Question: What is love?
Noam Chomsky: I just know it's—has an unbreakable grip, but I can't tell you what it is. It's just life's empty without it.
Question: Who would you like to meet and spend time with?
Noam Chomsky: I have to say, the people who really impress me, when I have a chance to meet them, are people whose names nobody will ever hear. So, for example, in Southern—let me give you a personal, very personal example. A couple of months ago, I learned that extremely poor peasants in Southern Columbia, whose lives were being destroyed, in part by US run chemical warfare, called fumigation, which destroys their agricultural lands and communities. And in part just by the terror of the Columbian state and the, by now terror of the guerrillas that they're caught in the middle of, really miserable people. They just planted a forest in memory of my wife, who died a couple of months ago. That's one of the most moving things I've ever experienced. I've actually met some of them. I did go down and—but couldn't do much—I couldn't do anything for them, I just listened to horrible testimonies.
But these are people with real—and they're all over the world, with real human feelings, commitment, concern, a suffering beyond what we can imagine, but willing to do something for someone else they've never met. And you find things like that all over the place, here too. Some of the most moving experiences I've had are just in black churches in the south, during the civil rights movement, where people were getting beaten, killed, really struggling for the most elementary rights. Just asking for the congressional amendments during the Civil War, asking them to be implemented. Not particularly radical, but quite a battle, it continues like that. These are the really impressive people, in my view.
Recorded on: Aug 18, 2009
http://books.zcommunications.org/chomsky/year/year-overview.html
http://books.zcommunications.org/chomsky/dd/dd-overview.html
http://books.zcommunications.org/chomsky/sld/sld-contents.html

BBC Mundo publica la segunda parte de la entrevista que le realizara a Noam Chomsky, quien destacó que lo mejor que le pudo pasar a América Latina fue que la administración de George W. Bush no le prestara demasiada atención.
It's true. Though not that you'd think so from the media generated narrative about James Wenneker Von Brunn being "right-wing" and "conservative."
Lefty media types have been quick to put Von Brunn into a box labelled "right-wing conservative" and then use this as ammunition against conservatives. No doubt one of them has already found a way of blaming George Bush for the shooting at Washington's Holocaust Museum.
Pity they didn't bother to take the time to read what he had written himself about his beliefs. (For one thing, they'd have discovered that he's a 9/11 Truther who thinks Bush was behind it all.)
And as an ex-journalism major, he wrote quite a lot. Things like:
"One [capitalism] is past history; the other, WESTERN SOCIALISM, represents the future of the West, and the end of JEWRY on Western soil."
The Federal Reserve (ie the US's central bank) was "designed by bankers for bankers."
As Ben Johnson writing in frontpagemag.com observes, Von Brunn "despised the freedom and potential decadence capitalism affords, insisting Jews were “exacerbating natural disputes between the Western States and influencing the results in favor of Liberalism as opposed to Authority; that is, materialism, free trade and usury [the charging of interest on borrowed money], as opposed to Western Socialism; Internationalism as opposed to Western unity. MONEY was their sword and buckler. Hate and revenge their motif.”"
Now, I suspect that "western" socialism is another way of saying national socialism, ie NAZI, but we forget that nazism and fascism were genuineley radical working class movements.
They didn't just appropriate the term socialist to piss off the "genuine" socialists.
Franco, who was probably a conservative monarchist at heart was prepared to use the radical fascists, with their anti-capitalist rhetoric, so long as it suited him. Then he shafted them.
These points are taken from the “Platform for the Aryan National State” of Aryan Nations:
I'd reckon most anti-globalisation protesters at a meeting of the G20 would be quite happy to sign up to these.
He has this to say about Christianity:
He worked for a time at a white supremacist bookshop that had at least in the past stocked books by Noam Chomsky, who is something of a hero amongst Jew haters.
Again, this should surprise nobody. The extreme Right and the extreme Left are not the polar opposites that people imagine. They end up strangely resembling each other in quite a lot of ways.
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