Something I have observed from reading a lot of libertarian philosophy is that the 'right-wing' expressions of libertarianism are generally very clear and systematic. — Virgo Avalytikh
Chomsky has written and said a great deal that is political. He is critical of a great many people and institutions; particularly, governments and capitalism. — Virgo Avalytikh
Chomsky isn't God, of course. But I think you might cut him some slack if he doesn't happen to meet your criticism needs at some particular moment. — Bitter Crank
If the critique is good, then it is very useful. If it is not, then it is not.Critiquing the status quo - even voluminously or insightfully - is a relatively trivial undertaking. — Virgo Avalytikh
and they tend to start from the assumption that selfishness or individualism is true and good, something I strongly disagree with. — Noah Te Stroete
I think you might have misunderstood me. — Virgo Avalytikh
What I have said is that levelling a barrage of critiques against the status quo presupposes a political philosophy — Virgo Avalytikh
I am not sure how putting forward critiques in the absence of a set of principles is more preaching to the converted than not doing this. Those principles will likely be at least as polarized politically and appealing, in his case, to part of the Left and certainly not the right.The result is that, in my view, Chomsky does an awful lot of preaching to the converted. — Virgo Avalytikh
This was in response to someone else, but I think it is relevent. Of course it is not unreasonable to hold his solutions to the same standard as the solutions or systems he is critical of. But these are in the end separate issues. IOW perhaps much of his criticism is correct but his solution is terrible - I have often though this was true of some of Marx's analyses. Still, his criticism stands on its own. They need not be hinged. If he puts forward a system as better, well, certainly we are all free to criticize that system. In fact I can't imagine that not happening with great vigor, in the future and in the past. But the poverty of his solution does not eradicate the use of his criticism. Unless we truly have the best of all possible systems and this can be known. Then the response to him can be, yes, but your points don't matter nothing could be done about that and no system could be better. Those are the inevitable lesser evils of capitalism.It's not unreasonable to hold him to the same standard as many of the political philosophers he critiques, — Virgo Avalytikh
In my opinion, human society is effectively capable of scaling into the millions (and even billions) without unduly restricting personal freedom or imposing ill-founding collectivism; which is what Noam Chomsky's political philosophy would lead to. (Well, it historically certainly did.) — alcontali
You sound like you'd be fun to debate. — Virgo Avalytikh
inclusion of unions, worker inclusion on company boards — Noah Te Stroete
a strong social safety net — Noah Te Stroete
In my opinion, the very first question is rather: do corporations even make sense any longer?
We do not need taxi companies any longer, because we have Grab, Lyft, and Uber. We do not need hotels any longer, because we have Airbnb and similar networks. — alcontali
The entire system works like that. Lots of women say that they do not need a man (as a provider). Why? Because the government will provide them with money and free services. And where does the government get the money for that? From the men, of course. — alcontali
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