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chomsky
- To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: chomsky
- From: Dan Scanlan <dscanlan@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2003 12:18:00 -0700
- Comments: RFC822 error: <W> Incorrect or incomplete address field found and ignored.
Title: chomsky
Collateral Language
An Interview With Noam Chomsky
David Barsamian
------------------------------------
Noam Chomsky is Institute Professor in the Department of
Linguistics and Philosophy at MIT. He is the author of scores of
books-his latest are Power and Terror and Middle East Illusions. His
book 9-11 was an international bestseller.
BARSAMIAN: In recent years, the Pentagon, and then the media,
have adopted this term "collateral damage" to describe the
death of civilians. Talk about the role of language in shaping and
forming people's understanding of events.
CHOMSKY: Well, it's as old as history. It has nothing much to do with
language. Language is the way we interact and communicate, so,
naturally, the means of communication and the conceptual background
that's behind it, which is more important, are used to try to shape
attitudes and opinions and induce conformity and subordination. Not
surprisingly, it was created in the more democratic societies.
The first coordinated propaganda ministry, called the Ministry of
Information, was in Britain during World War I. It had the task, as
they put it, of controlling the mind of the world. What they were
particularly concerned with was the mind of America and, more
specifically, the mind of American intellectuals. They thought if
they could convince American intellectuals of the nobility of the
British war effort, then American intellectuals could succeed in
driving the basically pacifist population of the United States, which
didn't want to have anything to do with European wars, rightly, into
a fit of fanaticism and hysteria, which would get them to join the
war. Britain needed U.S. backing, so Britain had its Ministry of
Information aimed primarily at American opinion and opinion leaders.
The Wilson administration reacted by setting up the first state
propaganda agency here, called the Committee on Public
Information.
It succeeded brilliantly, mainly with liberal American intellectuals,
people of the John Dewey circle, who actually took pride in the fact
that for the first time in history, according to their picture, a
wartime fanaticism was created, and not by military leaders and
politicians but by the more responsible, serious members of the
community, namely, thoughtful intellectuals. And they did organize a
campaign of propaganda, which within a few months did succeed in
turning a relatively pacifist population into raving anti-German
fanatics who wanted to destroy everything German. It reached the
point where the Boston Symphony Orchestra couldn't play Bach. The
country was driven into hysteria.
The members of Wilson's propaganda agency included people like Edward
Bernays, who became the guru of the public relations industry, and
Walter Lippmann, the leading public intellectual of the 20th century,
the most respected media figure. They very explicitly drew from that
experience. If you look at their writings in the 1920s, they said, We
have learned from this that you can control the public mind, you can
control attitudes and opinions. That's where Lippmann said, "We
can manufacture consent by the means of propaganda." Bernays
said, "The more intelligent members of the community can drive
the population into whatever they want" by what he called
"engineering of consent." It's the "essence of
democracy," he said.
It also led to the rise of the public relations industry. It's
interesting to look at the thinking in the 1920s, when it got
started. This was the period of Taylorism in industry, when workers
were being trained to become robots, every motion controlled. It
created highly efficient industry, with human beings turned into
automata. The Bolsheviks were very impressed with it, too. They tried
to duplicate it. In fact, they tried throughout the world.But the
thought-control experts realized that you could not only have what
was called on-job control but also off-job control. It's their
phrase. Control them off job by inducing a philosophy of futility,
focusing people on the superficial things of life, like fashionable
consumption, and basically get them out of our hair. Let the people
who are supposed to run the show do it without any interference from
the mass of the population, who have no business in the public arena.
From that come enormous industries, ranging from advertising to
universities, all committed very consciously to the conception that
you must control attitudes and opinions because the people are just
too dangerous.
It's particularly striking that it developed in the more democratic
societies. They tried to duplicate it in Germany and Bolshevik Russia
and South Africa and elsewhere. But it was always quite explicitly a
mostly American model. There is a good reason for that. If you can
control people by force, it's not so important to control what they
think and feel. But if you lose the capacity to control people by
force, it becomes more necessary to control attitudes and
opinions.
That brings us right up to the present. By now the public is no
longer willing to accept state propaganda agencies, so the Reagan
Office of Public Diplomacy was declared illegal and had to go in
roundabout ways. What took over instead was private tyrannies,
basically, corporate systems, which play the role of controlling
opinion and attitudes, not taking orders from the government, but
closely linked to it, of course. That's our contemporary system.
Extremely self-conscious. You don't have to speculate much about what
they're doing because they're kind enough to tell you in industry
publications and also in the academic literature.
So you go to, say, the 1930s, perhaps the founder of a good bit of
modern political science. A liberal Wilsonian, Harold Lasswell, in
1933 wrote an article called "Propaganda" in the
Encyclopedia of Social Sciences, a major publication, in which the
message was, "We should not [all of these are quotes,
incidentally] succumb to democratic dogmatisms about men being the
best judges of their own interests." They're not, we are. And
since people are too stupid and ignorant to understand their best
interests, for their own benefit-because we're great humanitarians-we
must marginalize and control them. The best means is propaganda.
There is nothing negative about propaganda, he said. It's as neutral
as a pump handle. You can use it for good or for evil. And since
we're noble, wonderful people, we'll use it for good, to ensure that
the stupid, ignorant masses remain marginalized and separated from
any decision-making capacity.
The Leninist doctrines are approximately the same. There are very
close similarities. The Nazis also picked it up. If you read Mein
Kampf, Hitler was very impressed with Anglo-American propaganda. He
argued, not without reason, that that's what won World War I and
vowed that next time around the Germans would be ready, too, and
developed their own propaganda systems modeled on the democracies.
The Russians tried it, but it was too crude to be effective. South
Africa used it; others, right up to the present. But the real
forefront is the United States, because it's the most free and
democratic society, and it's just much more important to control
attitudes and opinions.
You can read it in the New York Times. They ran an interesting
article about Carl Rove, the president's manager-basically his
minder, the one who teaches him what to say and do. It describes what
Carl Rove is doing now. He was not directly involved in the war
planning, but neither was Bush. This was in the hands of other
people. But his goal, he says, is to present the president as a
powerful wartime leader, aimed at the next presidential election, so
that the Republicans can push through their domestic agenda, which is
what he concentrates on, which means tax cuts-they say for the
economy, but they mean for the rich-tax cuts and other programs which
he doesn't bother enumerating, but which are designed to benefit an
extremely small sector of the ultra-wealthy and privileged and will
have the effect of harming the mass of the population. But more
significant than that-it's not outlined in the article-is to try to
destroy the institutional basis for social support systems, try to
eliminate things like schools and Social Security and anything that
is based on the conception that people have to have some concern for
one another. That's a horrible idea, which has to be driven out of
people's minds. The idea that you should have sympathy and
solidarity, you should care whether the disabled widow across town is
able to eat, that has to be driven out of people's minds.
Clearly, there is a huge gap on the Iraq war between U.S.
public opinion and the rest of the world. Do you attribute that to
propaganda?
There is just no question about it. The campaign about Iraq took off
last September. This is so obvious it's even discussed in mainstream
publications, like the chief political analyst for UPI, Martin Sieff,
has a long article describing how it was done. In September, which
happened to be the opening of the midterm congressional campaign,
that's when the drumbeat of wartime propaganda began. It had a couple
of constant themes. One big lie was that Iraq was an imminent threat
to the security of the United States. We have got to stop them now or
they're going to destroy us tomorrow. The second big lie was that
Iraq was behind September 11. Nobody says it straight out; it's kind
of insinuated.
Take a look at the polls. They reflected the propaganda very
directly. The propaganda is distributed by the media. They don't make
it up, they just distribute it. You can attribute it to high
government officials or whatever you like. But the campaign was
reflected very quickly in the polls. By September and since then,
roughly 60 percent, oscillating around that, of the population
believes that Iraq is a threat to our security. Congress, if you look
at the declaration of October, when they authorized the president to
use force, said Iraq is a threat to the security of the United
States. By now about half the population, maybe more by now, believes
that Iraq was responsible for September 11, that Iraqis were on the
planes, that they are planning new ones.
There is no one else in the world that believes any of this; there is
no country where Iraq is regarded as a threat to their security.
Kuwait and Iran, which were both invaded by Iraq, don't regard Iraq
as a threat to their security. Iraq is the weakest country in the
region, and as a result of the sanctions, which have killed hundreds
of thousands of people-about probably two-thirds of the population is
on the edge of starvation-the country has the weakest economy and the
weakest military force in the region. Its economy and its
military-force expenditures are about a third those of Kuwait, which
has 10 percent of its population, and well below others. Of course,
everybody in the region knows that there is a superpower there,
offshore U.S. military base, Israel, which has hundreds of nuclear
weapons and massive armed forces and totally dominates anything.
But only in the United States is there fear or any of these beliefs.
You can trace the growth of the beliefs to the propaganda. It's
interesting that the United States is so susceptible to this. There
is a background, a cultural background, which is interesting. But
whatever the reasons are for it, the United States happens to be a
very frightened country by comparative standards. Levels of fear here
of almost everything, crime, aliens, you pick it, are just off the
spectrum. You can argue, you can inquire into the reasons, but the
background is there.
What is it that makes it susceptible to propaganda?
That's a good question I don't say it's more susceptible to
propaganda; it's more susceptible to fear. It's a frightened country.
The reasons for this-I don't, frankly, understand them, but they're
there, and they go way back in American history. It probably has to
do with conquest of the continent, where you had to exterminate the
native population; slavery, where you had to control a population
that was regarded as dangerous, because you never knew when they were
going to turn on you. It may just be a reflection of the enormous
security. The security of the United States is beyond anyone else.
The United States controls the hemisphere, it controls both oceans,
it controls the opposite sides of both oceans, never been threatened.
The last time the U.S. was threatened was the War of 1812. Since then
it just conquers others. And somehow this engenders a sense that
somebody is going to come after us. So the country ends up being very
frightened.
There is a reason why Carl Rove is the most important person in the
administration. He is the public relations expert in charge of
crafting the images. So you can drive through the domestic agendas,
carry out the international policies by frightening people and
creating the impression that a powerful leader is going to save you
from imminent destruction. The Times virtually says it because it's
very hard to keep hidden. It is second nature.
One of the new lexical constructions that I'd like you to
comment on is "embedded journalists."
That's an interesting one. It is interesting that journalists are
willing to accept it. No honest journalist would be willing to
describe himself or herself as "embedded." To say "I'm
an embedded journalist" is to say "I'm a government
propagandist." But it's accepted. And it helps implant the
conception that anything we do is right and just; so therefore, if
you're embedded in an American unit, you're objective.Actually, the
same thing showed up, in some ways even more dramatically, in the
Peter Arnett case. Peter Arnett is an experienced, respected
journalist with a lot of achievements to his credit. He's hated here
precisely for that reason. The same reason Robert Fisk is hated.
Fisk being British, Arnett is originally from New
Zealand.
Fisk is by far the most experienced and respected Middle East
journalist. He's been there forever, he's done excellent work, he
knows the region, he's a terrific reporter. He's despised here. You
barely ever see a word of his. If he's mentioned, he's denounced
somehow. The reason is he's just too independent. He won't be an
embedded journalist. Peter Arnett is condemned because he gave an
interview on Iraqi television. Is anybody condemned for giving an
interview on U.S. television? No, that's wonderful.
The attack on Afghanistan in October 2001 generated a couple
of these interesting terms, and you've commented on them. One was the
Operation Enduring Freedom and the other is "unlawful
combatant." Truly an innovation in international
jurisprudence.
It's an innovation since the post-war period. After World War II
there was a relatively new framework of international law
established, including the Geneva Conventions. And they do not permit
any such concept as enemy combatant in the way it's used here. You
can have prisoners of war, but there is no new category. Actually,
it's an old category, pre-World War II, when you were allowed to do
just about anything. But under the Geneva conventions, which were
established to criminalize formally the crimes of the Nazis, this was
changed. So prisoners of war are supposed to have special status. The
Bush administration, with the cooperation of the media and the
courts, is going back to the pre-World War II period, when there was
no serious framework of international law dealing with crimes against
humanity and crimes of war and is declaring not only to carry out
aggressive war, but also to classify people it bombs and captures as
some new category who are entitled to no rights.
They have gone well beyond that. The Administration has now claimed
the right to take people here, including American citizens, to place
them in confinement indefinitely without access to families and
lawyers, and to keep them there with no charges until the president
decides that the war against terror, or whatever he wants to call it,
is over. That's unheard of. And it's been to some extent accepted by
the courts. And they're, in fact, going beyond the new, what's
sometimes called PATRIOT 2 Act, which is so far not ratified. It's
inside the Justice Department, but it was leaked. By now there are a
couple of articles by law professors and others about it in the
press. It's astonishing. They're claiming the right to remove
citizenship, the fundamental right, if the Attorney General
infers-they don't have to have any evidence-just infers that the
person is involved somehow in actions that might be harmful to the
United States. You have to go back to totalitarian states to find
anything like this. An enemy combatant is one. The treatment of
people-what's going on in Guantanamo is a gross violation of the most
elementary principles of international humanitarian law since World
War II, that is, since these crimes were formally criminalized in
reaction to the Nazis.
What do you make of British Prime Minister Tony Blair being
quoted on "Nightline" on March 31 saying, "This is not
an invasion."
Tony Blair is a good propaganda agent for the United States: He's
articulate, sentences fall together, apparently people like the way
he looks. He's following a position that Britain has taken,
self-consciously, since the end of World War II. During World War II,
Britain recognized-we have plenty of internal documents about it-what
was obvious; Britain had been the world-dominant power and it was not
going to be after World War II-the U.S. was going to be. Britain had
to make a choice: Is it going to be just another country, or is it
going to be what they called a junior partner of the United States?
It accepted the role of junior partner. And that's what it's been
since then. Britain has been kicked in the face over and over again
in the most disgraceful way and they sit there quietly and take it
and say, "Okay, we will be the junior partner. We will bring to
what's called the coalition our experience of centuries of
brutalizing and murdering foreign people. We're good at that."
That's the British role. It's disgraceful.
Often at the talks you give, there is a question that's
always asked, and that is, "What should I do?" This is what
you hear in American audiences.
You're right, it's American audiences. You never hear it in the Third
World.
Why not?
Because when you go to Turkey or Colombia or Brazil or somewhere
else, they don't ask you, "What should I do?" They tell you
what they're doing. It's only in highly privileged cultures that
people ask, "What should I do?" We have every option open
to us. None of the problems that are faced by intellectuals in Turkey
or campesinos in Brazil or anything like that. We can do anything.
But what people here are trained to believe is, we have to have
something we can do that will be easy, that will work very fast, and
then we can go back to our ordinary lives. And it doesn't work that
way. You want to do something, you're going to have to be dedicated,
committed, at it day after day. You know exactly what it is: it's
educational programs, it's organizing, it's activism. That's the way
things change. You want something that's going to be a magic key that
will enable you to go back to watching television tomorrow? It's not
there.
You were an active and early dissident in the 1960s opposing
U.S. intervention in Indochina. You have now this perspective of what
was going on then and what is going on now. Describe how dissent has
evolved in the United States.
Actually, there is another article in the New York Times that
describes how the professors are antiwar activists, but the students
aren't. Not like it used to be, when the students were antiwar
activists. What the reporter is talking about is that around 1970-and
it's true-by 1970 students were active antiwar protesters. But that's
after eight years of a U.S. war against South Vietnam, which by then
had extended to all of Indochina, which had practically wiped the
place out. In the early years of the war-it was announced in
1962-U.S. planes are bombing South Vietnam, napalm was authorized,
chemical warfare to destroy food crops, and programs to drive
millions of people into "strategic hamlets," which are
essentially concentration camps. All public. No protest. Impossible
to get anybody to talk about it. For years, even in a place like
Boston, a liberal city, you couldn't have public meetings against the
war because they would be broken up by students, with the support of
the media. You would have to have hundreds of state police around to
allow the speakers like me to escape unscathed. The protests came
after years and years of war. By then, hundreds of thousands of
people had been killed, much of Vietnam had been destroyed. Then you
started getting protests.
But all of that is wiped out of history, because it tells too much of
the truth. It involved years and years of hard work of plenty of
people, mostly young, which finally ended up getting a protest
movement. Now it's far beyond that. But the New York Times reporter
can't understand that. I'm sure the reporter is being very honest.
The reporter is saying exactly what I think she was taught-that there
was a huge antiwar movement because the actual history has to be
wiped out of people's consciousness. You can't learn that dedicated,
committed effort can bring about significant changes of consciousness
and understanding. That's a very dangerous thought to allow people to
have.
----------------------------------
David Barsamian founder and director of Alternative Radio. He is
the author of Decline & Fall of Public Broadcasting as well as a
number of books, such as Propaganda & the Public Mind with Noam
Chomsky, Confronting Empire with Eqbal Ahmad and Culture &
Resistance with Edward Said. He is a regular contributor to Z, the
Progressive, and other publications.
This message has been brought to you by ZNet (http://www.zmag.org).
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- Thread context:
- Re: Uchitelle on jobless recovery, (continued)
- Redstockings & URPE,
Yoshie Furuhashi Tue 22 Jul 2003, 21:55 GMT
- chomsky,
Dan Scanlan Tue 22 Jul 2003, 19:18 GMT
- Joseph Wilson's wife outed as CIA agent,
Louis Proyect Tue 22 Jul 2003, 15:16 GMT
- Runaway shops,
Louis Proyect Tue 22 Jul 2003, 14:05 GMT
- Bring Them Home Now: Leaflets & Website (from Stan Goff),
Yoshie Furuhashi Tue 22 Jul 2003, 10:02 GMT
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