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HISTORY AND CULTURE: Noam Chomsky, Closet Capitalist
By Peter Schweizer
Chomsky talks an anti-capitalist game, but what does he practice? Market economics at their most profitable. By Peter Schweizer.
One of the most persistent themes in Noam
Chomsky’s work has been class warfare. He has frequently 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 percent. The American tax
code is rigged with “complicated devices for ensuring that the
poor—like 80 percent of the population—pay off the
rich.”
But trusts can’t be all bad. After all, Chomsky,
with a net worth north of $2,000,000, 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 favors the estate tax and 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. Although he did say that the tax shelter is
okay 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 the anti-profit rhetoric,
like any other corporate capitalist he has turned himself into a brand
name. As John Lloyd puts it, writing critically 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 $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 79 cents. You can also buy a CD with clips from previous
speeches for $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
September 11 give new meaning to the term war
profiteer. In the days after the tragedy, he
raised his speaking fee from $9,000 to $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 pushlisher 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. 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 website (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 website 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 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 $15 you
could attend the speech and hear the great man ruminate on the evils of
capitalism. For another $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 $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?” defense: “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.
This essay is adapted from the author’s new book Do As I Say (Not As I Do): Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy (Doubleday, 2005).
Available from the Hoover Press is The Fall of the Berlin Wall, edited by Peter Schweizer. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Peter Schweizer is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. He has served as a consultant to NBC News and as a member of the Ultra Terrorism Study Group at the U.S. Government's Sandia National Laboratory. He and his wife, Rochelle Schweizer, wrote The Bushes: Profile of a Dynasty, which theNew York Times called "the best" of the books on the Bush family. His other books include Do as I Say (Not as I Do): Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy and Reagan's War: The Epic Story of His Forty-Year Struggle and Final Triumph over Communism.
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