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DAVID BARSAMIAN: One of the heroes of the current right-wing
revival... is Adam Smith. You've done some pretty impressive
research on Smith that has excavated... a lot of information
that's not coming out. You've often quoted him describing the
"vile maxim of the masters of mankind: all for ourselves
and nothing for other people."
NOAM CHOMSKY: I didn't do any research at all on Smith. I just
read him. There's no research. Just read it. He's
pre-capitalist, a figure of the Enlightenment. What we would
call capitalism he despised. People read snippets of Adam Smith,
the few phrases they teach in school. Everybody reads the first
paragraph of The Wealth of Nations where he talks about how
wonderful the division of labor is. But not many people get to
the point hundreds of pages later, where he says that division
of labor will destroy human beings and turn people into
creatures as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human
being to be. And therefore in any civilized society the
government is going to have to take some measures to prevent
division of labor from proceeding to its limits.
He did give an argument for markets, but the argument was
that under conditions of perfect liberty, markets will lead to
perfect equality. That's the argument for them, because he
thought that equality of condition (not just opportunity) is
what you should be aiming at. It goes on and on. He gave a
devastating critique of what we would call North-South policies.
He was talking about England and India. He bitterly condemned
the British experiments they were carrying out which were
devastating India.
He also made remarks which ought to be truisms about the way
states work. He pointed out that its totally senseless to talk
about a nation and what we would nowadays call "national
interests." He simply observed in passing, because it's so
obvious, that in England, which is what he's discussing -- and
it was the most democratic society of the day -- the principal
architects of policy are the "merchants and
manufacturers," and they make certain that their own
interests are, in his words, "most peculiarly attended
to," no matter what the effect on others, including the
people of England who, he argued, suffered from their policies.
He didn't have the data to prove it at the time, but he was
probably right.
This truism was, a century later, called class analysis, but
you don't have to go to Marx to find it. It's very explicit in
Adam Smith. It's so obvious that any ten-year-old can see it. So
he didn't make a big point of it. He just mentioned it. But
that's correct. If you read through his work, he's intelligent.
He's a person who was from the Enlightenment. His driving
motives were the assumption that people were guided by sympathy
and feelings of solidarity and the need for control of their own
work, much like other Enlightenment and early Romantic thinkers.
He's part of that period, the Scottish Enlightenment.
The version of him that's given today is just ridiculous. But
I didn't have to any research to find this out. All you have to
do is read. If you're literate, you'll find it out. I did do a
little research in the way it's treated, and that's interesting.
For example, the University of Chicago, the great bastion of
free market economics, etc., etc., published a bicentennial
edition of the hero, a scholarly edition with all the footnotes
and the introduction by a Nobel Prize winner, George Stigler, a
huge index, a real scholarly edition. That's the one I used.
It's the best edition. The scholarly framework was very
interesting, including Stigler's introduction. It's likely he
never opened The Wealth of Nations. Just about everything he
said about the book was completely false. I went through a bunch
of examples in writing about it, in Year 501 and elsewhere.
But even more interesting in some ways was the index. Adam
Smith is very well known for his advocacy of division of labor.
Take a look at "division of labor" in the index and
there are lots and lots of things listed. But there's one
missing, namely his denunciation of division of labor, the one I
just cited. That's somehow missing from the index. It goes on
like this. I wouldn't call this research because it's ten
minutes' work, but if you look at the scholarship, then it's
interesting.
I want to be clear about this. There is good Smith
scholarship. If you look at the serious Smith scholarship,
nothing I'm saying is any surprise to anyone. How could it be?
You open the book and you read it and it's staring you right in
the face. On the other hand if you look at the myth of Adam
Smith, which is the only one we get, the discrepancy between
that and the reality is enormous.
This is true of classical liberalism in general. The founders
of classical liberalism, people like Adam Smith and Wilhelm von
Humboldt, who is one of the great exponents of classical
liberalism, and who inspired John Stuart Mill -- they were what
we would call libertarian socialists, at least that ïs the way
I read them. For example, Humboldt, like Smith, says, Consider a
craftsman who builds some beautiful thing. Humboldt says if he
does it under external coercion, like pay, for wages, we may
admire what he does but we despise what he is. On the other
hand, if he does it out of his own free, creative expression of
himself, under free will, not under external coercion of wage
labor, then we also admire what he is because he's a human
being. He said any decent socioeconomic system will be based on
the assumption that people have the freedom to inquire and
create -- since that's the fundamental nature of humans -- in
free association with others, but certainly not under the kinds
of external constraints that came to be called capitalism.
It's the same when you read Jefferson. He lived a half
century later, so he saw state capitalism developing, and he
despised it, of course. He said it's going to lead to a form of
absolutism worse than the one we defended ourselves against. In
fact, if you run through this whole period you see a very clear,
sharp critique of what we would later call capitalism and
certainly of the twentieth century version of it, which is
designed to destroy individual, even entrepreneurial capitalism.
There's a side current here which is rarely looked at but
which is also quite fascinating. That's the working class
literature of the nineteenth century. They didn't read Adam
Smith and Wilhelm von Humboldt, but they're saying the same
things. Read journals put out by the people called the
"factory girls of Lowell," young women in the
factories, mechanics, and other working people who were running
their own newspapers. It's the same kind of critique. There was
a real battle fought by working people in England and the U.S.
to defend themselves against what they called the degradation
and oppression and violence of the industrial capitalist system,
which was not only dehumanizing them but was even radically
reducing their intellectual level. So, you go back to the
mid-nineteenth century and these so-called "factory
girls," young girls working in the Lowell [Massachusetts]
mills, were reading serious contemporary literature. They
recognized that the point of the system was to turn them into
tools who would be manipulated, degraded, kicked around, and so
on. And they fought against it bitterly for a long period.
That's the history of the rise of capitalism.
The other part of the story is the development of
corporations, which is an interesting story in itself. Adam
Smith didn't say much about them, but he did criticize the early
stages of them. Jefferson lived long enough to see the
beginnings, and he was very strongly opposed to them. But the
development of corporations really took place in the early
twentieth century and very late in the nineteenth century.
Originally, corporations existed as a public service. People
would get together to build a bridge and they would be
incorporated for that purpose by the state. They built the
bridge and that's it. They were supposed to have a public
interest function. Well into the 1870s, states were removing
corporate charters. They were granted by the state. They didn't
have any other authority. They were fictions. They were removing
corporate charters because they weren't serving a public
function. But then you get into the period of the trusts and
various efforts to consolidate power that were beginning to be
made in the late nineteenth century. It's interesting to look at
the literature. The courts didn't really accept it. There were
some hints about it. It wasn't until the early twentieth century
that courts and lawyers designed a new socioeconomic system. It
was never done by legislation. It was done mostly by courts and
lawyers and the power they could exercise over individual
states. New Jersey was the first state to offer corporations any
right they wanted. Of course, all the capital in the country
suddenly started to flow to New Jersey, for obvious reasons.
Then the other states had to do the same thing just to defend
themselves or be wiped out. It's kind of a small-scale
globalization. Then the courts and the corporate lawyers came
along and created a whole new body of doctrine which gave
corporations authority and power that they never had before. If
you look at the background of it, it's the same background that
led to fascism and Bolshevism. A lot of it was supported by
people called progressives, for these reasons: They said,
individual rights are gone. We are in a period of
corporatization of power, consolidation of power,
centralization. That's supposed to be good if you're a
progressive, like a Marxist-Leninist. Out of that same
background came three major things: fascism, Bolshevism, and
corporate tyranny. They all grew out of the same more or less
Hegelian roots. It's fairly recent. We think of corporations as
immutable, but they were designed. It was a conscious design
which worked as Adam Smith said: the principal architects of
policy consolidate state power and use it for their interests.
It was certainly not popular will. It's basically court
decisions and lawyers' decisions, which created a form of
private tyranny which is now more massive in many ways than even
state tyranny was. These are major parts of modern twentieth
century history. The classical liberals would be horrified. They
didn't even imagine this. But the smaller things that they saw,
they were already horrified about. This would have totally
scandalized Adam Smith or Jefferson or anyone like that....
BARSAMIAN: ....You're very patient with people, particularly
people who ask the most inane kinds of questions. Is this
something you've cultivated?
CHOMSKY: First of all, I'm usually fuming inside, so what you
see on the outside isn't necessarily what's inside. But as far
as questions, the only thing I ever get irritated about is elite
intellectuals, the stuff they do I do find irritating. I
shouldn't. I should expect it. But I do find it irritating. But
on the other hand, what you're describing as inane questions
usually strike me as perfectly honest questions. People have no
reason to believe anything other than what they're saying. If
you think about where the questioner is coming from, what the
person has been exposed to, that's a very rational and
intelligent question. It may sound inane from some other point
of view, but it's not at all inane from within the framework in
which it's being raised. It's usually quite reasonable. So
there's nothing to be irritated about.
You may be sorry about the conditions in which the questions
arise. The thing to do is to try to help them get out of their
intellectual confinement, which is not just accidental, as I
mentioned. There are huge efforts that do go into making people,
to borrow Adam Smith's phrase, "as stupid and ignorant as
it is possible for a human being to be." A lot of the
educational system is designed for that, if you think about it,
it's designed for obedience and passivity. From childhood, a lot
of it is designed to prevent people from being independent and
creative. If you're independent-minded in school, you're
probably going to get into trouble very early on. That's not the
trait that's being preferred or cultivated. When people live
through all this stuff, plus corporate propaganda, plus
television, plus the press and the whole mass, the deluge of
ideological distortion that goes on, they ask questions that
from another point of view are completely reasonable....
BARSAMIAN: At the Mellon
lecture that you gave in Chicago... you focused primarily on
the ideas of John Dewey and Bertrand Russell [regarding
education]...
CHOMSKY: ... These were highly libertarian ideas. Dewey
himself comes straight from the American mainstream. People who
read what he actually said would now consider him some far-out
anti-American lunatic or something. He was expressing mainstream
thinking before the ideological system had so grotesquely
distorted the tradition. By now, it's unrecognizable. For
example, not only did he agree with the whole Enlightenment
tradition that, as he put it, "the goal of production is to
produce free people," -- "free men," he said, but
that's many years ago. That's the goal of production, not to
produce commodities. He was a major theorist of democracy. There
were many different, conflicting strands of democratic theory,
but the one I'm talking about held that democracy requires
dissolution of private power. He said as long as there is
private control over the economic system, talk about democracy
is a joke. Repeating basically Adam Smith, Dewey said, Politics
is the shadow that big business casts over society. He said
attenuating the shadow doesn't do much. Reforms are still going
to leave it tyrannical. Basically, a classical liberal view. His
main point was that you can't even talk about democracy until
you have democratic control of industry, commerce, banking,
everything. That means control by the people who work in the
institutions, and the communities.
These are standard libertarian socialist and anarchist ideas
which go straight back to the Enlightenment, an outgrowth of the
views of the kind that we were talking about before from
classical liberalism. Dewey represented these in the modern
period, as did Bertrand Russell, from another tradition, but
again with roots in the Enlightenment. These were two of the
major, if not the two major thinkers, of the twentieth century,
whose ideas are about as well known as the real Adam Smith.
Which is a sign of how efficient the educational system has
been, and the propaganda system, in simply destroying even our
awareness of our own immediate intellectual background.
BARSAMIAN: In that same Mellon lecture, you paraphrased
Russell on education. You said that he promoted the idea that
education is not to be viewed as something like filling a vessel
with water, but rather assisting a flower to grow in its own
way...
CHOMSKY: That's an eighteenth century idea. I don't know if
Russell knew about it or reinvented it, but you read that as
standard in early Enlightenment literature. That's the image
that was used... Humboldt, the founder of classical liberalism,
his view was that education is a matter of laying out a string
along which the child will develop, but in its own way. You may
do some guiding. That's what serious education would be from
kindergarten up through graduate school. You do get it in
advanced science, because there's no other way to do it.
But most of the educational system is quite different. Mass
education was designed to turn independent farmers into docile,
passive tools of production. That was its primary purpose. And
don't think people didn't know it. They knew it and they fought
against it. There was a lot of resistance to mass education for
exactly that reason. It was also understood by the elites.
Emerson once said something about how we're educating them to
keep them from our throats. If you don't educate them, what we
call "education," they're going to take control --
"they" being what Alexander Hamilton called the
"great beast," namely the people. The anti-democratic
thrust of opinion in what are called democratic societies is
really ferocious. And for good reason. Because the freer the
society gets, the more dangerous the great beast becomes and the
more you have to be careful to cage it somehow.
On the other hand, there are exceptions, and Dewey and
Russell are among those exceptions. But they are completely
marginalized and unknown, although everybody sings praises to
them, as they do to Adam Smith. What they actually said would be
considered intolerable in the autocratic climate of dominant
opinion. The totalitarian element of it is quite striking. The
very fact that the concept "anti-American" can exist
-- forget the way it's used -- exhibits a totalitarian streak
that's pretty dramatic. That concept, anti-Americanism -- the
only real counterpart to it in the modern world is anti-Sovietism.
In the Soviet Union, the worst crime was to be anti-Soviet.
That's the hallmark of a totalitarian society, to have concepts
like anti-Sovietism or anti-Americanism. Here it's considered
quite natural. Books on anti-Americanism, by people who are
basically Stalinist clones, are highly respected. That's true of
Anglo-American societies, which are strikingly the more
democratic societies. I think there's a correlation there...As
freedom grows, the need to coerce and control opinion also grows
if you want to prevent the great beast from doing something with
its freedom....
... Sam Bowles and Herb Gintis, two economists, in their work
on the American educational system some years back... pointed
out that the educational system is divided into fragments. The
part that's directed toward working people and the general
population is indeed designed to impose obedience. But the
education for elites can't quite do that. It has to allow
creativity and independence. Otherwise they won't be able to do
their job of making money. You find the same thing in the press.
That's why I read the Wall Street Journal and the Financial
Times and Business Week. They just have to tell the truth.
That's a contradiction in the mainstream press, too. Take, say,
the New York Times or the Washington Post. They have dual
functions and they're contradictory. One function is to subdue
the great beast. But another function is to let their audience,
which is an elite audience, gain a tolerably realistic picture
of what's going on in the world. Otherwise, they won't be able
to satisfy their own needs. That's a contradiction that runs
right through the educational system as well. It's totally
independent of another factor, namely just professional
integrity, which a lot of people have: honesty, no matter what
the external constraints are. That leads to various
complexities. If you really look at the details of how the
newspapers work, you find these contradictions and problems
playing themselves out in complicated ways....
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