Monday, December 6, 2010

Sublime Filmmaking





The title of the film "Assassination of Jesse James by Coward Robert Ford" says almost everything about the film, almost. But what it doesn't say is that Jesse James gets assassinated or murdered more than once. Jesse James embodied this larger than life Robinhood figure who was a criminal by the very definition of it and a cold blooded killer when he had to be one, but also by some accounts a committed family man who generously distributed the usurped wealth to the needy. Now, this perception may or may not be tenable, but it certainly appeals to a primal aspect of most human beings who strive for that contradiction of winning, ruthlessness, courage and fame, yet want this image of kindness, generosity and some inherent sense of righteousness. All this becomes even more aspirational when the state has failed for the people. James's folklore image could be a product of some of these factors.

Robert Ford ( Casey Affleck ) was a product of the times, a young 20 year old smitten by the image of James, collects every possible piece of literature mystifying the glamorous outlaw as he and his brother join the gang. His "fascination" with Jesse is akin to comic book fanatic idolizing his super hero, except maybe Ford had a certain innate infatuation which maybe not all would share. You want to believe that the ideal you idolize is real. There is something pure about it, not obscured by the ambiguous ideas of morality or decency. But the image is castigated when it confronts reality. This is where Jesse James gets murdered many times over in Ford's mind. As he watches, James sit alone and awkward as his brother leaves, as he sees James despondent with the failed train robbery, as James becomes increasingly paranoid, insecure and moody during his final days. But more importantly, Ford feels neglected by Jesse or not appreciated enough. Maybe all those conversation he had in his mind with Jesse as he explains to him the 12 things he had in common with him did not go according to plan when it actually materializes.

Every encounter with Jesse probably killed some part of him in Ford's mind, which by his own confession "he lost some curiosity over the years" and as he conveys to his brother of his motive to kill James "He is just a human being". I bet part of Ford also died during this time since all he wanted to do or be was Jesse James "You want to be like me or you want to be me". All the players in this dance of death were doomed from the beginning. Jesse James was in his final few days reviewing his life, trying to protect his family or cut off the possible trails but losing his peace of mind. By the end, he just wanted to be put out of his misery. Better to die as a mystical hero betrayed by one of his own which will only enhance the legacy than be caught and reduced to a trial of an average Joe. Ford had committed the act even before he pulled the trigger, Jesse was no longer the same for him. However, what he probably did not foresee, was that people still held James as the Robinhood figure and he would antagonizing them all, leading to his own end. Probably, he too wanted to end his misery, since he would only be the guy who killed Jesse James, nothing more. I feel for for him.

Andrew Dominik is one of the great talents of modern cinema who exploded on the scene with "Chopper", another story of a glamorous criminal although told in completely different tone. By his own admission he wanted to make the film, in a Terrence Mallick narrative with greater focus on tone, on images, on time and space. The film is contemplative and meditative. You can see the characters journey to the point they have to they were meant to. I shudder to think that there has been over evocative and sublime cinematography in recent years as one by Roger Deakins here. The Train Robbery sequence, as the light strikes through the dark frame reflecting from the surrounding trees will be the legacy of this great film. And lastly the score is haunting and evocative like the images almost transporting you in time amidst the snow clad mountains.



One of my all time favorites.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Groundhog Day :- Review





Often you hear the adage, "It is just a film". Well, for most times it is true. But on rarest of rare occasions, it isn't. This is one of them. Like a great piece literature, painting, poetry, speech it has the capacity to change the way you feel and think. It is the biggest compliment I can pay to a film.

It is anything but a preachy film as the "intro" to the review might suggest. In fact it an extremely entertaining and funny film with one of the best performances ever by Bill Murray. The plot revolves around a weather man (Bill Murray) is reluctantly sent to cover a story about a weather forecasting "rat" (as he calls it). This is his fourth year on the story, and he makes no effort to hide his frustration. On awaking the 'following' day he discovers that it's Groundhog Day again, and again, and again. First he uses this to his advantage, then comes the realization that he is doomed to spend the rest of eternity in the same place, seeing the same people do the same thing every day.

The challenge here for the makers was in terms of screenplay, editing and performances. Bear in mind that, the "loops" Bill Murray's character goes through, might become redundant for the audience after a while. This is where the genius of Harold Ramis and Bill Murray comes into play, who seem to introduce some "novelty" factor with every shot of the same sequence. I couldn't think of any actor other than Murray who could have pulled this one off.

It is a movie likely to deceive you in its effortless narrative and casual comic tone. Yes, it is funny, but make no mistake about it, it is a film with a strong philosophical undertone. This is a quality that separates Groundhog from rest of the movies with similar intent. It tells you what it intends to on your terms. It deals with the questions that bother us for a better part of our lives i.e. meaning of life, purpose of life, existentialism, death, god but never preaches, nor propels any propaganda. But by the end of it, you know that something has changed, something you didn't see coming has happened. And then you watch it again only to realize the moment of Epiphany that eluded you the first time.

Every time I am down or losing perspective this is the movie that eases everything and makes me ask a simple question, "What is important?", "Am I living the same day over and over again?". If answer is affirmative for too long, then something needs to change. It really is the most basic philosophical question which most of us fail to confront. Knowing that you are dying everyday, what can be the possible meaning to life ? What can we do to make it bigger than what it is ? Lot of the times the answers are a lot simpler to these questions, maybe not convinient.

One of the absolute great films of the 90s, but more than just a film for me.

Here is the trailer

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Deconstructing Miss Roy.




There are few matters on which I have been unable to arrive at instant judgement. There have been matters that I have taken positions on only to revert later. However, with Miss Roy there is this peculiar element that she brings to the table which has in the past put some doubt as to where she stands or where I stand in relation to it. Is she is the Indian version of Noam chomsky trying to restore the rights of poor and the weak from the elitists who have continued to scour this country at the cost of majority who continue to survive in sub human conditions while the part of the country where India is shining is celebrating CWG medals ? or is she attention whore who would stoop to any level in her public discourse to maintain here anti India narrative which keeps her as an interesting prospect both for national and international media for different reasons.

Lately, regrettably, the opinion has swayed comprehensively towards the latter. Now, before anyone jumps on me for being a hardline nationalist, let me make it perfectly clear that I am no fan of Indian govt. and consider myself to be the one of the biggest critics of democracy as it is practised in India. So, it is not Miss Roy's anti-India rant per se that is troubling. It is the fact that she has not shown any more flexibility than Osama Bin Laden with her opinions. So, there might be times I might agree with her like I agree with Bin Laden when he talks about concerns of Global Warming. But the crux of the issue is whether a "fundamentalist" or a hardliner can ever be or should ever be taken seriously. Do they have any role in meaningful discussions ? Here is where you have to detach the opinions from the person who is giving it to understand where exactly is this person's modus operandi.

Miss Arundhati doesn't necessarily like to be on the left or the right of any discussions. She prefers the top from where she can have a "bird's eye" view and slur oall players involved. Take for instance: Mumbai attacks . Even the most hardline cynics would not have even remotely thought of Kashmir when the 26/11 attack took place, but Roy with her uncanny consistency saw a connection between Military action in Kashmir to justify 26/11. She will very conviniently not comment on the role of Pakistan, the insurgency and the terrorism, the ethnic cleansing of Kashmiri Pandits. She will shae stage with a certain Pro Pakistani seperatist who has unequivocally stated that he wants to impose Sharia law in Kashmir. Why? This is where we come to the Osama analogy, it doesn't fit here anti-India narrative.

Again here response after the massacre at Dantewada. One can site case after case of the blatant that the delusional chomskians are doing yet missing out on the most important principle that Chomsky believed in "Truth". She will not talk of the be-headings or the children kidnapped from the tribal areas or the villagers threatened by the Maoists. Why ? Because their missions alligns with hers, i.e. undermining and overthrow of the Indian state. She will come out and make a statement a knee jerk reactionary statement like this which immidiately rules out any reasonable intellectual discussion and reduces it to a shouting contest "I write this from Srinagar, Kashmir. This morning's papers say that I may be arrested on charges of sedition for what I have said at recent public meetings on Kashmir. I said what millions of people here say every day. I said what I, as well as other commentators have written and said for years. Anybody who cares to read the transcripts of my speeches will see that they were fundamentally a call for justice. I spoke about justice for the people of Kashmir who live under one of the most brutal military occupations in the world; for Kashmiri Pandits who live out the tragedy of having been driven out of their homeland; for Dalit soldiers killed in Kashmir whose graves I visited on garbage heaps in their villages in Cuddalore; for the Indian poor who pay the price of this occupation in material ways and who are now learning to live in the terror of what is becoming a police state."

So how do we deal with her ? The problem is that she does not fit within the usual image of a hardliner or extremist that we associate with. She is relatively rich, she is outspoken, she is eloquent, she is "booker" award winner which adds more weight to her portfolio and she has some important friends abroad who will magify her voice and reach. I think the best way is to ignore her. It is a test of democracy to handle elements which ar undermining its unity and integrity without stooping to the same levels. I also believe the recent news of action or FIR goes against the idea of free speech. Also, any kind of jail time would be exactly what the attention whore will look forward. If anything we have learnt from our neighbours, there is no substitute to playing a victim. It is ironic though that the democracy Miss Roy shuns is same one which is protecting her to right to free speech, considering that she would have been jailed under US sedition act, 1918.

Finally, to the media, grow up already. I know 24 hours are hard to kill but given a chance Congress will provide enough scams to keep everyone engaged. I know talking about a lunatic can make for some provocative discussions and better ratings. But please, ask yourself, would you give the same leverage to Osama if he makes some anti-US statements. Am I calling Miss Roy a terrorist ? No. But she is a fundamentalist and I reiterate they have no role is any meaningful dicussion or solution.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

No, we can't

Barack Obama's visit to India has made him such a huge celebrity here that it's a wonder he hasn't yet been asked to appear on Bigg Boss. I can imagine the housemates being given a task: 'The President is coming, prepare for the president's visit.' So they get all set to greet Obama: Veena Malik puts on her best make up and pouts in front of the mirror, Dolly Bindra personally supervises the making of special gaajar ka halwa with secret ingredients, Ashmit Patel and Hrishant Goswami trim their eyebrows again, Shweta Tiwari puts on a finely-tailored, figure-hugging anarkali churidar kurta, and choreographs a dance for herself, Manoj Tiwari composes and practises a Bhojpuri song written specially for the occasion, Mahabali Khali practises punching through walls to impress the president, Sara Khan decides that she will try and call Obama 'Pops' so as to cuddle up to him, and they all line up in the garden as the moment nears. The gates swing open. Pratibha Patil walks in.

Okay, this is unlikely to happen -- as unlikely as our country is to ever throw up a politician quite like Obama. A few months ago I was invited for a television talk show to discuss "Who is India's Obama?" I couldn't participate because I was busy at the time, but I found the question ridiculous. For a political figure like Obama to rise in India would be as unusual as growing palm trees in a snowfield. India's political system would never allow someone like Obama to rise, and would disincentivise entry in the first place.

Consider how Obama climbed the ladder in politics. He wasn't from a privileged background or a political family: he worked as a community organiser in Chicago in the 1980s, and then graduated from Harvard Law School, where he was editor of the Harvard Law Review for a while. He worked as a professor at the University of Chicago Law School for a few years, and wrote an acclaimed memoir. Given that background, you'd have expected him to stay in academics and write more books, maybe even winning a Pulitizer along the way. (He's a very fine writer.) But he saw a different calling for himself.

It might have been idealism that motivated him to join politics, but he also possessed the pragmatic street-smartness without which you can't rise in that profession. He networked superbly in the local political scene and built a base for himself. (Interestingly, poker was a part of his tactical mix, as James McManus points out in this article in the New Yorker. For more on the role poker has played in American public life, I strongly recommend you read McManus's magisterial history of poker in America, Cowboys Full.) But Obama's rapid ascent in national politics was not a result of backroom wheeling-and-dealing, but of the power of ideas. He came on the national scene when America, tired of the Iraq war and the growing partisanship in politics, was ready for a change. Obama, a thinker of much nuance, was also a speaker of great clarity and eloquence, and galvanized a nation with his words alone. Despite being criticized for his lack of managerial experience, he also ran perhaps the greatest political campaign in American history.

Now, can you imagine a similar career graph for a politician in India today? America is the most meritocratic of all countries, and their politics is truly democratic, which is why they have an incumbent president whom pretty much no one outside his city had heard of just ten years ago. India, on the other hand, as I have written before, has a feudal political system, and none of our parties are internally democratic in the true sense of the term. All our promising young politicians are scions of political families who have been handed an inheritance. The time is past when someone like Obama could emerge on the scene from nowhere and rise to the very top in Indian politics through the force of his ideas. An Indian Obama would be a professor at a business school, a top manager in a multinational company, an acclaimed writer with a modest income -- or he would simply have gone abroad, where the opportunities are far greater.

Obama's visit hasn't prompted any self-reflection in our political elite or our media, though. We gush over him, we get orgasms when he praises India or disses Pakistan, but we don't think a little harder and realise that what Obama says about India not being an emerging nation any more is just sweet talk. We are still a backward, emerging nation, and this is amply reflected in the poverty of our political landscape, where Ashok Chavan and Suresh Kalmadi stand for the quintessential, typical Indian politician. Can India produce an Obama in this kind of system? No, we can't.

* * * *

Needless to say, my admiration for Obama doesn't necessarily translate to support for his policies. While it's heartening to see a politician who doesn't speak in platitudes and is capable of intellectual depth, Obama inherited an enormously difficult set of circumstances, and I find aspects of his approach to the economy somewhat dubious. (Indeed, when it comes to expanding the role of government in America, there isn't much difference between GWB and BHO.) That said, even Lincoln and Roosevelt, it could be argued, were not confronted with two problems quite as complex as this economic crisis or as nebulous as the war on terror. But that's a subject for another day.

* * * *

Speaking of young politicians, check out England. Their prime minister, David Cameron, is 44 years old. His deputy prime minsiter, Nick Clegg, is 43. The Chancellor of the Exchequer (their equivalent of a finance minister) is the 39-year-old George Osborne. The leader of the opposition (and of the Labour Party) is Ed Miliband, who turns 41 this December. In contrast, Indian politicians in their 50s are often described as "young and upcoming". It's crazy -- but perhaps a dysfunctional system deserves senile or our-of-date leaders. Such it goes.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Atithi Devo Bhava - Indeed!!!

An article in Times before the arrival of Obama!! - Nice

What's good for President Barack Obama is good enough for us...

Mark Manuel I TNN

Somebody here seems to have taken the meaning of Atithi Devo Bhava far too seriously. Also religiously. And irrespective of how the ancient Hindu scriptures meant it, or whether he deserves it or not, President Barack Obama is being treated like God in a city where the proud Maharashtrian not so long ago shut the door on Indians coming from parts North of the country.

Our laying out the red carpet to greet an American President not so hot on his own turf has to be the most slavish display of hospitality ever. We thought we were subservient and this, like pink gins in the afternoon and coffee after dinner, was an old Raj hangover from which generations post Independence had not got over. But what we are seeing in the run-up to Air Force One bringing Obama plus 3,000 today is not just the city bending over backward to welcome a visiting head of state, but well, embarrassingly also forward. And that kind of hurts. Not just because it comes at a time when we want to be by ourselves, for Diwali is meant to be celebrated with family and friends, and certainly not with an unwelcome guest who plays spoilsport at the party. Or because we find parts of the city, yes — aamchi Mumbai, out of bounds for our festive weekend and ourselves declared persona non grata at Gateway of India for the nightly fireworks. That too, perhaps with a stiff upper lip — another English hand-me-down to the long-suffering Indian, we might have accepted in silence. After all, a guest is a guest, and we are known to be a tolerant people.

If we can grit the teeth and bear a 50-car cavalcade holding up peak hour traffic as it rushes President Pratibha Patil to Raj Bhavan for dinner, then we can clench the fists as the Obama juggernaut hurtles through silent and deserted roads with flashing lights and wailing sirens. No, what has caused the iron to enter our soul is this servile deference of a city getting dressed up and having nowhere to go because its date for the weekend is a man who will hop from one bullet-proofed and sanitised venue to another without so much as a glance at the preparations that have gone into making him feel important. Yes, you couldn't have missed it this week, a workforce of labourers toiling in the sun to paint dividers, scrub kerbsides, wash roads, fill up potholes, plant trees, shine traffic lights, re-tar flyovers and give Mumbai an avatar that would have RK Laxman's common man gaping in awe because the last time he saw the city like this, was never. And the question uppermost on the poor fellow's mind would be, but what about me? Why am I, the poor tax payer, the cheated voter, not given these basic amenities the rest of the year? What have I done not to deserve this? If it's good for Barack Obama, then it's good enough for me. And I, too, would like to live in a city that Nana Chudasama and Chhagan Bhujbal once promised would be "sundar Mumbai, swaccha Mumbai". For which, of course, there is no answer.

Somebody once said, the people get the government they deserve. And this is true. We promised, after 26/11, to be the change we want. Change, not this! A meek acceptance yet again of government decision for which there is no explanation or reason, just a dismissive excuse... that it has to be done. Well, the damage has been done. To the warm and generous Mumbaikar's hospitable spirit. And to the President of the US of A, we have only this to say, "Welcome, Mr. Obama... and after you've gone, and perhaps miss Mumbai, your Consul General Paul Folmsbee here could send you pictures of the city you never visited."

HERE I COME: Barack Obama, and all around, a city getting dressed up to meet him

Mumbai getting ready for the Most Powerful on Earth

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Corruption Per sqaure!!

Corruption| Adarsh housing scam What makes India's property market the biggest sink of black money in the country? The Adarsh Housing Society scam threatens to topple ministers, politicians and military top brass, but that's unlikely to slow property transactions in Mumbai, Delhi or anywhere else in the country. Some of these, according to anecdotal evidence, could involve as much as 60% to 70% of the payment in hard cash.

"Real estate is where most of the cash generated in the economy flows," admits a finance ministry official, who doesn't want to be identified. He should know. In December, the ministry compiled the results from income tax investigations across the country: of the relatively modest Rs 4,500 crore uncovered, nearly half —Rs 2,000 crore—was unearthed from real estate. About a quarter of the total was traced to manufacturing and a tenth to bullion.

We don't notice it often, but despite its success in modern technology and services, India largely remains a cash economy. We pay the cabbie cash; we hand over banknotes to the family help and despite the growth of organized retail, we do most of our shopping at the local kirana store where the gentleman has a sign that reads, "In god we trust, rest only cash."

One such store we visited claimed to service 300 households in the neighbourhood, supplying everything from soap and shampoos to cooking oil, flour, butter, biscuits and even plastic utensils. The owner refused to talk about sales and earnings, but the math wasn't hard. Let's say a household spends Rs 15,000 per month on essentials. This store's takings would be Rs 45 lakh per month.

Retail margins vary widely, from as little as 5% for soap and shampoo to as much as 50% to 100% for food and baltis. Even so, an average margin of say,a third, would leave the store owner with a profit of Rs 15 lakh a month. That's Rs 1.8 crore a year. And it's all cash.

Every time you see a truck drive by, think cash. There is a high chance the trucker has been paid in cash. The average nine-tonne truck charges about Rs 25,000 for a full load on a Delhi-Mumbai run. If it averages a hundred such runs in a year, that's Rs 25 lakh per truck per year, mostly cash. India's trucking industry is heavily fragmented: of the 5.2 million trucks on the road today, more than four million are run by people who own 10 trucks or less.

The taxman's survey found that manufacturing generates a lot of cash. That's surprising because it should be relatively easy to measure – and tax –what comes out of factories. Not quite, explains the finance ministry official. "In the past when we had excise inspectors physically present at excise gates, most factories had a second gate to take untaxed output to the market," he says. "VAT was supposed to change all that, but people have found ways around that too."

If you drive a car, I'll tax the street; If you try to sit, I'll tax your seat; If you get too cold I'll tax the heat; If you take a walk, I'll tax your feet; Taxman! Cos I'm the taxman, yeah I'm the taxman (Taxman, lyrics by George Harrison)

It's hard to tell whether Indira Gandhi was inspired by the Beatles, but from the 1970s, when she hiked top income tax rates to 90%-plus, well heeled Indians have played cat and mouse with the taxman with gusto. In the early 2000s, economist Arun Kumar reckoned that about half of India's wealth was stashed away as black money. In a trillion dollar economy, that's about $500 billion.

Some of this money is salted away overseas. A few years ago, a Ford Foundation-sponsored study by think tank Global Financial Integrity (GFI) found that Indians had salted away $23 to $31 billion dollars overseas in 2006.

India's economy has grown since then and it's safe to assume so has the volume of funds salted away overseas. But even if you double the outflows to $50 billion, there's still another $450 billion sloshing around the country. You can't eat two breakfasts a day, you can't buy too many expensive cars with cash, so what's the best place to park cash? Bullion of course, but real estate is right at the top of the list.

"It's out there, you don't need to hide it, it can't be stolen and the best thing,it doesn't have a price sticker on it telling the government how much you paid for it," explains the head of a Delhi-based real estate brokerage that does deals for high networth clients.

It's not as if governments haven't tried to keep tabs on–and tax—property. For several years, the Delhi government has set something called 'circle rates' – the minimum prices at which property can be traded in the city. It recently hiked those rates, in some areas even doubling them to Rs 125,000 per square metre. That narrowed, but hasn't closed the gap between the official and market rates. For example, the highest circle rate could still be as low as a fifth to a quarter of what you'd actually pay to buy property in those areas.

"The market is changing for the better," says the real estate broker agehead. "More professionals are entering the market, forcing builders to accept cheque payments, forcing the cash component down." But he still reckons that most secondary transactions have a cash component of anywhere between 40% and 50%. The cash market is fickle, he explains. In many cases it depends on the background of the seller and how much he's paid in cash.

"Businessmen have more cash than professionals. And if someone's paid 70% in cash to buy, he'll want the same when he's selling," shrugs the broker, "History matters, you know."

Friday, September 10, 2010

The Propaganda System :- Noam Chomsky

Noam Chomsky

Lies of Our Times, May 1992

Letter from Lexington April 6, 1992

Dear LOOT,

Media critique has generally focused on how the news and opinion sections ensure right thinking. Book reviews are another intriguing element of the system of doctrinal control. In particular, the New York Times Book Review serves as a guide to readers and librarians with limited resources. The editors must not only select the right books, but also reviewers who adhere

to the norms of political correctness. What follows are some illustrations, drawn from successive weeks.

In the study of any system, it is often useful to look at something radically different, to highlight crucial features. Let's begin,then, by looking at a society that is close to the opposite pole from ours: Brezhnev's USSR.

Consider policy formation. In Brezhnev's USSR, economic policy was determined in secret, by centralized power; popular involvement was nil, except marginally, through the Communist Party. Political policy was in the same hands. The political system was meaningless, with virtually no flow from bottom to top.

Consider next the information system, inevitably constrained by the distribution of economic-political power. In Brezhnev's USSR there was a spectrum, bounded by disagreements within centralized power. True, the media were never obedient enough for the commissars. Thus they were bitterly condemned for undermining public morale during the war in

Afghanistan, playing into the hands of the imperial aggressors and their local agents from whom the USSR was courageously defending the people of Afghanistan (see E.S. Herman and N. Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent, 226f.). For the totalitarian mind, no degree of servility is ever enough.

There were dissidents and alternative media: underground samizdat and foreign radio. According to a 1979 US government funded study, 77% of blue-collar workers and 96% of the middle elite listened to foreign broadcasts, while the alternativepress reached 45% of high-level professionals, 41% of political leaders, 27% of managers, and 14% of blue-collar workers.

The study also found most people satisfied with living conditions, favoring state-provided medical care, and largely supportive of state control of heavy industry; emigration was more for personal than political reasons (James Miller and Peter Donhowe, Washington Post Weekly, Feb. 17, 1986, p. 16).

Dissidents were bitterly condemned as "anti-Soviet" and "supporters of capitalist imperialism," as demonstrated by the fact that they condemned the evils of the Soviet system instead of marching in parades denouncing the crimes of official enemies. They were also punished, not in the style of US dependencies such as El Salvador, but harshly enough.The concept "anti-Soviet" is particularly striking. We find similar concepts in Nazi Germany, Brazil under the generals, andtotalitarian cultures generally. In a relatively free society, the concept would simply evoke ridicule. Imagine, say, that Italian critics of state power were condemned for "anti-Italianism." Such concepts as "anti-Soviet" are the very hallmark of a totalitarian culture; only the most dedicated and humorless commissar could use such terms.

Well-behaved party hacks were guilty of no such crimes as anti-Sovietism. Their task was to applaud the state and its leaders; or even better, criticize them for deviating from their grand principles, thus instilling the propaganda line by presupposition rather than assertion, always the most effective technique. The commissar might say that leaders erred in their defense of Afghanistan against "the assault from the inside, which was manipulated" by Pakistan and the CIA. They should have understood that "it was an Afghan war, and if we converted it into a white man's war, we would lose." Similarly, a Nazi ideologue might have conceded that the "encounter" between Germans and Slavs on the Eastern front was "less than inspiring," though for balance, we must recall that it was "a total war between rival nations for control of a territory both groups were willing to die for"; and for the Slavs "the terms of the conflict" were "less mortal" than for the Germans needing Lebensraum, "staking not only their fortunes but also their very lives on the hope of building new lives in untried country."

The Slavs, after all, could trudge off to Siberia. I return to the source of the quotes directly.

With these observations as background, let us turn to our own free society.

Begin again with policy formation. Economic policy is determined in secret; in law and in principle, popular involvement is nil. The Fortune 500 are more diverse than the Politburo, and market mechanisms provide far more diversity than in a command economy. But a corporation, factory, or business is the economic equivalent of fascism: decisions and control are strictly top-down. People are not compelled to purchase the products or rent themselves to survive, but those are the sole choices.

The political system is closely linked to economic power, both through personnel and broader constraints on policy. Efforts of the public to enter the political arena must be barred: liberal elites see such efforts as a dangerous "crisis of democracy,"

and they are intolerable to statist reactionaries ("conservatives"). The political system has virtually no flow from bottom totop, apart from the local level; the general public appears to regard it as largely meaningless.

The media present a spectrum of opinion, largely reflecting tactical divisions within the state-corporate nexus. True, they arenever obedient enough for the commissars. The media were bitterly condemned for undermining public morale during the war in Vietnam, playing into the hands of the imperial aggressors and their local agents from whom the US was courageously

defending the people of Vietnam; a Freedom House study provides a dramatic example (see Herman and Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent, chapter 5, 5.2, and appendix 3). For the totalitarian mind, again, no degree of servility is enough.

There are dissidents and other information sources. Foreign radio broadcasts reach virtually no one, but alternative media exist, though without a tiny fraction of the outreach of samizdat. Dissidents are bitterly condemned as "anti-American" and "supporters of Communism" as demonstrated by the fact that they condemn the evils of the American system instead of marching in parades denouncing the crimes of official enemies. But they are not severely punished, at least if they are privileged and of the right color. Again, the concept "anti-American" is particularly striking, the very hallmark of a totalitarian mentality.

Let us now turn to the Times Book Review, keeping to the reviews, not the books.

The March 15 issue carries Morton Kondracke's review of Paul Hollander's Anti-Americanism; the author and reviewer are loyal apologists for atrocities by the US government and its clients. Kondracke applauds this worthy exposure of the crime of anti-Americanism, though he feels Hollander may go too far in citing benefits for the handicapped as an illustration of the leftist deviation of Congress.

"Anti-Americanism" (equivalently "the left," or "Marxists") is defined by the author as "a generally critical disposition toward existing social arrangements," the "cultural belief" that "this is a severely flawed and possibly doomed society, though still a menace to its citizens and humanity." Kondracke agrees that "the left gets more respect and attention in the news media than its ideas merit," and is "strongly influential" in colleges and the church. But all is not lost: "there is not a single Marxist or `anti-American' major daily newspaper (or even major newspaper columnist) in the country" and the dangerous "mainline churches" are losing membership. Fortunately, those with "a generally critical disposition toward existing social arrangements" are almost entirely barred, though we must keep up our guard in case the heresy finds a tiny outlet.

Kondracke is particularly outraged that even though "the Communist alternative has collapsed," the anti-Americans (by implication, pro-Communists) maintain their "permanently adversarial culture" and continue to "hate their nation." They "have not recanted," even though they have been proven "disastrously wrong" in their wild claims that the Sandinistas and other evil-doers "represented a bright future for mankind" -- or, to replace raving by reality, that the Sandinistas might have offered hope for Nicaraguans. The criminals in this case include the World Bank, Central American Jesuits, the leading figure of Central American democracy, Jose Figueres, a great enthusiast for US corporations and the CIA, indeed, a rather broad range. But that just shows how awesome the anti-American conspiracy is.

Kondracke does not remind us how the anti-Americans were refuted, though his record suggests that he would agree with Time magazine's admiring review of the technique that brought about the latest of the "happy series of democratic surprises" as "democracy burst forth" in Nicaragua in February 1990: to "wreck the economy and prosecute a long and deadly proxy war until the exhausted natives overthrow the unwanted government themselves," with a cost to us that is "minimal," leaving the victim "with wrecked bridges, sabotaged power stations, and ruined farms," and thus providing the U.S. candidate with "a winning issue": ending the "impoverishment of the people of Nicaragua." Kondracke's enthusiasm for terrorist violence and

illegal economic warfare was no less, and his love of "democracy" is of the same order. The anti-Americans, Kondracke explains, are driven only by "the pleasure of struggle against the world in which they live."

But, he concludes triumphantly, "for all their raving against America, few America-haters ever leave." Love it or leave it, but don't dare to say that its magnificence is flawed. Totalitarian cultures do not often reach such heights. In the next week's issue (March 22), Caleb Carr reviews a book on the 1862 Sioux Uprising in Minnesota. After the obligatory frothing at the mouth about the evils of PC, Carr explains that the "Minnesota encounter" was "a total war between rival nations for control of a territory both groups were willing to die for." For one nation, "settlement was generally their last hope"; they were "staking not only their fortunes but also their very lives on the hope of building new lives in untriedcountry." For the natives, at least at first, "the terms of the conflict" were "less mortal"; they could, after all, trudge off further

West. Carr describes the "encounter" as "less than inspiring," and praises the author for recognizing that both nations were guilty of crimes. Those of the Sioux are outlined in gory detail ("atrocious behavior," "sadism and blood lust," "a particular penchant for torturing infants and children," etc.); the rhetoric differs for the settlers seeking Lebensraum (broken treaties,hanging of 38 Sioux, expulsion even of some who were not "guilty" of resistance, etc.) But the difference is only fair, given the asymmetry of need in the "encounter."

The following week, we are treated to a review by Arthur Schlesinger (AS) of John Newman's JFK and Vietnam, a review by the leading Kennedy hagiographer of a book of Kennedy hagiography. Both author and reviewer, of course, affect a critical stance, stressing that the hero may have erred by concealing his noble commitment to "limited war" (wholesale international terrorism), rather than full-scale aggression -- as distinct from the lower-level aggression that JFK launched in 1961-2, another of those unspeakable truths.

AS is full of praise for this "solid contribution," with its "meticulous and exhaustive examination of documents," etc.; an astonishing judgment that merits separate discussion. Newman's thesis that JFK intended to withdraw from Vietnam even without victory is "essentially right" AS believes. He adds that he, AS, had made the same point 30 years ago in his A Thousand Days, where he gave JFK's view that "it was a Vietnamese war, and if we converted it into a white man's war, we would lose." AS does not remind us that LBJ commonly made similar remarks after picking up the mantle: we do not want "our American boys to do the fighting for Asian boys," he proclaimed during the 1964 election campaign. True, this is not quite the same as the JFK-AS version: for LBJ, it was a point of principle, while for JFK-AS, it was sheer expedience, a question of how to win. But that aside, by AS's reasoning, LBJ must have been deeply committed to withdrawal rather than escalation. AS also

does not remind us that in his huge history of Camelot, published in 1965 before the war had lost its popularity among elites, there is not a single phrase suggesting that JFK intended to withdraw, which leaves only three possibilities: (1) the historian was keeping it secret; (2) this close JFK confidant didn't know; (3) it wasn't true.

Author and reviewer blame the evil military for thwarting JFK's secret designs. Both cite what AS calls "a hysterical 1962 memorandum" in which the Joint Chiefs predict "that `the fall of South Vietnam to Communist control would mean theeventual Communist domination of all the Southeast Asian mainland' and that most of Asia would capitulate to what the military still stubbornly called the `Sino-Soviet Bloc'." "Such hyperbole," AS explains, "confirmed Kennedy's low opinion of the military."

Turning to A Thousand Days, we discover that it was JFK's State Department that babbled on about the "Sino-Soviet Bloc." The "hyperbole" about South Vietnam is, furthermore, standard fare in internal documents back to the 1940's, based on fear of the potential appeal of Communist success. AS also spares us JFK's thoughts on this matter. In 1956, Senator JFK described Vietnam as "the cornerstone of the Free world in Southeast Asia, the keystone to the arch, the finger in the dike." Burma, Thailand, the Philippines, and India "are among those whose security would be threatened if the red tide of Communism overflowed into Vietnam... Moreover, the independence of Free Vietnam is crucial to the free world in fields other than the military. Her economy is essential to the economy of all of Southeast Asia; and her political liberty is an inspiration to those seek to obtain or maintain their liberty in all parts of Asia -- and indeed the world. The fundamental tenets of this nation's foreign policy, in short, depend in considerable measure upon a strong and free Vietnamese nation" -- that is, the murderous Diem dictatorship, a terror state with minimal domestic support, as generally conceded

Perhaps JFK changed his tune later. No chance. Until the end he held that "for us to withdraw from that effort would mean a collapse not only of South Vietnam, but Southeast Asia. So we are going to stay there" (May 1963). Withdrawal "only makes it easy for the Communists," who would sweep over Southeast Asia; we must therefore "win the war" (Sept. 1963). Even reduction of aid to the Far East would hand Southeast Asia to the Communists and have "the inevitable effect" of threatening India and perhaps even the Middle East (March 1963). By comparison, the Chiefs sound pretty mild. To the end, JFK's public position was that our "objective" is to ensure that "the assault from the inside, and which is manipulated from the North, is ended" (Nov. 12, 1963). The internal record hardly differs. Like Newman, AS cites Michael Forrestal and Roger Hilsman as insiders on withdrawal, failing to add that Forrestal explicitly conditioned withdrawal on victory and condemned even pursuit of a "negotiated settlement...between North and South Vietnam" as "folly" (Nov. 13, 1963); while Hilsman, who outlined the October 1963 Taylor-McNamara withdrawal proposal (NSAM 263) in his 1964 book

To Move a Nation, gave his judgment that without victory, JFK "might well have introduced United States ground forces into

South Vietnam -- although I believe he would not have ordered them to take over the war effort."

To guard doctrinal purity, it is not essential to demonstrate that JFK intended to withdraw from Vietnam. Rather, it is important to ensure that debate over the US war be constrained within the dove-hawk spectrum: the permissible choices lie between international terrorism (allegedly JFK) and full-scale aggression (LBJ, the Kennedy advisers who stayed on). And all choices must be sanitized: they are defense against "the assault from the inside" in JFK's words -- in fact, as he knew, the "assault" by indigenous guerrillas against a terrorist client regime that could not survive political competition. If these goals are achieved, the propaganda system will have done its duty.

Sincerely,

Noam Chomsky

Monday, August 30, 2010

A Political Brawl - how destiny moved .... !!!

Story goes long back in 1989 - 90 when india's foreign reserve was negative with country fighting for a near bankrupcy. Just then a year later general election in india were announce. The then PM Mr. Rajiv Gandhi was roaming all across india on his political yatra to trumph the election and just then he sidelined the then vetern leader Mr. Narsimha Rao to look after the political movement of congress and retire from the active politics. Opinion polls discarded congress as campaign progressed with just 150-160 seats coming on its way and it seemed hard for Mr Gandhi to prove his ancetroral legacy. Just then, a brutal human bomb attack on Mr. Gandhi took his life and again india's political scenario was looked shattered. As election moved, congress emerged as single largest party in country with some 191 seats, still way below the simple majority.

Then, south's most senior leader, Mr. Rao claimed his prime ministership with south coming up with largest seats for congress. With refusal of Mrs. Gandhi to interfere, it was among senior congress leadership to decide for prime ministerial post. with no option on their hand and with no strong numbers behind heavy weights like Pranav Mukerjee and Sharad Pawar, congress had no option but to give this thorne crown to Mr.Narshima Rao. The Person who was sidelined by Mr. Gandhi at the begininig of the election and was not even given ticket to fight the MP's election, was crowned with the prime minister post in the most complex stable coallition goverment in the indian history. He has been criticised by the many but many do agree that he was among the best PM india ever had. The fundamental decision taken by him are still the foudation of indian economy.

The then Governer of RBI, Mr Manmohan Singh, who was sighting his retirement from the RBI in few years was picked by Mr. Rao to become finance minister of his goverment to take some bold decisions to overcome bankrupcy and faciliate the great indian success story. No one has yet forgot the 1991 budget that changed picture of the india economy. No one ever imagined that this geek alike person would be crowned PM and will become one of the most loved PM of the country.

The destiny has planned the way for them which they never thought to move on.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Peepli Live

Satire is always a tricky genre for directors. Always a possibility of making a mockery of a grave situation or making it too serious for the audience (especially Indian) to take it. This balancing act between the poignant and theatrical is a precarious one, which is why Anousha Rizvi's directorial debut is noteworthy. Rizvi, a former reporter/journalist from NDTV brings a more insightful approach to the problem of farmer suicides and dynamics of media coverage.

I am not a great fan of Indian cinema. In fact, I abhor it with every bone in my body. But every once in a while a movie comes along that shows ambition and reach which is not reminiscent of our cinema in general. The script while focussing on the predicament of farmers also manages to bring in the role of the media and the politicians. Probably, one of the more well rounded scripts in hindi cinema in recent times.

The plot:-" Natha a poor farmer from Peepli village in the heart of rural India is about to lose his plot of land due to an unpaid government loan. A quick fix to the problem is the very same government's program that aids the families of indebted farmers who have committed suicide. As a means of survival Farmer Natha can choose to die!!! His brother is happy to push him towards this unique 'honor' but Natha is reluctant. Local elections are around the corner and what might've been another unnoticed event turns into a 'cause celebré' with everyone wanting a piece of the action. Political bigwigs, high-ranking bureaucrats, local henchmen and the ever-zealous media descend upon sleepy Peepli to stake their claim. The question on everyone's lips - "Will he or Won't he?" As the mania escalates what will be the fate of Farmer Natha; nobody seems to care how he really feels?"


The criticism levelled out at the film inspite of the positive reviews is the lack of empathy it generates for the state of the farmers. It is a fair argument if those were your expectations from the film. My take is that it wasn't and it shouldn't be a director's prerogative to "effect" the audience. Especially in a satire, where the prime motive is to poke fun at the theatrical failure of system and its participants. Be it "Dr. Strangelove or how I learn to stop worrying and love the bomb" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gXY3kuDvSU, "Network" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQUBbpvXk2A, "Wag the dog" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EnSauj2855M, "Jaane bhi do yaaron" or any other great satire, I never really think the writer was pre occupied with establishing sympathy or empathy for the characters. Humour in life and films was essentially developed to convey some real harsh absolute truths in a sugar coated manner. We from the cities who our so pre occupied with planning our weekend, our holidays, our diwali shopping, job appraisal etc can't be realistically expected to be social workers and understand the true plight of the farmers after paying Rs. 200 for an A/c theatre with sofa seat. It is quite incredible how insulated we are from "less priveleged". Forget the farmers in a distant village, I haven't even bothered with the slums that surround my 13 storied apartment.

Of the perfomances everyone if top notch. On a slight negative, the gag got a bit stretched in second half which could have been edited by 5-10 minutes. It is always a risk in a satire, when unnecessary emphasis is added on an element that audiences have understood, in this case it was of media "sensationalization". I think it was truly insightful in showing political and media nexus and how the cover stories and sound bytes are planned for. Maybe after this, people consuming the news will be more aware of how to deal with it.

Overall, it is a must watch for any Indian.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Inception:- Reality As Perception

The idea of dreams and reality have been amply explored by cinema over the years. Although Hollywood with its formulaic approach could not venture into something that could possibly test the audience's intelligence and will not guarantee immidiate returns, but European cinema has since ever been enamoured by the idea of reality. With Last year At Marienabad (Alan Resnais) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=019kmMFpCcI in 1961, the director pushed the ante leaving the question of dream or reality upto the intellect of its viewers by creating a byzantine conduit or a maze like narrative strucure and throwing away the keys. Probing into the ennui in swinging sixties of Londin, Antonioni's "Blow Up" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Xz1utzILj4 takes us through a "used up" photographer's perception of reality. Through the 60s and the 70s there have been movies that have constantly probed in this area.

With the mega hyped release of "Inception" this year, Christopher Nolan goes down this route within the confines of the hollywood studio system and the not so flexible large chunk of the audience. I chose to write this some time after the initial release of the film to sight some perspetive on the "actual" achievements of the film. Did this film push the medium as touted by Warner Bros? High expectations wouldn't you say? with the studio trying to compare Nolan to the master Stanley Kubrick as his second coming. Well, this is no 2001 a space odyssey. It is fair to call it a heist sci fi genre film. Now, I wouldn't go into the plot or its meaning and try to fit every piece of the puzzle here. I think tha has been more or less done by innumerable takes on the film post its release.

I am addressing a bigger question here. What does Inception mean for cinema? I doubt it will change much. Lot has been made about Nolan's respect for audience's ability to grasp narrative which does not have a linear convention. I think it is a fair point except that I don't believe Nolan went far enough with his vision to a point where a the line between reality and illusion would become non existent. It would have been challenging for the audience certainly but also for the studios who have 160 million $ riding on it. Nolan has also explored and pulled off convincingly the experiments with the structure of his narrative and how the order of sequences can be altered to heighten the impact and keep the audiences on the edge of their seat coming again for more. With Memento ( his most famous work ) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vS0E9bBSL0 which was a masterpiece of non linear structure, it was clear that we have a unique talent . Insomnia was probably his most straight forward work so far still capturing the obsession and suspense of the original. Batman Begins http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eILWtra6AcU and The Dark Knight were the first films about superheroes and "Superhero" films, not reducing the ideas of good and evil to baseline carricatures and dissecting the mythology of the comic book characters to make it relevant within our context. With Prestige, he again comes back to the illusion that the two rival magicians create for the audiences ultimately succumbing to the obsessions of their own trickery. This is a formidable talent.

Nolan's talent as a story teller is unquestionable, but over the course of the decade one can notice a clear pattern to his narrative either trying to be non linear or interspersing simeltaneous events as they takes place in different sub plots of his film. This may not be a criticism but to be among some of the all time greats as WB makes it a point to remind us in the promotion, I would hope to see him push the ante both in terms of content and structure. I think all of us have accepted his command over his narrative but there can be a tendency to lose the characters in this obsession over the structure. Nolan also is not be edgy enough in the films he has made so far. One hopes that he does not get trapped in the comfort zone of the studios or his rabid fanboys and keeps exploring himself as a filmmaker. One would like to see Chris Nolan introducing some wit and humour in his films. The biggest criticism I have of him is his inability to shoot action. For a director of such great abilities, his action sequences leave a lot to be desired with the shaky cam and high octane editing which as a norm is being passed off as "apparent" action, it is mediocre by his standards.

Here is hoping from this master storyteller that he keeps pushing the ante for cinema in the years to come. One of the few rays of hope in today's hollywood.




Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Noam Chomsky on Anarchism, Marxism & Hope for the Future

The following are excerpts of an interview with Noam Chomsky published in Issue 2 of Red & Black Revolution. RBR can be contacted at Red & Black Revolution, PO Box 1528, Dublin 8, Ireland. The interview was conducted in May 1995 by Kevin Doyle.

RBR:First off, Noam, for quite a time now you've been an advocate for the anarchist idea. Many people are familiar with the introduction you wrote in 1970 to Daniel Guerin's Anarchism, but more recently, for instance in the film Manufacturing Consent, you took the opportunity to highlight again the potential of anarchism and the anarchist idea. What is it that attracts you to anarchism?

CHOMSKY: I was attracted to anarchism as a young teenager, as soon as I began to think about the world beyond a pretty narrow range, and haven't seen much reason to revise those early attitudes since. I think it only makes sense to seek out and identify structures of authority, hierarchy, and domination in every aspect of life, and to challenge them; unless a justification for them can be given, they are illegitimate, and should be dismantled, to increase the scope of human freedom. That includes political power, ownership and management, relations among men and women, parents and children, our control over the fate of future generations (the basic moral imperative behind the environmental movement, in my view), and much else. Naturally this means a challenge to the huge institutions of coercion and control: the state, the unaccountable private tyrannies that control most of the domestic and international economy, and so on. But not only these. That is what I have always understood to be the essence of anarchism: the conviction that the burden of proof has to be placed on authority, and that it should be dismantled if that burden cannot be met. Sometimes the burden can be met. If I'm taking a walk with my grandchildren and they dart out into a busy street, I will use not only authority but also physical coercion to stop them. The act should be challenged, but I think it can readily meet the challenge. And there are other cases; life is a complex affair, we understand very little about humans and society, and grand pronouncements are generally more a source of harm than of benefit. But the perspective is a valid one, I think, and can lead us quite a long way.

Beyond such generalities, we begin to look at cases, which is where the questions of human interest and concern arise.

RBR: It's true to say that your ideas and critique are now more widely known than ever before. It should also be said that your views are widely respected. How do you think your support for anarchism is received in this context? In particular, I'm interested in the response you receive from people who are getting interested in politics for the first time and who may, perhaps, have come across your views. Are such people surprised by your support for anarchism? Are they interested?

CHOMSKY: The general intellectual culture, as you know, associates 'anarchism' with chaos, violence, bombs, disruption, and so on. So people are often surprised when I speak positively of anarchism and identify myself with leading traditions within it. But my impression is that among the general public, the basic ideas seem reasonable when the clouds are cleared away. Of course, when we turn to specific matters - say, the nature of families, or how an economy would work in a society that is more free and just - questions and controversy arise. But that is as it should be. Physics can't really explain how water flows from the tap in your sink. When we turn to vastly more complex questions of human significance, understanding is very thin, and there is plenty of room for disagreement, experimentation, both intellectual and real-life exploration of possibilities, to help us learn more.

RBR: Perhaps, more than any other idea, anarchism has suffered from the problem of misrepresentation. Anarchism can mean many things to many people. Do you often find yourself having to explain what it is that you mean by anarchism? Does the misrepresentation of anarchism bother you?

CHOMSKY: All misrepresentation is a nuisance. Much of it can be traced back to structures of power that have an interest in preventing understanding, for pretty obvious reasons. It's well to recall David Hume's Principles of Government. He expressed surprise that people ever submitted to their rulers. He concluded that since "Force is always on the side of the governed, the governors have nothing to support them but opinion. 'Tis therefore, on opinion only that government is founded; and this maxim extends to the most despotic and most military governments, as well as to the most free and most popular." Hume was very astute - and incidentally, hardly a libertarian by the standards of the day. He surely underestimates the efficacy of force, but his observation seems to me basically correct, and important, particularly in the more free societies, where the art of controlling opinion is therefore far more refined. Misrepresentation and other forms of befuddlement are a natural concomitant.

So does misrepresentation bother me? Sure, but so does rotten weather. It will exist as long as concentrations of power engender a kind of commissar class to defend them. Since they are usually not very bright, or are bright enough to know that they'd better avoid the arena of fact and argument, they'll turn to misrepresentation, vilification, and other devices that are available to those who know that they'll be protected by the various means available to the powerful. We should understand why all this occurs, and unravel it as best we can. That's part of the project of liberation - of ourselves and others, or more reasonably, of people working together to achieve these aims.

Sounds simple-minded, and it is. But I have yet to find much commentary on human life and society that is not simple-minded, when absurdity and self-serving posturing are cleared away. [...]

The Spanish Revolution

RBR: In the past, when you have spoken about anarchism, you have often emphasised the example of the Spanish Revolution. For you there would seem to be two aspects to this example. On the one hand, the experience of the Spanish Revolution is, you say, a good example of 'anarchism in action'. On the other, you have also stressed that the Spanish revolution is a good example of what workers can achieve through their own efforts using participatory democracy. Are these two aspects - anarchism in action and participatory democracy - one and the same thing for you? Is anarchism a philosophy for people's power?

CHOMSKY: I'm reluctant to use fancy polysyllables like "philosophy" to refer to what seems ordinary common sense. And I'm also uncomfortable with slogans. The achievements of Spanish workers and peasants, before the revolution was crushed, were impressive in many ways. The term 'participatory democracy' is a more recent one, which developed in a different context, but there surely are points of similarity. I'm sorry if this seems evasive. It is, but that's because I don't think either the concept of anarchism or of participatory democracy is clear enough to be able to answer the question whether they are the same.

RBR: One of the main achievements of the Spanish Revolution was the degree of grassroots democracy established. In terms of people, it is estimated that over 3 million were involved. Rural and urban production was managed by workers themselves. Is it a coincidence to your mind that anarchists, known for their advocacy of individual freedom, succeeded in this area of collective administration?

CHOMSKY: No coincidence at all. The tendencies in anarchism that I've always found most persuasive seek a highly organised society, integrating many different kinds of structures (workplace, community, and manifold other forms of voluntary association), but controlled by participants, not by those in a position to give orders (except, again, when authority can be justified, as is sometimes the case, in specific contingencies).

Democracy

RBR: Anarchists often expend a great deal of effort at building up grassroots democracy. Indeed they are often accused of "taking democracy to extremes". Yet, despite this, many anarchists would not readily identify democracy as a central component of anarchist philosophy. Anarchists often describe their politics as being about 'socialism' or being about 'the individual'- they are less likely to say that anarchism is about democracy. Would you agree that democratic ideas are a central feature of anarchism?

CHOMSKY: Criticism of 'democracy' among anarchists has often been criticism of parliamentary democracy, as it has arisen within societies with deeply repressive features. Take the US, which has been as free as any, since its origins. American democracy was founded on the principle, stressed by James Madison in the Constitutional Convention in 1787, that the primary function of government is "to protect the minority of the opulent from the majority." Thus he warned that in England, the only quasi-democratic model of the day, if the general population were allowed a say in public affairs, they would implement agrarian reform or other atrocities, and that the American system must be carefully crafted to avoid such crimes against "the rights of property," which must be defended (in fact, must prevail). Parliamentary democracy within this framework does merit sharp criticism by genuine libertarians, and I've left out many other features that are hardly subtle - slavery, to mention just one, or the wage slavery that was bitterly condemned by working people who had never heard of anarchism or communism right through the 19th century, and beyond.

Leninism

RBR:The importance of grassroots democracy to any meaningful change in society would seem to be self evident. Yet the left has been ambiguous about this in the past. I'm speaking generally, of social democracy, but also of Bolshevism - traditions on the left that would seem to have more in common with elitist thinking than with strict democratic practice. Lenin, to use a well-known example, was sceptical that workers could develop anything more than "trade union consciousness"- by which, I assume, he meant that workers could not see far beyond their immediate predicament. Similarly, the Fabian socialist, Beatrice Webb, who was very influential in the Labour Party in England, had the view that workers were only interested in "horse racing odds"! Where does this elitism originate and what is it doing on the left?

CHOMSKY:I'm afraid it's hard for me to answer this. If the left is understood to include 'Bolshevism,' then I would flatly dissociate myself from the left. Lenin was one of the greatest enemies of socialism, in my opinion, for reasons I've discussed. The idea that workers are only interested in horse-racing is an absurdity that cannot withstand even a superficial look at labour history or the lively and independent working class press that flourished in many places, including the manufacturing towns of New England not many miles from where I'm writing - not to speak of the inspiring record of the courageous struggles of persecuted and oppressed people throughout history, until this very moment. Take the most miserable corner of this hemisphere, Haiti, regarded by the European conquerors as a paradise and the source of no small part of Europe's wealth, now devastated, perhaps beyond recovery. In the past few years, under conditions so miserable that few people in the rich countries can imagine them, peasants and slum-dwellers constructed a popular democratic movement based on grassroots organisations that surpasses just about anything I know of elsewhere; only deeply committed commissars could fail to collapse with ridicule when they hear the solemn pronouncements of American intellectuals and political leaders about how the US has to teach Haitians the lessons of democracy. Their achievements were so substantial and frightening to the powerful that they had to be subjected to yet another dose of vicious terror, with considerably more US support than is publicly acknowledged, and they still have not surrendered. Are they interested only in horse-racing?

I'd suggest some lines I've occasionally quoted from Rousseau: "when I see multitudes of entirely naked savages scorn European voluptuousness and endure hunger, fire, the sword, and death to preserve only their independence, I feel that it does not behoove slaves to reason about freedom."

RBR: Speaking generally again, your own work - Deterring Democracy, Necessary Illusions, etc. - has dealt consistently with the role and prevalence of elitist ideas in societies such as our own. You have argued that within 'Western' (or parliamentary) democracy there is a deep antagonism to any real role or input from the mass of people, lest it threaten the uneven distribution in wealth which favours the rich. Your work is quite convincing here, but, this aside, some have been shocked by your assertions. For instance, you compare the politics of President John F. Kennedy with Lenin, more or less equating the two. This, I might add, has shocked supporters of both camps! Can you elaborate a little on the validity of the comparison?

CHOMSKY: I haven't actually "equated" the doctrines of the liberal intellectuals of the Kennedy administration with Leninists, but I have noted striking points of similarity - rather as predicted by Bakunin a century earlier in his perceptive commentary on the "new class." For example, I quoted passages from McNamara on the need to enhance managerial control if we are to be truly "free," and about how the "undermanagement" that is "the real threat to democracy" is an assault against reason itself. Change a few words in these passages, and we have standard Leninist doctrine. I've argued that the roots are rather deep, in both cases. Without further clarification about what people find "shocking," I can't comment further. The comparisons are specific, and I think both proper and properly qualified. If not, that's an error, and I'd be interested to be enlightened about it.

Marxism

RBR:Specifically, Leninism refers to a form of marxism that developed with V.I. Lenin. Are you implicitly distinguishing the works of Marx from the particular criticism you have of Lenin when you use the term 'Leninism'? Do you see a continuity between Marx's views and Lenin's later practices?

CHOMSKY: Bakunin's warnings about the "Red bureaucracy" that would institute "the worst of all despotic governments" were long before Lenin, and were directed against the followers of Mr. Marx. There were, in fact, followers of many different kinds; Pannekoek, Luxembourg, Mattick and others are very far from Lenin, and their views often converge with elements of anarcho-syndicalism. Korsch and others wrote sympathetically of the anarchist revolution in Spain, in fact. There are continuities from Marx to Lenin, but there are also continuities to Marxists who were harshly critical of Lenin and Bolshevism. Teodor Shanin's work in the past years on Marx's later attitudes towards peasant revolution is also relevant here. I'm far from being a Marx scholar, and wouldn't venture any serious judgement on which of these continuities reflects the 'real Marx,' if there even can be an answer to that question. [...]

RBR: From my understanding, the core part of your overall view is informed by your concept of human nature. In the past the idea of human nature was seen, perhaps, as something regressive, even limiting. For instance, the unchanging aspect of human nature is often used as an argument for why things can't be changed fundamentally in the direction of anarchism. You take a different view? Why?

CHOMSKY: The core part of anyone's point of view is some concept of human nature, however it may be remote from awareness or lack articulation. At least, that is true of people who consider themselves moral agents, not monsters. Monsters aside, whether a person who advocates reform or revolution, or stability or return to earlier stages, or simply cultivating one's own garden, takes stand on the grounds that it is 'good for people.' But that judgement is based on some conception of human nature, which a reasonable person will try to make as clear as possible, if only so that it can be evaluated. So in this respect I'm no different from anyone else.

You're right that human nature has been seen as something 'regressive,' but that must be the result of profound confusion. Is my granddaughter no different from a rock, a salamander, a chicken, a monkey? A person who dismisses this absurdity as absurd recognises that there is a distinctive human nature. We are left only with the question of what it is - a highly nontrivial and fascinating question, with enormous scientific interest and human significance. We know a fair amount about certain aspects of it - not those of major human significance. Beyond that, we are left with our hopes and wishes, intuitions and speculations.

There is nothing "regressive" about the fact that a human embryo is so constrained that it does not grow wings, or that its visual system cannot function in the manner of an insect, or that it lacks the homing instinct of pigeons. The same factors that constrain the organism's development also enable it to attain a rich, complex, and highly articulated structure, similar in fundamental ways to conspecifics, with rich and remarkable capacities. An organism that lacked such determinative intrinsic structure, which of course radically limits the paths of development, would be some kind of amoeboid creature, to be pitied (even if it could survive somehow). The scope and limits of development are logically related.

Take language, one of the few distinctive human capacities about which much is known. We have very strong reasons to believe that all possible human languages are very similar; a Martian scientist observing humans might conclude that there is just a single language, with minor variants. The reason is that the particular aspect of human nature that underlies the growth of language allows very restricted options. Is this limiting? Of course. Is it liberating? Also of course. It is these very restrictions that make it possible for a rich and intricate system of expression of thought to develop in similar ways on the basis of very rudimentary, scattered, and varied experience.

What about the matter of biologically-determined human differences? That these exist is surely true, and a cause for joy, not fear or regret. Life among clones would not be worth living, and a sane person will only rejoice that others have abilities that they do not share. That should be elementary. What is commonly believed about these matters is strange indeed, in my opinion.

Is human nature, whatever it is, conducive to the development of anarchist forms of life or a barrier to them? We do not know enough to answer, one way or the other. These are matters for experimentation and discovery, not empty pronouncements.

The future

RBR:To begin finishing off, I'd like to ask you briefly about some current issues on the left. I don't know if the situation is similar in the USA but here, with the fall of the Soviet Union, a certain demoralisation has set in on the left. It isn't so much that people were dear supporters of what existed in the Soviet Union, but rather it's a general feeling that with the demise of the Soviet Union the idea of socialism has also been dragged down. Have you come across this type of demoralisation? What's your response to it?

CHOMSKY: My response to the end of Soviet tyranny was similar to my reaction to the defeat of Hitler and Mussolini. In all cases, it is a victory for the human spirit. It should have been particularly welcome to socialists, since a great enemy of socialism had at last collapsed. Like you, I was intrigued to see how people - including people who had considered themselves anti-Stalinist and anti-Leninist - were demoralised by the collapse of the tyranny. What it reveals is that they were more deeply committed to Leninism than they believed.

There are, however, other reasons to be concerned about the elimination of this brutal and tyrannical system, which was as much "socialist" as it was "democratic" (recall that it claimed to be both, and that the latter claim was ridiculed in the West, while the former was eagerly accepted, as a weapon against socialism - one of the many examples of the service of Western intellectuals to power). One reason has to do with the nature of the Cold War. In my view, it was in significant measure a special case of the 'North-South conflict,' to use the current euphemism for Europe's conquest of much of the world. Eastern Europe had been the original 'third world,' and the Cold War from 1917 had no slight resemblance to the reaction of attempts by other parts of the third world to pursue an independent course, though in this case differences of scale gave the conflict a life of its own. For this reason, it was only reasonable to expect the region to return pretty much to its earlier status: parts of the West, like the Czech Republic or Western Poland, could be expected to rejoin it, while others revert to the traditional service role, the ex-Nomenklatura becoming the standard third world elite (with the approval of Western state-corporate power, which generally prefers them to alternatives). That was not a pretty prospect, and it has led to immense suffering.

Another reason for concern has to do with the matter of deterrence and non-alignment. Grotesque as the Soviet empire was, its very existence offered a certain space for non-alignment, and for perfectly cynical reasons, it sometimes provided assistance to victims of Western attack. Those options are gone, and the South is suffering the consequences.

A third reason has to do with what the business press calls "the pampered Western workers" with their "luxurious lifestyles." With much of Eastern Europe returning to the fold, owners and managers have powerful new weapons against the working classes and the poor at home. GM and VW can not only transfer production to Mexico and Brazil (or at least threaten to, which often amounts to the same thing), but also to Poland and Hungary, where they can find skilled and trained workers at a fraction of the cost. They are gloating about it, understandably, given the guiding values.

We can learn a lot about what the Cold War (or any other conflict) was about by looking at who is cheering and who is unhappy after it ends. By that criterion, the victors in the Cold War include Western elites and the ex-Nomenklatura, now rich beyond their wildest dreams, and the losers include a substantial part of the population of the East along with working people and the poor in the West, as well as popular sectors in the South that have sought an independent path.

Such ideas tend to arouse near hysteria among Western intellectuals, when they can even perceive them, which is rare. That's easy to show. It's also understandable. The observations are correct, and subversive of power and privilege; hence hysteria.

In general, the reactions of an honest person to the end of the Cold War will be more complex than just pleasure over the collapse of a brutal tyranny, and prevailing reactions are suffused with extreme hypocrisy, in my opinion.

Capitalism

RBR: In many ways the left today finds itself back at its original starting point in the last century. Like then, it now faces a form of capitalism that is in the ascendancy. There would seem to be greater 'consensus' today, more than at any other time in history, that capitalism is the only valid form of economic organisation possible, this despite the fact that wealth inequality is widening. Against this backdrop, one could argue that the left is unsure of how to go forward. How do you look at the current period? Is it a question of 'back to basics'? Should the effort now be towards bringing out the libertarian tradition in socialism and towards stressing democratic ideas?

CHOMSKY: This is mostly propaganda, in my opinion. What is called 'capitalism' is basically a system of corporate mercantilism, with huge and largely unaccountable private tyrannies exercising vast control over the economy, political systems, and social and cultural life, operating in close co-operation with powerful states that intervene massively in the domestic economy and international society. That is dramatically true of the United States, contrary to much illusion. The rich and privileged are no more willing to face market discipline than they have been in the past, though they consider it just fine for the general population. Merely to cite a few illustrations, the Reagan administration, which revelled in free market rhetoric, also boasted to the business community that it was the most protectionist in post-war US history - actually more than all others combined. Newt Gingrich, who leads the current crusade, represents a superrich district that receives more federal subsidies than any other suburban region in the country, outside of the federal system itself. The 'conservatives' who are calling for an end to school lunches for hungry children are also demanding an increase in the budget for the Pentagon, which was established in the late 1940s in its current form because - as the business press was kind enough to tell us - high tech industry cannot survive in a "pure, competitive, unsubsidized, 'free enterprise' economy," and the government must be its "saviour." Without the "saviour," Gingrich's constituents would be poor working people (if they were lucky). There would be no computers, electronics generally, aviation industry, metallurgy, automation, etc., etc., right down the list. Anarchists, of all people, should not be taken in by these traditional frauds.

More than ever, libertarian socialist ideas are relevant, and the population is very much open to them. Despite a huge mass of corporate propaganda, outside of educated circles, people still maintain pretty much their traditional attitudes. In the US, for example, more than 80% of the population regard the economic system as "inherently unfair" and the political system as a fraud, which serves the "special interests," not "the people." Overwhelming majorities think working people have too little voice in public affairs (the same is true in England), that the government has the responsibility of assisting people in need, that spending for education and health should take precedence over budget-cutting and tax cuts, that the current Republican proposals that are sailing through Congress benefit the rich and harm the general population, and so on. Intellectuals may tell a different story, but it's not all that difficult to find out the facts.

RBR: To a point anarchist ideas have been vindicated by the collapse of the Soviet Union - the predictions of Bakunin have proven to be correct. Do you think that anarchists should take heart from this general development and from the perceptiveness of Bakunin's analysis? Should anarchists look to the period ahead with greater confidence in their ideas and history?

CHOMSKY: I think - at least hope - that the answer is implicit in the above. I think the current era has ominous portent, and signs of great hope. Which result ensues depends on what we make of the opportunities.

[RC NOTE: In previous versions of my webpage, this was obtained by link. That link seems to be dead. Fortunately for me, I had saved the text to my disk. After some consideration--including the reflection that Chomsky's ideas are far too rarely disseminated outside a limited political circle--I decided to copy it here. I have cut a few Q&A for space. As most anarchist publications are not copyrighted, I think I'm safe, but if the copyright holder cares to contact me I will proceed accordingly. The labor of HTML markup was originally performed by Charles Munson.]


P.S. I am posting this interview for the readers who have not come across or who have misunderstood the term "anarchism". Chomsky is one of the great writers, philosoophers and intellectuals of our era. His unfliching belief in his understanding which is to my understanding bereft of the propoganda machine is something that the youngsters today can aspire to.