Monday, July 13, 2009

Modern Anarchists: Why the likes of Noam Chomsky should be silenced.

You are no greater than, and nothing should humble you as much as the place you consider home, especially if it has provided for you opportunities not available in other nations. It is where you grew, and in the case of developed democratic nations, it has given you the luxury of freedom and human privilege. I love Australia, and although I am at odds quite frequently with our government, it is our ability to grow, learn and therefore evolve that I will always remain loyal to. Australia is the true land of opportunity, and I don’t blame so many foreigners for wanting houseroom here. No matter where you live, if your country has given you health, freedom and happiness, you should not devote your life to criticising it.

Then you have jackasses like Noam Chomsky, a man so revered in the US he has literally become the one of the most cited intellectuals in history, right behind Sigmund Freud (rightly so). In the sub-Ivy League universities of America on the west coast especially, he is literally bigger than the death of MJ, poisoning the minds of up-and-coming academics and providing a one-sided view on the state of modern America. He makes the writings of Dr. Peter Van O look completely impartial.

As put by Bernard Goldberg, he is the world’s most important anti-American American Intellectual. He attacks everything about America; its values, behaviour and generally everything in American society. In his words: “When you come back from the Third World to the West –the U.S in particular, you are struck by the narrowing of thought and understanding, the limited nature of legitimate discussion, the separation of people from each other” and “The Cold War? All America’s fault... (then begins comparing America to Nazis)”. This man has never met an American or American policy he liked, claiming after 9/11 that America’s foreign policy was “far more extreme terrorism”. If there is one thing this man has ever been successful at, it has been systematically dismantling intellectual support for a nation in control of much of the free world. This man should be gagged.

For much the same reason, I give a dishonourable mention to Michael Moore, often cited as “Chomsky for children”. His far more public open hostility towards America has made him more notorious than famous. His arguments are dripping with bias, with his facts often so far spun he is succeeds even John Howard. Take my advice; never see his docos, never read his books (I own them all, and they’re all rubbish), never listen to the dribble spat from his fat mouth. He doesn’t just target politicians, but citizens (circa “Stupid White Men”) and everyone else he considers sub-par. It isn’t even like he’s educated – he’s a college drop out. He isn’t an intellectual, he isn’t an academic, he isn’t anything. If I get strung up by my heels for what I write in a simple blog, then this ass should be strung up by his neck. There is nothing but virulent garbage spitting from behind his teeth; he too needs to be gagged.

What honestly got me started on this rant was a woman at a second-hand book store in Fremantle, who when noticing me buy political texts, questioned if I had read anything by Chomsky or Gore. I of course replied they’re both rubbish (Gore not as much, but I hate is desperate spotlight-grabbing. He lost, he should get over it and stop trying to return himself to the front bench), and left. I have read essays by Chomsky, own three of Al Gore’s books and three of Michael Moore’s. I have earned the right to criticize, because they all need to step back and stop being so high and mighty. It’s spin at its finest, and these dicks doctor themselves out of experience. I don’t buy it, and neither should anyone else. Seriously, bend over, grab a hold of the stick, and pull it out of your ass. People hate you.

The honest fact is that criticism of governments is necessary, it keeps parliament in check and keeps the power bases spread. These men are not criticising their governments, they are criticising their country, their culture. They judge their nation based on what it should be, rather than what it is. I am a Liberal, and therefore am a sworn enemy of the Labor government, but I am not stupid enough to actually believe the Liberals should be in power right now, especially after the last few weeks and the party splits being made extremely public. These men see the world from their own narrow-minded eyes and are too stubborn to shift their ideologies and see the greater picture. They are not rational.

America is a great, however misled nation. But until the high horses are tied up and the ass-sticks are extracted, the world will never be analysed through impartial eyes. These men are anarchists; they will feed off sedition and chaos until the modern Liberal Democratic tradition is bled dry.

So next time you see a Sicko on television, or feel the need to cite On Nature and Language, remember what these men represent, and find another source of information. You’d have better luck with Charles Firth, at least you’d get a good laugh.

xXx

2 comments:

Tippy Cup said...

Actually I agree with your hate for micheal moore, although I'd say that I hate him much more than you do.

He does more harm to the far left than good.

ChannelingGinny said...

I love you! As an American I get quite bent out of shape when people, especially Americans, criticize our country. My response is two-fold: If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem; and if you don't like it you can leave.

I have yet to see Michael Moore, Al Gore or Noam Chomsky provide any solutions to the so-called problems they spout on about. Personally, I think anything that the last administration (GW Bush) endorsed these people would vehemently oppose. In fact, they have spent so much time opposing America that when Obama came out and upheld some of the Bush-era policies these people had no choice but to slam Obama, the very person they thought would "save America".

I'm glad I stumbled across your blog (from a link on VTM). I like getting perspectives from other countries.