Wir haben gestern einen Film-Abend gemacht. #CaptainFantastic

Eine Aussteigerfamilie, die in den Bergen gelebt hat. Sie waren alle hochgebildet und besonders. Statt #Weihnachten haben sie den #NoamChomskyDay gefeiert.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXE6ZafkRMI

#NoamChomsky

Happy Noam Chomsky Day - Captain Fantastic

YouTube
QUESTION: Alexander Cockburn likes to tell the joke that the two greatest disasters that befell U.S. power in the twentieth century were the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and your birthday, both on December 7. About the Pearl Harbor attack: you have a kind of non-traditional view of the events leading up to that.

CHOMSKY: I wrote about it a long time ago, in the 1960s. What I think is not very far from what is actually in the scholarly literature. First of all, let’s be clear about what happened. It’s not quite the official picture. About an hour before Pearl Harbor, Japan attacked Malaya. That was a real invasion. The attack on Pearl Harbor was the colony, the military base on a colony of the United States. An act of aggression, but on the scale of atrocities, attacking the military base on the colony is not the highest rank. The big Japanese atrocities in fact had already taken place. There were plenty more to come, but the major ones, the invasion of China, the rape of Nanking, the atrocities in Manchuria, and so on, had passed. Throughout that whole period the U.S. wasn’t supportive, but it didn’t oppose them very much.

The big issue for the United States was: will they let us in on the exploitation of China or will they do it by themselves? Will they close it off? Will they create a closed co-prosperity sphere or an open region in which we will have free access? If the latter, the United States was not going to oppose the Japanese conquest.

There were other things going on in the background. By the 1920s, which was of course the period when Britain was still the dominant world power, Britain had found that they were unable to compete with Japanese manufacturers. Japanese textiles were outproducing Lancashire mills. As soon as that became evident, Britain dropped its fancy rhetoric about the magnificence of free trade. Nobody supports free trade unless they think they’re going to win the competition. Britain hadn’t supported it before it had won the industrial game, and it was now going to withdraw its support. In 1932 there was an important conference in Ottawa, still the British Empire then, remember. There was an empire conference and they basically decided in effect to close off the empire to Japanese exports. They raised the tariff 25 percent, or something absurd. This in effect closed off India, Australia and Burma and other parts of the British Empire. Meanwhile the Dutch had done the same thing. This is the 1930s. The Dutch had done the same with Indonesia, the Dutch East Indies. The United States, which was a smaller imperial power at that time, had also done the same with the Philippines and Cuba. The Japanese imperialists’ story was they were being subjected to what they called A, B, C, D encirclement: America, Britain, China, which was not being penetrated properly, and the Dutch.

There was some truth to that. The Japanese idea was: they’re just denying us our place in the sun. They’ve already conquered what they wanted, and now when we’re trying to get into the act as latecomers, they’re closing off their imperial systems so we can’t compete with them freely. That being the case, we’ll go to war.

It didn’t happen like that mechanically. The invasion of Manchuria preceded the Ottawa conference, but these things were going on. There was an interaction of that sort which continued up until 1941. The Japanese were being constrained by the imperial powers. They were carrying out more aggression to create for themselves a domain that they would control. That aggression led to more retaliation from the imperial powers. Things got pretty tight.

https://chomsky.info/dissent03/

#NoamChomskyDay #ChomskyDay like in #CaptainFantastic
#FreeTrade #IndustrialGame #BritainFreeTrade #PearlHarbor #InvasionOfMalay #JapaneseInvasionOfMalaya #JapanAndUSA
Pearl Harbor, by Noam Chomsky (Excerpted from Chronicles of Dissent)

The Noam Chomsky Website.

> Alexander Cockburn used to quip that the two greatest disasters to befall the United States [Empire] in the 20th century both happened to be on December 7th: the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Noam Chomsky’s birth in Philadelphia.

https://www.alternativeradio.org/products/chon245/

#ChomskyDay #NoamChomskyDay #AlexanderCockburn #PearlHarborDay #PearlHarborColonyBase

Chomsky 87th Birthday Interview — Alternative Radio

The latest in the historic series of Chomsky-Barsamian interviews. Alexander Cockburn used to quip that the two greatest disasters to befall the United States in the 20th century both happened to be on December 7th: the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Noam Chomsky’s birth in Philadelphia. In this exclusive birthday interview, Chomsky reveals his…

Alternative Radio

Let's Celebrate Noam Chomsky Day (12/07)!!

Movie: Captain Fantastic
映画: はじまりへの旅

> They are raised to coexist with nature, are given unique names, and celebrate Noam Chomsky's birthday instead of Christmas.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Fantastic_(film)
https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/はじまりへの旅

https://bleeckerstreetmedia.com/captainfantastic

#CaptainFantastic #NoamChomskyDay #ChomskyDay

Captain Fantastic (film) - Wikipedia

Happy Noam Chomsky Day everybody! 🥧 🥳

  

#NoamChomsky #NoamChomskyDay #CaptainFantastic

Happy 94th birthday to Noam Chomsky, one of the greatest and most principled public intellectuals the American left has ever produced.
#NoamChomskyDay
ZINN & CHOMSKY : Autodéfense intellectuelle - En VOD sur CinéMutins

Howard Zinn et Noam Chomsky, deux penseurs américains originaux parmi les plus importants de l'histoire contemporaine. Tous deux furent parmi les premiers à s'engager contre la guerre du Vietnam et à s'opposer aux guerres d'interventions. Les deux intellectuels ont toujours été attentifs à être compris par le plus grand nombre, tout en ne se résignant pas à la simplification. Avec un grande rigueur factuelle toujours vérifiable, Chomsky et Zinn n'ont cessé de fournir des armes d'autodéfense intellectuelle aux mouvements de résistance au néo-libéralisme destructeur. Voici quelques films utiles pour comprendre l'Histoire, le fonctionnement du pouvoir, les enjeux géopolitiques et structurer sa pensée critique dans un monde qui parait de plus en plus confus, et dans lequel se glissent les théories les plus farfelues, renforcées par le flux permanent des "Fakenews". Plus que jamais, Zinn et Chomsky sont des penseurs utiles pour qui est prêt à sortir de ses propres certitudes et prendre le temps nécessaire pour cela. Mais il n'y a pas ici de promesse de miracle, pas de formule magique qui se résume en quelques lignes... Au delà des films et des livres, pour se faire une opinion solide, il faudra encore accepter de confronter calmement ses intuitions et ses propres fantasmes à des faits vérifiables sur la durée... Une pensée critique rationnelle se construit loin des "arc-réflexes" encouragés par ce que sont devenus les "réseaux sociaux" et cette pensée critique exige souvent de commencer par "penser contre soi-même", ce qui n'est pas gagné d'avance. Photo Zinn/Chomsky (image composée) : © Michael Dobo/Dobophoto.com.

C'est l'anniversaire de Noam Chomsky. Tous ses articles en accès libre https://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/recherche?auteurs%5B%5D=Noam%20Chomsky #NoamChomskyDay https://t.co/O0aCJi09P4
Résultats de la recherche - Le Monde diplomatique

@stigatle Celebrating the #noamchomskyday :-D