Noam Chomsky — "The more you can increase fear of drugs and crime, welfare mothers, immigrants a…"
The more you can increase fear of drugs and crime, welfare mothers, immigrants and terrorists, the more you control all the people.
The more you can increase fear of drugs and crime, welfare mothers, immigrants and terrorists, the more you control all the people.
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"The American people are subjected to a massive propaganda campaign to turn them into docile consumers and obedient workers."
"The United States is unusual among the nations of the world in having a citizenry that is primarily an immigrant population."
"The idea that you can have a democracy when the means of communication are controlled by private tyrannies is absurd."
"The whole educational system is a very elaborate filter, which just weeds out people who are too independent, and who think too much, and who are too creative, and who don't follow instructions."
"If you want to achieve something, you build a structure. If you want to prevent something, you mess it up."
American linguist whose generative-grammar revolution (Syntactic Structures, 1957) reshaped linguistics, and whose Manufacturing Consent (1988, with Edward Herman) reshaped media criticism. Closely associated with Edward S. Herman (media-criticism co-author) and Howard Zinn (left historian peer and friend). For an intellectual contrast, see B.F. Skinner, Harvard behaviorist psychologist (1904-1990) — Chomsky's 1959 review of Skinner's Verbal Behavior is the most-cited demolition in 20th-century psychology — the moment behaviorism's dominance ended and the cognitive-science era began. Skinner's stimulus-response account of language and Chomsky's innate-faculty account are the cleanest 'environment vs nature' linguistic poles.
The standard scholarly entry points to Noam Chomsky's work: Robert F. Barsky (Vanderbilt, Chomsky biographer) — Noam Chomsky: A Life of Dissent (1997); James McGilvray (McGill, philosophy of language) — The Cambridge Companion to Chomsky (ed., 2005). These are the works graduate seminars cite when teaching Noam Chomsky.
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