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42 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What after Chomsky?, March 8, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Acts of Aggression (Paperback)
After listening to Chomsky lecture 'in the flesh', free of editors and media butchers, I came to appreciate his expansive mind, his love of humanity and, surprisingly, his guarded optimism regarding human possibility even in the face of institutional monstrosities. For some reason, many Americans have come to believe that there is something inherently 'negative' or 'bad' in critical interpretation. Chomsky goes to the heart of this matter, and though he likes to minimize his linguistic soul, it is by his natural ability to sift through mediated language that he is able to render, clear as day, something that, finally, approximates some truth about the world we have created, the forces that are continually struggling for control and the casualties of the commodification of 'the individual' in a world proliferated by free market gobblygook. My only worry is, what after Chomsky? So far, many have tried to 'follow', but I have yet to encounter anyone who is brave enough to use their positions to speak the truth, as Chomsky has. After reading this work in particular, one is reminded that there are only two types of people in the 'first world', those who are activists and those who are complicit. Only a monster can sit idly by while the horror of U.S. policy (funded with public monies) is allowed to be 'disappeared' by our media, as the plight of the E. Timorese was for so many years. How many times are we going to let this record replay? Is access to cheap petro-chemical resin garden chairs really worth half a million children's lives?
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38 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Response to Toronto, Canada, December 21, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Acts of Aggression (Paperback)
This is just a comment on the writer from Toronto, CA about his feelings of the acceptance of Chomsky's ideas and theories in the intellectual community and also a comment on Chomsky's literature in general. I have found that Chomsky's ideas are very real, but there are many critics and authors who refuse to accept Chomsky's views because, well, his readings go directly against all literature of the established political scientists and contradict the content of the literature. I think that Chomsky has a lot to offer, but it is important and interesting to consider who disagrees with Chomsky or refuses to cite his works. Chomsky is the most widely cited living author, making him "the most important intellectual alive". His writings are eye-opening and frank, easy to read. This and anything by Odonian Press are great for starters (What Uncle Sam Really Wants, on the subject of U.S. Foreign Policy, for example) Happy reading!
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50 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A superb book, June 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Acts of Aggression (Paperback)
I am writing in response to the first review here. I just want to say that every intellectual person in the world takes Professor Chomsky seriously. I live in Canada and I remember that in each of his lectures in Toronto there was enormous attendance to listen to him. He is the conscience of the West. He is a person who did not sell himself to the corporations. You can read this book and learn a lot about U.S. foreign policy and its impacts in the lives of people around the world and especially Middle East. After reading this book without any bias you can demand that US foreign policy makers and their suppurates should be charged for crimes against humanity.
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