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The Ezra Klein Show

Best Of: Noam Chomsky's Theory of the Good Life

The Ezra Klein Show

New York Times Opinion

Society & Culture, Government, News

4.611K Ratings

🗓️ 21 December 2021

⏱️ 73 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

How do you introduce Noam Chomsky? Perhaps you start here: In 1979, The New York Times called him “arguably the most important intellectual alive today.” More than 40 years later, Chomsky, at 92, is still putting his dent in the world — writing books, giving interviews, changing minds. There are different sides to Chomsky. He’s a world-renowned linguist who revolutionized his field. He’s a political theorist who’s been a sharp critic of American foreign policy for decades. He’s an anarchist who believes in a radically different way of ordering society. He’s a pragmatist who pushed leftists to vote for Joe Biden in 2020 and has described himself as having a “rather conservative attitude towards social change.” He is, very much, himself. The problem in planning a conversation with Chomsky is how to get at all these different sides. So this one, from April 2021, covers a lot of ground. We discuss: — Why Chomsky is an anarchist, and how he defines anarchism — How his work on language informs his idea of what human beings want — The role of advertising in capitalism — Whether we should understand job contracts as the free market at work or a form of constant coercion — How Chomsky’s ideal vision of society differs from Nordic social democracy — How Chomsky’s class-based theory of politics holds up in an era where college-educated suburbanites are moving left on economics — Chomsky’s view of the climate crisis and why he thinks the “degrowth” movement is misguided — Whether job automation could actually be a good thing for human flourishing — Chomsky’s views on US-China policy, and why he doesn’t think China is a major geopolitical threat — The likelihood of nuclear war in the next decade And much more. Mentioned in this episode: On Anarchism by Noam Chomsky Climate Crisis and the Global Green New Deal by Noam Chomsky and Robert Pollin “Why the Amazon Workers Never Stood a Chance” by Erik Loomis “Trends in Income From 1975 to 2018” by Carter C. Price and Kathryn A. Edwards “This is What Minimum Wage Would Be If It Kept Pace with Productivity” by Dean Baker “There is no Plan B for dealing with the climate crisis” by Raymond Pierrehumbert Recommendations: "The Last of the Just" by Andre Schwarz-Bart "All God's Dangers: The Life of Nate Shaw" by Theodore Rosengarten Selected essays by Ahad Ha'am You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of "The Ezra Klein Show" at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein. Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at [email protected].

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, this is Ezra Klein. I'm out on paternity leave, but today I'm thrilled to share with you one of my favorite episodes from the show so far.

0:07.0

This is a conversation with the linguist, the political theorist, the philosopher, the legend, Nome Chomsky.

0:14.0

I hope you enjoy and I'll be back with new episodes in January.

0:18.0

I'm Ezra Klein and this is the Ezra Klein Show.

0:32.0

The first political book I ever received was 9-11 by Nome Chomsky.

0:36.0

My older brother gave it to me just a little bit after 9-11 and I read it and I reread it and I argued with people over it.

0:43.0

And then over the years I would dip into the Nome Chomsky library and just always it's breath is so astonishing.

0:51.0

Nome Chomsky, he's written more political books than I can count and politics isn't even his main research interest.

0:57.0

He's a pioneering linguist who put that entire field on new footing.

1:01.0

He's done very important work as a media theorist. He's made waves in the artificial intelligence world.

1:06.0

It's really a remarkable example of a mind just continually at work.

1:10.0

And it's still true, Chomsky is 92 and he's still writing books and giving interviews and trying to make his dent in the world.

1:18.0

If you just know Nome Chomsky as a symbol of a certain kind of leftism or as a critic of American imperialism, you're going to miss a lot.

1:25.0

There's a coexistence in his arguments of the world he wants to build and then the urgency of what needs to change right now, which includes compromising.

1:33.0

He's a utopian thinker but a very pragmatic actor. He spent much of 2020 for instance trying to convince the left to vote for Joe Biden.

1:41.0

He says he's a conservative when it comes to social change and you'll hear that here.

1:44.0

There's a resistance in his thinking to making sweeping pronouncements about how things should or will work in his ideal world because he doesn't think that's how change can actually function.

1:57.0

Which is all to say there's a deep independence to Chomsky's thinking that I've always admired whether I agreed with the conclusions he came to or not.

2:04.0

He is always in everywhere himself, both when that's easy and when that's hard.

2:09.0

But the core of Chomskyism as I've always understood it is an idea about what human beings are and what we want.

2:16.0

An idea based in his work on language and how we think but then feeding into his beliefs about the political architecture that would best support human flourishing.

2:23.0

And for him that's anarchism but not anarchism in the way the word is often used now where it just is a synonym for chaos or for lack of organization.

...

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