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JAJ
INTERVIEW WITH NOAM CHOMSKY
Dear
Reader,
Our correspondent
in Ankara, John Bolender, holds a PhD. in, well, Philosophy,
and currently teaches in the Department of Philosophy at Middle
East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. Bolender has been
steadily interviewing the irrascible philosopher and linguist
Noam Chomsky in an ongoing online forum described below.
At the
moment, this compiled interview finds a home at Jump Arts
Journal, but it will be an ongoing matter at the for-fee section
of Zmag.org. Many would-be champions of Chomsky find themselves
of similar political outlook, but find the professor a media
machine unto himself, but I don’t find this to be a
bad thing, as the discussion is most worthy and significant,
and rarely discussed in depth if at all in mainstream media.
Additionally, as in music, one must be a strong impressario
to get the information/ music/ art to the public.
As JAJ
deals will all media, I’d like to note that Chomsky’s
DVD Distorted Morality (Epitaph Records) is floating around
for much less than the price of two GetHappy Meals. The lecture
in that DVD shows Chomsky to be a charming persuader in person,
and some stories floating around have indicated he can be
even quite whimsical on the personal level.
As I encourage
you with our writing on the Arts, listen to everyone, but
make up you own mind; the same regarding political issues.
Feel free to respond in our own Jump Arts Journal Forum section.
I have
strong beliefs about passive resistance, am in awe and admiration
for the Vietnam-era monks who self-immolated to draw attention
to the wrongs of that war, and detest any excuse for (which
is different from explanation of) any kind of terrorism, which
includes schoolyard bullies and economic abuse of our and
other populations. The answer? That’s the difficult
question, and so with a smile, and many grains of salts including
aspirin, let the games begin.
[Ed. note
on Ed. intro: Mr. Bolender feared readers would think my “grains
of salt” phrase “can only mean that the interview
contains a lot of false information.” I think more of
our readers. If I thought that, I wouldn't print the piece.
He claims it is flippant. Of that, I am most punnily guilty.
It is my way of dealing with what other people call “reality.”
I hope Mr. Chomsky will forgive me my pecadillo. Five grains
of aspirin, please, somebody.
Technical
matters: some of the writing (e.g.: i.e.) is due to the online
nature of the original discussion. Footnotes are copiously
offered at the foot of the interview. Please forgive our Tech
Dept. until our server permits us to more easily post Turkish
diacritical marks.]
Steve
Koenig, Editor
AN INTERVIEW
WITH NOAM CHOMSKY
Noam Chomsky
is Institute Professor in the Department of Linguistics and
Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Since
the 1950s, he has written a great number of enormously influential
books and articles on language, mind, and politics. Some of
his most recent books include Amerikan Müdahaleciligi
, edited and translated by Taylan Dogan and Baris Zeren (Istanbul:
Aram Yayincilik, 2002), On Nature and Language, edited by
Adriana Belletti and Luigi Rizzi (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002), and Hegemony or Survival: America’s Quest
for Global Dominance (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2003).
Questions
and endnotes are by John Bolender. The questions and answers
appeared from January through December 2003 in an internet
forum on www.zmag.org, open to ZNet sustainers.
BOLENDER:
On 2 Sept. 2003, the Christian Science Monitor ran an article
called "Probing the roots of terror" by Mark Clayton
in which he describes some recent work by economists trying
to understand the root causes of terrorism. The economists
describe what Clayton considers to be a surprising result,
namely that most terrorists are middle class. I.e., "a
fetid mix of poverty and lack of education" is generally
not a factor. Here is a quote:
“Among
Hamas and PIJ [Palestinian Islamic Jihad] members ... only
20 percent were poor - fewer than the 32 percent who qualified
as poor among a similar slice of the general Palestinian population
between ages 18 and 41. But among suicide bombers, the contrast
was even more pronounced: Just 13 percent were from poor families.
Educational backgrounds of people aligned with those groups
showed similar results. Among suicide bombers, 36 percent
had finished at least secondary school. Only 2 percent had
not gone past primary school. It looked as if the pundits
might be wrong: The suicide terrorists were fairly well educated
and were far from being poor.“
Clayton
reports their conclusion: “The ‘findings’
provide no support for the view that those who live in poverty
or have a low level of education are disproportionately drawn
to participate in terrorist activities.'"
CHOMSKY:
I saw the article but it was not specific enough to be very
helpful. The general conclusions reported are familiar. If
you are interested, there is a careful discussion of these
topics by Scott Atran in Science, March 7, 2003. Specifically
on suicide bombers, but it generalizes.
BOLENDER:
Given that you describe John Kennedy as a terrorist (1), I
would not expect you to express the slightest surprise that
terrorists need not be poor or uneducated. But Kennedy would
be a special kind of terrorist, a head of state.
CHOMSKY:
It's close to a historical universal that the term "terror"
is used for their terror against us and our clients, not our
terror against them. Heads of states can qualify as "terrorists,"
when they are official enemies.
BOLENDER:
Is it surprising or hard to interpret the fact that so many
non-state terrorists have middle class backgrounds?
CHOMSKY:
Not particularly. People who are struggling to survive and
can't think much beyond tomorrow's meal are unlikely to become
politically active in any dimension.
BOLENDER:
If it is literally impossible to theorize about human action
(2), how useful are such generalizations (e.g., about the
wealth of the typical terrorist) in understanding and predicting
the course of human events? If they are useful, then why can't
one speak of "theory"? Let me try to re-phrase that:
If there are no theories of human action or choice, then why
aren't the soft sciences essentially fraudulent? And if they
are not fraudulent, then what sort of understanding does one
get from them?
CHOMSKY:
Generalizations, if carefully reached, can be quite useful.
It's certainly not impossible to theorize about human action.
We all do it all the time, informally and intuitively, and
in the social sciences and psychology it's done more self-consciously.
They're by no means fraudulent in general. The question that
arises is whether they reach the level of depth of explanation
and understanding so as to merit honorific terms that are
often thrown around loosely ("theory," "science,"
etc.).
BOLENDER:
In January of 2001, the Foreign Relations of the United States
put a myth-vs.-fact sheet on its website (www.state.gov/p/nea/rls/01fs/3935.htm).
It contains a lot of corrections of misconceptions, or at
least that was the stated purpose. It is largely about how
the suffering of Iraqis cannot be blamed on sanctions but
on Saddam Hussein alone. There are two "myths" and
"facts" stated below. It would be interesting to
hear your reaction to them.
“Myth:
The Iraqi people do not have an adequate supply of medicine
because of sanctions.
Fact:
Sanctions have never prohibited or limited the import of medicine.
In fact, the UN has urged the Iraqi regime to order more basic
medicines, but Baghdad has refused. Saddam has been criticized
by the UN for intentionally hoarding medicines in warehouses
in government-controlled Iraq instead of distributing it to
civilians.
Myth:
Sanctions prohibit humanitarian contributions to Iraq.
Fact:
Sanctions do not prohibit humanitarian contributions, Saddam
does. Since June 1998, Saddam has publicly refused a number
of humanitarian contributions while claiming that his people
are suffering.”
CHOMSKY:
These are familiar fabrications that have been refuted over
and over by the officials responsible for administering the
programs, notably Denis Halliday and Hans van Sponeck. A good
scholarly review refuting these and many other fabrications
is Eric Herring, "Between Iraq and a Hard Place,"
Review of International Studies 2002, 39-56. It's a critique
of the British government claims, which are about the same.
It's on the web (3). A site that lists plenty of documentation
on this is: www.cam.ac.uk/societies/casi/info/themes.html#gwesi
(4).
Note, incidentally, the logic of the argument. Suppose it
were true that Saddam had been purposely making life harder
for Iraqis. Then the US government logic is that we must therefore
join him in making life even more impossible for Iraqi civilians
by imposing extremely harsh sanctions -- and the lists of
what the US has tried to block are really outrageous, and
well-documented.
BOLENDER:
Do you think that the sanctions imposed on Syria are a pretext
for a future attack? Given the increasing unpopularity of
the war in Iraq, one might doubt it.
CHOMSKY:
I agree with you that the (rather surprising) difficulties
faced by the occupation of Iraq, the chances for going on
to the next target are reduced. In any event, I doubt that
the administration would have attacked Syria, which is not
defenseless and therefore not a proper target, though they
might have "unleashed Israel," where the government
might have its own reasons. Right now [December 2003], it
doesn't look likely. Possible targets are not just in the
Middle East: the Andean region is another.
BOLENDER:
Could you say something more about the Andean region?
CHOMSKY:
US intelligence projections regard the Andean region as crucial
to US global power in the coming years, in part because of
its oil resources. But only in part. The region is in turmoil
(meaning, not under stable US control), from Venezuela to
Bolivia. The US has a substantial military presence right
in the region, and a ring of military bases including Ecuador,
El Salvador, and the Dutch islands. The US already backed
the Venezuelan military coup, and was forced to back down
when it was overturned at once by popular reaction and denounced
throughout the hemisphere. More is not unlikely, though I
presume that the unexpected (and to me at least rather surprising)
failures of the military occupation in Iraq may reduce the
likelihood of military action.
BOLENDER:
L. Paul Bremer, top administrator of the Coalition Provisional
Authority in Iraq, has just announced that U.S. forces will
probably stay in Iraq even after the interim government assumes
power in June. "Our presence here will change from an
occupation to an invited presence. I'm sure the Iraqi government
is going to want to have coalition forces here for its own
security for some time to come," the Financial Times
quotes Bremer as saying (5). It's also my understanding that
the U.S. will still control aid money to Iraq even after the
new government appears in June.
I am wondering
if the Bush administration means to install some sort of pseudo
democracy in Iraq so that the Shi'ite majority doesn't have
any real say. The whole situation might be roughly analogous
-- I am speculating -- to the military shadow government in
Turkey which regularly tells the elected government what it
should and shouldn't do (6). The U.S. has supported this military
shadow government because it is America's true ally in Turkey.
When the Turkish parliament voted against letting Turkey be
used as a military base in the Iraq invasion, Paul Wolfowitz,
U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense, denounced the Turkish military
for not stepping in to control its government, i.e. for not
doing its duty (7). Do you think that the U.S. administration
wants to create something similar now in Iraq but with the
U.S. acting directly as the shadow government rather than
relying on a local group to play that role?
CHOMSKY:
For the record, it was also reported in the Boston Globe,
Nov.18: Robert Schlesinger, "US expects March deal to
keep troops in Iraq." I didn't see other mentions in
the US, but didn't search. The closest analogy, I presume,
is Central America and the Caribbean, where we have a century
of experience to learn from. Democracy is fine, as long as
the democratic government does what we say.
The British
ran the Middle East pretty much the same way, with "independent
governments" that the British internally described as
an "Arab facade," administering their countries
but with the British in effective control, and ready to "ruthlessly
intervene" if anything threatens that arrangement, as
Britain's foreign Secretary explained in internal discussion
in 1958, when Britain was considering granting nominal independence
to Kuwait to stem the nationalist pressures emanating from
newly independent Iraq. That's in fact traditional imperialism,
neo-colonialism, or other euphemisms. And Iraqis seem to understand
it. That's presumably why, in polls after Bush's dramatic
announcement that the US was "changing course" (once
again – it happens every two-three years, to much acclaim)
and promoting democracy, some Iraqis agreed that that was
the US aim: 1%. After all, what would have been the point
in invading if not to control Iraq? If those now running Washington
were willing to see Iraq run by Iraqis, they wouldn't have
supported Saddam Hussein through his worst crimes, authorized
him to crush the uprising that might have overthrown him in
1991, and supported the sanctions regime that killed hundreds
of thousands of people, forced the population to be dependent
on the tyrant for survival, and probably saved him from the
fate that befell other members of the remarkable rogues gallery
that they supported: Ceaucescu, Suharto, and a long list of
others, to whom they add new representatives every day (8).
Wolfowitz's
comments were not surprising in themselves. His record is
one of very strong support for brutal tyrannies. What was
intriguing, however, was the reaction of intellectual elites
here: rapturous admiration for Wolfowitz as the "great
visionary" who wants to bring democracy to the Middle
East, and whose "heart bleeds" for the suffering
of Arabs (9), accompanied by reports of the kind you cite,
reflecting his visceral hatred of democracy, and complete
silence about his intriguing record.
BOLENDER:
In December 2002, Rumsfeld called religious leaders to the
Pentagon to discuss "the religious and philosophical
principles" of a "just war” (10). And that
has underscored an anxiety of mine: If it is true that moral
judgments are largely grounded in human nature, then what
is moral philosophy for? Does it simply distract us from what
would be our otherwise more automatic moral responses? Is
it typically a kind of highfalutin’ way of making morally
obscene judgments seem reasonable?
One reason
why I ask this of you is that your political and moral commentaries
are virtually always heavily data-driven, nothing but facts.
You virtually never insert a comment such as "The government
is here violating Rawls' difference principle" or anything
like that (11). It's as though you expect the moral judgments
to flow from unconscious principles and don't dare cloud the
water with moral theory (12). ("Language and Freedom"
might be an exception. It's also not very recent, though.
(13). Is your point that what divides people on moral issues
is not different moral principles but unequal access to relevant
information? And are philosophical discussions of ethics just
new clothes for the Emperor?
CHOMSKY:
Rawls's "difference principle" is reasonable, but
hardly a theory. Other moral principles are reasonable too:
e.g., the principle of universality that underlies all of
"just war theory": if something is right (or wrong)
for us, it's right (or wrong) for others. It follows that
if it's wrong for Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti, and a long list
of others to bomb Washington and New York, then it's wrong
for Rumsfeld to bomb Afghanistan (on much flimsier pretexts),
and he should be brought before war crimes trials. Again,
the principle of universality is not a "theory."
Just moral truism.
What's
the source of such moral truisms? We don't know much more
than David Hume did 250 years ago when he pointed out that
our moral judgments are so rich and complex, and apply so
readily to new cases, that they must derive from some fixed
principles, and since we cannot acquire these from experience,
they must be part of our nature (14). Rather like language.
Or any other structure or capacity of an organism. To find
out what these principles are, however, is a very hard task,
and there has been very little progress, beyond rather elementary
observations. That's why I don't cite moral theory. It is
so lacking in depth or confirmation or argument that it doesn't
help very much, except in simple cases like the one I mentioned
about bringing Rumsfeld to war crimes trials -- unless he
and the deep thinkers he brought to Washington really do think
that the countries I mentioned, and many others, ought to
be bombing Washington and New York.
If we
want to pursue the matter further, we have to consider the
fact that even if the fundamental principles of human moral
nature that Hume sought were known, there would still appear
to be another question: are they right, in some other sense?
That's a hard question; arises elsewhere too, e.g., in epistemology.
Worth thinking about, but we should bear in mind that all
of this is utterly remote from any application to human affairs.
For that, elementary truisms carry us rather far, which is
why they are almost always ignored, as in the single case
I mentioned.
As to the function of the debate on "just war,"
I think you have the answer right before you. Can you find
anything in the literature on this topic, now quite rich,
that suggests that we should adhere to the most elementary
principle of just war theory -- universality -- and apply
it in the real world? I can't think of an example. If so,
we conclude that it is all some kind of apologetics for atrocities.
That seems to follow rather clearly, unless the issue is engaged
-- and I think you'll find that it isn't.
BOLENDER:
Some psychologists have argued that there are limits on human
sympathy, a cognitive channel capacity for sympathy: roughly,
that it is harder to feel deep concern for other people the
larger the group one interacts with or belongs to. Since you
worked with George Miller, I know that you are deeply familiar
with the notion of a cognitive channel capacity (15).
CHOMSKY:
It has been claimed, and since very little is known, one can
claim about anything one likes. It's no secret that one is
likely to have more concern for one's children than nephews,
and more concern for them than people one doesn't know. And
it's possible to develop some evolutionary scenarios for that
(16). The problem is that the same scenarios show that everyone
cares more about children dying from AIDS in Africa than for
one's pet kitten, and no one should care at all about a dolphin
stranded on the beach. Of course, one can revise the scenarios
to accommodate this -- or just about anything else that's
discovered.
BOLENDER:
I think this can be related to an earlier post of yours in
which you look into the question of whom or what to hold responsible
for current atrocities: individuals or institutions? Here
are some excerpts from what you wrote:
“When
Klaus Barbie, ‘the Butcher of Lyons,’ was finally
extradited by France from Bolivia (where the US had dispatched
him, as it did others, when it became hard to keep Nazi war
criminals at their old jobs in Europe after the war), I happened
to hear an interview with his daughter on the radio. She described
what a wonderful father he was, thoughtful, humane, really
a nice guy. I have no reason to doubt that she was telling
the truth. .... The issues are institutional, not personal.
That's why the policies persist with little change, whoever
is in office. Probably Carter was genuinely a born-again Christian,
like he said. Reagan apparently hadn't a clue what was going
on. Bush and Clinton understood what they were doing, surely.
But the policies remained essentially the same, reflecting
the persistence of the institutional structures, the distribution
of power and authority, within which they operated.”
(17)
You talk
about structure rather than size of the institutions or the
number of people that a person is called upon to deal with.
But mightn't the moral sense process information differently
or even sometimes just turn off when faced with information
about huge numbers of people? Mightn't there be a good cognitive
science explanation for much of the suffering which you expose
in your work?
CHOMSKY:
In principle, there might some day be good cognitive science
explanations. But that is very remote from the current state
of understanding.
BOLENDER:
I know that science is severely limited in the issues it can
address: we can't study humans in groups the way we study
molecules. On the other hand, there are some interesting data
found in Christian Buys that indicate tight constraints on
sympathy (18). Here is a short version of my question: As
William Godwin suggested, might true democracy and compassion
only be possible in small groups? (19) Might many of our woes
be the result, perhaps even an unavoidable result, of high
population densities?
CHOMSKY:
It's conceivable. So is the opposite. It's conceivable that
the founder of what's now called "evolutionary psychology"
(Peter Kropotkin) is right, and that there are evolutionary
pressures leading to his version of communist anarchism (20).
Or to Parecon (21). Or -- take your pick. These topics just
are not understood. What is understood, pretty well, is how
institutions function and set constraints on policy choices.
And that tells us quite a lot about how the world works.
BOLENDER:
I have one more question, and please don't get angry. It's
a little trivial: Is "Noam" one syllable or two?
CHOMSKY:
Two.
The End,
for now.
FOOTNOTES:
1. In
Propaganda and the Public Mind (London: Pluto Press, 2001),
p. 189, Chomsky remarks that “In 1962, the Kennedy administration
sent a team to Colombia headed by William Yarborough of Special
Forces. He advised the Colombian military on how they should
deal with their domestic problems. His recommendations, which
were then implemented, with joint training and so on, were
that the security forces were to be trained “as necessary
to execute paramilitary, sabotage, and/or terrorist activities
against known communist proponents.” This means union
leaders and peasant organizers, priests and teachers, and
human rights activists. That’s understood. The Kennedy
administration proposal, then implemented, was to use military
and paramilitary terror against that sector of the population,
and that led to a change in the violence. It got a lot worse,
which is recognized by Colombian human rights activists.”
See www.statecraft.org,
especially Chapter 9. See also Chomsky, Rogue States: The
Rule of Force in World Affairs (Cambridge, Mass.: South End
Press, 2000).
2. By
“theory” Chomsky means an explanation with depth,
e.g., Newtonian mechanics in which a small number of principles
entails a wide range of phenomena with a high degree of exactitude,
at least under controlled conditions. Theorizing in this sense
requires a great deal of idealization. See Chomsky, Rules
and Representations (Oxford: Blackwell, 1980), pages 9-10.
Chomsky is skeptical that one can find much theory outside
of certain specific branches of science, such as the core
natural sciences and some areas of cognitive science. He makes
this point colorfully in the following remark: “In fact,
I'm personally disinclined to use the word ‘theory’
outside of rather narrow branches of the empirical sciences.
When people speak of ‘Marxist theory’ or ‘literary
theory,’ my flesh creeps; I think they are mostly deluding
themselves” from “Chomsky on Mind Modules, Meaning,
and Wittgenstein” an interview with Emilio Rivano, appearing
at www.udec.cl/~prodocli/Rivano/rlaart_99.htm. In his linguistic
works, Chomsky expresses confidence that there has been, and
continues to be, progress toward genuine theory in understanding
the individual’s unconscious grammatical knowledge.
3. uk.geocities.com/dstokes14/Eric/HardPlace.pdf
and also www.firethistime.org/herring.htm The sanctions regime
included the denial of funds to Iraq and the freezing of all
its assets abroad. According to the Committee of the Security
Council, which oversaw the sanctions, supplies and payments
meant strictly for “medical or humanitarian purposes
and, in humanitarian circumstances, foodstuffs” were
to be permitted. However, Iraq lacked the means to buy these
things, since it could not raise funds. The practical effect
was that the sanctions also applied to medical and humanitarian
supplies.
As for
Saddam Hussein “hoarding medicines in warehouses …
instead of distributing it to civilians,” the UN favored
stockpiling medicines and the World Health Organization even
argued for more stockpiling. The rationale was to have a buffer
stock in case of emergencies. By 1999, the stockpiling had
become extremely high, but this was due, as noted by UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan, to a number of conditions including incompetence,
lack of transport, anticipation of emergency needs due to
political tensions, delays in the arrival of complementary
parts and technical staff, among others. The most suspicious
condition Annan noted was “lack of motivation”
by the distributors. Annan’s assessment is presumably
what the Foreign Relations of the United States’ website
meant by “UN criticism.”
As for
Saddam Hussein refusing humanitarian contributions, this could
not have been a sufficient condition for the suffering under
sanctions and the bombings. Before the sanctions and the bombings,
the Iraqi welfare state was one of the most generous in the
Arab world. Nutrition, access to safe water, access to health
care, and literacy were all high. Although Saddam Hussein
was indeed slow to secure contracts for improved nutrition,
the UN also noted that even if this had been corrected, the
oil for food program would still have been inadequate.
John Mueller and Karl Mueller note that “economic sanctions
have probably already taken the lives of more people in Iraq
than have been killed by all weapons of mass destruction in
history,” “Methodology of Mass Destruction”
The Journal of Strategic Studies 23: 1 (2000), p. 164. As
a result, Denis Halliday, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator
in Iraq, and his successor Hans van Sponeck, each resigned
in protest. (Except where otherwise noted, all information
in this endnote is from Herring.
4. This
site includes an article by Richard Garfield, titled “Morbidity
and Mortality Among Iraqi Children from 1990 through 1998:
Assessing the Impact of the Gulf War and Economic Sanctions”
and appearing at www.casi.org.uk/info/garfield/dr-garfield.html.
The following are quotes:
“A
variety of methods were used [in this paper] to estimate the
mortality rate that is predicted by these indicators [the
indicators being child nutrition, water quality, and adult
literacy, among others]. The most reliable estimates were
derived from a logistic regression model using a multiple
imputation procedure. The model successfully predicted both
the mortality rate in 1990, under stable conditions, and in
1991, following the Gulf war. For 1996, after five years of
sanctions and prior to receipt of humanitarian foods via the
oil for food program, this model shows mortality among children
under five to have reached a minimum of 80 per one thousand,
a rate last experienced more than thirty years ago. This rise
in the mortality rate accounted for between a minimum of 100,000
and a more likely estimate of 227,000 excess deaths among
young children from August 1991 through March 1998. About
one-quarter of these deaths were mainly associated with the
Gulf War; most were primarily associated with sanctions.
….
“These child deaths far outnumber all deaths on all
sides, among combatants and civilians, during the Gulf War.
It exceeds the number of deaths known to result from any of
the bombing raids in Iraq even on the days of the bombings.
It exceeds each week the number of deaths that occurred in
the tragic bombing of the Al Furdos bomb shelter during the
Gulf War. That incident caused an international uproar, an
apology from the Joint Military Command, and a revision in
the procedures for selecting targets. Reaction to the much
greater number of child deaths associated with sanctions has
been far more muted.
….
“Studies from 1996 onward suggest that there was little
decline in mortality rates at that time. Since March 1998
the oil for food program has greatly increased access to essential
supplies and the mortality rate has surely declined, but data
are not yet available to estimate the magnitude of that decline.
Indeed, the failure to institute stepped-up monitoring when
sanctions were initiated in 1990 continues to limit the capacity
to carry out timely and reliable assessments of humanitarian
conditions in Iraq.”
5. Joshua
Chaffin, Charles Clover, and Nick Pelham. 17 November 2003,
"US forces set to stay in Iraq long after home rule"
Financial Times.
6. On
their web site, the University of Maryland’s Center
for International Development and Conflict Management makes
the point as follows:
While
Turkey is a competitive multiparty democracy, nevertheless,
the military continues to exercise substantial, albeit often
indirect, influence over executive recruitment. The power
of the military is reflected most recently by their successful
efforts to force the resignation of Prime Minister Necmettin
Erbakan (leader of the Islamic Refah Party) in 1997. Although
military troops never actually left the barracks, this “virtual”
or “postmodern” coup resulted in the collapse
of a democratically elected government and its replacement
by one more amenable to military goals and influence. The
continued role of the military in “guiding,” although
not directly controlling, the political system means that
some of the most important functions of the executive branch,
most specifically internal security, are held by non-elected
officials. Under the authority of Article 118, the National
Security Council (composed of military officers and sympathetic
civilians) work as a kind of shadow government. The National
Security Council makes “recommendations” to the
government that, as the departure of Prime Minister Erbakan
vividly illustrates, elected politicians ignore at their own
peril.
See www.cidcm.umd.edu/inscr/polity/Tur1.htm.
7. The
following is a quote from Chomsky’s Hegemony or Survival:
“The
crucial point was expressed with unusual vulgarity by Pentagon
planner Paul
Wolfowitz. Like others across the spectrum, he berated the
Turkish government for its misbehavior, but went on as well
to condemn the military. Wolfowitz of course knows that the
military is just behind the scenes in Turkish democracy. But
“for whatever reason, they did not play the strong leadership
role that we would have expected,” Wolfowitz said, condemning
the military for its weakness in permitting the government
to honor near-unanimous public opinion. Turkey must therefore
step up and say “We made a mistake. Let’s figure
out how we can be as helpful as possible to the Americans,”
thus demonstrating their understanding of democracy. Wolfowitz’s
stand is particularly instructive because he is put forth
as the leading visionary in the crusade to democratize the
Middle East perhaps with some justice, given the operative
conceptions of democracy as illustrated in practice over the
past century of bringing democracy to Washington’s domains.”
[See Marc Lacey “Turkey rejects criticism by U.S. official
over Iraq,” New York Times, 8 May 2003].
8. The
claims made about Iraq prior to the U.S. invasion are discussed
in detail in Iraq Under Siege: The Deadly Impact of Sanctions
and War, edited by Anthony Arnove (London: Pluto Press, 2000).
9. The
quote is from David Ignatius, 2 November 2003, “A war
of choice, and one who chose it” The Washington Post.
10. The
notion that war is governed by moral principles stretches
back to time immemorial, but classic formulations of just
war doctrine can be found in the writings of Augustine and
Thomas Aquinas. The latter identifies three conditions for
a war to be just: “The ruler under whom the war is to
be fought must have authority to do so,” i.e., a private
citizen cannot legitimately wage a war; “a just cause
is required – so that those against whom the war is
waged deserve such a response because of some offense on their
part”; and “the third condition that is required
on the part of those making the war is a right intention,
to achieve some good or avoid some evil,” The Summa
of Theology The Second Part of Part II, Question 40.
For reports
of the Pentagon meeting: Adelle M. Banks and Kevin Eckstrom,
19 December 2002, “Rumsfeld consults with religious
leaders on war, peace” The Pew Forum on Religion &
Public Belief, pewforum.org/news/display.php?NewsID=1843;
Erik Alsgaard, 10 January 2003, “Bishop meets with Rumsfeld,
seeks reissue of church paper” The Call, www.kccall.com/News/2003/0110/Church/005.html.
11. John
Rawls’ difference principle, as explained in his book
A Theory of Justice (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1972),
is a method for deciding among possible social arrangements.
The point is to make the worst off group in society as well
off as can be. What is striking, however, is that this does
not guarantee that all groups will be equally well off. If
the only way to maximize the well being for the worst off
is an unequal distribution of shares, then that unequal distribution
is the fairest alternative. Precise equality is entailed only
if that is the condition which makes the worst off as well
off as can be.
12. For
a discussion of theory, see note (2).
13. “Language
and Freedom” appears in For Reasons of State (New York:
Pantheon, 1972) and The Chomsky Reader, edited by James Peck
(New York: Pantheon, 1987)).
14. In
his Treatise of Human Nature Book III Part I Section II, David
Hume writes
“It
may now be ask'd in general, concerning this pain or pleasure,
that distinguishes moral good and evil, From what principles
is it derived , and whence does it arise in the human mind?
To this I reply, first, that `tis absurd to imagine, that
in every particular instance, these sentiments are produc'd
by an original quality and primary constitution. For as the
number of our duties is, in a manner, infinite, `tis impossible
that our original instincts should extend to each of them,
and from our very first infancy impress on the human mind
all that multitude of precepts, which are contain'd in the
compleatest system of ethics. Such a method of proceeding
is not conformable to the usual maxims, by which nature is
conducted, where a few principles produce all that variety
we observe in the universe, and every thing is carry'd on
in the easiest and most simple manner. `Tis necessary, therefore,
to abridge these primary impulses, and find some more general
principles, upon which all our notions of morals are founded.”
In other
words, the mind exhibits an in-principle unbounded capacity
to form moral judgments in response to novel situations. The
most elegant explanation of this is that the mind uses a small
number of principles to generate this potential infinity.
For Hume, moral principles are not wholly the result of learning.
Near the beginning of Section V of his Enquiry Concerning
the Principles of Morals, Hume writes:
“From
the apparent usefulness of the social virtues, it has readily
been inferred by skeptics, both ancient and modern, that all
moral distinctions arise from education, by the art of politicians,
in order to render men tractable, and subdue their natural
ferocity and selfishness, which incapacitated them for society.
This principle, indeed, of precept and education, must so
far be owned to have a powerful influence, that it may frequently
increase or diminish, beyond their natural standard, the sentiments
of approbation or dislike; and may even, in particular instances,
create, without any natural principle, a new sentiment of
this kind; as is evident in all superstitious practices and
observances: But that all moral affection or dislike arises
from this origin, will never surely be allowed by any judicious
enquirer. Had nature made no such distinction, founded on
the original constitution of the mind, the words honourable,
and shameful, lovely and odious, noble and despicable, had
never had place in any language; nor could politicians, had
they invented these terms, ever been able to render them intelligible,
or make them convey any idea to the audience.”
Chomsky
uses poverty-of-the-stimulus considerations to defend a conception
of morality similar to Hume’s, at least in respect to
the points in Hume quoted above. According to these sorts
of considerations, if the organism’s knowledge exceeds
its stimulus history in terms of richness, then some of that
knowledge must be biologically innate. The earliest example
of this sort of argument, although with a more religious conception
of innateness, is found in Plato’s Meno. Chomsky is
most famous for applying poverty-of-the-stimulus considerations
to human knowledge of syntax, but he has also applied such
an argument, at least in rough outline, to moral knowledge,
as in the following passage:
“[J]ust
as people somehow construct an extraordinarily rich system
of knowledge of language on the basis of rather limited and
degenerate experience, similarly, people develop implicit
systems of moral evaluation which are more or less uniform
from person to person. There are differences, and the differences
are interesting, but over quite a substantial range we tend
to make comparable judgments, and we do it, it would appear,
in quite intricate and delicate ways involving … agreement
about new cases, and so on, and we do this on the basis of
a very limited environmental context available to us. …
[W]henever we see a very rich, intricate system developing
in a more or less uniform way on the basis of rather restricted
stimulus conditions, we have to assume that there is a very
powerful, very rich, highly structured innate component that
is operating in such a way as to create that highly specific
system on the basis of the limited data available to it.”
(Language and Politics, Black Rose Books, 1988, pp. 240-41)
15. A
channel capacity is the greatest amount of information a subject
can give about a stimulus, e.g. the number of names one can
memorize in a certain period of time. A classic discussion
of channel capacities can be found in George Miller’s
The Psychology of Communication (Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin,
1967). Limits on the ability to feel sympathy can perhaps
be construed as an emotional channel capacity, e.g. the number
of people for whom one can feel deep concern. For evidence
on the narrow limits of deep sympathy, see Christian J. Buys
and Kenneth L. Larson, 1979, “Human Sympathy Groups”
Psychological Reports Volume 45, pp. 547-53; and Buys, 1992,
“Human Sympathy Groups: Cross-Cultural Data” Psychological
Reports Volume 71, p. 786.
16. The
reference here is to William Hamilton’s hypothesis that
innate tendencies for morality are due to natural selection
favoring individuals who behave generously toward their near
kin, on the assumption that such individuals are helping to
preserve copies of their own genes in doing so. On this view,
the altruistic impulse should be stronger for near relatives
than for distant ones, since near relatives share more copies
of one’s genes. See Hamilton’s “The Genetical
Theory of Social Behaviour” in Volume 7 (1964) of the
Journal of Theoretical Biology.
17. The
quote is from an earlier post by Chomsky in response to a
question in the Znet forums.
18. For
Buys, see note (15).
19. William
Godwin (1756-1836) was an anarchist political philosopher
who published Enquiry Concerning Political Justice .
20. Evolutionary
psychology is the attempt to understand the mind as a set
of cognitive adaptations to Darwinian selection pressures.
Peter Kropotkin (1842-1921) argued that the role of competition
in the process of evolution by natural selection had been
overemphasized, and that cooperation plays a crucial role
in a population’s survival. Being naturally social,
humans do not need religion or government in order to be moral
and cooperative; in fact, government creates the very inequalities
which breed crime and hatred.
21. “Parecon”
is short for participatory economics, Michael Albert’s
alternative to capitalism, rejecting markets in favor of remuneration
according to effort and sacrifice with no central planning.
See www.parecon.org.
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