Decoding the Gurus - Noam Chomsky: Lover of linguistics, the USA... not so much
Episode Date: August 18, 2023OK, so we're finally getting around to taking a chunk out of the prodigious, prolific, and venerable Noam Chomsky. Linguist, cognitive scientist, media theorist, political activist and cultural commen...tator, Chomsky is a doyen of the Real Leftâ„¢. By which we mean, of course, those who formulated their political opinions in their undergraduate years and have seen no reason to move on since then. Yes, he looks a bit like Treebeard these days but he's still putting most of us to shame with his productivity. And given the sheer quantity of his output, across his 90 decades, it might be fair to say this is more of a nibble of his material. A bit of a left-wing ideologue perhaps, but seriously - what a guy. This is someone who made Richard Nixon's List of Enemies, debated Michel Foucault, had a huge impact on several academic disciplines, and campaigned against the war in Vietnam & the Indonesian occupation of East Timor. Blithe stereotypes of Chomsky will sometimes crash against uncomfortable facts, including that he has been a staunch defender of free speech, even for Holocaust deniers...A full decoding of his output would likely require a dedicated podcast series, so that's not what you're gonna get here. Rather we apply our lazer-like focus and blatantly ignore most of his output to examine four interviews on linguistics, politics, and the war in Ukraine. There is some enthusiastic nodding but also a fair amount of exasperated head shaking and sighs. But what did you expect from two milquetoast liberals? Also featuring: a discussion of the depraved sycophancy of the guru-sphere and the immunity to cringe superpower as embodied by Brian Keating, Peter Boghossian, and Bret Weinstein mega-fans.Enjoy!LinksTrust Science, Not Scientists | Peter Boghossian & Brian KeatingA new Epistemic courage/humility matrixGeorge Monbiot's Correspondence with Noam Chomsky on DenialismPiers Morgan Uncensored (2023): Piers Morgan vs Noam Chomsky | The Full InterviewPolitics Joe (2023): Noam Chomsky on Keir Starmer's attack on the Labour left, the war on unions and the future of AIUpon Reflections (1989): The Concept of Language (Noam Chomsky)Jones (2020): Academic article on Chomsky's views on GenocideDaily Beast (2017): How the West Missed the Horrors of Cambodia
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to decoding the gurus the podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist
listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer and we try to understand what they're
talking about i'm matt brown with me is chris kavanagh and uh i don't know what do i say
something after that was at the end of my spiel is that it it's hard to tell it's hard to tell is it consistent it's vaguely
consistent you mostly you reach into the possibility space of introductions you've got a grammar there
and you construct your introductions from different parts that are pre-existing in your
cognitive capacities that's what you're up to i think what you're saying is that there's
a deep structure to my introductions even though the superficial grammar might vary from episode
to episode yeah there's a an endless tapestry but underlying it is an introductory grammar that
we can all agree is universal topical topical eh? Topical, topical, topical.
Well, how are you, Chris?
How was your day?
How are you since the last time I spoke to you,
since you're asking me for statistical advice?
I'm frustrated because I'm looking at spreadsheets and data and writing things.
And that's an infuriating experience always,
especially when you're towards the end
and you keep finding niggling things
which require you to change stuff in manuscripts
that you want to be done with.
So, yes, I'm irritated.
I'm on edge.
I'm upset too.
I'm on edge too.
I'm upset.
I submitted a paper 48 hours ago,
and this morning I got an email saying it was desk rejected.
They said that they do triage on incoming papers,
and apparently my paper wasn't worth saving.
It sounds to me a lot like some of our enemies have gotten the positions
of editorial power at journals that they know that you are likely to publish in.
There's no other explanation, Matt.
I mean, academic of your stature, being desk rejected, this is unheard of.
Frankly, Matt, I don't think we can stand for this.
I appreciate you being outraged on my behalf.
I really do appreciate that.
Look, they're not necessarily against me.
It could just be that their puny little two-dimensional minds
can't encompass the wonderfulness of my paper the 84 dimensions that you're constantly spinning simultaneously
in your papers yes that's one possibility or you know the editor was having a bad day or your
paper is just not up to snuff there's lots of possibilities but that's that's not what we
heard to dwell on we're not the type the monger in grievances at
least not about our academic publishing we are doing the decoding episode today about a guru
that we've mentioned probably since the start of the podcast as a potential candidate but haven't
got around him for various reasons not because we're scared scared, just because there's so many gurus
in the guruverse
that sometimes people just slip the net.
And this one is one Noam Chomsky,
noted linguist, political figure,
Dorian of the left,
the revolutionary kind of left,
at least anti-capitalist,
somewhat skeptical of America. Anti anti-capitalist somewhat skeptical of america
anti-imperialist yeah that that whole uber plus a advocate for universal grammar
generative grammar the minimalist version of it or recursion being the key factor many many different
things but um a significant figure in the academic political commentary space for many decades
many decades and he's still holding on he's still in there yes that, that's right. He is currently at the ripe old age of 94 years.
A spring chicken.
And it genuinely is quite impressive how active he still is.
I listened to a random podcast he was on,
and he casually mentioned that he was doing three interviews on podcasts a day.
He has a schedule.
So it seems like he's still commenting as much as he possibly can.
He obviously accepts all invitations.
He'd come on this podcast, I think, Chris, if we asked him.
I don't know.
I'm not so sure he would, but he does accept a lot of invitations.
And him and David Attenborough, I think they're putting the rest of the world to shame with
their productivity in the later years of life.
But that is impressive.
Whatever you think of old Gnome to be still kicking it at 94, that's an achievement.
And one issue that we had is that he's got such a long career.
He's been around for decades and he has linguistic work.
He has his political output. He does punditry and he has linguistic work he has his political output he does punditry
and he has more recent stuff and older stuff so you know the way this show goes is that we focus on
usually a specific piece of content or or two pieces of content but that feels a little unfair
so in in this case we've opted for a smorgasbord of different parts
of content that we will get to after we have a short introductory topic okay so it's going to
be short it's going to be sweet what is our introductory topic today chris what's been going on in the Twitterverse? It's not sweet. It's the opposite of sweet.
It's sour.
I guess that is the opposite.
I'd say it's more an irritation.
I would say this is a Weinstein watch in a way. We have been watching the Weinsteins and what they've been up to most recently with Eric
and Mick West, but both of them have been referenced by other people and I think
it's worth mentioning because it's it's actually a very similar dynamic that that I want to
reference and it's not actually them themselves so much it's more their orbiting spin-off gurus so our friend bad stats clipped a few clips from peter bogosian.com where
peter is talking to brian keating that peter bogosian is one of those so-called squared people
noted apologist for hungary more recently he he kind of does tours of hungary and recommends that
people listen to the government spokespeople on various
issues about freedom of speech and whatnot. So that's old Boggs, a philosophy lecturer
of some description, but he retired himself from the academic grind. He got an existence in the
grind, eke out an existence in the Substack podcast sphere. What an unusual trajectory
for someone in that neck of the woods. That's unheard
of. Yeah, so he's having a chat with Professor Brian
Keening. He's like a physics influencer, popularizer
person. He's an American
cosmologist, but he's probably most notable i think for writing
a book about losing the nobel prize in 2018 so it kind of it might explain why he is
so fond of eric they might have somewhat similar personalities in that respect. Although I've
actually heard from Tim Nguyen that his book was actually pretty good. It wasn't just a
kind of wallowing, ranty book. It was more an interesting look at somebody who believes that
they almost could have won a noel prize the other thing about
brian keating is that he is an academic who's featured in prager university and tends to have a
rather soft spot for creationist intelligent design type arguments maybe you don't know that
about him no i didn't i didn't know that about him no he's an
odd character because he's kind of tangential or but he's sort of related to a lot of these figures
like there's a tweet here where he's talking about listening to conceptual james that's james
lindsey and ben shapiro and saying how wonderful they are yeah i don't know we're reserving we
haven't covered him so we won't come no i'm not reserving. We haven't covered him, so we won't cover him. No, I'm not reserving judgment.
Brian Keating's terrible.
He's like, he was one of the people in the clip we played before where,
you remember when Eric was being asked about criticisms for geometric unity and then he started saying, excuse me, who are you?
Who are you?
Theo Poglia and all that.
excuse me, who are you?
Who are you?
Theo Poglia and all that.
And Brian Keating was moderating that space and just reinforcing anything that Eric said.
He's extremely sycophantic towards Eric.
He's basically like in the mold of Gad Saad.
He really would like to be considered
within the Jordan Peterson, Sam Harrisris kind of idw sphere but
most people don't actually know who he is so yeah that's that's how i would frame it even though his
background is cosmology and purportedly he's like a popular science guy he seems to be an aggressively focused influencer person and that's drawing him more and
more into culture worry type things yeah yeah exactly now just to illustrate this matt so
you know he has a youtube channel and i believe he's still involved with academia to some extent
as well but he recently just had a podcast episode with Pocosin, as you mentioned.
And during the podcast, the subject of Eric Weinstein came up.
What a surprise.
And I just, I'm constantly in a state of amazement about the levels of sycophancy that you can find in these guru
waters that we paddle. I'm on a constant state of amazement about what levels that people can plumb
for that particular behavior. So shall I play a clip to illustrate what I mean?
Why not? Why not? Why why not why okay this is the
first one so now we're getting into like some really controversial stuff so eric eric is uh
perhaps the most interesting and and mercurial and and uh delightfully challenging person
that i've ever met um i was listening to an interview with Sam Harris, who I hope we can get to Sam, uh, talk about him in a bit, but, um, but no, but I was just thinking like, I get to talk
to Eric and Eric just to my mind, just, just a completely obliterates in the public intellectual
space, Sam, uh, on every level. And, and he's so much more um kind of just articulate but his his ability to
articulate and his humility which i don't believe sam has at the same level i forgot do you know sam
well or or not very well and i and i don't want to you know i'd love to talk to sam he's never
been on like a very high level scientifically oriented podcast i mean he he's been on with
many people and maybe he's not he's
not a he's not a physicist though no but i've had on you know i talked to economists a nobel
prize winning economy you know it's i don't need to people come on the show oh i thought you i
thought you meant to talk to to talk about eric's theory no no not at all no i'm just saying like
he was talking about other things so when i what to say about Eric is that he, there's no, Eric's mind works in multiple dimensions in ways that normal people can't really contemplate.
Yeah.
So, well, he's right.
That last statement is correct.
Like Eric's mind does work in ways that normal people cannot contemplate.
He's operating on,
on different dimensions.
But so part of it,
there is just the absolute praise about how wonderful and how you articulate
and humility,
Matt,
the one word that's brings into mind when you think Eric Weinstein,
what's the thing which he's most
noted for his humble character yeah and soft-spoken humility and he just obliterates the competition
in the public intellectual landscape but very specifically he destroys sam harris sam harris
in particular yeah yeah yeah it's that as well like it's that you know again we talked about the passive aggressive
narcissism type yeah well you know you're always playing around with the praise and the criticism
yeah like we talked about how the gurus have like these fractious collaborative relationships with
each other yes where it tends to be either like unbridled love unbridled flattery and sycophancy
or they're having a like a feud
and they're letting people know which side they're on yeah it's very much about the personalities
that because there he's trying to say look sam just to my mind he's nothing you know barely
scratches the shining surface that is eric's mind and then he says you know know, Sam, because he says, yeah, I'm good
friends with him. Well, you know, I haven't talked to him, but he, you know, he hasn't come on the
show. You know, it would be great to talk to him. And you're just like, my God, like if slime could
ooze out of the speakers, they can turn on a dime, but it's exactly that. It's that like
back and forth between, oh, you oh you know yeah he's an intellectual
lightweight really can't really hang with people like eric and you know the kind of people i have
in my pocket but it'd be great if he came on i'd love to have him i'm sure we could discuss our
differences and oh yeah and you know what by the end of that conversation if sam in this case were
to play ball i had to say flattering things back
or whatever then you'd come into the fold and you'd be one of the best friends again yeah so
there's that aspect of it and then this is another part of the same conversation matt it doesn't stop
there they don't like move on the conversation what eric should do is is indeed publish it and indeed look for criticism of it, respond to that criticism.
The problem with Eric's theories, ideas, is because he's such an influential public intellectual, because he's probably one of the brightest living human beings.
And I've interacted, you know, I've had 14 Nobel Prize winners on my podcast, and I'm not saying this lightly, but Eric easily can held his own with any of them from economics to astrophysics.
OK, but his his his intellect goes beyond that.
Because of that, he's attracted a huge cadre of people that would love to see him fail.
A hundred percent.
I see that a hundred percent.
Yeah.
They have a,
he has a massive,
massive target on his back.
And,
and just to buttress what you're saying,
you know,
every time I've,
I've hung out with Eric,
I found him to be,
um,
I,
I found everything you've said about him to be absolutely true.
He's very affable as well.
I really, I really like him
as a person.
Yeah.
So
yeah, but it's
not just sick of fancy. I feel that
downplays the extent of this.
He refers to him
as probably one of the brightest
living human beings.
Somebody that eclipses 14 Nobel Prize winners
because of the breadth of his knowledge.
And Boghossian then needs to jump in and say,
well, I agree everything you say there.
I completely agree.
Plus, he's really nice.
He's so affable.
I've met him.
And, you know, jesus i i don't speak about my muller the way that these people
speak about their acquaintances within the fucking online spheres this is a guy where the focuses of
his attention most recently has been almost entirely on us. Like just the brightest mind of our generation, Chris,
is baffled and confused by the UFO menace.
I mean, we just recently dissected Eric's conversation with McWest.
And if you want to hear the caliber of his thought and argument,
I recommend looking at that episode.
But even ignoring all of the UFO stuff,
just digging into Eric's thought, it's not good.
Superficially, it's impressive.
It's littered with references to physics and economics and complex equations and scientific
works and works of fiction.
But when you dig beneath the surface, it's extremely empty, extremely empty,
extremely conspiratorial. And the fact that people like Brian Keating and Boghossian just
absolutely wet themselves whenever they're talking about him. It's hard for me to
understand this well, because there has to be an
element of it where they you know i'm not even saying consciously but they're aware that eric
may listen to this right so they want to say nice things or have it feed back to him that they're
saying nice things but i actually also just think it's kind of in their nature to be this absolutely
just irrepressibly fawning towards people that they consider you know within their in-group or
uber yeah i'm getting increasingly interested in this brian keating guy chris like you say he does
seem to be like a god sad type figure like's really grinding. He's really focused on being an influencer,
being an influential pop science figure.
And he seems to have sort of zeroed in on this IDW adjacent kind of anti-woke,
you know, what's going wrong with academia?
Why is everyone wrong about everything?
I don't know enough about him,
but he seems like an interesting candidate for our show.
Well, yeah, I don't think he warrants an episode on his own.
But just to highlight that it's a lot of the stuff we've heard before.
See if you recognize this kind of talking point.
Anyway, so this conversation was from 2020,
and it was all about the dangers of reelecting Trump and how it's an existential threat.
And so Scott and Sam Harris were debating how it could lead to a new invasion of Ukraine.
It could lead to tensions with Iran, and it could lead to Chinese interference.
I'm like, do you guys ever do an audit on yourselves like scott
galloway or sam have you ever looked back and say look when we predicted this we were wrong like i
made a mistake and and that's that's fine to do that and actually just and it's totally different
context i just did an interview with a renowned theoretical physicist you know your paper the the
um the uh hermeneutic penis oh Oh, yeah, the conceptual penis is a social construct.
One of the highest in gender studies.
It's one of the most cited papers in all of gender studies.
In the top tier, that is.
Do you know what your H-index is or what that paper is?
No.
The answer is he doesn't, Matt, because he's not a real academic.
They don't publish. they don't do this kind
of thing but did you notice any points there that you may have heard in similar content i'm curious
about this paper being the most influential most highly cited paper in gender studies seems
unlikely i just pulled up peter pogossian's google scholar page
and down here we have the conceptual penis is a social construct 15 citations 15 citations
so maybe it's not the most highly cited paper in well who knows with gender study nose with jenna it clips the average paper but yeah again it just speaks to the conceptual penis
paper that they wrote as well was in a pay-to-play journal this was like a criticism of that specific
thing that james lindsey could never properly grok and he later claimed that was an intentional
thing that he was also criticizing pay-to-play journals
but that wouldn't make any sense because you shouldn't be combining the two things right like
you could write an article about potatoes and publish it in a pay-to-play journal so yeah yeah
actually i do see the original paper i realized the conceptual penis is a social construct was
cited by 40 40 which is not nothing but it's
certainly nowhere near being the most highly cited paper in any discipline or sub-discipline
or whatever and it's it's cited by papers with titles like lying in an age of digital capitalism
so it's not you know it would be cited as an example of academic malfeasance so not not always uh on its own merits right
yeah just to mention judith butler's i have no idea what this is but the book called gender
trouble cited 86 851 times i imagine that she falls within the gender studies rubric so
it doesn't matter it's such an obviously false game. It's so obviously false, but they can't grasp that.
But that's even a minor point, because the one that I wanted to highlight there was him
referencing, you know, Sam Harris being unwilling, like he can't admit how wrong he's been.
And in another part, he refers to the vaccines as the so-called vaccines.
Because it's different than even the COVID vaccine, so-called vaccines because it's different than it's different than than even
the covid vaccine so so-called vaccine i don't really call it a vaccine because it didn't really
seem to do what a vaccine typically does with uh you know dead viruses and so forth but anyway let's
call it a vaccine and this is all in reaction because they they got triggered because they
thought that sam harris was too hard on don Trump, right? Sam Harris called Donald Trump something like an existential risk in the United States.
It's that, and it's Sam Harris feuding with Brett,
and it's Sam Harris saying the thing about the Hunter Biden laptop on trigonometry.
But the thing that I got to mention, Chris, is that these guys are,
I mean, this is not nominally a politically oriented conversation,
and these two would not profess to be right wing.
But all of their takes, all of their stuff is always in that right wing direction.
You know, oh, you've criticized Trump too much.
Oh, you know, Fauci this and, you know, lab leak that.
Like every time it aligns.
Yeah, anyway.
Yeah, it is.
And again, Matt, just to highlight highlight there's a mini decoding of
kidding in a way but you know the way that eric speaks about his critics and good fear of criticism
and all those kind of things here's a peel imitation of that from brian but when you have
people on the internet you know who want to see him fall that like dedicate podcasts that,
that go on venues and then attack his paper using pseudonymous names so that
you can't verify, is this person the same person that said something that was
misgendering somebody and, or is that person, somebody who's, who's, you know,
causing people to come to people's houses? We don't know because that person's name, or is that person, somebody who's, who's, you know, causing people to come to
people's houses?
Uh, we don't know because that person's name.
So at that level, now there is a very public critic who has made his name known, um, uh,
online and is frequently critic.
And he, he also loves to try to engage me in it.
And, and I actually, I think he's a brilliant, you know, we won't use his name.
Let's not use his name.
I don't, I don't care.
Uh, but, but, you know, he's had like four or five podcasts peter on his podcast about me my book
eric trying to get you know other scientists to comment on the quality of my science or some of
the things and why is it bad that i don't have him on my podcast um look i find it flattering
at some level because every time he mentions me, I get this
great boost because he's, he's such a brilliant young guy.
This, this guy who's criticizing Eric.
However, um, I don't find that he's acting in good faith.
I feel like, you know, and I've seen attacks.
And so anyway, um, I'm happy to talk to anybody.
They have to be doing it in good faith and they have to be doing it from a point of view
of trying to have clarity, not just taking somebody down and like uh standing over
them and revealing them to be the grifter and everything else yeah that's what happens when
you move at high levels in the public space is that the number of lunatics who come out of the
woodwork in bad faith accusations i mean if you think it's bad i don't think this guy's a lunatic
at all i think no no i'm not i'm not talking about him specifically i'm just talking about the
the number of insane people who come out who literally has a huge target and if you think
it's bad for eric it's a foul it's it's so much worse for his brother i mean they they come after
brett like crazy crazy like and just the sheer vituperation the sheer nastiness the sheer
and that's part of the problem is you don't really know if it's 50 people or 5 000 people
like 50 people with 100 kind of sock puppet accounts who are they talking about chris
tim noon tim noon uh so they're like that thing again you heard the double-edged knife right of he's a
brilliant guy young guy brilliant guy but bad faith and he's always mentioning me on his podcast
and maybe misgendered someone again that random use of social justice stuff to try and discredit
someone like who is tim newguyen misgendered?
Who is Theo Poglia? Yeah, like they throw in those little digs and like Tim Nguyen is just
someone who's a physicist who understands gauge theory, right? And he's someone who's well
qualified to be critical of these things, but he will be on the outer and he will be subject to
those kinds of slurs until he bends the knee and plays nice
and says that they're all brilliant but and that that notion of like yeah all my haters you know i
i love it when they talk about me and i i'll talk to anyone except anyone who's strongly critical
because that's it because that's in bad faith, right? As I said, he's like an influencer.
He's grinding to be an influencer.
And those references to getting a boost for my metrics and stuff.
People who are really focused on metrics, you know, just think twice.
Just think twice about that.
Yeah.
It's unpleasant, but it's unpleasant to look at this.
But I do have to just mention as well,
and this one doesn't have any audio,
so it'll be a quick sidetrack,
but just on the Olo Weinstein front,
Brollo Brett was praised by one of his long-term consistent Uber fans,
Alexandros Marinos,
who we've had various run-ins with the past,
but Marinos made a thread in which he debuted
a new four quadrant model
where it's epistemic courage and epistemic humility.
And you can be low and high in each of them, right?
So the worst would be low epistemic courage,
low epistemic humility.
That's where he puts people
like Peter Hotez, for example. And on the opposite side, at the high epistemic courage,
high epistemic humility, of course, you have your Brett Weinstein's, your Joe Rogan, Glenn Greenwald, as he describes it, the real intellectual dark web. So he wrote a long,
fawning post about this, basically outlining what a great, courageous, and humble person Brett was.
And Brett retweeted it, saying, a very useful framework, a powerful four quadrant model from two fundamental characteristics
that predict capacity to find and hold a rational course despite a rapidly changing chaotic
information environment an antidote to the fog of information war yeah how come you never make a
four quadrant model with me positioned at the upper apex of it chris it's not me that should
do it it should be our fans that do it and then we retweet it and say how accurate it is how
accurate it is yeah the model that means that we're wonderful people yeah yeah well they're
immune to cringe immune to cringe it's a superpower just like trump's superpower if you if you could just
brazen your way through it and just go all the way then it seems to work unheard of levels this is
really they are pioneering new new heights of sycophancy i'm in astonishment that's yeah
alexandros marinos is special though i mean you, you know, he puts Brian Keating to shame.
Good try, Brian.
But I'm sorry, you've been outshone by Alexandros.
He is-
There was a fantastic interaction deep in Weinsteinian lore
where Eric was saying something about ivermectin
and poor Brett and his mistreatment.
And Alexandros chimed in to say,
I haven't forgotten, Eric, that you said
that you were concerned about what Brett was doing. Don't think we've forgotten. And Eric
responded by saying, excuse me, who are you? Have we met? I don't remember seeing you at the
Weinstein dinner table. He did a, you know, good day, sir. I say good day. That's how you could tell you're a super fan,
when you're criticizing your beloved's brother
for not supporting their brother enough.
It's quite something.
And just the dynamic that's interesting
is this little orbiting pattern of wannabe gurus or super fans
like becoming not just sycophantic, but the kind of bulldog
defenders of their chosen guru. So they will make the long sub stack post or the huge Twitter thread
to interact with the enemies while the main guru can retweet it and you know head pat them for pointing out this person has shown how those
criticisms don't apply to me and and so on it's well yeah i think that there's two kind of dynamics
there's that sort of follower master dynamic that you described there and then there's the kind of
aspiring up-and-coming thrusting young bucks that want to carve out a place for themselves in
the pantheon and that's where you have this unbridled flattery and back slapping going on
where everyone is buttering up everyone unless you don't play ball in which case you'll get the
nasty illusions like tim newman like sam Harris, or whoever is not currently on
the inn, in the inner of the club. Yeah. And it's just the fact that it's constantly presented as
if that's not what it's about. It's all about ideas. It's the fearless, yeah, exploration of
ideas, epistemic humility, epistemic courage, combining those two things together so you can fearlessly tread into these exciting new intellectual realms,
yet they still find themselves talking about the same old
culture war bullshit every day.
That they completely agree on endlessly.
I know.
So we'll get out of this fucking quagmire,
but Chomsky in a way will be nice, refreshing hair wash in that respect.
He'll be a relief.
Compared to this, I don't care if he's like a completely ideologically blinkered anti-America.
Genocide denier.
Pico genocide denier.
At least he's not that.
He's not what we just talked about.
He could be bad in completely different ways,
but I'm just up for a change.
So that'll be good.
Agreed.
Agreed.
So I almost feel like I need a shower.
It's so against my nature.
Just aside from all the issues about the intellectual problems or whatever,
just that unbridled
fawning yeah i think it also would make any english person's skin crawl like it should yeah
yeah it should if i haven't been pilled then it should yeah it definitely does go against your
nature i know that you just can't compute like in your universe it goes against nature so much
people shouldn't be able to do that yet
it's so embarrassing it's so cringy but they don't feel it they have no cringe within their soul
they're cringeless creatures that's the thing so you know but that's that's what they are so
anyway that's weinstein world it's not, the Weinsteins themselves are not entirely to blame for this.
This is just the environment
that they encourage around them.
And look at what it breeds, what treasures.
All right.
Well, I'm not going to hold my breath
for a flattering four quadrant model from you, Chris.
But that's fine.
I don't need it.
It's all right.
And I'm just going to say this, Chris,
in case we decide to do it.
But since we've been playing clips provided to us thoughtfully by bad stats on Twitter,
citations, you know, we cite our sources.
He also created a replacement theme song for our show, which could be better than our standard
one.
So we might play it now before we get into the main episode.
And you guys can decide whether or not we should make it our new theme song.
Oh, yeah.
I can play that now decoding the gurus those wacky wacky gurus my name is matt my name is
chris let's have some fun and take the piss decoding the gurus now on to the show wow
that's i don't know i just it's uncanny ai me sounds exactly like me beautiful stuff i like it
it's an uptempo bouncy kind of theme just what the podcast needs to inject a new kind of joy
into it that'll be good that'll be good well on to the man off they are old nomski and people
thought we were putting this off because we were so scared to touch the
towering intellect of Chomsky.
And that's not it.
The reason why we haven't done someone yet is always the same.
It's just that we haven't got around to it yet.
There's a list of people that are always referenced. Like, you'll never do Teal.
You'll never do Chomsky.
You'd never do.
And the answer to all of them is, well, just give it some time.
Yeah, I'll decode anyone, anytime, anywhere, as long as I feel like it.
Yeah.
And I will say, Matt, like Chomsky is someone that constantly online,
ever since I've been on forums,
people are like, oh, you think that?
Well, Chomsky said this, right?
Because, you know, if you're left wing,
I don't know if you've experienced this,
but people always throw Chomsky at you
as if the fact that he has said something
means that all people on the left,
therefore, now sign on to like whatever
chomsky's tick is like a george orwell meme quote you got a george orwell quote for that then that's
well that's the end of the story george orwell yeah i've genuinely experienced this since i
began using the internet people citing chomsky at me as if I have cited Chomsky, you know, as if I brought him up and said,
well, you know, as the great Chomsky said, blah, blah, blah. But I think it's because online,
left-wing people must reference him very often. This is why people think that completely undermines
your argument, if they can show you that Chomsky has said something so i think he is in that respect
a good candidate for a left-wing guru um because his influence on the left is certainly high enough
that he could fit the bill and he's not religious secular tick guru tick yeah no if people are
citing him as like the last word like unassailable then come on that's got secular guru
written all over it yeah yeah treat it a little bit like a prophet but um but we'll see if that's
justified yeah let's see does he make the garometer thing that is yet to be determined let's find out Okay, Matt. So we have four sources. They are an interviewomsky thing talking about his academic area of expertise.
Then we have three more recent interviews.
We have his appearance on Piers Morgan talking about his general career and his current opinions,
a kind of chatty show kind of thing, but an overview of his life and work, which
isn't actually particularly contentious given the difference in politics.
It is a relatively friendly interview.
Then we have an interview with something called Politics Joe.
I think this is a UK outlet. In any case, it's Chomsky talking with
someone else about Keir Starmer, the Labour left, the Warren unions, blah, blah, blah. I chose this
in part because he's talking about UK politics, which I know a bit better than America. But in
this case, the guy is fairly sympathetic about Chomsky's point of view. You
know, he largely agrees with the way that he frames things. And lastly, Matt, and I think I
might not have mentioned this to you, so he probably doesn't listen to it. So this will be surprise
clips for you. There's a Times interview with Matt Chorley, also from this year, about his opinion on Ukraine. Also, again, his opinion on Jeremy Corbyn and UK
elections and so on. And a bit more contentious, a kind of classical British style argy-bargy
interview with Chomsky. So we've got a selection of different Chomsky content. And this is just scratching the surface, but I think
it does allow us to get into at least some of the different facets of his character,
which is perhaps fitting for somebody of his stature and age.
Advanced age.
In any case, he's mid-90s and he's still being interviewed multiple times so you
know that's quite an achievement whatever you you think of old mr chomsky's politics okay so we're
gonna start i think uh with his linguistic stuff hey let's um cover a little just a tiny little
taste of it because yeah he's written so much because whenever we announced that we were
going to do chomsky one of the things that people were concerned about is is make sure you get his
linguistic stuff because that's a significant part of his intellectual output and it wouldn't do him
justice just to focus on his politics but i i do think one issue is that he actually has done a pretty good job of keeping the things
separate.
Like when he talks about linguistics, he doesn't do what Jordan Peterson does, which is
constantly connect his academic point of view to his politics.
He does sometimes, but I think broadly he views it like an old school academic math that the two
should be kept slightly independent so i'm not opposed to that perspective but no makes sense
non-overlapping magisteria chris is politics and linguistics for the most part yeah so i i don't
know that we're gonna have much we find objectionable about his linguistic
content but nonetheless i think it's good to cover it and also you'll hear a younger chomsky in his
prime in the 80s when he was only i guess in his 40s like me in my prime. Yeah. So, well, here's him talking about language
and how it changes and some of this stuff.
How does language change over time?
How did 18th century French change
compared to 12th century French?
Well, you know, when we talk about language change,
that's very misleading.
I mean, there is no such thing as a language in France.
I mean, up until, say, the turn of the century, you could find people in nearby villages in France
who couldn't understand one another, virtually could not understand one another. The idea
of a national language is a pretty modern phenomenon. It has to do with the rise of
nationalism and communication and so on, or take, say, Italy today or Germany today. I
mean, the differences among the things that we call
German are enormous, so enormous as to lead to non-mutual intelligibility. You have to learn
the national language when you go to school. It's a different language than the one you spoke at
home. And when we talk about language changing, what's actually happening is that there's some,
it's kind of like species changing. There's a mixture of all sorts of dialects and the mix changes over time, either because
of conquest or some political change or boundaries are drawn in a different place or, you know,
some kind of commercial interchange or whatever.
Got any problems with that, Chris?
Any hot takes in there?
I don't, but I do think that the interesting thing is one, just I actually think when you Got any problems with that, Chris? Any hot takes in there? like French, English, German. But of course, that's an artificial imposition
because of all the diversity that was there.
And prior to the rise of nations
where you had like standardized official versions of the language.
So I do think that's all interesting to consider.
And I think this is a good clip
that introduces his cadence and delivery,
which hasn't really changed.
No.
I mean, he's gotten older, so he does sound older in the later clips,
but he's very much got an academic delivery style.
Yeah, he does a good job in that sort of public intellectual role there,
sort of explaining to a general audience, you know,
this is how spoken languages evolve.
And, you know, I like the evolution sort of analogy before mass communication
and published sort of standards and things um you know you had all this diversity from village to
village and in the modern era became a bit of a monoculture associated often with national
boundaries but not always so you know like he was pretty brief there but it was a good little
introduction to the topic for a lay person yeah and, and I like this, Matt, where he was invited to, you know,
to speak on his ability to predict where languages would go.
And I just appreciated this answer.
But if you were in France in the 12th century
and you understood all the nuances of language,
could you have predicted how these various languages would have evolved over time?
No, it's totally impossible.
But is it partially random?
It's not so much that it's random.
It's not actually random.
For all we know, it might be completely deterministic.
There's just too many factors involved.
It's like predicting the weather.
There's just too many things going on.
Human life is a pretty complicated affair.
And now our culture are tentative.
Speakers of English can be misled by this.
English is relatively homogeneous.
You can go a long way in the United States.
I mean, I just came from Boston, and I understand everybody in Portland and Seattle and so on.
But that's not true of most of the world.
Most of the world, language areas, language that you can get very
different languages pretty close by. And much of the world is what we would call multilingual.
Yeah, that's a good answer too. It's not right, is it, to call it random, but it is
totally unpredictable because it's like any super complex dynamic system. And no lies
detected, eh, Chris? No, and I appreciate, you know,
And no lies detected, eh, Chris?
No, and I appreciate, you know,
when invited to talk about how his superior knowledge would have allowed him to, you know,
determine what would have happened.
He's like, nah.
Of course not, nah.
Yeah.
It's just, it's refreshing.
That's all, you know, when you hear people recognize that,
no, I'm not, you know, I have limitations to my ability.
It's probably a bit early to be making commentary, but I'll say real quickly, Chris, that like I was thinking recently about how a lot of our gurus are differentiated from like more normal people, including normal public intellectuals, by just how much of what they say is connected to self-presentation in some way, shape, or form.
They're always talking about themselves
and trying to conjure an image of themselves in the listener.
And you can hear it was Chomsky that he's just someone who doesn't do that.
He just answers the question.
He's not thinking, okay, well, how can I answer this that makes me look good?
Yeah, in a way that makes me look good.
Yeah, it is nice to see.
And this is also pointing me at, Matt,
that I think our listeners should pay attention to.
They need to fully absorb this knowledge from Chomsky.
But what does it mean for the language to be pure?
Or when people say they want English to be pure,
what are they talking about?
Was Shakespeare pure?
I mean, in fact, every stage of history, languages are,
there is, first of all, there is no such thing as a language.
There are just lots of different ways of speaking that different people have, which are more or less similar to one another.
And some of them may have prestige associated with them.
For example, some of them may be the speech of a conquering group or a wealthy group or a priestly caste or one thing or another.
And we may decide, OK, those are the good ones and some other ones, the bad one.
But if social and political relations reversed, we'd make the opposite conclusions.
Is the matrix the wrong way to say it, Chris?
Or is it so right that it blows your mind?
That's what I think Chomsky is saying there.
I think he's trying to say the priestly classes
who think that their English is the correct pronunciation,
the English and the Americans out there,
they're just what delusional words they live in.
That's the problem.
So we're doing our part, Matt.
We're doing our part.
That's right.
If we could predict the
future of language which we can't chomsky is quite right then it may well be the case
that everyone will be saying the matrix in future we can't say at this point but it's possible
yeah and uh you know chomsky talks about his limitations which again maybe our listeners
need to consider their own limitations
in regards to this. So a bit more elaboration on the point, I think, is warranted.
Sometimes, in order for that decoding system to work, the systems have to be
close enough. You and I can do it. Actually, if you listen to us closely, we're speaking
different languages, but they're close enough so that we don't have any, I don't have a problem
decoding you and you don't have a problem decoding me.
But again, that's a little artificial.
That's because of the artificial unity of the English language spoken in the United States.
I happened to be in England last week, and I can find myself in places in England where I don't understand what they're saying.
I mean, if I listen to them for a while, we can establish communication.
But you have to kind of retune your system in some manner that's not understood so that you can begin to decode what
you're hearing just i feel sympathy for him you know he goes to places in english they're talking
oh my god no what's happening here just calm down speak slowly you know i need to decode them so yeah it's something we can all
relate to dialects of the english language it's fair to say he's not a prescriptivist when it
comes to linguistics i learned this pseudo controversy prescript prescriptivism versus
what's the opposite of prescriptivism naturalism descriptivists
descriptive that sounds right yeah probably but yeah you know there's like an old-fashioned
fuddy-duddy version of linguistics is that there's like a proper kind of way to use english and
there's a right way to do it there's a wrong way to do it yada yada yada and you know there's
people that says you know let a thousand flowers bloom and whatever people do is okay.
He talked about the, he talks about, you know, also that we use these words in ways that are not consistent.
Like we talk about dialects of Chinese when in fact there's, they are very much not dialects of like Mandarin Chinese, right?
They're completely different languages.
And, but because of the
political situation they can be classified as dialects and as opposed to for example hiberno
english which is a just a dialect of english it's a perfectly correct way to speak english that
happens the predominant in in northern ireland but like all the different ways to use the language
is legitimate except for the way that people
from Liverpool speak, which.
Yeah, that's universally understood as wrong.
But so he did talk about this, Matt,
that kind of official grammar
versus the language of the streets
had created quite a nice image for me
of Chomsky growing up
in the hard knock streets.
So listen to this.
The literary standard is not what I learned in the streets. It's not very different,
but it's a little different. And when I went to school, I was taught the literary standard.
Now, the literary standard has some principles associated with it, some of which are those of
a real language, some of which are completely artificial. They were made up by people who had
crazy ideas about language.
And they're all given names you've never heard of before.
Yeah, and in fact the reason you have to teach them is because they are not the person's
language.
Nobody, your actual language, nobody teaches you.
I mean, your language just grows in your head.
You know, you can't, you stick a child, a young child in an environment where people
are speaking language, and that child can no more help knowing that language
than the child can help growing.
It's just part of human growth
is for some component of the brain to pick up the language.
You can't learn it,
and you don't learn it anywhere you learn to see.
The hard streets.
I don't know, he strikes me as someone
who's a linguist in the streets
and a linguist in the sheets.
I don't know.
Who knows?
It's actually, it is hard to tell because chomsky as we've mentioned is old right so when he's talking about his childhood
adventures and so on it's it's important to remember the the relevant context so that's right this is
medieval times when he was growing up no no it was a great it was a great depression i think
yeah here's him talking about that and a little bit about political history but um
his childhood how is it done we know perfectly well take the New Deal in the 1930s, which I'm old enough to remember first.
The labor movement in the United States had been crushed almost totally
by Woodrow Wilson's Red Scare.
1930s began to recoup, reorganize, CIO organizing, militant actions,
moderately sympathetic administration, introduced social democratic policies, which in fact were later picked up by Europe in the post-war period.
That's the way politics change.
Something else has happened.
Forty years ago, Reagan and Thatcher launched a major assault against the population.
Class war, bitter class war. First act they undertook was to destroy the labor movement.
Very sensible. The one defense against bitter class war then came.
defense against bitter class reward then came more it goes on yeah you can tell that this clip is from a slightly older chomsky and i i forgot that he goes on to outline political history but just
he was growing up in the 1930s right it just worth bearing that in mind he lived through the rise of fascism and stuff like
that so i i think that's important to remember when listening to him talk about you know politics
and that kind of thing as well and saw the rise of the reagan and thatcher era and all that and
you could see how his political worldview,
which we'll get to later on,
has been like his guiding star throughout all of those decades.
I could see how it all sort of fits together for him.
So returning to the linguistics point, though,
he's talking about a bunch of different things,
but the way that people use languages and it's not purely functional, right?
There are also aspects about maintaining group identities or signaling group membership, and I thought some of this was interesting.
The words that are in one era are archaic, and in another era it can be three years or something like that and people are playing with their languages often again this is not too
common in our societies our societies remember are basically technological
societies our intelligence and creativity and so on goes into other
things but if you go to say Central Australia where you're finding
basically Stone Age tribes, there's a lot
of innovation in language. A lot of the cultural wealth has to do with playing games with languages
and constructing elaborate kinship systems and things which probably have no or little
functional utility. It's just the creative mind at work. So you get very complex language
games, a special language system taught as a puberty
rite, and only a particular group of people speak it.
Nobody else understands it.
I think some anthropologists might take issue with no functional utility to complex kinship
systems.
But nonetheless, he's still correct about language marking out specific subgroups and subcultures within a society and
people being taught languages that apply only in certain circumstances. In the country that I live
in, in Japan, there are changes to the verbs that people use depending on the status of the other
people that they're talking to and the level of politeness and whatnot. And yeah, I think this is all very interesting
to consider from the point of view
of the fact that all humans develop languages
or can use languages,
assuming that they are following
normal development patterns.
And we use them in a variety of interesting ways
that linguistics have studied.
Yeah, it's easy to see that, you know, language is super duper complicated.
It's not just, oh, here's a dictionary.
Here are the rules for using it.
Okay, go ahead and communicate.
It's got all of these roles and signaling and social psychology.
And in my particular interest in it, like your interest is sort of anthropological.
That's where you make your legs.
For me, it's cognitive, Chris.
It's cognitive.
I teach all these units on how the brain works and how knowledge is represented and stuff.
And it is a bit of a mystery, but I find it pretty fascinating how language representations sort of dovetail with just more general semantic meaning representations of information in the
brain. So super complicated and mysterious. There's a point that I appreciated, Matt,
which I felt the sort of kinship with Chomsky when he was asked a question about poetry.
I think you'll vibe with his response here as well.
Do you respond to poetry?
Why? Sure. That time to read it.
Does it make you think differently? So What goes on in your thought process? Well, you know, I don't feel competent to say,
but it's a topic that has been discussed quite intelligently. So, for example, if you read,
say, Not By Me, I have nothing to say about it. No pretend to but if you read say william amson's seven types
of ambiguity you get an intriguing account of why poetry makes you think yeah i like that chris he's
like me i think he's he sort of hinted at it he's he talks about poetry as like something that
happens to other people more so than him and and i'm the same. Like, Chris, when I was at school, we had to study this poem,
and it was about these two farmers, like, mending a fence,
and it was a metaphor for the walls we build between ourselves
and stuff like that.
It wasn't a Roll Powers song, was it?
No.
It was a proper poem.
But all of that went totally over my head.
I just thought it was a poem about a couple of farmers fixing a fence.
I didn't get any of the analogies.
Somebody had to explain it to me.
I like that.
He's a concrete thinker, clearly.
That was one of the comments of one of my teachers from my life reports.
He's a concrete thinker.
Yeah, that's so good with them you know just just just very concrete but the um so yeah and and the fact that he is like you know
lots of people have written very intelligently about it but not me right yeah get that for me
like you that resonated with a whole bunch of other things he said,
which is whenever he sort of gets an invitation to wax lyrical,
give a personal kind of thing, he says, no, thank you.
He just bats it away, doesn't he?
Yeah, and another thing which highlights his delivery
and the same tendency is he's asked about humor.
And the
way that the interviewer asks, it kind of gives the impression that he's well known not to be
funny. So that's just like, but he doesn't correct them. So this is this.
We bring up another area you can claim you have no expertise in, and that's the use of humor.
We respond to people who use humor and communication, yet it's not taught in grade school.
We're not taught how to be comedians, but we respond to it.
And that seems to be the case in almost every language.
Well, see, I don't think that has too much to do with language.
We can be humorous in other ways, too.
A clown can be humorous without using language, and nobody teaches a child how to laugh at a clown.
Now I think we're going here to interesting topics,
but topics where nothing is understood.
There's no doubt in my mind that there's something
about human nature, the basic structure
of the human mind and brain,
which makes certain things comical and other things not, just as there's certain things about the human mind and brain, which makes certain things comical
and other things not, just as there are certain things
about the human brain that make some things come out
to be human language and others not.
Yeah, once again, he doesn't wade in to just sort of giving
like a half-formed explanation of how it's related to language
off the top of his head.
I think he knows that he doesn't know an awful lot
about humor and so he doesn't engage with it, doesn't spin a theory on the fly.
And he's not somebody that it can be said relies a lot on humor in his delivery.
No, well, on that note, Chris, people who love Chomsky will hate this, but isn't he a little bit like Richard Dawkins?
Like just a bit.
I mean, you know, the styling is slightly different, but come on, there's some common
ground there.
No, I, yeah, I agree.
He's basically an old academic that speaks in an academic way.
It's not to say neither of them could crack a joke, but you wouldn't
expect Dawkins to launch into a humorous anecdote that regularly. I think Dawkins reading out his
hate mail was pretty comedic, but that was mostly just because of his delivery. So there is that.
Matt, this might be getting into the weeds a little bit, but I think we probably should just a part because what Chomsky is famous for is his models about universal grammar,
the syntactic structures of language that are innate and allow people to develop their
language abilities, despite what he refers to as like a poverty of stimulus.
And that has been an influential,
but fair to say controversial theory within linguistics.
He's credited with helping to kick off the cognitive turn
in the linguistic field,
focusing away from behavioralist approaches onto more like cognitive, what's going
on in the mind approaches. But in contemporary linguistics, I think a lot of his stuff is
out of favor, or at least a lot of the claims have had to be revised quite dramatically. But
maybe playing a clip of him talking about the issue about the
poverty of stimulus would be useful to get an idea of what he sees the issue as arising from.
It's amazing how somebody can walk in a room, hear a few words and walk out crying or angry
or this whole series of emotions, simply with a few words.
Doesn't that constantly amaze you?
It's not just words, again.
It could be a fleeting picture.
Take, say, a caricature.
You see a few lines, and it brings to your mind a person in a situation,
maybe a tragic situation or a comical situation or whatever.
I mean, the human mind is a very marvelous thing.
It's got an extremely intricate and complex structure,
which, at least at a scientific level,
we understand very little about.
But what you're pointing to is a central part of it.
Little hints here and there succeed in evoking in us
very rich experience and interpretation.
And what's more, it's done surprisingly uniformly for different people. And it's, of course,
done without any training or very minimal training. Nobody would know how to train people
to do this. So it somehow must be the only logical possibility aside from angels or acts
of God, is it something rooted in our nature.
I mean, qualitatively speaking, these phenomena are very much like physical growth.
The nutrition that's given to an organism, to an embryo, is not what determines that it's going to be a human or a bird.
What determines that it's going to be a human or a bird is something about its internal structure.
determines that it's going to be a human or a bird is something about its internal structure.
And what determines that we are
going to be the kind of creature that can
speak and that can
interpret
a sign or
a couple of lines or something
as evoking an
emotional experience or whatever, that's
something in our nature, but it's so far
beyond what we know how to study that you can only wave your hands at it at the moment. Well, you said that his theories
these days are a bit controversial or out of favor, but some components of his theories have
since become commonly accepted. Like the idea that humans are predisposed towards language
acquisition, I think is universally accepted. We know that there are parts of the brain that are specialized for language comprehension and production. So it's difficult to judge him 50 years since because I don't really fully understand his theories. Obviously, I'm not a linguist and it's all super technical and everything, but the little I do understand, I mean, half of it just seems totally obvious to me, but that's because, as you said, he was
part of that sort of cognitive shift, like there's these generative grammars and...
What are the architectures called, Chris?
So there's generative grammar, universal grammar, language acquisition device.
grammar universal grammar language acquisition device uh his approach i think is originally standard theory then extended standard theory then revise extended standard theory then government
and binding theory um to the minimalist program and and then eventually to the core feature being
mostly not the things previously mentioned just just recursion, just the property of recursion in language.
So that's a lot of things.
And there's a lot of very specific terminology associated with all of that.
It's fair to say that he definitely inspired a large amount of linguistic work
and he has still a large amount of devoted advocates of his approach.
But I think there are many detractors of his approach and many who argue that the attempts
to preserve the theory in the face of evidence are limiting actually progress within certain
linguistic quarters.
And persistent criticisms have been that a lot of it was originally derived from,
you know, the structures you find in European grammars
and broke down a bit when you started trying to account for Asian languages
or more far-leafy languages.
One of the things I mentioned to you, because I was just confused by it this idea of a deep deep structure or deep grammar or whatever and this is the idea
that there's a kind of there's these common human universal rules between objects and so on so you
say that the cat chased the dog no let's say the dog chased the cat that would make more sense
you've got an object and a subject and you've got like a verb which connects these two things together the superficial grammar can change from language
to language but underlying it is a basic graph where you have circles and arrows connected to
each other and certain sort of logical relations that they can have and that confused me a bit
because it feels like it's like a bit of a tautology. I can't imagine a way to express relationships between concepts that doesn't have that kind of grammar.
Or to put it another way, if you're saying that, oh, this is a thing that makes humans special, this is a human species constant, which I'm very much open to.
But if you're saying that the thing that's constant, the thing that sort of binds all of our languages together is this deep grammar, but you can't imagine an alternative,
that is, if you met an alien or a hyper-evolved octopus
that could talk about cats and dogs chasing each other,
then if you can't imagine a way to describe the grammar
of the relations between each other that's different
from the special human one, I just don't get the point.
It's almost tautological.
It has to be that way. Yeah. I don't know i don't get the point it's almost tautological has to be that
way yeah i i don't know about linguistics to have a strong opinion but i do know that there's a lot
of criticisms and i remember reading various versions of it i tend to find the work by
tomasello which argues about the focus of shared intentionality being the core underpinning and that this system
relates not just to language but the whole realm of human sociality yeah and are you talking about
like ontological categories of things they have things that can have intentions and things that
no no no no so that that's also a part you know, and this is all, I think in large part, various elements of this
are well supported empirically.
The fact that humans readily categorize objects and agents
that they encounter into the world,
into those two things, objects and agents,
and also into subcategories of plants and moving animates
and people and so on. your brain automatically or your mind more
specifically ascribes a whole set of ontological assumptions depending on which category things
fall into i think that is that's well ascribed to i don't think chomsky objects to any of that
either but i'm talking about uh thomasllo and collaborators have argued that basically a whole bunch of the stuff about the human evolution and language development and so on is underpinned by a hyper focus on enjoying interpersonal, shared, intentional stances and situations.
intentional stances and situations and that are language.
This underpins the way that we use language as well.
And when you understand that, you understand more about the way language develops.
But I don't understand the details. So I'm just saying on a surface level, when I've read the arguments, that approach has
resonated with me.
But if you want to seek out the details you'd be better going and you know
reading well-qualified linguistics discussion of the debate yeah yeah but it's interesting stuff
isn't it like it's at the interface between language but also social behavior and cognition
and and also evolution and biology because he's pretty yeah pretty pretty frank and i i do think
for example one of the critiques of Chomsky
has been put by this guy, Dan Everett,
who did work with the Piraha,
I think that's how you pronounce it,
a tribe in the Amazon,
and argues that they lack lots of the features
that Chomsky's model suggests will be universal.
But I always find that a weak critique,
in part because the more that you
look in the everett's claims the more that there's rebuttals from other people that have studied with
the piranha and have said that's misrepresenting their culture and language a bit and and also
because even if it were the case that there are certain examples where the general features are not apparent i don't know that that would disprove
that there is a yeah you know it might disprove the universal part that you absolutely need it
but yeah but if 99 times out of 100 you find the common feature then yeah no i hear what you're
saying but like you chris i also find that sort of agent-based explanation sort of interesting
i think that resonates with me too.
I think that probably is something that's characteristic of humans.
Maybe it'll be a characteristic of smart social aliens
if we ever meet them as well.
But it feels hard to imagine a language that doesn't have a bit of a focus
on agents and objects and that kind of thing,
those sort of distinctions.
focus on agents and objects and that kind of thing that those sort of distinctions yeah there's a part where he's asked about the correct way to to teach children to develop proper language or whatever
and again he's not actually that prescriptive he's kind of like you know well actually parents don't
have that much impact because children are designed to sponge up the language that's around them.
So you could interfere with that, but actually that would be harmful.
And I was like, yeah, you know, that's a nice way to argue against helicopter parenting.
Yeah, just speak normally.
Speak to them like they're little humans.
Yeah.
He also, in one of the other interviews, he got asked about the most interesting unanswered question.
And I think this highlights that he retains, you know, his interest in this topic up till now.
Is there anything left that you're really, you would love to know the answer to, that you've never to your satisfaction worked out?
to, that you've never to your satisfaction worked out? Well, moving to another domain of intellectual professional pursuits, there is a question that was asked by Galileo,
then by his associates in the 17th century, which is as yet unanswered. How are you and I able to do
what we are now doing? How, as Galileo put it, how is it possible with a finite number of symbols
to produce an infinite number of thoughts and even use these symbols to allow others
who have no access to our minds
to access to their inner workings of our minds.
How is this miracle possible?
I like that. It's a good answer.
And a couple of things, Chris.
Notice how he
delineates his professional work as he yeah so let's talk about another topic yeah different
domain because up until then he'd been talking to piers morgan about his political opinions which
he frames and thinks of as his political opinions and then he has his work his linguistics work over
here i'm sure he takes them equally seriously and sees them as equally important,
but he doesn't sort of just conflate them all together
into a grand theory of the universe.
And the other nice thing is despite him having worked on this
like his entire career, he still thinks of it as a total mystery.
You know, and he's –
I felt that was a bit – it's a bit pessimistic.
We've got no idea.
I think he's overstating the case a little bit, I think.
I think it is a bit of a shame that he doesn't seem very interested
in these language models, for instance.
You can say what you like about them, Chris, but you have to admit
they have the special feature which fascinates Chomsky,
which is that they're generative.
They work with the finite.
That doesn't fascinate him about it.
He's quite clear, as we'll get to when he talks about AI.
He doesn't seem to regard them as particularly interesting.
In fact, maybe we should just play a clip of him talking about AI
and his general views on how interesting that topic is.
I was trying to see if the models were being constructed on the basis of neural nets could teach you something about the brain.
That kind of interest has mostly disappeared.
Now it's become almost a pure engineering project.
And we do something that sells, basically.
Doesn't tell us anything about language, learning, cognition, just works.
Well, there's nothing wrong with technology.
In fact, I'm using it right now.
The captions that I'm reading,
because I'm hard of hearing,
are developed by deep learning technology.
For that, it's quite useful.
Maybe it's useful for other things.
But it's not teaching us anything.
It's not intended to.
but it's not teaching us anything.
It's not intended to.
It's as if somebody's studying insect navigation and want to figure out how insects navigate.
And someone comes along and says,
it's not a problem.
I can do it with a GPS and high technology and so on.
We'd laugh, you know.
That's essentially what it is.
So the technology can be, like other technology,
can be useful, can be harmful.
Our decision is how to use it.
But it's not part of science anymore.
It's not telling us anything.
Do you agree, Matt?
No, I don't agree. I see where he's coming from but chris i mean the way these machines generate language is very
different to how the brains do it i mean we've got an architecture that's different even though
there is something of a similarity in terms of the statistical learning and associative learning and
they're called artificial neural networks because they were based abstractly on human neural networks so i get i get that i get that it's very different
from how humans do it but it still should be interesting i think to someone like chomsky
because you know he's he's got this big focus on human universals and if you're interested in human
universals wouldn't you love to have just one counter example something that generates language
but isn't a human like a hyper evolved if you could get your hands on a hyper evolved octopus
that could talk right maybe it was just blathering away like gpt boring you know aliens aliens arrive
right they're using language that's boring yeah i i personally think it's interesting um it is an
engineering project of course primarily these days but even so i still think no i to be honest i also disagree because despite the discussions we've
had on here and on the extended longer uncut versions on the patreon about ai i think it should be extremely interesting that what we have developed with LLMs is the ability to have linguistic conversations with a system that doesn't follow the same process, but can produce outcome as if it is a person, as if it is parsing the language in the way that we do.
I think that if you ask Chomsky or various other people,
would we be able to do it in the way that we can now,
he would be much more pessimistic, as many rightly were.
I probably, not that I'm an expert in linguistics,
but I would have shared the pessimism that the processes that we had
could lead to the result that we have now
but the fact that we can produce results which are so linguistically sophisticated and which
at least mimic the appearance of somebody communicating with correct grammar in every
language that the trading database provides it is a marvel i think but he kind of says well it's
just it's a toy clever toy yeah like on the same like even if you're someone who's like really
skeptical of lm llms and you think there's no cognition there's no reasoning there's nothing
going on under the hood it's just pretending well that makes it even more interesting that a machine
that can't think or reason or do anything cognitively interesting is able to create such such seamless plausible natural language so that's our opinion so feel
free others may disagree yeah um now we're gonna switch to talk about the thing for which chomsky most famous for, which is his political opinions or his views on contemporary social issues and
ideologies. And we're going to look at some of those opinions and the way that he presents them.
But I do think he's an interesting case for us to look at because there are lots of ways that he doesn't fit into the secular guru template as
established by many of the previous gurus we look at. For example, he is quite reluctant to accept
fawning prayers, at least without issuing some self-deprecation. So some examples of this.
Here's, I believe this is him talking to Matt Chorley
for the Times interview, but listen to this, Matt.
It's been said that Noam Chomsky
is one of the most cited authors in history,
up there with Shakespeare and the Bible even,
and his work covers a huge range.
Take his latest book book it's called
illegitimate authority a collection of interviews on subjects as varied as joe biden climate change
abortion rights in the united states the economic fallout from covid 19 the war in ukraine vladimir
putin xi jinping and much more besides no welcomeam, welcome to Times Radio. Thanks for joining us. Thank you. And don't take too seriously the output of PR.
He's got an energy there where he doesn't, he certainly doesn't need any fawning praise these
days. I mean, the skeptical person could say, Chris, that, well, he's got such a big track
record. He's been fawningly praised so many times.
He's sort of got the luxury to kind of always downplay it.
But it doesn't sound like false modesty, does it?
No.
And, like, listen, this is him responding to the issue of whether he regards himself as a public intellectual.
Now, listen, I want to talk to you first of all about how you are described. If
you're filling in a form, what's your occupation? Do you write down public intellectual, as other
people might expect? What's your job? I teach, I'm a university professor, right?
professor i teach courses on linguistics cognitive science philosophy uh social and political issues and like any other academic do you like being thought of a public intellectual or is is the
idea of a public intellectual a sort of old-fashioned thing
in a world where everyone can pump out their opinions in public all the time?
Well, I never took the concept public intellectual very seriously,
and I don't take it very seriously.
Yeah.
I feel like Chorley didn't really listen to his answer,
because he said, like, I don't call myself a public intellectual.
I've never called myself that.
And then this follow-up question was like, you know,
how does it make you feel when you're referred to as public intellectual?
I was like, yeah, I just told you.
Yeah, he says things like this a few times in the stuff that we've heard.
It doesn't sound like a line.
Yeah, he seems to be one of those people that just doesn't deal with that kind of blather.
He's like, okay, I'm a lecturer.
I write books.
I do this, whatever.
Sure, he's happy with being well-known, but you know.
So I'll say this, Matt.
I think Chomsky has a perfectly healthy self-regard for himself.
And when you hear him talk about his ideas
or defend his theories,
he basically argues as if they are self-evidently true
and have been strongly supported by all evidence.
He's not a retiring wallflower
about his arguments being correct.
But what he isn't is somebody that wants to say that he's this larger than life Einsteinian figure with an insight that's never been matched. He very much does present himself as giving lone individual especially when it comes to linguistic ideas when it comes to politics he sometimes talks about how nobody else the mainstream doesn't give
voice to those but he is also highlighting voice like him or to be honest i think that ladder
largely reflects that he correctly sees his strongly left-wing views as being in the minority,
right? Because they are. Yeah, except that he thinks they're in the minority because of the
influence of the media and the elites. Yeah, the whole system is keeping them down. That's right,
but it's not personal. That's his ideological worldview, right? Yes. Look, I think it's that's his ideological worldview right um yes look i think it's got to do with
what i was saying before about like how much time and effort people dedicate to sort of self
presentation versus talking about just delivering the stuff that they think is true and as you said
he'll deliver the stuff that he thinks is true with absolute certainty and with as much strength
as you can imagine and believes that they're absolutely
supported by all the evidence that can be seen by a reasonable person so i believe forcefully
but he doesn't seem to devote any time into saying well you should take me seriously because i'm a
special person well i will get to this but i'm going to play it just to tee things up a little
bit so there's a point towards the end of the interview with Matt Chorley,
and we'll see it gets pretty contentious in the way that British political interviews often do.
But he's asked at the end, does he ever consider that he might just be wrong
about all of the views that he's just expressed and so on, right?
And his answer here, on the the one hand sounds humble and self
deprecating but hold that thought do you ever think maybe i'm the one who's wrong one do you
ever think maybe i'm the one who's wrong that you've you that you that you might be wrong
of course all the time i was much too late in getting involved in the opposition to
the vietnam war i began to get seriously involved when kennedy radically escalated the war in the
early 60s should have been involved 10 years earlier yeah so the answer there matt was yes i always considered that i might be wrong but the
illustration was i didn't advocate my beliefs more strongly and sooner that's the error that
he highlights not like i accidentally engaged in quasi-genocide denial about Cambodia because of my political sympathies or any of that kind
of thing, right? My views were not articulated strongly enough early enough. But it's kind of
a weird question, isn't it? That sort of intellectual humility test. I mean, like,
how do you answer that properly? Oh, have you ever considered you're wrong? Well,
like nobody thinks they're wrong when they think
i get that i i i know that but i also feel like that's the reason you ask it because for normal
people it's a simple thing to answer like of course you know i'm giving my opinion it could
be wrong i i might have misunderstood things or i do consider i've been wrong but there's the thing
matt you have to think about the gurus the people that we cover do they ever entertain that they
could be mistaken yeah i guess you're right i guess you're right because i asked myself that
question and i i could summon up a couple of legitimate questions where it was like i was
just legitimately wrong and i changed my mind after a bit you know so i can't i can't think of those cases i suppose i don't know if i'd do it on the
fly if i was doing an interview but it's not it's not like you know if somebody asked you to give
the examples where you've fundamentally changed your mind or whatever i i think that can be harder
in the moment because you know like you say people tend to think they believe things for
good reasons and motivated reasoning means that you can often shift what you previously thought that you believe to more
align with what you currently believe but it's the acknowledgement that you could be wrong even if
you forcefully believe something and chomsky does say yes but it's telling that the immediate example
is like i should have advocated for the things i believe in more strongly which is not that's not the spirit of the question that's the opposite so
i'm just saying yeah no no i take that point it reminds me of a piers morgan question where
he asks about cancel culture or something um i think some freedom of speech issue piers morgan
obviously meant it to you know in a kind of left-wing sense, but Chomsky
answered it in terms of these are the right-wing examples of cancellations and blocking freedom of
speech. So, you know, it's a rhetorical maneuver. I have that clip, Matt. I'll just play it now
since we have it here. I think we have more common ground on. Free speech, it seems to me, has never been under more ferocious
attack in the West than it is right now. Why is that? And what do we do about it?
There definitely is an attack on freedom of speech, even freedom to read. In the United States,
Ron DeSantis is running for president, as he just announced, has imposed regulations, laws in Florida, which make it illegal to teach authentic American history.
You have to teach a kind of history which glorifies the United States.
Nothing about what actually happened.
This is happening in
Republican legislatures around the country. I've been, as you know, probably very much opposed
to the actions of small sectors of young people who are picking up the traditional cancellation, which has been endemic in the academic world
and in the political world for years.
I can give you examples from my own experience.
Cancellation of the left has been constant.
It's only very...
You want me to spend time?
I could tell you from my own experience, which is small of it.
Now, small segments of young people are picking up that same improper policy we should have opposed the massive cancellation that has been accepted
for decades because it was directed against the left and dissident opinion. So yes, it's wrong.
Like you say, reframing questions in a way that serves your arguments, it's something that people
do. Because in general, he doesn't engage in a lot of the standard
secular guru tropes that much but when it comes to a certainty about his perspective i think he
is on a very similar level as the other gurus that we cover he has a moral certainty to his
outlook which leads to anybody expressing that it might be wrong is immediately kind of
categorized as a potential hostile force. And you can see that where there's an interaction between
him and a Guardian writer, George Monbiot published this email exchange he had with him online. And
it's not the same as the Sam Harris published email exchange exchange where they have very different worldviews, right?
Like Chomsky is known for his anti-imperialist, anti-US foreign policy stance.
And Sam Harris is, in many respects, a hawkish perspective, especially when it comes to like the Middle East and Islamic countries.
So they have a genuine disagreement there.
George Monbiot is very much in agreement with Chomsky about the
condemnation of the US and the historical atrocities of the US and contemporary politics as well.
But he wanted him to unequivocally condemn the genocide denialism that was in a book that Chomsky
had written the foreword to. There was a book called The Politics of Genocide, and Monbiot
mentioned that it contained the revisionist and widely inaccurate account of the Rwandan genocide,
as well as some extremely contestable statements about the massacre at Srebrenica.
And Chomsky goes on to accusing Monbiot of just reciting these things that people are supposed to say that are part of the
Western canon. And Monbiot has written strongly about very similar topics to Chomsky was suggesting,
no, no, you know, I'm not, you know, a paid up member of the British elite. I criticize all the
same things, but surely we agree that revisionist accounts of atrocities and so on don't serve anybody's cause. And the
exchange is there for everyone to read. But to me, Chomsky comes across as he is extremely
dismissive, becomes very hostile, and basically paints Monbiot as a servant of the British elites and their obsession with denigrating non-Western countries.
And it basically went nowhere.
So if you want an example where Chomsky's evasiveness around these kind of topics
and his fixation on switching the topic to,
do you not acknowledge the genocides that have been perpetrated by the west as has been fully
on display um and yeah like i think that fits into his tendency to see that his worldview
is correct and anybody that disagrees is suspect at best i see what you mean about the cast iron
certainty in the bigger picture. And
he's not above using the various tools in the rhetorical arsenal to support that.
Yeah. And here I want to make a distinction, which I think is important because on the one hand,
Chomsky has a political ideology, which I might describe as anti-imperialist leftisty, something along those
lines. And we'll play some clips which outline it. And it is what you would imagine, highly critical
of the West, particularly the US, highly critical of corporations, extremely sympathetic to socialists and socialist countries, even those
which appeared into dictatorships. But that's like a political worldview, right? He has a whole
economic outlook and stuff that's associated with it. And you can agree or disagree with it. In
you and I case, I think we disagree with it. And in Chomsky's worldview, we are part of the villains of the world because centristy
left-wing people are essentially the handmaidens of the evil capitalist strip mining the world,
right?
Well, we've been duped by the mainstream media complex.
Our consent has been manufactured.
Yes, yes.
But so there's that, right? And you can disagree with that. You can
agree with that. You know, everybody has their own political outlooks. But there's another aspect,
which is the degree of ideological certitude and fixation, which I think is a different thing,
because you can have all different degrees of political views that you strongly believe in, but you accept that there's a variety of different perspectives and people
with different values can arrive at different conclusions. I don't think that's exactly the
way that Chomsky arrives at. Maybe I'm being unfair to him, but I just want to make this
distinction that you can appreciate that people have different political opinions and criticize them for the degree
of ideological fixation that they represent.
I think that those two things are like...
It's very boring if you like to say, well, Chomsky believes this and we don't believe
that.
We think he's wrong because he's got his ideological worldview.
We've got our ideological view. You know, know others are available that's not very interesting but i don't know you're saying hopefully you could tease apart that from actually yeah so i think the
way to help is like let's just play some clips to illustrate what i mean so So here, I think, is a clip that gives a good overview
or at least general introduction to Chomsky's political perspective.
Back 40 years when Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan
inaugurated what's called neoliberalism, basically a form of class war.
One of their first acts was to attack the labor unions.
It made good sense.
When you're going to carry out an assault against working people and the poor, eliminate the means of defense, main means of defense
or labor unions that opened the doors to corporate expansion of modes of crushing worker organization.
I know the details better in the United States, but it was about the same in England.
That led to a very significant weakening of the labor movement and opened the doors to
basically highway robbery by the very rich in England, by austerity programs,
by the huge establishment attack on Jeremy Corbyn when he tried to create a genuine Labour Party
that weren't going to tolerate that.
And now there is a reaction,
both in the United States and Britain.
And, of course, the government is trying it.
The government which is essentially the government of the rich and the corporate sector is trying
to maintain the controls over labor and repression of labor so as to enable this highly successful class war to proceed.
And it is highly successful.
I don't know the figures for England, but in the United States,
about $50 trillion, it's not small change,
have been transferred from working people and the
poor to the top 1% during the class war, mislabeled neoliberalism.
It's pretty, nope.
The guys who run the thing don't want that gravy train to stop.
There you go.
That was a potted history 40 years back and and you get to hear
right the kind of crushing of the labor union movements by capitalists and the elites in the
united states and britain and elsewhere and efforts by figures more recently in the UK by Jeremy Corbyn to oppose this being crushed by the various forces, embedded forces that would be threatened by any changes to the capitalist system.
So capitalists are doing very bad things.
And there's a long history going back decades.
And in general, it's class warfare right it's the
the workers and the laborers versus the elites and the the capitalist class in general yeah yeah so
like regardless of what you think of you know thatcher labor movement and stuff like that like
personally if i look at australian history it's just not that different from the UK.
There's been a very strong labor movement,
and I totally believe it's been a good and positive thing in the main.
But at the same time, you can cite examples of union activity going too far.
There was strikes by the NFMEU, for instance, and violence,
and shutting down wharfs and things like that.
And these are not poor downtrodden workers.
They're workers that are getting paid extremely well in certain very vulnerable sections of the economy, right?
So, you know, an alternative point of view is that it is a bit like a guild system, like the kind of guild system that protects the salaries of surgeons and the various other medical specialties.
Now, I just mentioned that to say that it's complicated, right? system that protects the salaries of surgeons and the various other medical specialties.
Now, I just mentioned that to say that it's complicated, right? And whatever you think about all of the modern history of the left and the right wing and the back and forth over workers'
rights, whatever, and he's totally right in a lot of what he says, like more and more of income is
going to the richest 1%, that the power of unions and workers groups generally has
decreased the share of the GDP that's actually coming in the form of wages, as opposed to
dividends from companies is decreasing. So I agree with a lot of what he says. But all of that is
just a long precursor. Chris is saying that I think it's clear from how he looks at it is that
whether you agree or disagree, it is within a sort of an ideological straitjacket. He looks at it is that whether you agree or disagree it is within a sort of an ideological straitjacket
like he he looks at it in terms of you know class warfare it's just about destroying one class and
one class beating the other class and i think that just leaves out some of the complexities
and the nuances that's all yeah i i would encourage if people want to consider the nuance
about this and have leftist
tendencies, just consider the police unions and their protection of the police and their
opposition to prosecution.
So there are clearly instances where unions can be effective, but potentially have negative
impacts for the general public or not, you know, it very
much depends on how you see what the police unions are doing. But I think in the context of America,
unions are pretty weak, as they are in Japan. So there is a different history there, at least in
contemporary history. So this is him a little bit more talking about neoliberalism, unions, and a lesser extent others, get much more profit
if you can use easily exploited workers and lower wages and repressive governments, no
environmental constraints. So every move was made by the global planners to facilitate the transfer,
the corporate transfer of operations to places where it's more profitable and
exploitation is easier. That's how the World Trade Organization was structured.
Basically, it was an investor rights system which facilitated transfer of work to places which should be more profitable for the ownership class.
There was nothing inevitable about that.
No economic theory behind it.
Just let's enrich ourselves.
And there are strike waves now going on
in the service sector,
to some extent in the industry,
in the more limited industrial sector.
And it's very difficult.
By now, the sophistication of strike breaking has become quite extensive.
A lot of it's illegal.
But when you have a criminal state, it doesn't matter.
You can carry out illegal acts.
So in the United States, the National Labor Relations Board has been severely weakened,
which is supposed to prevent illegal actions.
Defunded, weakened, not even appointed.
Members appointed. It's been slightly improved under biden but this is a 45 year project there's a lot to recover uh so yeah once again chris i know i wouldn't
quibble about what he's saying in terms of in the u.s the eroding and the general lack of workers' rights and protections.
But I think just stepping back, his worldview is kind of simple, right? There's been class
warfare going on. There's been a 40 or 50 year project for the elite class to destroy the power
and exploit and take all the money for themselves from the labor group. And I'm sure you can build a case for parts of that being true,
but there's also other stuff going on. For instance, like he described the international
trade system as just simply being a matter of exporting labor to areas where it could be more
easily exploited. But that kind of ignores the massive increase in GDP and in living standards in
large parts of the non-Western world that has arisen from international trade. So I think he's
for that, right? He's for China and other parts of Asia, for instance, making more money by selling
stuff to the US, would think but according to
his world view I think you'd have to have protectionism to avoid Chinese workers from
taking American jobs I don't know your guess is as good as mine in that regards but yeah in any
case it's a political perspective that should be familiar to anybody who is familiar with various forms of
marxist um politics right like it's one focused around class welfare and the bastard states that
develop and exploit the working class and there's plenty of things as you say which are valid but
you know it just aspects like though you heard him describe the u.s as a criminal
state right now now people will point out well that's fine because the u.s has broken international
law and there's plenty of things you know it's rules with corporations that other countries
wouldn't abide by but it's still you know he wouldn't use that language when it comes to certain other countries which
are much more willing to trample on the rights of yeah their citizens so yeah yeah yeah that's
right i mean logically if you defend that statement as being factually accurate because
it's technically true which is the best kind of true then it's got to be true of like every country
in the world right in which case yeah all states are criminal all right so yeah which is probably
true because i think like his ultimate ideology comes down to you know a kind of true libertarian
one with like workers collectives and and whatnot so anarcho anarcho-communism
some variety thereof but he but he is also very critical of the various
right-wing versions of that which saying you know you're you're doing it wrong so um but i you know
who cares it's fantasy future mad max politics uh that's it's not gonna happen so and if it does
i'm gonna be dressed up in leather fetish gear
working for the toe cutter.
That's the way it goes.
So that to me is very clearly a particular political worldview.
However, the way Chomsky describes it is like this.
I would suggest distinguishing between Western propaganda and the facts.
So let's take China's military buildup.
At the risk of sounding impertinent, but you sound very trusting of China and its motivations.
No, not in the least. I said explicitly, China is by no means saintly. Plenty of criticisms you can make of China, but I would like to describe the world situation as it is,
not as it's presented by US-British propaganda.
Yeah, so here's where it gets tricky, hey, Chris,
because from Chomsky's point of view,
he isn't being overly ideological in any way, shape or form.
He's describing the world as it is and someone like you and i uh would be ideologically blinkered and misinformed to the extent that we
disagree with him so i don't know how to get out of that particular catch-22 well there's one example
i think that can help elucidate where these opinions would differ. So here's Chomsky talking about Labour, the UK left-wing party's recent results,
particularly the results under Jeremy Corbyn, who was a far lower left leader of the party than is typical. How do countries like Britain and America break away from the, as you put it, Western party line?
Jeremy Corbyn, I think, just agreed with you on lots of things, actually, in politics.
He went to the country twice and he lost twice.
It turns out the country did not want Jeremy Corbyn to be prime minister.
Well, you would hope perfectly well that that's not what
happened. Jeremy Corbyn
won an enormous victory
in 2017.
No, he didn't.
Yes, the biggest victory
that Labour had won in a
generation. No, it wasn't. He lost.
He didn't become Prime Minister.
Then what happened is the British
establishment, including your
newspaper came down on him with a ton of bricks with false deceitful propaganda about uh anti-semitism
all exposed as lies totally that's just not true i'm afraid that's just not true. I'm afraid that's just not true. Facts check this for us, Chris.
Who won? What happened with this election?
Why is Chomsky saying that Corbyn won it?
So objectively, Corbyn lost.
Labour has not been in power for quite a long time in the UK.
So what he's referring to is that compared to their performance in 2015, they won a large
amount of seats.
So it was like a positive swing.
Under Ed Miliband, they won 232 seats in 2015, right?
So Ed Miliband lost as well.
So Ed Miliband lost as well. But then when Jeremy Corbyn was leader two years later, Labour won 3018 seats right or in 2001 413 in 2005 355 all of which put labor into power. So Tony Blair's performance objectively better than Jeremy
Corbyn's. From 1990 election onwards, Corbyn's was the fourth best performance after Tony Blair.
But what Chomsky is talking about is one, that swing, because people expected Corbyn to do
worse, and there was a positive swing. But the other aspect is that the population of the UK
has increased from the 90s. So if you count it by the amount of people that voted for Labour,
it's more. But this fails to mention that two years later, in 2019,
Labour lost 60 seats under Jeremy Corbyn and failed to win election again.
So you're being a stickler for facts, and that's helpful.
That's good.
That's useful.
Thank you, Chris.
But getting back to the question, the question that was asked is basically, if you're so right, Noam Chomsky, if all the working people in the UK are horribly exploited
and desperately want
this sort of change then how come they aren't voting for it and i think chomsky's answer would
be that's because they're being tricked well first of all he kind of avoids the question by
misrepresenting the facts as you describe them but i think if he was pushed he would say that
they were being seduced and deceived by the mainstream media complex,
which is tricking them to vote against their interests.
Yeah.
Yes.
And he was asked by a different, more sympathetic interviewer about that question.
Like, why did you say that?
And you can hear his response to why he described it.
And it is basically what you're saying.
You recently claimed that Jeremy Corbyn had a historic victory in 2017.
Why do you think it's important to recognize that result and describe it in those terms?
Jeremy Corbyn, who's a very decent person, tried to create a Labour party that would be a participatory party, not just
run by elites and the parliament, and it would furthermore work for the interests of its
constituents, and was very successful. 2017 vote increased the labor vote by huge amounts,
I think more than in about 50 years.
That set off alarm bells through the whole establishment.
Can't allow this.
We can't have a political party that's a participatory party
and that represents its constituents.
It's not the way politics works.
Politics works run by small elites who tell everyone else what to do.
Then came the establishment attack on Corbyn, which was impressive, concocting all kinds of tales about anti-Semitism,
all exploded, even in the early days at the beginning of this campaign.
Chris, maybe it's all the mention of the elites stealing the legitimate outcome of the election,
but it does remind me of Trump's talk about stolen elections and illegitimate election outcomes. It's kind of
like the left-wing version of it, isn't it? Like the right-wing version of these sorts of slightly
conspiratorial things is very concrete. They rigged the ballot boxes, they stole the election,
that kind of thing. The left-wing version is always a bit more abstract, right? And
not so concrete. Not always abstract. Like in left-wing socialist countries they very much just openly say
you know the ballot boxes have been tampered with or whatever if they're in power and able to do so
if the result goes against them so i don't think it's always the case that it's couched so
non-concretely shall we say but in in this case, yes, I agree. First of all, you could hear there,
because he said the biggest increase in 50 years. So it's trying to present it in that relative way,
which again, it's completely wrong because there was an increase of 147 seats in 1997, a 54% increase. So that's just factually wrong. But even setting that aside,
there's the notion that the will of the people would elect the leader that Chomsky wants if
the people were allowed to express it. And obviously the objection to Corbyn, any of the kind of reasons given are fundamentally dishonest.
It's because of the threat he poses to capital.
Yeah, and forming a properly inclusive labor movement.
That's the real threat.
Yeah, Corbyn is a decent man who wants to create a utopian society.
to create a utopian society and the evil neoliberal capitalists cannot allow that.
So they have to determine. Now, on the other hand, it is the case that there, of course, there are right-wing smear
campaigns against a liberal leader in the run-up to the election.
a liberal leader in the run of the election. The right-wing tabloids are obviously going to portray a left-wing leader in the least favorable light they can. So yeah, there are a lot of parallels
that I think people won't want to have emphasized, but the underlying logic is the same. And I have more clips which illustrate that.
So maybe I can move on to another one.
Let's go back to the facts.
2017.
He lost.
He won the big.
He lost.
He lost.
Sorry.
That was the biggest labor in history.
Then came the. No, it history then came the no it wasn't
he lost
it was the biggest labour gain in history
then came
no it wasn't on what basis was it
then came the
enormous establishment
attack across the board
right to left,
so it's called Left Guardian,
with deceitful lies
all since exposed
about charges of anti-Semitism.
No, that's not true.
I'm sorry,
the Equality and Human Rights Commission
in the UK,
the watchdog set up by the Labour Party,
found the Labour party guilty of
not protecting jews within the party less anti-semitism in the labor party than among the
tories this has all been exposed in detail by the labor files yeah that's interesting. Yeah, he does seem to have a very clear narrative there
about Jeremy Corbyn winning, with a capital W.
But the thing is, he's not insane.
He knows that he didn't actually win.
So it's just the technical definition of winning that he wants to insert.
But it's quite impressive how hard it
is to knock him off track yes it's like a steamroller the interjections and disagreements
just bouncing off him uh yeah so i guess but what's the theme there the theme there is that
for him for his worldview it has to be the case that grassroots working class movement,
as exemplified by Jeremy Corbyn, can basically do no wrong. And if they don't win general elections,
then it's because of lies, media manipulation, false class consciousness, or something like that.
It is also funny to refer to the guardian as the so-called
left i know that that is a common referion especially amongst the leftist side you know
the so-called left-wing guardian but like the guardians it's pretty lefty
the real left that's like the real ira right it's a splinter. It's true. It's all in the eye of the beholder and whatnot. I guess it's the corporate left.
So let me play another clip which highlights the way he sees this issue.
The parliamentary party, the Blairite parliamentary party, did not want to see.
the Blairite parliamentary party,
did not want to see... In fact, they said it.
We have the documents in the Labour files.
They said, we do not want to lose our party,
the party that we own,
to this effort to develop a popular-based party
working for working people and the poor.
We don't want to lose our party to that.
No, that's not what they said.
That's not what they said. That's not what they said.
They did not want Jeremy Corbyn...
What they said, you can read it in the Labour file.
They did not say they did not want a government
that wants to act for the poor.
What they said was they did not want someone...
They said they didn't want to lose their party.
So a man with a track record
of tolerating anti-Semitism in the Labour Party
and taking anti-West positions,
including ones to give Russia the benefit of the doubt over the Salisbury poisonings,
was one of the big things that they protested. There's no anti-West position.
I do appreciate the British pundit style of interviewing, because it's just, it contrasts
quite distinctly with lex friedman's
approach for example or the trigonometry people right like yeah whether or not you agree with
maturingly's response i think it's better that he presents the you know like a kind of no no
it's like this because you can also hear chomsky respond then to the critique. The UK is famous, isn't it, for its competitive journalists.
They don't do these softball interviews.
So what's the background there?
Like, what's the bigger picture in your eyes, Chris?
You know, UK politics and what Chomsky's vision of it is.
Yeah, so he just he doesn't like Keir Starmer.
and Corbyn was a more far left member of the party who had for quite a long time been a kind of gadfly on the fringes but then became the leader of the party which gave a lot of power
to groups in labor that had been marginalized for one reason or another and then they didn't win two elections corbin is not the
leader the new leader is a kind of moderate left wing what they regard as a neo-blairite type and
so predictably chomsky doesn't like him and thinks it's a coup of swords to please the real party of the people that was
being built with a defanged conservative party light version thereof and and the part which is
sort of interesting is that there's these endless reports flinging back and forth about anti-Semitism in the Labour Party and
accusations that it's been oversold or that it's been under-recognized, depending on how you look
at it. But I think what is pretty much non-debatable, wherever you fall, is that it's being a topic that has been used on both sides right it's been used
as an opportunistic attack as well as it's being denied you know it's being painted as just a
smear and and there are actual grievances there are actual reports but there are also reports showing that various factions are weaponizing it or accusing it of being weaponized.
So the anti-Semitism is real.
There were real concerns with reactions directed at Corbyn and Corbyn's wing from the Jewish community.
But it also was a handy thing to use as a delegitimizing issue so yeah you know yeah
so i guess the difference between how i might look at these things and how tromsky would is
without knowing the intricacies of uk politics is that this is all pretty normal in in parliamentary
democracies like like australia and the right? You've got your centre parties.
They have their different factions.
Our Liberal Party's got a right faction and a left faction,
and our Labour Party's got a right faction, a left faction,
and other factions too, I'm sure.
And when these different factions, sometimes one has control,
sometimes the other has control,
if they're not doing particularly well in the polls,
if there's some scandals or, you know, difficult things going on, then they get knocked over and the other group gets in and gets to run the show for a while.
So it all seems like pretty much par for the course.
But that's not how Chomsky looks at it, right?
There's a plot, essentially.
There's the mechanisms of neoliberalism coming into play to get rid of
the people's choice and what the people want yeah and for example in the way that he presents
corbin it's not just that he's a person with a particular political agenda it's that he's a very
good person with a very important political goal that would have led to great outcomes
if it hadn't been for it.
So, for example...
You can read it on Al Jazeera.
The British press has chosen to mostly suppress it and marginalize it,
but that's a problem for the British press.
Corbyn has since been virtually kicked out of the Labour Party.
His effort to try to develop a popular-based party, participatory party,
that would serve the interests of working people and the poor,
was smashed by the British establishment.
It's a scandal, okay?
But it has nothing to do with these other things that we're talking about
yeah so he got that much so he was just trying to solve the issue for the poor and the working
class people and the establishment couldn't have that so they destroyed him and his efforts and now he's he's marginalized it is not what you said which is
standard political horse-jacking proposition well i guess um his sympathy for corbin is
understandable they share a lot of similar kind of anti-imperialist anti-war in general kind of
views corbin is against pretty much every military intervention in recent
history including in libya and syria yeah i see here has even called for nato to be disbanded
so so you know it's not a totally mainstream stance even for a labor party leader right
no no much ink has been spilled on Jeremy Corbyn and where
he stands, but he is well known for his opposition to the Iraq war and criticism of Israel. Not
particularly surprising. These are not unheard of positions on the left and particularly not to the
more progressive wing of the left,
especially the criticisms of Israel.
It's interesting how the hard left and hard right positions kind of dovetail there because,
you know, like withdrawing from NATO and skepticism towards those sort of
multilateral agreements is something you also see on the right in America and the UK.
Slightly different motivations, but I guess it ends up at the same place.
Well, yeah, there are interesting overlaps.
For example, Corbyn was, I think, credibly accused of not campaigning very effectively against Brexit
for different reasons than the right wing concerns about immigration. He also had concerns
about stronger partnerships with Europe that primarily revolved around opposition to
neoliberal globalization. But actually, that somewhat distinguishes a little bit from Chomsky, because when Chomsky was talking about the EU in the interview, he said this.
And there's no sign of any benefit from leaving the EU. Do you think that was a sensible decision by Britain to do that? I thought at the time that it was a very serious error, both harmful to Britain,
harmful to Europe, in a way beneficial to the United States, because under Brexit,
Britain becomes even more subject to US domination than it was before.
to US domination than it was before.
But I thought it was a terrible mistake.
And I think the record since basically confirms that. Good. Yes.
I agree. Correct.
And there is a clip of him summing up Keir Starmer for you.
I actually don't think he gets much wrong here,
but this is him discussing Starmer.
Well, so far, there are people like Will Hutton, for example, who think that
Keir Starmer has all sorts of fine plans for social reform and so on. I don't see any evidence of it. All he's been doing so far is purifying the
Labor Party of any militant activist elements and putting it onto more central control,
eliminating people like Corbyn, of course, Crystal recently, and others who do
work for a
constituent-based party
dealing with
needs of the
constituency,
labor constituency.
So it seems to me
he'll probably move towards
a Blairite-style parliamentary, elite parliamentary party, Thatcher-lite, as it used to be called.
Sounds about right to you, Chris?
Well, he's got a negative spin on that, but he is correct that, like we discussed, whichever faction is in power tends to want to shore up its support and marginalize the elements
that might disrupt that, which Corbyn also attempted to do when he was in the leadership
position. But he is also right that in general, dramatic reform efforts, I wait to see evidence of that but again i think that's you know it's pretty common in
center left parties that nobody's really happy with what they do they make too many concessions
and too many promises and then everybody's fed up with them but as long as they get power for a
little while i'm content with that because the conservatives have been in power for a long time in the uk generally center parties are pretty much focused on winning elections
and adjust their policy to suit i guess that's something where like i'm just trying to identify
what if anything is wrong with chomsky in our view because you know he's a lefty with opinions
and a lot of what he's talking about here is just giving his political opinions.
And I think almost all political opinions are valid in a way.
But I guess my issue with him is in that misrepresenting points of fact
and creating a narrative around a very sort of one-eyed view
of things that have happened.
I mean, that's probably the point at which i'd
criticize him for not so much just for being a hard lefty per se yeah yeah let's move to him
talking about ukraine let's see if we can spot any similar such issues um or perhaps good things
so he's talked about this quite a bit. And it does come up in two of the
interviews that we've covered. This one probably goes a bit long. But in any case, let's hear it.
You mentioned the war in Ukraine. Let's turn our attention to that. Certainly in the UK,
the left, actually under people like jeremy corbyn had
argued that it wasn't russia that was the enemy it was the us that was destabilizing the world
and then russia invades a sovereign democratic country right on its on its border starting a
conflict which has claimed tens of thousands of innocent lives does that not make clear that
who the real threat to the world is it It's not the US, as the left
has argued for a long time.
It's Vladimir Putin's Russia.
Well, the invasion
of Ukraine is
plainly a war crime.
You can't put it
in the same category as greater
war crimes, but it's a
major one, according
to the official, the only evidence
that we have, solid evidence, is United Nations estimates, Pentagon estimates, and so on.
They estimate about 8,000 civilians killed.
That's a lot of people.
What the United States and Britain do overnight,
presumably it's an underestimate.
So let's say it's twice that much.
That would put it at the level of the U.S.-backed invasion,
the Israeli invasion of Lebanon,
which killed about maybe 20,000 people.
Suppose it's off by a factor of 10.
That is, the casualty rate is really 10 times as high as is claimed.
Well, that would put it in the category of Ronald Reagan's terrorist atrocities in El
Salvador, roughly on the order of 80,000.
So it's here.
Of course, Iraq is just another000. So it's serious. Of course, Iraq is just another dimension.
So it's serious.
It's a terrible crime.
You can understand why the Global South does not take very seriously
the eloquent protestations of Western countries
about this unique episode in history.
They've been victims of far more.
Maybe the Russians will go on to air level, maybe.
Ah, right.
So he agrees it was a war crime to invade Russia.
That's positive, right?
Anything else?
Well, it seems a bit equivocal, I suppose,
about the question of who's responsible for the conflict.
Well, he's often accused of engaging in whataboutism
that focuses on America and the West's crimes
over and above any other countries. And whether you regard that as
whataboutism or an accurate accounting, I think it is fair to say that's quite clearly on display
there. You can present that as he's appropriately contextualizing the scale of the conflict and
highlighting that the Western nations are
not saints in any sense of the word. But it does sound a little bit like downplaying the scale of
the conflict. And, you know, basically, if somebody mentions a conflict and you immediately cite other
conflicts, it is like a way to point the attention elsewhere right yeah but it can't be denied that
he did begin by saying it is a war crime right just perhaps a lesser war crime than what the
us and other countries have done um so a bit more on this but certainly from from left-wing
politics in the uk this this trying to create equivalence they're at anti-west position
become where you are you're doing equivalence you are drawing equivalence you're saying that
you've just you've literally just drawn equivalence with with the number of deaths
in various places i've explained to people listening to this why what you're not saying
is because ronald reagan did this or george bush did that that
doesn't make what vladimir putin's done all right does it first i said it's a major crime but there's
no equivalence that's following the party line i gave figures no equivalence maybe the casualty toll is 10 times as high as is estimated
well that would make it like reagan's crimes in el salvador it's not equivalent
but i suppose some people listening to this will think you're seeking to excuse what no that's what it has done that is fabrication of the right
wing i am not seeking to excuse anything i said it's a terrible war crime that's not excusing
anything i'm talking about the extreme hypocrisy of claims about how this is the worst thing that ever happened when it's a fraction of
what we do all the time what about that matt well it does remind me of some of the less salubrious
type of twitter discourse where um you might find people comparing death counts in various the gulags versus the concentration camps for example
yeah yeah so it seems a bit tangential to me frankly like precisely how many people died
here compared to there because i don't know there's other factors at play but yeah so one
thing i think which is worth noting is chomsky remains pretty clear there, right?
First of all, he's saying there's not an equivalence.
The West has a much higher death toll.
So he's saying there isn't an equivalence because it's way smaller in the case of the Ukraine conflict.
And second, he is clear, though, that he didn't justify it, right?
Like he says, no, I've been clear that I said it's a war crime,
a lesser war crime perhaps.
But he is quite clear, right, that he's not saying it's okay.
He's just wanting to say the West is worse.
The West is worse.
Yes, you're right. That's a good summary i think that's
a fair appraisal of what is what you said yeah yeah and uh matt choley the interviewer there
is highlighting that that response can be seen as minimizing what's occurring and And I don't know, Matt, but there is something about like, has the US in
recent decades threatened to nuke a country after annexing a portion of it? Because that does seem
to be like, there are differences. You can have legitimate critiques of a whole bunch of the stuff
that Western nations have done
around the world. And there are plenty of well-documented colonial events and holdovers.
But Vladimir Putin's rhetoric about the willingness to use nuclear weapons,
the dire threats that will be coming to anyone who dares stand in their rightful reclamation of their territory.
And it does seem different.
Look, I'm always very wary about comparing the magnitude of bad things
in just in terms of these raw numbers, because it's terribly flattening to do that.
So you could compare Ukraine to to say the korean war and you go well
you know the korean war had this many hundred thousand casualties so the u.s is a bigger
criminal than than russia but that just totally ignores the context and the causes and who was
instrumental in invading whom and a whole bunch of things so look there's no doubt the west covers
half the world it's been involved in a lot of stuff and as a result if you want to put all of
the blame for every conflict that's occurred on them you can arrive at an arbitrarily large number
but i think that ignores the fact that, as you said, the Ukraine conflict is perhaps
just the clearest and most obvious example of a totally unnecessary, unilaterally driven
invasion. And that, I think, is probably the key thing.
In the troubles in Northern Ireland, there were just under 4,000 people killed
during the troubles, according to official tallies.
Not as bad as Ukraine then, Chris.
Not a big deal compared to Ukraine.
Well, yeah.
So, you know, I think that is an event which had,
there's more injuries and whatnot, but nonetheless, right?
Like in the global perspective
you could say well so what it's a blip yeah but actually that's that's another good example like
i think we know where your sympathies tend to lie right in terms of the irish uh english conflict
there but i think even you would accept that this is not a situation where you can unilaterally
lay all of the blame for the troubles on the uk parliament right no no the you cannot and you
cannot excuse the actions of the paramilitaries regardless of the justifications offered because they committed crimes, right, against innocent people.
So, yeah, it isn't something where you can just focus on who killed more, how many people were
injured by both sides and whatnot. I think just conflicts have to be put in context. And also,
I would note, Matt, that Chomsky rather famously downplayed the severity or
called into question, would be one way to put it, the claims about the Cambodian genocide.
And there we have a genocide with numbers that are astronomical.
So I think it's the ideology, which is the more consistent factor.
which is the more consistent factor. You know, in the cases where it has been socialist forces
or communist forces that are responsible for atrocities,
it's fair to say that Chomsky is quicker to call into question
the relevant scale of atrocities that have been carried out.
And that's because of ideological sympathies, I think.
That seems fair to me.
Yes. So anyway, continuing on with this, this issue came up when we were discussing with
Robert Wright about what the war in Ukraine has created. And again, it speaks to this potential
way of framing things in a particular fashion so here's him talking about the potential
response to the invasion by other countries in the region uh so uh did putin make a mistake
of course not only not only was it a criminal act of aggression but was an act of criminal stupidity. He's driven Europe into Washington's control.
It's a gift to the United States on a silver platter.
Finland and Sweden is a different issue.
They have absolutely no reason to join NATO, and they know it perfectly well.
Their reason for joining NATO is they have advanced military systems.
They've been pretty well integrated into NATO operations for many years.
Joining NATO officially opens up new markets for their military industry,
a new potential for obtaining advanced equipment and so on.
There hasn't ever been, and they know it, the slightest threat to Sweden or Finland
from Russia.
Really?
Anything to say about that claim?
I know a bit about Finnish history and policy in the 20th century.
And it's true, they were reluctant to join NATO, but only because they were afraid that
would trigger an immediate evasion from Russia.
They're in a very difficult geopolitical situation, and it's pretty much difficult because of
Russia.
I mean, all of Finnish defense policy, they have a policy called total defense, which
involves everybody serving in the military at a young age and then coming back for regular
service and so on.
And this is a policy that a very small country does to enact kind of like a be like a hedgehog
to try to protect itself against a potentially dangerous adversary.
be like a hedgehog to try to protect itself against a potentially dangerous adversary now you may think finland's fears are irrational right but it's a genuinely held policy and it is a
genuine belief in finland amongst the finnish people so i i think i'm gonna side with the
finnish people here their view of things rather than Noam Chomsky's Russia has invaded
Georgia and the Ukraine two neighboring countries in the recent decades I don't think any country
on its border is being completely irrational to be concerned about potential military engagement.
And yeah, so Chomsky speaks very blithely about that.
And when we had the conversation with Robert Wright as well, he very quickly steered things
back to the U.S. perspective when we were raising that issue.
And it does often feel that like in these geopolitical perspective, countries like
Sweden and Finland are just viewed in relation to Russia or the US and like their actual internal
perspective or the fact that they have their own national interests that yes, mean that they
interact with the US and want support from an aggressive
Russia or whatever. But that's not all that they are about. And reducing the country to,
well, their military complex just wants to get money from the markets that being integrated
in NATO can get. It just, yeah, I just think that is a very skewed perspective about Finland and Sweden's stance.
Yeah, I think it's useful to focus on this because I think Chomsky's opinions there about a place like Finland are representative of how him and, you know, other people, how they look at a whole range of issues.
Which is, as you say, these players like Finland are viewed as big players, as sort of props.
They don't have their own agency. When you're faced with explaining a brute fact, which is that
Finland would very much like to join NATO, then that is explained by someone like Chomsky as
either they're being manipulated into it or coerced into doing it by the United States,
or maybe they're ruled by some neoliberal elites that is looking to build a
military industrial complex for some nefarious purposes. We're not quite sure of what, like
instead of the blindingly obvious and stated reason, which is that they are keen to participate
in mutual self-defense and that they have very little fear of being invaded by
a country like the United States of America. And that is a rational belief perhaps. But they do
have other security concerns and maybe that's what's motivating them. So I think the broader
point here is that I have some issues with Chomsky and it's not that he is a hardcore lefty. I'm
genuinely fine with people having a broad spectrum of political views.
I think the thing that irritates me is it's kind of a conspiratorial worldview, which
is adopting a hyper complex interpretation of the world with all of these moving parts
that isn't very well substantiated and ignoring the much simpler, very obvious explanation
for events that's right there in front of your face.
Yes. If you want to hear a little bit of pushback on this point that might be cathartic, listen to this.
But why not? We were told months before Russia invaded Ukraine, there was no prospect of them invading Ukraine, repeatedly by Russia.
Russia said that they were not going to invade Ukraine, and then they did. Why it, that if Ukraine moves towards entering NATO,
no Russian leader would ever accept it.
Yeah, I think I've heard that point before,
which is that it's not acceptable to Russia,
that the countries bordering it do what they want so
that's that. That's not how people experience it though but that is what they're saying.
Actually I have a clip that illustrates that particular point like a little bit stronger.
And yeah it does sound a bit like you are explaining it
because why can't Ukraine join NATO?
They're an independent, sovereign country.
Why can't they join NATO?
What would happen if Mexico decided to join
a Chinese-run international military alliance
with sending heavy weapons to Mexico aimed at the United
States interoperability of Chinese and Mexican military systems what would
happen to Mexico it'd be blown away you know that so you're then drawing
comparisons between NATO and China and Russia.
You see an equivalence between...
I don't. NATO is a much more aggressive alliance.
NATO has invaded Yugoslavia, invaded Libya, invaded Ukraine,
backed up the invasion of Ukraine, backed up the invasion of Ukraine,
backed up the invasion of Afghanistan.
It's an aggressive military denial.
Everybody outside the West, in the West, we're not allowed to think it because we're deeply controlled by adherence to the party line.
But everybody else can see this.
Yes, well, I respectfully disagree with Chomsky
about that point that NATO is a far more aggressive entity
than Russia or China.
But I suppose, look, the reasonable part of what he's saying, I guess,
is that a relatively powerful country,
very powerful country like the United States,
is going to have influence and exert influence on countries that it views as
geopolitically important. I mean, it did that with Cuba, of course, right? It certainly helped launch
an invasion by, what were they, nationalist rebels, whatever you want to call them.
In the Bay of Pigs.
Bay of Pigs, an infamous fiasco, and has-running blockade and you know exerted all kinds of
influence to show its displeasure with cuba i suppose for similar kind of partly ideological
partly geopolitical reasons that russia might want to strong-arm ukraine or finland yeah though
the issue for me and this is recapitulating a conversation that we had with Robert Wright,
is that, yes, I agree that America would not like a Chinese military force installed in Mexico
on their border and would regard that with hostility. However, the notion that Chomsky
says is that Mexico would be blown away if it made a military alliance with China.
Would it?
It's 2020 now.
So the notion is the US would just go to war with Mexico because they formed an alliance
with China.
I would dispute that.
And I would dispute that if that happened, the whole world, Europe and whatnot would
be, well, that's fine.
That's okay. Like, yes, countries can be displeased with all our countries forming
alliances that can be worried. You can definitely be concerned if people are amassing military
weapons aimed at your population, right? But I feel like even if we take for granted his premise
that the US would not stand for it
and would militarily engage, that just condemns the U.S., right? Because then you can say, well,
the U.S. is interfering with the sovereignty of other countries because of its geopolitical
things. But that is not a reason to say, well, we should tolerate that everywhere else. We
shouldn't tolerate the U.S. dictating what every other sovereign country can do. And we shouldn't tolerate Russia doing
that. But I feel a little bit with the Chomsky perspective is, well, look, the US would do that.
So we can't condemn other countries when we do it. And I'm more like, why not, even if that's true,
why don't we just condemn them all and say, you can't do that. Ukraine is a sovereign country.
Mexico is a sovereign country. Ireland is a sovereign country. You cannot dictate what
policies another country follows. And if they aggressively militarily build up in your direction,
yes, then you might have conflict. If you put nuclear warheads pointed
at the country's home, you will get a response. But it's again defaulting to the US as the key
thing that we should focus on. And in this case, it's a hypothetical experience because the US is
not happy with Cuba. It has engaged in a blockade.
It hasn't tried to invade Cuba, to my knowledge, in recent decades.
No, it hasn't declared Cuba to be American territory and attempted to annex it.
Yeah.
I mean, last time America annexed something, I think it was Texas, wasn't it?
Well, but people are going to say Iraq.
They did change the regime in iraq but iraq
is not annexed as part of the united states now chris well is it not my just give it time
i mean if it has been annexed by the u.s then words have lost all meaning chris but
well like well first of all the rationale doesn't make sense russia has declared Ukraine is not to be like a genuine state, basically,
that it's not legitimate and that it properly belongs to Russia, should be part of Russia.
I mean, that's a different motivation than a geopolitical one saying we're very worried about
nuclear weapons being stationed here and we can't have an unfriendly country in this strategic
location, therefore we have to do something. So it's a
different situation from Cuba or this hypothetical example of Mexico suddenly becoming best friends
with China. And it doesn't really add up even in the hypothetical. It doesn't pass the smell test.
I feel that we are just repeating a particular perspective on the war in Ukraine that is popular in some hard left circles. But this is
Chomsky highlighting a bit more about why he sees NATO as strongly at fault and the US in particular
here. Take a look at what happened in 2021, 2022. We have a record. The Biden administration offered an enhanced program to Ukraine,
enhanced program for NATO, for entering NATO. It increased weapon supplies,
interoperability of weapons. The attacks in Donbass continued. This does not justify the invasion,
but it's a background. Up until February 2022, Russia was still saying, why don't we try to,
if you will consider our security concern, we can have a negotiated settlement, was flatly rejected.
Gets worse.
Last March, there were negotiations between Ukraine and Russia under Turkish auspices.
What did Britain do?
Prime Minister Boris Johnson flew to Ukraine,
informed Kiev that Britain and the United States don't think this is the time for negotiations.
He was followed by Lloyd Austin, Secretary of Defense for the United States, who presumably gave his typical message,
extremely clear, we have to continue the war to severely weaken Russia.
clear we have to continue the war to severely weaken Russia.
Well, the negotiations collapsed.
We don't know why Western media don't cover these things.
We only know mainly from Ukrainian sources.
For the Western media, like your journal, you don't cover peace and possibilities.
You cover war.
But those are all the facts we know.
Well, does that justify the criminal attack no is it an act of criminals to pit it yes okay so i don't have my fact checking hat on chris so i
can't speak to all of the little things he he mentioned there but the the general picture is
pretty clear isn't it so the way he frames it which is that um russia was very
reluctant very reluctant united states and the uk very keen to get ukraine into nato presumably so
they could mount aggressive forces there to threaten russia and ukraine has kind of been i don't know led into it coerced into it or something somehow
inside into it like it isn't the driving ukraine isn't the driving force now so that narrative i
think is just totally opposite i think ukraine has been keen to join nato for understandable reasons for about 10 years. And there's a lot of reluctance in NATO always to include new members
and, you know, a lot of prevarication and a lot of kind of wait and see
and, you know, there's all kinds of ways to delay it.
So I just think that the way he portrays the history is not accurate.
It's very skewed.
And also, the presentation of Russia as reluctant to invade,
provoked to the point of where it's intolerable what's happening.
And we have documents that show that Russia planned to completely chop the head of Ukraine,
to take out the leadership in Kiev and take the country.
So they had a view about the war, which was not this defensive thing where they're just going to
shore up their borders and push back. No, they wanted to absolutely take over the country
and install a puppet regime that would be pro-Putin like it doesn't jive with that and even
where there are interests like the u.s is benefiting from the fact that russia is engaging
in an economically destructive and militarily damaging war with another country without the
u.s being directly involved in the engagement. It does
benefit from that. And there are undoubtedly war hawks or anti-Russia hawks in the US who are happy
about that state of affairs. But it's this notion that basically the response of the West
is let's sacrifice Ukraine in order to damage Putin. That's the primary drive.
As if there was the chance for peace and they would just say, no, no, no, screw it.
You know, we can make more money and do a bit more damage this way.
It just, it feels like an extremely...
Well, Chris, I'd put it like this.
put it like this it feels like jamming the round peg of history and recent political events into the square hole of chomsky's worldview and ideology you know he's a very clever guy and he
he says some things that is like approximately correct like as you said he's not totally
delusional it like you said with the corbin thing it's not that he thinks that the election was
literally stolen in the sense that they rigged the the ballot boxes andbyn thing it's not that he thinks that the election was literally stolen
in the sense that they rigged the ballot boxes and so on so it's different from the Trump style
distortion of reality it's done in a more abstract way but it sort of fulfills the same purpose
though doesn't it yes it does and it's a frustration because like and we call all the gurus out on this when they say i'm not
doing something and then they proceed to do it so like chomsky is careful with his words and he
did say the invasion is a war crime he did say it was a criminal attack but he spends a lot more time focused on the context, right, and portraying Russia as essentially
responsive to the threats presented by NATO, which he highlighted.
NATO is a much more aggressive military alliance, in his perspective, than any of the other
ones, right?
They're invading countries willy-nilly.
He's not saying there's a justification, but all he's doing is piling up things
which are used as justifications by Russia.
So how is that not offering at least partial justifications?
Because it's the difference between saying
this is relevant context from this is a justification,
but it is used as a justification.
And I think you can get around a lot of that by just saying, I'm not saying that that's
correct, but you are.
You're saying NATO and the US are aggressive military outfits that are more dangerous than
the other ones that you've described.
Finland and Sweden are joining just purely for mercantile military contracts, not because of any real perceived threat.
So in all of this, the presentation is presenting Russia as reactive to a belligerent NATO that is encircling it and posed to invade.
Who knows if you're Russia?
Yeah. What's that phrase of yours, Chris?
Strategic disclaimers.
Strategic disclaimers. Yeah. What's that phrase of yours, Chris? Strategic disclaimers. Strategic disclaimers. Yeah. Like when you lead with the strategic disclaimer,
you say it very forcefully, then you've got that settled, and then you can go out and spend 95%
of your time talking to the opposite point. I'm not a racist, but you can go on for as long as
you like. So it gets called out at that point that point but listen it sounds to me like you are
justifying the russian invasion of ukraine you'll say the very act of the very act of wanting to
enter nato is grounds for russia feeling sufficiently threatened to then invade ukraine
the western party line which western intellectuals are instructed to adhere to rigorously says that if you tell the
facts, that's justifying Russia. No, it's not justifying Russia. There's not even a hint of
that, not even a remote hint. It's saying, here are the facts that we should face. That's the
facts. If you get out of the little Western propaganda bubble,
move to the global South, everybody says this. I think he genuinely feels that way,
that the facts are on his side, just like you and I generally feel like the facts are on our side,
Chris. When I see someone like Jordan Peterson creating this warped worldview, I have the feeling that it is influenced by the attention and the narcissism and this self-justifying kind of thing.
With Dom Chomsky, he has a terribly strong ideological worldview.
I don't think he's doing it to be popular popular to get clicks or to sell more books or whatever
like he seems to be genuine about it what do you think what do you think's going on
why exactly he perceives the facts as he calls them to be so differently from us
yeah because he has a strong adherence to his particular ideological perspective which is the same reason that he was sympathetic is perhaps a way to
present that he wouldn't agree with that, but at least looked sympathetically at the Khmer Rouge
regime in Cambodia, the same reason he had questions about the Srebrenica massacre during the Bosnian war.
His questions around these topics always relate to downplaying the atrocities committed by regimes which are more strongly associated with socialism or communism than their counterparts,
strongly associated with socialism or communism than their counterparts and emphasizing the atrocities amongst the capitalist Western countries. So his latest round of commentary
on the Ukraine war, I think falls into that category. And, you know, there's a lot of
ink spilt on the degree to which you can describe what Chomsky has said about Cambodia
or Bosnia or Armenia as genocide denial. But a lot of it, Matt, is, you know, asking questions
about the photos of, oh, there's a fat person in this picture. And so like, maybe there wasn't the
mistreatment which was claimed or maybe the
accounts being provided by refugees fleeing the Khmer Rouge's mass atrocities are being over-egged
by American sources because it serves their purposes like it's always in a particular
direction and I know what I mean is like the these are pretty like when
stephan molyneux says he's not a holocaust denier but he wants to emphasize that you know the leftist
jewish people in the positions of power meant that people were skeptical about the role that
that jewish intellectuals played in world II. He's just asking questions.
He's just being sceptical of the mainstream narrative.
Yeah, they don't say that.
They don't say that.
They say, you know, that that is in the vein of Holocaust denialism.
Yeah, well, I'm just looking at a summary here of an article
that Chomsky wrote with the guy Edward Herman in 1977 about cambodia about the karmel russian the genocide
what filters through to the american public is a seriously distorted of the evidence available
emphasizing alleged karmel russian atrocities and downplaying or ignoring the crucial u.s role
direct and indirect in the torment that cambodia has. So they write that even though the refugee stories
of the Khmer Rouge atrocities should be considered seriously,
they also need to be treated with great care and caution
because refugees are frightened and defenceless
at the mercy of alien forces.
They naturally tend to report what they believe
their interlocutors wish to hear.
So also praised a book by a couple of others which painted a very
favorable picture of the karmir russia's programs and policies so you know that does sound quite
similar doesn't it to what we've just been talking about with ukraine showing skepticism of the
official narrative and i guess showing a lot of i guess empathy cognitive empathy as someone might say
to the alleged perpetrators and sort of shifting attention to the allegedly criminal role of the
united states in all of this and yeah and i i want to highlight this that we while we're doing this
episode because to be honest i find very little worse than when people are downplaying war crimes or
have engaged in variations of genocide denialism.
And Chomsky is very clear that he's not denying all these events have happened.
He contests the use of the word genocide for them because of restrictions that he wants
applied to that term.
But in the same way, you can hear in these responses, it's very often like saying, yes, bad things happened.
But when we put them in context and when we consider the U.S.'s crimes, should we really be focusing on these?
we really be focusing on these you know and yeah i just find that absolutely worth highlighting because to me chomsky's a smart guy people can have different views on politics right left and
center but anybody engaging in downplaying atrocities or denying war crimes, I think deserves stern criticism and like a consideration of how
far their ideology impacts their perspective, because you can advocate all the same things
and the condemnation of the U.S. without downplaying atrocities by communist regimes or other opponents of western nations or or capitalism
yeah yeah i noticed that um christopher hitchens who who most people think of these days as some
sort of i don't know near liberal hawk actually defended chomsky on the carmere rouge issue
saying that he was simply trying to engage in the admittedly touchy
business of distinguishing evidence from interpretations. On the other hand, you know,
I see even back in the 1980s, Chomsky was being accused of attempting to demonstrate some sort
of moral equivalence between the Karmai Rouge and the Americans to sort of postulate these
significantly lower numbers of victims and essentially downplaying and minimising.
And, you know, whether or not you see that as just being appropriately
sceptical and just asking questions or whatever, I mean,
I think we have to, you know, we understand the motivations,
which his primary concern is the crimes committed by America.
But I think we have to admit that there is a consistent theme
throughout his career to
downplay and minimize crimes committed by others. Regimes of this particular political ideology or
at least in opposition to a specific political ideology and yeah so I will put links you know
for people who want to look more into it.
And there are people who may think that his approach is more legitimate to these topics
than I do.
But I really genuinely think that those comments and his approach are a stain on his legacy.
He never revised or reviewed any of those opinions to your knowledge, Chris, that he's
made over the years
well typically he argues that whatever positions he's taken were justified at the time and that
if you look carefully at what he said he did not do what his opponents are accusing him of but i
i feel that in general he remains rather steadfast in his perspectives and i
believe that you know when times when he's asked if he would do anything differently
none of it focuses around like his comments on massacres or atrocities right he never
expresses regret for that so i don't think he sees those as legitimate errors
rather people like misrepresenting what he said to make it sound worse is the way i think he
would perceive that but i i don't think that's accurate so there we go um so now let's let's see where to go from here so we've done chomsky on ukraine and the uk
we've covered his anti-gururism maybe to finish on a slightly positive
note as opposed to you know potential genocide denialism or that kind of thing we can look at
some of the questions where he was asked about his legacy or how he sees what the future will hold
i think there again you do get to see some of his positive attributes.
So let's see.
What would you like your legacy to be?
If you could write your own heading on your own tombstone,
here lies Noam Chomsky.
What would you like the rest of that sentence to say?
He tried his best.
Yeah.
That's a good epitaph.
That's good. And also uh here's another one if you if you had if we knew this was going to be our last day on earth i asked professor hawking this
actually i said how would you spend it and he said he would get his family together he would play
wagner very loudly and he would drink fine champagne.
If you knew it was all about to end, how would you spend your last day?
I would get my family together but skip the rest.
I mean, he's very likable.
You know, I just like the way he responds to those questions he doesn't put some sort of flair on it to ingratiate himself or trying to think of something clever or whatever
he doesn't seem to be particularly concerned with impressing people no and he's not into like he
cares about his political opinions he cares about his linguistic views and whatnot but in terms of him personally and his importance as a kind of guru figure i think he doesn't see that and
this is another example of that if i had the power to let you relive one moment in your life
what would you go for some moments are almost miraculous like the birth of my first child,
and many other things like it.
But I don't see much point talking about my personal life and situation.
There are more important things in the world.
Again, this is very different from most of the gurus we cover
who are very keen to talk about their personal revelations
and their personal traumas and their personal moments of enlightenment.
Yeah, and I'll also say he doesn't fall into the traps
that a lot of the gurus we've covered do in terms of
automatically sticking out contrarian positions on whatever issue he doesn't just oppose mainstream
narratives in general maybe 40 percent believes in church and divine guided evolution the rest
say the world was created 10 000 years ago uh there's this is uh by, extended by an enormous anti-science movement, which is quite powerful.
It goes back a century.
The corporations that were producing lethal products like lead, tobacco, asbestos, or recently fossil fuels.
Scientific information was beginning to accumulate
about a century ago
about the harmful effects of these products.
Corporate sector recognized
that it's no use to deny the facts.
If you try to deny them, you'll just be refuted.
They picked another path.
Let's sow doubt about science.
Why should we believe scientists?
They keep changing their minds. They're bought by big corporations.
They're a bunch of liberals.
They're mostly liberals.
Why should we believe them?
So let's sow doubt about science altogether.
That's had a big effect.
That's had effect in all kind of areas.
A large part of the basis for the anti-vaccine movement,
which I was surprised to see in recent polls, is pretty large in Britain.
I think about a third of the population thinks COVID was a conspiracy.
All of this is coming out of the major corporate lead anti-science movement,
which is going on for a century.
And that had extremely harmful effects.
Can't calculate the number of people murdered just from the lethal products
like lead, tobacco, and so on.
But now it's survival of human species.
tobacco and so on but now it's survival of human species we don't deal with the fossil fuel overuse we're finished but it doesn't matter to the corporate sector they have to make profit
tomorrow incidentally i don't blame them for that so i mean okay a couple of things there it's
like if you did a straw poll of all of Chomsky's views,
sampled them equally,
then you'd find that there'd be an awful lot of overlap, I think,
with what you and I would believe in
and also the issues that you and I would be concerned with.
And I think that's worth remembering.
I think he's got perfectly sensible views about a wide range of things.
I remember when one of the questions he was asked in one of these interviews was, what are his two main worries about the world?
And he didn't come up with some obscure, weird pet obsession. He said, climate change and nuclear
war, which I think is a very rational pair of global concerns thinking in the long term.
The only point at which he lost me there and i
think this speaks to his ideological slant is he mentioned the corporations as being responsible
for the anti-vax wave that he was quite surprised by so we obviously share his concern with the
anti-vax movement you and i pay very close attention to it i i think pointing the finger at big
corporations as being the driving factor there i think he's letting his ideological slant show a
little bit yeah just a little bit so it's it is true that corporations you know have historically
and are involved in various efforts to downplay climate change to argue that
tobacco wasn't causing cancer or muddy the water and whatnot so plenty of legitimate things to call
out but the notion that they are primarily responsible for anti-vaccine sentiment just
seems incorrect he's on slightly stronger ground blaming the corporations as the instrumental
factor for lack of sensible policy on climate change, which is one of my biggest concerns
personally, because they obviously do fund advocacy groups and do essentially lobbying
and things like that to influence policy. But as someone who really shares with Chomsky the view that it's one of the greatest frustrations
of my life that the world hasn't been taking it more seriously and acting faster, I have
to say you can't blame entirely the corporations.
I mean, it's the governments that basically let them do what they do mine coal deliver energy in this particular way
and those governments are voted in by people like you and me and yes they're influenced by
shock jocks and lobbyists and money but at some point I think us individual people would need to take responsibility as well.
Well, I'll leave you and Chomsky for the final word about climate change.
Probably do agree with him on it.
But yes, I think there's conspiratorial tendencies or anti-corporate position leak into his views a little bit?
There's actually been a very strong movement in the corporate sector.
I mean, it's been criticized as being this sort of woke corporatism
where they've actually, like there's business groups and stuff like that.
They may not have coal miners involved,
but they've got an awful lot of other corporations involved,
doing things in their corporate jargon and
their corporate way of doing things to actually basically make decarbonization a corporate policy
even though it doesn't necessarily contribute to the bottom line so it's controversial because
it's like a corporate objective that isn't based on maximizing profits but there are
movements within the corporate sector which um yeah no i i just don't
buy that sort of traditional view which is okay corporations the bad guys the united states the
bad guys the wonderful grassroots people we're the good guys the non-western nations they're
all good guys too i i just don't like that manichean view of the world spoken like a good neoliberal shilma your check is
in the mail um so yeah i think we've spent enough time on chomsky we've covered quite a range of
things and this is a little bit of an unusual episode because of all the different parts that
we've tried to get but chomsky is 94 If we do another guru that's in his 90s,
we'll probably have to do a similar level of material
in order not to feel like we're not doing him justice.
And people will take issue with various things
that we've not covered or that we have covered too much
or whatever the case.
And if that is so, so be it.
So be it.
You do your own decoding.
Leave us alone.
We did them.
And we've got more people that we need to cover.
So I think I'll say in very brief terms, uncharacteristically, that in terms of a bunch
of the figures that we typically associate with the secular guru set chomsky
doesn't fit the mold because he does seem to genuinely dislike being presented as a important
special figure public intellectual he presents himself as just an academic, just a political commentator, whatnot.
But in terms of his commitment to his ideological outlook and his certainty that his perspective is correct,
and the slightly conspiratorial framing of the world that he operates under,
conspiratorial framing of the world that he operates under i do think there are tendencies that he shares with other gurus so i would anticipate that they will score in the mid-range
and just to be clear for the hundred thousandth time in this episode this is not to say anybody
with a leftist or hard left perspective automatically falls somewhere into a guru camp.
No, there's lots of people who just hold those politics and are not really guru types.
These are separate things.
There are also moderately people who share the same politics as me and engage in secular guru type stuff.
You know, probably people like Yuval, what's his name you val harari yeah you know might fall into that and we will have a look at them so let's
see so i'm just saying my main issue with chomsky is is ideological fixation that leads to potential genocide minimization or atrocity minimization that to me
is very bad and i think it's on the spectrum of why he presents the labor defeat under corbin
as a victory in the interview that we heard. Yeah, I concur.
I think he'll score quite lowly on the Garometer.
We'll see.
We'll see.
But I basically, like you said, don't pick up these guru-esque vibes.
And it's not because I'm sympathetic towards lefties.
He's far more left than me.
And I think he is ideologically blinkered on those hot-button kind of anti-imperialist issues.
I understand why he's kind of obsessed with the bad things
that the United States and the West has done.
There are heaps of legitimate concerns and recriminations
that can and should be made there.
But I think that obsessive focus, in my eyes,
leads him to have a blinkered view of the world more generally.
So, I think he's a smart guy.
He's quite interesting.
You can hear him talk about linguistics or other random things.
And he's always interesting to listen to.
You see the ideological glasses impinging from time to time.
But, you know, in the end end he's a smart guy an academic very
productive and prolific with opinions i don't really see many guru s qualities so fair play to
him all right well we'll see when we quantify where he falls but yes so that's chomsky done and dusted at least for now should you want some reflections
on the topic more discussion of chomsky there will be the grommeter episode on the patreon so
look out for that now matt to finish off this short little episode we need to finish with two
things the shout outs for the patrons and the review of
reviews. But I also want to just give a personal shout out to somebody on Twitter who goes by
Terence T. Research Remora on Twitter, who produced these very nice visualizations of our Gurometer scores.
So if you want to see them, go on Twitter.
Matt and I have retweeted them.
The account has retweeted them.
And they're very nice, these little, I don't know the name for the chart, but a nice visualization
of our very subjective scores on the Gurometer for each of the gurus at least up to 2022
yeah absolutely gorgeous visualizations in that infographic style so we might have to commission
it to make some big posters for us chris and people can put them up on their wall
and gaze at them before they go to sleep yeah no reviews matt we've had a few no i quite enjoyed one of them we've had a raft of five star reviews not so many negative reviews
so and i think given the length of this episode i'm just going to read one of the good ones i
think this is a a nice one the end on a positive note for us is that all right or do you demand
that i get a negative one no no i could do with
a bit of encouragement today okay that's good so this one is titled my boyfriend regrets
recommending this podcast five stars by ladybird lawyer it's a promising start so my boyfriend
regrets recommending this podcast or at least he should. He innocently suggested I may
enjoy the podcast, and I do. As a result, he is subjected to my frequent attempts to discuss
episodes that have long faded from his memory. However, I knew nothing of the IDW, and now he
must shoulder the responsibility of knowing I may have remained blissfully unaware of the Weinstein
brothers, if not for his suggestion.
More to the point, I have transformed into a conspiracy hypothesizer,
and this is a review of the video version of the podcast.
My review.
Ah, they have very nice smiles and look like they're having fun.
Boyfriend's review.
Chris seems more coherent when you can see his fierce matt sounds like his hair
stunning five stars that sounds like he's there i like it i love it that's an excellent review i
like it on all counts it must be amazing to have a partner with whom one can discuss the content
in decoding the gurus with My wife knows nothing of this world.
I mean, I try to tell her, but she zones out immediately.
So I've got the message.
I should change the topic quickly.
But, you know, I get enough of it talking to you
and with the Patreons on the get-together.
You glided over, Matt, the fact that I was remarked
to be more coherent if you can see my face.
What does that imply? Many millions of coherent if you can see my face. What does that imply for the many millions of people
that can't see my face?
Yeah, I know.
It doesn't imply good things.
Yeah, I took it to mean, yeah, your coherence is,
the baseline is so low, but being able to see your mouth move,
you know, helps.
It makes you slightly more coherent.
I sound like my hair.
My hair, as everyone everyone knows looks amazing so i took that pretty much as a straight up compliment alabaster white floating
like just imagine a young gandalf and you've got a very good image um yeah so that's that that was
a good review thank you ladybird lawyer and and boyfriend
and boyfriend yeah yeah for for recommending for recommending us to you that's it thanks
what else oh yes patreon shout outs matt that's the people that support the enterprise dtg
and in all its facets and sign off on all of our analysis of chomsky and other figures
yeah and just before we thank them specifically generally big thank you to our top tier patreons
i forget who they are well i know who they are but i forget what the tier is called but the ones
who come to our monthly whatever it's called live stream my well it's just a general
thank you because it is more of a donation than a you know we realize that the benefits that they
get just from being in that tier it's more supporting us rather than them getting anything
returned so just want to say we are aware of that. What? What?
Come on, Chris.
The benefits aren't that great.
Let's face it.
They get an audience, a monthly audience with us.
If I tried to sell an audience with me to anyone in real life, I don't think I could get $10 for it.
Agreed. I agreed agreed you couldn't but the point is by doing that you've now made me have to strike them out because it'd be weird
to double strike the vice and i have to so for example we might thank mike s that would be one
of them we might also thank samuel rivers we We're thanking Kyle Wilson, Polly Surf, Jim Brown,
Mohamed, and Shane Burke. Shane Burke, Matt. Thank you guys. And girls.
Galaxy Brain Gurus. That's what you call them. Galaxy Brain Gurus. That's the ones. Yes.
galaxy brain gurus that's the ones yes we tried to warn people yeah like what was coming how it was going to come in the fact that it was everywhere and in everything
considering me tribal just doesn't make any sense i have no tribe i'm in exile think again sunshine
yeah let's see we'll get to you somehow.
They don't sound a lot like Chomsky, do they?
Not quite.
Not exactly, no.
No, Matt, we're going to go backwards because of what you've made me do in the document.
We're now going to thank the revolutionary genius tier.
This is the mid-tier people who get access to Decoding Academia,
which is a beneficial thing.
You say people don't get any benefit.
Have you not listened to our Decoding Academia episodes,
multiple hours on linear regressions, discussions of meta-facilities?
Who wouldn't pay for that kind of thing?
Everything you wanted to know about multivariate statistics,
but we're too afraid to ask.
You can hear it there.
So that's right.
That's the benefit you get at the $5 tier.
Hey, that's the median tier.
You get Decoding Academia.
And you get it if you have the $10 tier.
As well.
You can listen to them twice at the $10 tier.
Your license is twice.
Yeah.
You can probably request that we do one.
We might.
We should do that we should take
requests for the decoding academia we're open to that well we'll put it up in the patreon we can
ask people so there we have to find people like emir's dreams emir's chad jones dulce
chad maria people really are called chad sorry chad sorry it's a fine name
martin mason mr pay pj bell chamber i hope that is his name roderick boyd dead eye nick
durple josh white you should all reconsider your names i know most of the pictures
terry no problems with terry no problems i like terry as as well logan bank matthew meyer
ian tierney angus dirk k and dazai yes all those guys and gals. Which tier is this again? Revolutionary geniuses.
Okay, great. Well, that's good. I'm usually running, I don't know, 70 or 90 distinct paradigms
simultaneously all the time. And the idea is not to try to collapse them down to a single master
paradigm. I'm someone who's a true polymath. I'm all over the place. But my main claim to fame,
if you'd like, in academia is that I founded the field of evolutionary consumption.
Now, that's just a guess, and it could easily be wrong, but it also could not be wrong.
The fact that it's even plausible is stunning.
Those are a nice combination.
I like the backwards. Yeah.
nice combination thanks to martin yeah yeah so the last the meek shall inherit the earth the conspiracy hypothesizers who are the most popular tier mod they are what a surprise
what a surprise no no that's i think i think what is it, $2 or something? That's a very reasonable price to pay for Outlawedcast.
In the game of chess, the pawns are important.
You need them.
If you just had castles and knights and stuff.
When are you going to sacrifice?
When are you going to sacrifice?
Nothing.
You have to be sacrificing someone more important.
Someone who's $90 a month.
This is right
no one revealed the tactics you just send them in waves human wave of two dollar patreons and
then see what happens um that's it that's how you visualize them isn't it matt
intellectual cat and fodder that we should rename it now what do two dollar patrons get
chris access to the patreon and the bonus material that goes up there.
Things like the Garometer, things like bonus episodes,
of which we have like 50 of those things in the bank and stuff.
That's actually heaps.
Actually, you guys are getting a really good deal.
A lot.
You just don't get the code in academia because that's $3 extra.
That's so good.
And it's so good.
I just can't tell you how good it is. No, no. I good and it's so good i just i can't
tell you how good it is no no i mean it's a dilemma isn't it chris like if you like
like say 10 podcasts that's like you know two bucks it's just 20 bucks a month for people i
know we're away on the internet most dollar podcasts put the lowest tier at five dollars
mark but we're not like that you know you know i remember it was me that suggested we make a two dollar lower lower tier because i just had low self-confidence
and feelings of self-worth i think it was you that suggested and i that accepted
but yeah we don't mind that's fine two dollars $2, I think, is a fair amount. The $5 and $10, as you've highlighted,
are symbolic gestures of support
as well as we provide you with benefits.
But, you know, that's it.
I wouldn't suggest to anyone
to increase your overall podcast Patreon spend.
But if you wanted to redirect
some of your support from other podcasts to to us it's
like i wouldn't encourage anyone to start smoking but you know if you're smoking one brand you could
switch to another if you were supporting the weinsteins have we got you out of it maybe you
always have you considered it like that but no i'm good it's all right you don't have to
contribute anything if you don't want to if you
want to you can there's some bonus especially if you're young if you're under 20 you probably don't
have much money don't want your two dollars keep it buy yourself an ice cream buy a coffee but
nonetheless people that we need to thank those are people like kyle ferreter stewart Ekoop, Peter Ross, Jonathan Howard, Anders Norman, Wesley Maffley Kipp,
Will VZ, Avik Roy Chaudhry, Alexis Neil Horwarth, Stefan Hench, Peter Musgrave, Gabriel,
Peter Musgrave, Gabriel, Marie Caldwell, Engons Burgess, Cameron Osborne, Zach,
Two-Leg Humanist, and Saad Amhed. Fantastic. Fantastic. We appreciate you.
Good bunch of people. Yeah.
I feel like there was a conference that none of us were invited to that came to some very strong conclusions and they've all circulated this list
of correct answers i wasn't at this conference this kind of shit makes me think man it's almost
like someone is being paid like when when you hear these george soros stories well he's trying
to destroy the country from within we are not going to advance conspiracy theories. We will advance conspiracy hypotheses.
And boy, is he continuing to do so.
Brett and Heather barreling down the anti-vax tunnel of death.
They're just nightmares.
But we've given people enough nightmares already, Matt.
So thank you, everybody, for listening today. I will clock the traditional guru clock signal at the end of the episode.
And yeah.
Thanks for listening, everyone.
Bye.
Bye for now.
Ciao.
Arrivederci.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
Decoding the gurus.
Those wacky, wacky gurus
My name is Matt
My name is Chris
Let's have some fun
And take the piss
Decoding the Gurus
Now on to the show