Spastic Bullet: The behavior you demand from others in debate you curiously exept yourself from. Specifically, your demand for specifics on Chomsky vs. your sweeping judgements of a source, based upon the most superficial information. One can be understood, the other cannot.
As far as your arguments (and I would have thought this was obvious):
1) The point wasn't that it was 'hush money', the point was that the work he did directly benefited entities of which he was HIGHLY and OPENLY critical, to wit, the Defense Department. Why, if the defense department is as nasty as Chomsky regularly claims, would he benefit them with the fruit of his intellect for any sum?
2) Here the point was not that one must renounce property or extol the virtues of the system, but for one with socialist beliefs like Chomsky to live in high style in the midst of a state park does not fit with his vision does not really help others in the way that his rhetoric woud imply is his desire. Nor do his multi-million dollar trusts. BTW - you shouldn't compare what a Canadian buck buys in Vancouver to what a greenback buys on Cape Cod. The exchange rate doesn't have much to do with purchasing power, so you only demonstrate your lack of understanding.
3) Really no need to type it again, as you didn't say much about this.
spastic bullet wrote:
whittsend wrote:
spastic bullet wrote:
If there's something valuable in that issue of Reason that applies here, why not just post it instead of lecturing me about reading every article ever written in every magazine with Ayn Rand on the cover?
Because you judged the magazine based on the picture on the cover of that issue. I had never mentioned it before them, so your claiming that I am lecturing you about a plethora of magazines is disingenuous.
So, if I might paraphrase... "WAAAAAAAA!!!" You don't want to state your position, or in this case, cite something to support it, because the bad man questioned the credibility of one of your... no, your only quoted source. I'm saw-wee.
The issue with Rand on the cover is only being discussed at all because you dredged it up in an effort do smear the source; it is only tangential to the discussion, and your insistance on deriving information from the
cover of an issue which isn't even tangential to the Chomsky discussion continues to be disingenuous. I'm no expert on Chomsky, but I have read enough interviews, and heard him rant often enough to have a pretty solid handle on what the guy is about. If you wish to claim that my understanding is lacking (I disagree, but) that is fair enough. Your continuing efforts to demean a magazine based on the cover of one issue, however, are truly disappointing....in your words, "it's beneath you." Perhaps there is more than one story about Rand on an issue featuring her on the cover? Perhaps differing contributers disagree on her value and contribution? Never mind, you saw the cover of an issue (not even the one from which the article in contention came!) and that is enough.
spastic bullet wrote:
Btw, I went to their site, but they've got such a hate-on for Chomsky, he seems to be in every other issue in some way or another.
Strange, I don't recall reading another article featuring criticism of him. Care to be specific (after all, if you are going to demand specificity, why shouldn't I)?
spastic bullet wrote:
Be specific about your criticisms, or admit they're just a bunch of fallacious deflections from his actual points.
Here I will have to concede that a search for relevant data has been unsuccessful. I'm unable to find any but the most vague pronouncements that tax havens are bad. Still, knowing his principles, I continue to believe that it is disengenous of you to state that Chomsky has nothing against those who act in the manner he has found to be acting in himself. He clearly does not hold himself to the principles to which he holds others. Or, perhaps he feels he does his part by exposing the evils of our society, and at the same time enriching his own fortunes? Bad news for Mr. Chomsky is that we already are aware of the evils, and his solutions are worse than useless. So, in the end, his contribution is....nothing.
whittsend wrote:
spastic bullet wrote:
...his ideas are uncommonly sound, and based in a quite consistent logic.
The 'soundness' of his ideas are highly debatable.
spastic bullet wrote:
Maybe to those who can actually be bothered to "see the point in a comprehensive" debate, they are. I mean "it is". I guess we'll just take your word for it.
The man refers to himself as a libertarian socialist, and before you give me the, "I thought you were a libertarian..." nonsense again, it is time you understood what that really means. First of all, Chomsky himself distances himself from libertarianism in the US, which he labels (inaccurately) as 'anarcho-capitalism.' He believes in a system where government is minimalised (so far so good), and people's inherent concern for one another will provide for the needs of all. Please. That is fantasy, and to say his ideas are sound is to agree that, given the choice, will care for our bretheren of our own free will. Now, if this is your idea of 'sound', we can stop discussing it right now; we have no common ground on which to base a discussion, so continuing this is pointless.
At its core, his philosophy is similar to communism in its vain hope that informed citizens will see to each others needs; except that the libertarian socialist ideal is not exclusive to the proletariat. Either way, the same problems with it exist: once several members of the society decline to participate in the 'ideal' it either compels compliance with force, or fails outright.
spastic bullet wrote:
whittsend wrote:
If you are stating that you aren't aware of Chomsky's very public views on wealth in society being contrary to his lifestyle as noted in Reason, you are either not as well informed about his opinions as you claim, or you are being disingenuous again.
Once again, you're "punishing" me for not taking Reasonmagazine seriously. I now don't get to respond to any
specific criticisms because I dared to question their not-at-all "fawning praise" of a deranged old cow who genuinely thought she was the best thing since Aristotle. AND Homer. Gimme a break.
You don't need to read
Reason to understand what Chomsky is about - he tells it to anyone who will listen with frequency. And, again, I will say that it is disingenuous to portray him as other than hostile to actions such as he has been shown to take.
There isn't much more to say about this. I could continue to state the obvious, and you can continue to criticise
Reasonmagazine because they had a picture of Ayn Rand on the cover once...but what's the point?