessments....especially the part about nations being punished if not destroyed by America, if they do not acquiesce to her demands.

  • @LukoHevia
    @LukoHevia 7 лет назад

    Damn... This guy is so right... The world needs him so much

  • @iliketha
    @iliketha 12 лет назад

    basically you could substitute soviet threat for terrorist threat and most of what he said applies today

  • @AlemanJuan
    @AlemanJuan 12 лет назад

    my first thought was "his hair and glasses makes him look like stephen colbert in this video"

  • @Starkalicious07
    @Starkalicious07 5 лет назад

    Ah, the days when Chomsky could deliver a whole sentence in less than 5 minutes.

  • @BornAgainHedonist
    @BornAgainHedonist 11 лет назад

    What if a grizzly bear emerged from the woods? And pulled up a chair to join in the discussion?

  • @DClean
    @DClean 11 лет назад

    Dude's a beast. Where can I see the full vid???

  • @foofighting101
    @foofighting101 13 лет назад

    "Hey guys, I was thinking about going into the woods to discuss global politics. Wanna come?"
    "Yeah, sounds awesome, I'll grab some chairs!"

  • @rvdrvd1000
    @rvdrvd1000 12 лет назад

    The threat was American missiles in Turkey,The missiles were removed,by the Kennedy Administration,as a concession for the removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba.

  • @MXOtaku
    @MXOtaku 11 лет назад

    "To create a system of shared interests" I couldn't agree more

  • @punxsutawneybarney
    @punxsutawneybarney 11 лет назад

    Most people at the time assumed that the reason the USA invaded Afghanistam was to get Osama, and that the reason the USA wanted to get Osama was because he had done 9/11. So yes, the idea that the USA had no evidence that Osama did it was beyond contrroversial--it was unthinkable.

  • @gtfan44
    @gtfan44 11 лет назад

    India and South Africa are the examples that come to mind first. One could argue that China and Japan were basically colonized because Europe and the US forced them to open their trade, and their standards of living have risen in the 120+ years since then faster than any other period of similar length in either country's history...

  • @syggelekokIe
    @syggelekokIe 12 лет назад +1

    Noam Chomsky = forever relevant

  • @NZ.YouTube
    @NZ.YouTube 9 лет назад +2

    a glorious mindfuck

  • @trilobright
    @trilobright 12 лет назад

    In the Boston area where MIT is if you're not in a city or town, or on a beach, you're in a forest. Not like in Great Britain and Ireland where they're relatively rare. Like in New England the idea of a particular forest having a name and terminal area is foreign, because basically everything is forested and any open meadow or farmland was probably deliberately cleared by human hands.

  • @lefttoitall2982
    @lefttoitall2982 6 лет назад

    Could anyone give me a link ;or the broadcast, or show title to find the entire interview?

  • @iwiwla22
    @iwiwla22 13 лет назад

    I'd like to see this in its entirety. Do you have a title or link? is it even worth watching past this?

  • @InfiniteGXT
    @InfiniteGXT 12 лет назад

    having a global socioeconomic discussion in the woods, what bosses

  • @mitzvahgolem8366
    @mitzvahgolem8366 6 лет назад +1

    Chomsky must openly admit it is because of free speech of America he can say what he thinks safely . God bless America!

    • @hhhahahhhahha
      @hhhahahhhahha 3 года назад

      a gift given from below not from above. free speech was WON during the civil rights era not given by the constitution. A lot of people were arrested for speech during the 20th century, labor activists, anti war activists, they arrested eugene v debs for giving an antia ww1 speech

  • @steves4945
    @steves4945 6 лет назад

    is there a link to the long/unedited version?

  • @alexivanov7567
    @alexivanov7567 6 лет назад

    Anyone knows who are the others in this video? Кто нибудь знает имена других в этом видео? Это не Солженицын случайно среди них?