Chomsky as Chavez's Clown

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* This article criticizes the weak and untenable posture the celebrated North American linguist and essayist holds in support of the current Venezuelan government. It was originally published in Venezuela’s anarchist newspaper El Libertario #57.


Contrary to what many think, the ability to believe in fairy tales and to blindly accept a fiction, no matter how fantastic or grotesque, is not the sole attribute of the dumb and ignorant. The famous writer Noam Chomsky has just proved that intelligent and cultivated intellectuals are also capable of believing and adopting conduct and political action totally dogmatic, false and authoritarian. They believe so or at least pretend to.

It is nothing new to see a highly ranked intellectual falling into such contradiction. In the Soviet Union and Maoist China we saw the irrational phenomenon of the “fellow travellers” … Those intellectuals who believed –many of them in good faith – the establishment of “socialism” and the construction of “the new man” in those countries until the facts forced them to realize what those regimes really were. Nevertheless, although in many cases such mistakes are not motivated by the search of some sort of reward and may seem sincere, just some anthropological weakness, it behoves us to ask the why and how of such conduct. Although the easiest thing would be to think that it is simply due to beliefs that no human being –even the most rational ones- could forever avoid, in Chomsky’s case it is not possible to forget that he himself fought against this tendency in the past.

That is why it is imperative to ask: how can a man, apparently capable of reasoning, of critical analysis of what happens in the world, travel to Venezuela today to sing the praises of “XXI Century socialism” without noticing the military mentality of its inventor, Commander Chávez, nor the crass populism of his so-called Bolivarian Revolution? How can Chomsky commit the same error as some famous intellectuals of the past century, some praising Stalin and some, years later, revering Mao and his “Little Red Book”? They did so because they believed that in Russia and in China they were building the “true communism” and he does so now because he believes that in Venezuela “a new world, a different world” is being created. How can he forget that later all those intellectuals were forced to confess a “mea culpa” for their ideological blindness that prevented them from seeing what was behind the Stalinist and Maoist revolutionary discourse? That totalitarianism, responsible for the death of millions of people, inspired Castro to impose for fifty years a dictatorship in Cuba that Chávez devoutly imitates.

But what is surprising in the Chomsky of the last few years is not only the apparent historical amnesia but that he is sensitive to the praises the histrionic commander bestows: “I give you the warmest welcome (…) it was time for you to visit us and for the Venezuelan people to see you and hear you directly” while he shows his gratitude for his “loving and generous words”. There is also the buffoonery of Chomsky saying how “it moved him to meet the men who have inspired this situation”.

What is most surprising about this conversion to messianic faith, similar to other famous conversions to Catholicism (Baudelaire, Peguy, Claudel etc) is that the miracle happens after the collapse of “real socialism” of Soviet inspiration and the establishment of capitalism in China by the same communist party Mao left in power. In contrast to the young intellectual “idealists” who worshipped Stalin or Mao before these important historical events happened, Chomsky has been able to observe them in his lifetime and that makes more incomprehensible the fact that he now seems to have forgotten them. Above all, the failures of messianic revolutions confirm without a doubt all his prophecies.

It is true that for a while now we have been witnesses to the instrumentalization of Chomsky in many directions. This happens despite the fact that his ethical position, his ideological references and his political activity are contrary to what many of his followers defend and value. This is easy to see simply by reading his books. Unless today’s Chomsky is not the same who wrote: “We are in a time of corporatizing power, consolidating and centralizing power. It is assumed this is good, if you are a progressive, as a Marxist-Leninist. Three important things come from the same background: fascism, bolshevism and corporate tyranny. They all come from the same more or less Hegelian roots.” (Chomsky, Class Warfare, p.23) And let us not talk about what he wrote a while later regarding the country born out of the Bolshevik coup d’etat in October 1917 that, for Chomsky, was responsible for the dismantling of the emerging socialist structures in Russia: “They are the same brutal communists, the same brutal Stalinists of two years ago, now directed by the whites” and who are “the enthusiastic managers of the market economy”. Hence his pessimism: “Those who try to associate themselves with popular organizations and help the population to organize themselves, those who support popular movements in this way, simply will not be able to survive in such circumstances of concentrated power”. (Chomsky, Comprende le pouvoir, pp.7 – 11).

How is it possible that he can commit the same error as the pro-Chinese “fellow travellers” who had known the same old blindness in the preceding generation –that of the old Stalinists who tardily came to self-criticism- although he was a critical witness to such blindness? What is even more serious in Chomsky’s case is that those experiences have taught him nothing even after seeing and denouncing them.

Regarding Chomsky we must ask ourselves about the mystery of the strange cohabitation of the sharpest intelligence and the most obtuse credulity in the same human spirit. Particularly so because at that time he was one of the harshest critics of the blindness suffered by many of his intellectual colleagues who along with him constituted the cream of western intellectuals: the Sartres and other great philosophers, historians, sociologists, journalists or first rate university people.

It is indeed a mystery since there were few intellectuals who later didn’t have to confess being wrong and admit that Chomsky was right, showing how this blindness had driven them to commit that very grave error in the past. How could Chomsky have forgotten this? It is also true that the old Stalinists’ blindness –a thousand times confessed and analyzed in articles, interviews and books – didn’t serve as lesson for young western Maoists, who 20 years later repeated the same error, with the same arrogance as their predecessors. The first thing for them was blind adhesion to what was presented as an emancipating revolution. In Chomsky we see the opposite: first came the denunciation, the objective, rational analysis, rigorously critical, and then the blindness…

Short-sighted Anti-Imperialism

It is true that Chomsky’s anti American imperialism was rather discreet with regards to the growing authoritarianism of the Sandinistas during their turn in power in the 80’s in Nicaragua and the Castro dictatorship during several decades. And this is so in spite of the fact that among the victims of the latter are many who shared a lot with the militant pro-Cuban anti-imperialists of Latin America.

Could it be that this obstinate anti-imperialism, the fact that in his view the most important thing is to denounce the injustices prevalent in the USA as well as the injustices generated by this country on a global scale, drives him to stake his position on what happens in the American continent in such a confusing manner? Although Chomsky still considers himself “anarchist-libertarian” it’s clear that for him ideological considerations must be relegated to the background and a kind of gradation must be made between injustices according to the degree of global danger posed by the targets of his criticism. The problem is that such political relativism allows many Marxist-Leninists, demagogues and politicians, whose only concern is the conquest of power, its execution and conservation, to get shelter in Chomsky’s anti-imperialist arguments instead of caring about helping the people to organize themselves. It’s a serious problem because Chomsky does and says nothing to dissuade them. On the contrary, maintaining such immoral discretion with such perseverance and allowing himself to be photographed besides the Castros and the Chavezes he becomes an accomplice of the clownishness and the authoritarian, dictatorial deviations of these modern day oligarchs, no matter how convenient or discreet his praises might be.

Unfortunately, this obstinacy in keeping such Manichean discretion (considering that these demagogues’ access to power is less of a danger than the destruction caused by Yankee imperialism in the world) is not only inefficient in preventing such destruction (these demagogues continue to do business with the empire’s multinational corporations) but also contributes to demobilize people and make even harder the task of those who do struggle against worldwide domination by Capital and the State.

It is possible that, given his age, Chomsky can’t recognize it: but it is impossible to think that he isn’t aware of the distance that separates him from all those who believe his arguments against the Yankee empire and who, in turn, are very reticent, because of self-interest or comfort, to denounce the dominating ways of these supposedly revolutionary demagogues.

Octavio Alberola

About the author: O.A. combines theory and activism. In 1955 he organized in Mexico in solidarity with the Cuban struggle against the Batista dictatorship, later directly supporting the preparations for Castro’s landing in the Isle. In 1962 in France he coordinated Interior Defense, a secret group formed by agreement between the CNT, the FAI and the Iberian Federation of Libertarian Youth in order to re-activate the struggle against Franco’s dictatorship, being responsible for sabotage, attempts, printing clandestine propaganda and helping people fleeing Spanish fascism. Today he works on the revision of the Delgado and Granado trial, in the Support Group for Independent Libertarians and Syndicalists in Cuba (GALSIC), among other activities. He is the author of “El anarquismo español y la acción revolucionaria (1961-1974)” and “Miedo a la memoria”.

Note from the publishers of El Libertario: In our issue #51, accessible at www.nodo50.org/ellibertario, we have published another article on this subject: “Chavez y Chomsky. El caudillo y el libertario” by N. Triffon, translated to Spanish from the French original published in Le Monde Libertaire, weekly paper by the French Anarchist Federation in its issue of December 21 2006.

Translation: Luis Prat

Comments (14)
  • Anonymous  - needs editing

    notably the paragraph starting "What is most surprising about" and a few after have funny spaces and breaks that need deleting.

    Otherwise a really good article. Can't we get him put down?

  • jhaaglund

    Cheers for pointing that out, thought I'd fixed all of those.

  • Mike L  - ?

    I consider myself to have little knowledge of Latin America but as someone who has at least read a bit, watched many documentaries and has some basic grasp on what's going on there, I certainly fail to see how Castro was a dictator, or how Chavéz is for that matter.

    This article came across as very arrogant and very suggestive. I could swear I was reading something written by your typical right wing, Christian fundamentalist republican American. Apologies for even resorted to the reference of stereotypes, but I would like to see some sensible, rational discussion, or even some contextual evidence that shows Castro as a dictator and not for what, to me, it seems he was: A product of a violent revolution that emerged out of a situation something along the lines of: Fight or starve, Resist or fade away - a fate that much of the world is facing as result of globalization and American Imperialism.

    I happen to dislike Chavéz's militaristic approach and was heavily put off by his arms deals with Russia - but when you have the U.S stirring a war between Colombia and Venzuela, throwing in a military coup in 2002 you have to understand the need for vigilance where the rulers of the world see that you are not playing ball with their interests. Only recently in Hondruas the Obama administration lent a hand to big business, forcing president elect Manuel Zelaya into exile and violently oppressing his supporters, murdering journalists and spinning a web of brazen lies to FOX news and co as they handed the country back to the oligarchs.

    The word Chomsky appears 22 times in your article. It just seems to me that the pot calls the kettle black. You have devoted an awful amount of time to slandering him without really offering much in the way of tangible evidence that we should disrespect his views. I for one don't take all his work as gospel but those capable of critical thinking can appreciate and weigh up what is said without being so emotionally involved with who is providing the info. Vigilance to suspicious sources is necessary but to me this seems like a vendetta - You're correct, Chomsky is human, he has an inability to even conceive it being possible that the events of 9/11 were at least suspicious and very poorly handled.

    I will say right now that I have less knowledge than you of history, at least I assume so, I have studied little of Stalin as I feel no need to - I get the impression - but I feel it would be fair to say that comparing Stalin to Chavéz is at best a shallow and mellodramatic notion.

    There is no Gulag in Venezuela and to quote John Pilger, 'Capitalism has never really had it better in Venezuela' perhaps that's evident in the fact that there is still areas of extreme poverty which no president could dissolve in the 10 years Chavéz has been around, but as far as I can see he has taken great steps - and where do I undersand this? From listening to the people, and looking at literacy rates, human rights legislation, property and land reform.

    Is it dictators that give the poor a voice, teach them to read and write? Are we not being a little quick to judge these emergent Latin American leaders who have of course got many lessons to learn and are far from perfect. I mean I would love to see a world without nations and leaders, but that is a long way off. For now, I view Chavéz and co as the only sizeable resistance to the US empire, other than Iran which is rather under the thumb geopolitically of Israel and the Forx Knox that the U.S military has established in Iraq, seemingly, though my knowledge on this is sketchy - there's a good film, 'Iran is not the problem' that gives a good picture - No - I'm not a fan of how Chavéz has had his pictures taken all smiles with Ahmadinejad (sp) but.. he's taken on an enormous task and beggers can't be choosers in what was a unipolar world fast becoming otherwise with this semi unholy alliances. What do you expect? Neither of us have been to the Amazon lately I presume, western Sahara... Gaza...Burma?

    I find this article a case of excercising political intellectualism to promote and agenda. It was not informative, it was pompous, and even if I am horrendously mistaken in my world view, I will immediately correct myself. The desire to correct people in their 'blindness' and 'grave errors'...


    Apologies if I cause any offence, but I hate to see important issues slide into elitism, bias and arrogance.

    Peace

    www.thezeitgeistmoveme nt.com

  • jhaaglund

    You also don't seem to have actually read the article properly. At no point does it refer to Chavez as a dictator. It does refer to Castro as a dictator but I'd hardly call that unreasonable, he was the unelected leader of a one party state.

    Having said that, the issue isn't one of whether or not a particular leader is democratically elected. Ultimately, Cuba and Venezuela remain class societies, the working class is still forced by circumstances to work for a wage in order to produce commodities which can be sold by the boss class for a profit. That is the trouble with Chavez and Castro, not that they are different to "our" leaders in the West, but that their differences are ultimately superficial.

    As for "pompous" and "arrogant", I would suggest that you have a bit of a cheek trying to tell the author of this article, who actually lives in Venezuela, what it's like to live there on the basis that you've watched a few documentaries (hopefully of a higher quality than the Zeitgeist series, which were appalling beyond all reason).

    P.s. don't put irrelevant links to your website at the end of your posts again, or I will delete them as spam.

  • 000  - authoritarian antiauthoritarian....

    jhaaglund,
    The way the article was written (both in terms of content and style) and particularly the way you responded to what I found (at least in parts) a fair criticism by "Mike L - ?" forced me to double-check the URL just to make sure I was not in the EDL website... Especially your P.S. combined with any prospect of actually you being in position of power made me quite nervous admittedly...
    Peace,
    000

  • jhaaglund

    This is an article making criticisms of a political writer from the point of view of people directly affected by the issues he writes about, hardly comparable to anything written by the hatstand racists behind the EDL website. And if you're as interested as you claim to be in "fair criticism", perhaps you could actually write something resembling a substantive argument yourself.

    Regarding the P.S., we have a strict no spam policy here. The way that Mike L just randomly c+p'ed an URL at the end of his post is pretty clearly spam. The only reason I didn't just delete the post right away was because I didn't want to just remove a critical comment without responding to it.

  • alvaro ciglia

    :) if chavez was a real friend of the people,he wouldn't be in power.Simply because Washington wouldn't tolerate it,he'd probably have some mysterious plane crash.Courtesy of the c.i.a,but id like to think otherwise,What appear's on the surface.Is very different to what happen's behind closed door's,maybe compromise is a price he has to pay?,but i doubt it.

  • Dk  - Links

    This article assumes a considerable degree of prior knowledge: about Chomsky's visit; who he met; what he actually said etc. Anybody able to provide some links on any of this?

  • nick  - Wohin sind die Blumen?

    When's the time of making daisy chains with the free love that only the childlike know?
    This is 2010 - a massive number to rouse arthurian knights from their slumber beneath the moors of Kernow.

    Cummon chaps, the classiest thinker among us is the greatest thinker on earth, of course he must be challenged due to his unenviable status of authority on this or that really really crucial anarchist dilemma.

    Get a life, aren't we simply friends after all? Can we now raise our eyes toward the horizon, to the golden dawn of a new social contract?

    Z.

  • Anonymous  - re: Wohin sind die Blumen?
    nick wrote:

    When's the time of making daisy chains with the free love that only the childlike know?

    The 60s.

    nick wrote:
    This is 2010 - a massive number to rouse arthurian knights from their slumber beneath the moors of Kernow.

    Wha t? :0

  • RobNC86

    The military background of Chavez does not make him a dictator. He is a man of the Venezualen people and whatever we think of him he has distributed the wealth of the nations oil much more fairly than his CIA backed predecessar.

    Criticising Noam Chomsky for backing a man who is oposed to globalist capitilism and neo-liberalism is nit-picking to say the least.

    I would seriously question the position of the articles author or as the case may be the translator of the article.

  • Mijmo  - Noam

    This article is reactionary trash. Noam is a life long and commited anarchist and one of its greatest thinkers. His biggest problem is that he is dealing with so many lightweights amongst his so called fellow travelers. If one want to understand why the likes el libertario and many other anarchists would take the views they do then have a look at the fragmented and splintered discourse on these message boards. What stops anarchism ever having a chance of sucess is the untrammeled egos and pipe dreaming of its followers. When this is coupled with a reactionary tendency to lash out at potential friends over the stupidist of reasons it all makes sense.

  • Will Heyns  - Will comment

    I don't understand the article at all.
    It has one theme throughout: Condeming Noam Chomsky for meeting with Chavez.
    OK that's fine, but please give us some reasons why this should be comdemned..
    Will

  • Mr.Meanor

    Look, while Chavez's regime is far from perfect, it is at least in opposition to the dominant power in this world - the US (capitalist) elite. Chomsky has stated that he believes compromise to be necessary - for example, voting in a local election for a politician (whose stance you may not entirely agree with) who is going to at least preserve/alter some part of the local community for the better is preferable to not voting and allowing a complete monster to take office. You can shout "no compromise!" and stick to your guns as much as you like, but a progressive stance is far more, well, progressive. Venezuela is a fairly powerful voice of opposition to the way western Capitalism is doing things (as much as I hate to say it, more powerful than this organisation anyway) so to condemn those who choose to stand behind it, despite it's faults, is ridiculous and will, in the end, only serve those who seek to eradicate ALL opposition to capitalist interests. Those in opposition to the way the world is being run must unite rather than bicker, and then resolve our differences once the major and immediate threat to the world and the human race has been removed. Otherwise, we will just bitch-fight amongst ourselves over differing ideologies whilst the hawks and vultures of Washington and Wall Street carry on regardless. Chomsky has the right idea, you may not like it, but he has a far clearer idea of the way forward than you do. Heckling him will not change that.

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