Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Tuesday afternoon update

- Signs of the coming apocalypse: John McCallum is thinking of running for Liberal leader.

- Following up on a point I made yesterday, shouldn't what's good for the goose be good for the gander?

- Noam Chomsky, fraud. By Peter Schweizer in today's National Post:

One of the most persistent themes in Noam Chomsky's work has been class warfare. The iconic MIT linguist and left-wing activist frequently has lashed out against the "massive use of tax havens to shift the burden to the general population and away from the rich," and criticized the concentration of wealth in "trusts" by the wealthiest 1%. He says the U.S. tax code is rigged with "complicated devices for ensuring that the poor -- like 80% of the population -- pay off the rich."

But trusts can't be all bad. After all, Chomsky, with a net worth north of US$2-million, decided to create one for himself. A few years back he went to Boston's venerable white-shoe law firm, Palmer and Dodge, and, with the help of a tax attorney specializing in "income-tax planning," set up an irrevocable trust to protect his assets from Uncle Sam. He named his tax attorney (every socialist radical needs one!) and a daughter as trustees. To the Diane Chomsky Irrevocable Trust (named for another daughter) he has assigned the copyright of several of his books, including multiple international editions.

Chomsky favours massive income redistribution -- just not the redistribution of his income. No reason to let radical politics get in the way of sound estate planning.

When I challenged Chomsky about his trust, he suddenly started to sound very bourgeois: "I don't apologize for putting aside money for my children and grandchildren," he wrote in one e-mail. Chomsky offered no explanation for why he condemns others who are equally proud of their provision for their children and who try to protect their assets from Uncle Sam. (However, Chomsky did say that his tax shelter is OK because he and his family are "trying to help suffering people.")

Indeed, Chomsky is rich precisely because he has been such an enormously successful capitalist. Despite his anti-profit rhetoric, like any other corporate capitalist Chomsky has turned himself into a brand name. As John Lloyd recently put it in the lefty New Statesman, Chomsky is among those "open to being "commodified" --that is, to being simply one of the many wares of a capitalist media market place, in a way that the badly paid and overworked writers and journalists for the revolutionary parties could rarely be."

Chomsky's business works something like this. He gives speeches on college campuses around the country at US$12,000 a pop, often dozens of times a year.

Can't go and hear him in person? No problem: You can go online and download clips from earlier speeches -- for a fee. You can hear Chomsky talk for one minute about "Property Rights"; it will cost you US79 cents. You can also buy a CD with clips from previous speeches for US$12.99.

But books are Chomsky's mainstay, and on the international market he has become a publishing phenomenon. The Chomsky brand means instant sales. As publicist Dana O'Hare of Pluto Press explains: "All we have to do is put Chomsky's name on a book and it sells out immediately!"

Putting his name on a book should not be confused with writing a book because his most recent volumes are mainly transcriptions of speeches, or interviews that he has conducted over the years, put between covers and sold to the general public. You might call it multi-level marketing for radicals. Chomsky has admitted as much: "If you look at the things I write -- articles for Z Magazine, or books for South End Press, or whatever -- they are mostly based on talks and meetings and that kind of thing. But I'm kind of a parasite. I mean, I'm living off the activism of others. I'm happy to do it."

Chomsky's marketing efforts shortly after Sept. 11 give new meaning to the term "war profiteer." In the days after the tragedy, he raised his speaking fee from US$9,000 to US$12,000 because he was suddenly in greater demand. He also cashed in by producing another instant book. Seven Stories Press, a small publisher, pulled together interviews conducted via e-mail that Chomsky gave in the three weeks following the attack on the Twin Towers and rushed the book to press. His controversial views were hot, particularly overseas. By early December 2001, the publisher had sold the foreign rights in 19 different languages. The book made the best-seller list in the United States, Canada, Germany, India, Italy, Japan and New Zealand. It is safe to assume that he netted hundreds of thousands of dollars from this book alone.

Over the years, Chomsky has been particularly critical of private property rights, which he considers simply a tool of the rich, of no benefit to ordinary people. "When property rights are granted to power and privilege, it can be expected to be harmful to most," Chomsky wrote on a discussion board for the Washington Post. Intellectual property rights are equally despicable, apparently. According to Chomsky, for example, drug companies who have spent hundreds of millions of dollars developing drugs shouldn't have ownership rights to patents. Intellectual property rights, he argues, "have to do with protectionism."

Protectionism is a bad thing -- especially when it relates to other people.

But when it comes to Chomsky's own published work, this advocate of open intellectual property suddenly becomes very selfish. It would not be advisable to download the audio from one of his speeches without paying the fee, warns his record company, Alternative Tentacles. (Did Andrei Sakharov have a licensing agreement with a record company?) And when it comes to his articles, you'd better keep your hands off. Go to the official Noam Chomsky Web site (www.chomsky.info) and the warning is clear: "Material on this site is copyrighted by Noam Chomsky and/or Noam Chomsky and his collaborators. No material on this site may be reprinted or posted on other web sites without written permission." (However, the Web site does give you the opportunity to "sublicense" the material if you are interested.)

Radicals used to think of their ideas as weapons; Chomsky sees them as a licensing opportunity.

Chomsky has even gone the extra mile to protect the copyright to some of his material by transferring ownership to his children. Profits from those works will thus be taxed at his children's lower rate. He also thereby extends the length of time that the family is able to hold onto the copyright and protect his intellectual assets.

In October, 2002, radicals gathered in Philadelphia for a benefit entitled "Noam Chomsky: Media and Democracy." Sponsored by the Greater Philadelphia Democratic Left, for a fee of US$15 you could attend the speech and hear the great man ruminate on the evils of capitalism. For another US$35, you could attend a post-talk reception and he would speak directly with you.

During the speech, Chomsky told the assembled crowd, "A democracy requires a free, independent, and inquiring media." After the speech, Deborah Bolling, a writer for the lefty Philadelphia City Paper, tried to get an interview with Chomsky. She was turned away. To talk to Chomsky, she was told, this "free, independent, and inquiring" reporter needed to pay US$35 to get into the private reception.

Corporate America is one of Chomsky's demons. It's hard to find anything positive he might say about American business. He paints an ominous vision of America suffering under the "unaccountable and deadly rule of corporations." He has called corporations "private tyrannies" and declared that they are "just as totalitarian as Bolshevism and fascism." Capitalism, in his words, is a "grotesque catastrophe."

But a funny thing happened on the way to the retirement portfolio.

Chomsky, for all of his moral dudgeon against American corporations, finds that they make a pretty good investment. When he made investment decisions for his retirement plan at MIT, he chose not to go with a money market fund or even a government bond fund. Instead, he threw the money into blue chips and invested in the TIAA-CREF stock fund. A look at the stock fund portfolio quickly reveals that it invests in all sorts of businesses that Chomsky says he finds abhorrent: oil companies, military contractors, pharmaceuticals, you name it.

When I asked Chomsky about his investment portfolio, he reverted to a "what else can I do?" defence: "Should I live in a cabin in Montana?" he asked. It was a clever rhetorical dodge. Chomsky was declaring that there is simply no way to avoid getting involved in the stock market short of complete withdrawal from the capitalist system. He certainly knows better. There are many alternative funds these days that allow you to invest your money in "green" or "socially responsible" enterprises.

They just don't yield the maximum available return.

INFO: Peter Schweizer is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. This essay is adapted from his new book Do As I Say (Not As I Do): Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy.

9 Comments:

At 2:09 PM, Blogger Skeelo said...

I was going to post this today too but knew you would be all over it. Didn't want to steal your thunder.

 
At 2:30 PM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

Now that's a buddy eh folks?

 
At 4:22 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey Hammer, what do you think about John Godfrey?

 
At 4:37 PM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

Um ...

Well, it has always puzzled me how a former editor of the Financial Post became a Chretienite Liberal, and a left-winger at that, but I haven't given the guy's candidacy much thought.

 
At 4:58 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Chomsky piece is a great example of attacking a man and ignorning the important issues he raises - happens all the time to Chomsky and Michael Moore and Howard Dean and Bill Clinton etc. etc.

In Logic, it’s called an ad hominem appeal because you go after the person not the ideas.

Nowhere does the author argue against the points that Chomsky makes about the growing gap between rich and poor, the reckless greed of people who play the money markets and contribute nothing to productivity or job creation (except delivering the taxpayers the bankruptcy bill for companies like ENRON who are allowed to go bankrupt, but private citizens are virtually prohibited from doing same), etc.

No, attack the guy who protects the interests of his family because the state won’t do it. No health care, no pensions, deteriorating health and safety in the workplace, exporting people’s jobs to the poorest societies in the world — those are the ideas that need to be debated. Not whether Chomsky, or Michael Moore, protects his own interests in a society that puts all its emphasis on personal acquisitiveness and cares nothing for its own citizens.

I like Chomsky’s ideas and criticism of US “democracy”: what he does with his money in that nest of vipers called the US is his business.

What I’d say to the author of this article is: Now, can we talk about the real issues?

 
At 7:06 PM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

The book the author wrote is called "Do As I Say, Not As I Do: Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy", not "Economics for Dummies".

 
At 8:52 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

An evening lamer comeback than expected...

 
At 10:29 PM, Blogger GayandRight said...

I can't stand Chomsky. I'm ready to debate Chomsky with anybody. He was really lame in his debate with Dershowitz and was caught lying several times.

The Anti-Chomsky Reader is a good place for anybody to start. Road Hammer, thanks for this post...keep up the good work...and yes, let's start a debate on Chomsky.

 
At 7:23 AM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

If you want a debate on basic economics, pick up a first year economics text. It's all there.

All of the following issues can be explained with a trip to your local university bookshelf:

- the alleged gap between rich and poor;
- how the savings of millions of average folks on the stock markets provide capital investment for (gasp!) productivity;
- why expecting the "state" to take care of families is corrosive.

The goal of the author was not to debate the far-left ideology behind Chomsky's public pronouncements. It was to demonstrate that he doesn't walk the walk.

BTW, "Attacking a man and ignoring the important issues that he raises" and then calling my so-called comeback "evening lamer than expected"? I recommend one of Chomsky's linguistic texts to go along with Econ 101 and "The Anti Chomsky Reader".

 

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