captain cab wrote:
I dont disagree....BUT (and there had to be a but) in respect to chompsky he doesnt actually have any power whatsoever.....I think he should be cut a little slack for that.
So the author of 100 books, creator of numerous academic theories and someone who has millions of people eating out of his hand has no power whatsoever? You clearly use a very narrow definition of power.
What do you mean by 'power'? Does Wayne Casey have any?
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After all, the people he mentions taking a few sentences from Smith and taking it as gospel are doing so for their own selfish reasons and actually profiting from it.....whereas Chompsky may be equally selective....which is a moot point.....and that's all it is....a point thats moot.
So if I - most of the time earning less than the minimum wage - say that a taxi driver choosing a busy rank with no cars on it rather than a quiet rank with ten cars on it is an example of Adam Smith's invisible hand at work then I'm doing so for my own "selfish reasons and actually profiting from it"? Meanwhile, that multi-millionaire Noam Chomsky - who puts his assets in trusts for tax and estate planning reasons - should be "cut a bit of slack"?
I mean, Chomsky says in the video that Adam Smith thought governments should "end the division of labour"

What a load of nonsense. Where does Smith say that? And why doesn't Chomsky practice what he preaches? I mean, he could spend a couple of minutes a day stacking shelves, a couple of minutes a day driving a taxi and a couple of minutes a day writing books (and stick a brush shaft up his backside and he can sweep the floor at the same time), in which case he'd be little better off than the rest of us. No, didn't think so! Of course, if it wasn't for the division of labour we'd still be living in caves so he wouldn't be able to drive a taxi anyway, perish the thought.
But one of his last statements in the video nicely sums up the whole thing:
"Even to talk about trade, or free trade, or entreprenurial values, or consumer choice, or democratic functioning
is putting us in a world of delusion and fantasy...."
Well of course it's perfectly legitimate to question such concepts, but to call them "delusion and fantasy" is just crude political rhetoric and hyperbole.
Indeed, Chomsky will be well aware of that, but let's not let that get in the way of our own propoganda.
Of course, one of the numerous things he's well known for is critiquing the propaganda tools of business and government, which is probably why he's so good at them himself
