Re: RE: All things Chomsky
Chomsky doesn't know much about economics. Full-stop. On jobs, you missed my point. America is a jobs machine. Chomsky and other ideologues of the left argue that America's economy is an illusion and try to back into their biases by pointing out things like the prison population. For the at least the last three decades, America has created 20 million jobs a decade on average, and average wage growth has been 3%. And contrary to what the critics argue, most of those jobs have not been in low-paying services industries. (You can get all the statistics here http://www.bls.gov/) On a year over year basis, sometimes employment falls, as is the case recently. But over time, the US has created way more jobs than the more socialistic models of Europe. Given a choice between being on the dole and having a low-paying job, its better to have a low-paying jobs.
Though I find him interesting, and I believe he certainly adds something to the debate, I disagree with the fundamental premise of what Chomsky argues. He offers an interpretation and analysis of events that I believe are incorrect. I think he asks good questions about why the media tends to not ask hard questions about bad things governments do, but I do not believe it is solely or even mainly because corporations control the media. The media does not control the population or the government.
Derry McKinney said:My point was that you either misunderstood what Chomsky was saying, or you didn't hear it all, Toro.
Your appraisal of the sports thing in "Manufacturing Consent" is wrong too. Again, sports was just used as one example.
The bread and circuses theory of staying in control has been around since at least the ancient Romans. We are very much manipulated by the media. They control what we watch and what information we have and, through that, they control what we think about and how we think about it.
America's job creation hasn't been all that spectacular either. There are a lot of people either not working or working at low wage/no benefit jobs. Bush actually managed a net loss of jobs in his first term...first time that's happened since the Depression. In addition to that, he's decimated union jobs and shipped high paying jobs overseas.
Chomsky doesn't know much about economics. Full-stop. On jobs, you missed my point. America is a jobs machine. Chomsky and other ideologues of the left argue that America's economy is an illusion and try to back into their biases by pointing out things like the prison population. For the at least the last three decades, America has created 20 million jobs a decade on average, and average wage growth has been 3%. And contrary to what the critics argue, most of those jobs have not been in low-paying services industries. (You can get all the statistics here http://www.bls.gov/) On a year over year basis, sometimes employment falls, as is the case recently. But over time, the US has created way more jobs than the more socialistic models of Europe. Given a choice between being on the dole and having a low-paying job, its better to have a low-paying jobs.
Though I find him interesting, and I believe he certainly adds something to the debate, I disagree with the fundamental premise of what Chomsky argues. He offers an interpretation and analysis of events that I believe are incorrect. I think he asks good questions about why the media tends to not ask hard questions about bad things governments do, but I do not believe it is solely or even mainly because corporations control the media. The media does not control the population or the government.