Noam Chomsky speaks to Paul Jay on the Obama - Geithner plan. Chomsky says that "they're simply recycling, the Bush-Paulson measures and changing them a little, but essentially the same idea: keep the institutional structure the same, try to kind of pass things up, bribe the banks and investors to help out, but avoid the measures that might get to the heart of the problem." BioNoam Chomsky has written and lectured widely on linguistics, philosophy, intellectual history, contemporary issues, international affairs and U.S. foreign policy. His works include: Aspects of the Theory of Syntax; Cartesian Linguistics; Sound Pattern of English (with Morris Halle); Language and Mind; American Power and the New Mandarins; At War with Asia; For Reasons of State; Peace in the Middle East?; Reflections on Language; The Political Economy of Human Rights, Vol. I and II (with E.S. Herman); Rules and Representations; Lectures on Government and Binding; Towards a New Cold War; Radical Priorities; Fateful Triangle; Knowledge of Language; Turning the Tide; Pirates and Emperors; On Power and Ideology; Language and Problems of Knowledge; The Culture of Terrorism; Manufacturing Consent (with E.S. Herman); Necessary Illusions; Deterring Democracy; Year 501; Rethinking Camelot: JFK, the Vietnam War and US Political Culture; Letters from Lexington; World Orders, Old and New; The Minimalist Program; Powers and Prospects; The Common Good; Profit Over People; The New Military Humanism; New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind; Rogue States; A New Generation Draws the Line; 9-11; and Understanding Power.
Comments from Registered Members | (Register or log in to make your comment.) | DarrenTO9999 2009-04-07
I should have said "more attention to detail" rather than "deal" in my last post.
Darren, Toronto, ON. | DarrenTO9999 2009-04-07
Moreover, to extrapolate positive support of such exercises as copper mining at the expense of environmental concerns from an example that was used for the limited purpose of dispelling the public = inefficient myth is, I believe, a superficially literal interpretation. The example of the Chilean company was not used in the context of a debate about copper mining and to stretch the argument that far is intellectually dishonest. For example, I am a strong critic of the CBC but I would still use it as a means of dispelling the myth that a national broadcaster necessarily means less editorial/journalistic freedom. I respectfully suggest that more attention to deal and context is warranted. Darren Lund, Toronto, ON | DarrenTO9999 2009-04-07
It depends on the context in which it is discussed. I think Chomsky was merely trying to dispel the myth that the public sector necessarily implies inefficiency...a good myth to dispel since it is, for example, the basis for resistance to single payor health care. To imply that Chomksy is promoting efficiency as the primary value is to completely ignore the fact the the majority of his comments are a critique of the legal model that elevates the profit motive and makes the corporation answerable only to shareholders at the expense of stakeholders... | DarrenTO9999 2009-04-07
Sshenfield:
(If this goes too long I will post a follow-up) With respect, I think you have misinterpreted the thrust of Chomsky's comments with respect nationalization. You state that the Chilean company Chomsky refers to is subject to the same pressures and incentives as regular business corporations and criticize Chomsky for apparently buying into the "efficiency" model at the expense of broader concerns such as the environmental impact of copper mining.
I do not believe that your interpretation of Chomsky's comments takes the context into consideration, thereby disorting them. In the interview, Chomsky mentions the Chilean company as a rebuttal to the false dichotomy of "private = efficient vs. public = inefficient". Arguing that this dichotomy is untrue is not the same thing as arguing that efficiency is properly the prime objective of all economic activity. Efficiency is not inherently good or bad, but depends on the context in which it is discussed. If it is elev | sunrise 2009-03-29
Pl support paul jay/the real news, few of the forums that you can provide web address to inform the public of vital info. that the youtube will not allowed. See obama’s agenda:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7535755025025800195; and others
http://www.serendipity.li/jsmill/us_corporation.htm; The United States Isn't a Country — It's a Corporation!
•Thomas J. DiLorenzo: Truth About the 14th Amendment, Kirwan: FEMA — The Plan to Kill America
•Control of Government, Eliminate Taxes, Ed Lewis: Who's the boss in America? www.CindySheehansSoapbox.com, we can not transfer infos by mass e-mail any more, we need The Real News that yet provide this service until then, and we need to let everyone knows whats going on and protect each other. Thanks.
| Vierotchka 2009-03-28
sshenfield, libertarian and socialism are mutually exclusive, they are diametrical opposites. Therefore, Chomsky does not adhere to any "libertarian socialism". He is more of an anarcho-syndicalist than anything else. | Uhlinger 2009-03-28
"Fifty men have run America, and that's a high figure." (Joseph Kennedy, father of JFK, in the July 26th, 1936 issue of The New York Times.) | prgill 2009-03-28
The question to me seems where does one draw the line, indeed where should we draw the line to define the limits of "the public good" to be achieved through private enterprise. I especially like Chomsky's idea of the corporation as a public vehicle accountable to stakeholders (note, I do not say "shareholders"). Productions systems also belong to the environments and the communities that nurtured their success. This is an idea that is current in Europe and squarely addresses the idea that a corporation has "social responsibilities", indeed owes a duty to society greater than the sum of its taxes. | sunrise 2009-03-27
Please help the good cause to save US and the world; www.CindySheehansSoapbox.com
someone risk her life for our countryman, until US changes its policies toward global human with respect, no country will respect US either. Forward her web-site pays your dues for your parents, children, relatives and friends.
And we need a real American work for us, vote Cindy for congress.
| Mkldsz 2009-03-27
is there a way to download a low quality video? these are all pretty large. i don't have the time to watch them all when i finally get some internet, but would like to save them for later when i don't have it. | Benjamin 2009-03-27
It's great to have Chomsky, but I could hardly understand him, and it wasn't just his soft voice. The microphone wasn't working right. Still, the Real News is doing a great job,. but please fix these glitches. (Paul Jay sounded fine.) Thanks | sshenfield 2009-03-27
Chomsky says many good things, but I would like to point out how far removed his prescriptions remain from the libertarian socialism that, in principle, he himself stands for. Nationalized firms, like Codelco in Chile, in order to compete in the global market, still have to behave in basically the same way as private firms. And Chomsky seems to accept the criterion of capitalist "efficiency" customarily used to judge firms instead of asking to what extent the real processes of producing and using copper serve human needs and meet ecological requirements. What the planet and the species need is world socialism, not nationalization by contending states. | markmason 2009-03-27
It doesn't get any better. Jay and Chomsky, both engaging and sincere, speak as if Main Street matters, as if speaking truth were a common occurrence. Precious moment. Incredible dialogue. |
TranscriptNOTE: THIS TRANSCRIPT IS UNEDITED. CHANGES MAY ENSUE. THE REAL NEWS NETWORK IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR MISTAKES FOUND HEREIN.
PAUL JAY: Welcome to The Real News Network. We're in Cambridge at MIT with Professor Noam Chomsky, who I think needs no introduction. Thanks for joining us.
CHOMSKY: Glad to be with you.
JAY: So a few days ago, the Obama administration and Geithner, they announced their plan for the banks. What do you make of it?
CHOMSKY: Well, there are several plans, actually. One is capitalization. The other, the more recent one, is picking up the toxic assets with a private-public coalition. And that sent the stock market zooming right away. And you can see why: it's extremely good for bankers and investors. It means that an investor can, if they want, purchase these valueless assets. And if they happen to go up, well, it makes money; if they go down, the government insures it. So there might be a slight loss, but there could be a big gain. And that's—one financial manager put it in The Financial Times this morning, "It's a win-win situation."
JAY: A win-win situation if you're the investor.
CHOMSKY: If you're the investor, yeah.
JAY: If you're the investor.
CHOMSKY: For the public it's a lose-lose situation. But they're simply recycling, pretty much, the Bush-Paulson measures and changing them a little, but essentially the same idea: keep the institutional structure the same, try to kind of pass things up, bribe the banks and investors to help out, but avoid the measures that might get to the heart of the problem—however, at the cost, if you consider it a cost, of changing the institutional structure.
JAY: What's the plan you would support?
CHOMSKY: Well, I mean, say, for example, take the bonuses, the AIG bonuses that are, you know, causing such anger, rightfully. Dean Baker pointed out that there's an easy way to deal with it. Since the government pretty much owns AIG anyway (it just doesn't use its power to make decisions), split off the section of AIG—the financial investment section—that caused all the problems, split it off, and let it go bankrupt. And then the executives can seek to get their bonuses from a bankrupt firm if they like. So that would pretty much take care of the bankruptcy problem, and the government would still maintain its large-scale effective control, if it wants to exert it, of what's viable in AIG. And with the banks, the big banks, like Bank of America, one of the big problems is nobody knows what's going on inside. You know, there are very opaque devices and manipulations which technically the government—. They're not going to tell you themselves. You know, why should they? It's not their business. In fact, when Associated Press sent journalists to interview bank managers and investment-firm managers and ask them what they've done with the TARP [Troubled Assets Relief Program] money, they just laughed. They said, "It's none of your business. We're private enterprises. Your task, the public, is to fund us, but not to know what we're doing." But the government could find out—namely, essentially, take over the banks.
JAY: Is all of this sort of machinations of policy because they want to avoid nationalization?
CHOMSKY: You don't have to use the word "nationalization" if it bothers people, but some form of, you know, receivership which would at least allow independent investigators, government investigators, to get into the books, find out what they're doing, who owes what to whom, which is the basis for any form of modification. I mean, it could go on to something much beyond, but it's not contemplated. It's not a law of nature that corporations have to be dedicated solely to profit for their shareholders. It's not even legislation. It's mostly court decisions and management rules and so on. And it's perfectly conceivable for corporations, if they exist, to be responsible to stakeholders, to the community, to the workforce.
JAY: Well, especially when it's all public money at this point that's running the system.
CHOMSKY: Look, fact of the matter is it's almost always public money. So take, say, the richest man in the world, Bill Gates. How did he become the richest man in the world? Well, a lot of it was public money. In fact, places like where we're sitting right now,—
JAY: MIT.
CHOMSKY: —that's where computers were developed, the Internet was developed, fancy software was developed, either here or in similar places, and almost entirely on public funding. And then, of course, I mean, the way the system works, fundamentally—it's kind of an overstatement, but fundamentally, is that the public pays the costs and takes the risks, and the profit is privatized.
JAY: Which is what we're seeing now with the whole [inaudible] bailout.
CHOMSKY: Well, there's a lot of talk about it now because it's the financial institutions and it's very visible, but this happens all the time. I mean, as I say, computers and the Internet, the basis for the IT revolution in the late '90s.
JAY: So when you say "challenging the institutional structure," what would you like to see happen?
CHOMSKY: For a start, corporations, banks, and so on should be, I think, responsible to stakeholders. That's not a huge change. In fact, it's even been brought to the courts. It was an important case, highly relevant now. About 30 years ago, when the major steel companies wanted to destroy the Youngstown steel plants—major part of the steel industry, you know, the core of the community had been built up around it, and so on—and they wanted to move it or get rid of it. And the workers and the community wanted to keep it and felt they could run it privately. And in fact they brought a case up through the courts, arguing that the management rules ought to be changed so that stakeholders, rather than just shareholders, would have control over the corporation. Well, it lost in the courts, naturally, but it's a perfectly feasible idea. It could be a way to keep communities alive and the industry here.
JAY: So if you're looking at the financial system now and you take this principle, the representing the interests of all stakeholders, not just shareholders, what would that look like in terms of policy?
CHOMSKY: First of all, to begin with, it would mean that the government would not just bail out the banks, pour capital into them, but would exercise control. And control begins with inspection. So we find out what they're doing. And then you keep the viable parts. And if they're viable, they might just vote it into public control. I mean, the government could probably have, you know, bought AIG or Citigroup for far less than what they're paying them now. I mean, in a democratic society, the government would meet the public, and then there should be direct public engagement in what these institutions ought to do and how they ought to distribute their money, what the terms ought to be, and so on. I mean, they could be democratically run by the workforce, by the community.
JAY: But doesn't it—whether you use the word or not, requires a kind of nationalization. I mean, does the bank then become a publicly owned institution?
CHOMSKY: They become publicly owned institutions which serve the public and where decisions are made by the public. That's a long way off. You have to approach that in steps. When you think of nationalization, you know, the doctrinal system, with historical reasons, associates nationalization with, you know, some Big Brother taking it over, and the public follows orders. But that's not necessarily the way it's done. There are many nationalized institutions that are run quite efficiently. In fact, take, say, Chile, which is supposed to be the poster child for, you know, Thatcherite/Reaganite free-market economics. A large part of the economy's based on a nationalized, very efficient copper producer, Codelco, which was nationalized by Allende, but was so effective that during the Pinochet years it was never dismantled. Actually, it's being sort of chipped away at now, but it still provides the—I think it's still the biggest copper producer in the world, provides most of the government income. And elsewhere too there are highly successful nationalized firms. But nationalization is only one step towards democratization. The question is who manages them, who makes the decisions, who controls them. Now, in the case of nationalized institutions, it's still top-down, but it doesn't have to be. I mean, again, it's not a law of nature that institutions can't be democratically run.
JAY: What would it look like?
CHOMSKY: What would they look like?
JAY: Mm.
CHOMSKY: The participation by workers councils, by community organizations at meetings, discussions in which policies are made—that's how democracy's supposed to work. I mean, we're very far from that, I mean, even in the political system. Just take, say, primaries. Okay, the way our system works, candidates running for office, his campaign managers go to some town in New Hampshire and they set up a meeting, and the candidate comes in and says, "Here's what a nice guy I am. Vote for me." You know. And people either believe him or not and go home. Suppose we had a democratic system that worked the other way around. The people in the town of New Hampshire would get together at conferences, meetings, public organizations, and so on, and they would work out the policies that they would like to see. And then, if somebody's running for office, he can come; if they want, they could invite him, and he would listen to them. They would say, look, here's the policies we want you to implement; if you can do this, we'll allow you to represent us, but we'll recall you if you're not doing it.
JAY: Well, as you say, this is far off in terms of today's politics.
CHOMSKY: It's not that far off. It happens.
JAY: But at the national level, it's—.
CHOMSKY: At the national level it's far off. But let's take what's probably the most democratic country in the Western Hemisphere, although people don't like to think of it that way, Bolivia. It's the poorest country in the hemisphere. It's the poorest in South America. It's had elections in the last couple of years in which the large majority of the population, who happen to be the most repressed people in the hemisphere, the indigenous population, have for the first time in 500 years entered the political arena, determined the policies they want, and elected a leader from their own ranks, a poor peasant. And the issues are very serious—their control over resources, economic justice, cultural rights, the complexities of a very diverse multi-ethnic society. The policies are pretty much coming out of the public themselves, and the president is supposed to implement them. Now, you know, nothing works that perfectly, all sorts of problems, but that's kind of the basic theme. Okay. That's functioning democracy. It's almost the opposite of the way our system works.
JAY: Well, in the next segment of our interview, let's talk about the future of democracy, or what we might call it, in the United States. Please join us for the next segment of our interview with Professor Noam Chomsky. | |


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