Keeping the Rabble in Line: Interviews with David BarsamianBarsamian, the founder of Alternative Radio, and Chomsky, allegedly the most quoted author in the modern era, have forged a symbiotic relationship that manages to distill Chomsky's political philosophies and make them accessible. Barsamian's historically grounded, well-informed and probing questions prompt Chomsky to deconstruct concepts of class, media and economics. Chomsky deftly addresses domestic and foreign conundrums including health care, the recent crime bill and NAFTA. While these interviews span a two-year period and end early in 1994, they remain provocative and timely, with Chomsky's insights on Haiti, Northern Ireland and the Middle East proving especially resonant. Ultimately, Rabble serves as a Chomsky primer that is without condescension, and the question-and-answer format shows him at his most concise and adroit. His criticism exposes democracies as business-run societies that render the general population isolated from politics, persuasively suggesting that we are on the verge of a social breakdown. What sets this work apart from other reluctant messiahs who simply intellectualize suffering, is that Barsamian and Chomsky discuss avenues for activism-strengthening unions, following grassroots organizations or simply reading between the lines. Together they act as a lens, enabling the reader to see what has been there, hidden in plain sight. FROM Publisher's Weekly -- Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. |
From inside the book
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Page 103
... investors and something will trickle down by some magic , some time after the Messiah comes . The western countries of course would never really play this game completely . It would be too harmful to the rich . But they flirted with it ...
... investors and something will trickle down by some magic , some time after the Messiah comes . The western countries of course would never really play this game completely . It would be too harmful to the rich . But they flirted with it ...
Page 122
... investors . As long as the investors have the right to decide what happens , nothing much else is going to change . It's like saying in a totalitarian state , shall we change from proportional representa- tion to some other kind in the ...
... investors . As long as the investors have the right to decide what happens , nothing much else is going to change . It's like saying in a totalitarian state , shall we change from proportional representa- tion to some other kind in the ...
Page 236
... investors have seen more or less eye to eye on what public policy should look like . The moments of conflict which come along , like the New Deal , are cases where you do have some differences in per- spective and point of view among ...
... investors have seen more or less eye to eye on what public policy should look like . The moments of conflict which come along , like the New Deal , are cases where you do have some differences in per- spective and point of view among ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
They Dont Even Know That They Know | 33 |
Race | 61 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
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Keeping the Rabble in Line: Interviews with David Barsamian Noam Chomsky,David Barsamian No preview available - 1994 |
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