4.6 • 11K Ratings
🗓️ 21 December 2021
⏱️ 73 minutes
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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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