CHOMSKY: COLUMNIST WITHOUT A PLACE
CHOMSKY: COLUMNIST WITHOUT A PLACE
By Noam Chomsky
Introduction by Peter Hart
City Lights Books Open Media Series
234 pages | $15.95
ISBN ? 13: 978-0-87286483-2
For those of us who know the name Noam Chomsky, our familiarity flows from having read (or read about) his many books on political or foreign affairs. Perhaps his best-known are 9-11, Manufacturing Consent (written with Ed Herman), and thanks to the promotion at the United Nations by Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez recently, Hegemony or Survival. That said, when (or if) we think of Chomsky, it's in the context of a critic, an author, or a scholar.
Who knew that he is a gifted, concise columnist?
Chomsky has been writing and distributing his op-ed pieces for years; unfortunately, American newspapers rarely carry them. In fact, as Chavez has demonstrated, Chomsky's readership of both books and columns may be more plentiful abroad than here, in the States.
That may change with the publication of his newest book, a collection of columns called Interventions (City Lights Books/ Open Media Series,
The real kicker is, why is it easier to read him in
For example, in "Disarming the Iran Nuclear Showdown," Chomsky writes:
"A near meltdown seems to be imminent over
"Today, the standard claim is that
"Thirty years ago, however, when Kissinger was secretary of state for President Gerald R. Ford, he held that 'introduction of nuclear power will both provide for the growing needs of
(page 181)
Chomsky, a leading linguist and scholar, peppers his columns with such insights.
In an age when the nation's mass media knowingly betrayed its customers into this disaster of a war, based on a lie, Chomsky's musings could have been a valuable and necessary corrective. Unfortunately, millions of Americans never got that opinion; instead they were fed the lies of privilege, profit and war-mongering that led this nation into the mess it now finds itself.
A timely intervention might have changed things.
2007 Mumia Abu-Jamal



