Noam Chomsky Believes Trump Is “the Worst Criminal in Human History”
Noam
Chomsky Believes Trump Is “the Worst Criminal in Human History”
October 30, 2020
Chomsky has always been
extremely pragmatic in his political analysis, diverging from some other
leftists in his belief in the necessity of voting for mainstream Democrats
against Republicans.Illustration by
Leonardo Santamaria; Source photograph by Heuler Andrey / AFP / Getty
Noam Chomsky, the
American linguist, activist, and political writer, is one of the most famous
and harshest critics of American foreign policy. His critiques of Presidential
Administrations from Nixon to Obama, and the stridency of his views—comparing
9/11 to Bill Clinton’s bombing of a factory in Khartoum, for example—have made
him the target of much ire, as well as a hero of the global left. “Chomsky
always refuses to talk about motives in politics,” Larissa MacFarquhar wrote in
her Profile of him for The New Yorker, in
2003. “Like many theorists of universal humanness, he often seems baffled, even
repelled, by the thought of actual people and their psychologies.”
When
I called Chomsky, who is ninety-one, last month for a long-scheduled interview,
I had meant to discuss his career and life, and his latest book, “Climate Crisis and the Global Green
New Deal,” written with Robert Pollin and C. J. Polychroniou—but he
spent most of the hour-long session railing against the Trump Administration
with a vehemence that slightly surprised me. Chomsky has always been extremely
pragmatic in his political analysis, diverging from some other leftists in his
belief in the necessity of voting for mainstream Democrats against Republicans.
But in addition to supporting Joe
Biden this year, he told me that Donald
Trump is “the worst criminal in human history” and expressed
serious concerns about the future of American democracy (although he conceded
that it “was never much to write home about”). With perhaps not equal concern,
but with the same passion he seems to bring to every topic, he also railed
against “cancel culture” and explained why he signed the recent Harper’s letter
on free expression. And yet, Chomsky noted that what he most loves to think
about are philosophy, science, and language. “To tell you the truth,” he said,
“while I’m giving interviews and talking about things, one part of my mind is
working on technical problems, which are much more interesting.” Our
conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, is below.
Over the past four years, have we been in a strange and new period
of American history? Or are we seeing a continuation of American history that
is pretty much in line with what it has always been?
Of
course, it’s the same country. We haven’t undergone a major revolution, but the
last four years are very much out of line with the history of Western
democracies altogether. By now, it’s becoming almost outlandish. In the three
hundred and fifty years of parliamentary democracy, there’s been nothing like
what we’re seeing now in Washington. I don’t have to tell you. You read the
same newspapers I do. A President who has said if he doesn’t like the outcome
of an election, he’ll simply not leave office, and is taken seriously enough
that, for example, two high-level, highly respected, retired military officers—one
of them very well known, Lieutenant Colonel John Nagl—actually went to the
extent of writing an open letter to General [Mark] Milley, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, reminding him of his
constitutional duties to send in the American military to remove the President
from office if he refuses to leave.
There’s
a long article, which you’ve
probably seen, by Barton Gellman, reviewing the strategies that Republican
leadership is thinking of to try and undermine the election. There has been
plenty of tampering before. We’re not unfamiliar with that. In fact, one case
that comes to mind is kind of relevant at the moment: 1960. Richard Nixon had
pretty good reason to believe that he had won the election. Nixon, who was not
the most delightful person in the history of Presidential politics, decided to
put the welfare of the country over his personal ambition. That’s not what
we’re seeing now, and that’s only one sign of a very significant change. The
executive has been almost totally purged of any critical independent
voices—nothing left but sycophants. If they’re not sufficiently loyal to the
master, fire them and get someone else. A striking example recently was
the firing of the inspectors general when
they started looking into the incredible swamp Trump created in Washington.
This kind of thing goes on and on.
How do you view the Trump Administration, in terms of America’s
role in the world and whether it is new or not?
Well,
there are some new things which are not being much discussed. I don’t know if
it’s Trump, but the people around him are essentially creating an international
alliance of extremely reactionary states, which can be controlled by the White
House, which, of course, has shifted way far to the right, tearing up every
international agreement, wrecking everything in sight. In the Western
Hemisphere, a leading figure would be [Jair] Bolsonaro, in Brazil, kind of a
Trump clone, and the Middle East, with Gulf dictatorships, the most reactionary
states in the world, and Egypt under [Abdel Fattah El-]Sisi, probably the worst
dictatorship in Egypt’s history. Israel has moved very far to the right. The
current so-called peace agreements have nothing to do with peace agreements.
It’s a very natural Middle East base for the Trump-run reactionary
international. In the East, [Narendra] Modi’s India is a prime candidate. He’s
smashing Indian secular democracy, trying to impose Hindu nationalist
theocracy, crushing Kashmir. They’re an obvious part of it. In Europe, the
prime candidate is [Viktor] Orbán’s Hungary. Matteo Salvini’s not yet in power,
but Italy’s right behind. There are other pleasant figures around the world,
but that’s basically the core of it.
Now,
that’s one side of throwing out all international agreements and throwing out
any concern whatsoever for the attitudes and priorities of others. It was
revealed with typical Trump Administration arrogance in [Secretary of State
Mike] Pompeo’s announcement that the United Nations’ sanctions are reinstituted
against Iran. Why? Because he says so. The United States brought it to the
Security Council and could get virtually no support. So therefore we
reinstitute the United Nations’ sanctions unilaterally. That’s the Godfather
talking. It doesn’t matter what anyone else thinks. The same is true of every
international agreement. The arms-control regime has been torn to shreds, with
great danger to us as well as everyone else.
You mention a bunch of dictators that the United States has cozied
up to—and not respecting arms-control treaties—but those are things you’ve
written about in the past. I’m interested that you say that you think the Trump
Administration is a break with the past. How do you think it’s different in
some way?
Well,
having an arms-control regime is different than not having one. That’s a break,
and it’s a break on one of the two most significant issues in human history.
We’ve been living for seventy-five years under the shadow of possible nuclear
destruction. The arms-control regime that’s been slowly built up over the
years—Eisenhower’s Open Skies proposal, the Reagan-Gorbachev I.N.F. treaty,
and other pieces—has mitigated the dangers. Trump has been tearing every piece
of it to shreds. The only thing that’s left is New start. It has to be ratified by next February. If
Trump wins the election or refuses to leave office, it will be gone by
February.
VIDEO FROM THE NEW YORKER
What Do Foreign Correspondents Think
of the U.S.?
The
other major threat to human survival in any recognizable form is environmental
catastrophe, and, there, Trump is alone in the world. Most countries are doing
at least something about it—not as much as they should be, but some of them
rather significant, some less so. The United States has pulled out of the Paris
Agreement; is refusing to do any of the actions that might help poorer
countries deal with the problem; is racing toward maximizing the use of fossil
fuels; and, at the same time, just opened the last major nature reserve in the
United States for drilling. He has to make sure that we maximize the use of
fossil fuels, race to the precipice as quickly as possible, and eliminate the
regulations, which not only limit the dangerous effects but also protect
Americans.
Step
by step, eliminate everything that might protect Americans or that will
preserve the possibility of overcoming the very serious threat of environmental
catastrophe. There is nothing like this in history. It’s not breaking with the
American tradition. Can you think of anyone in human history who has dedicated
his efforts to undermining the prospects for survival of organized human life
on earth? In fact, some of the productions of the Trump Administration are just
mind-boggling.
To answer your last question, even if it was rhetorical, it seems
like the Republican Party leading up to Trump had very similar views on
climate-change science, even if he’s taken it in a more nihilistic direction.
What
leading figure in human history has dedicated policy toward maximizing the use
of fossil fuels and cutting down on regulations that mitigate the disaster?
Name one.
Bolsonaro perhaps, but yes, I get your—
Bolsonaro,
a Trump clone, and that’s following Trump’s lead. Yes, he’s doing it dangerously,
but even he hasn’t gone as far as Trump.
You’ve written a lot of books about American foreign policy, and
one of the themes is that American foreign policy is often driven by the
economic interests of élites. I think that there is a way in which that is
still true, and obviously Trump is of the economic élite. But, with Trump, it
seems like perhaps his personal desire for money is driving American foreign
policy now. I wonder if that’s made you think differently about how American
foreign policy is carried out.
Not at all. In this
respect, he’s a continuation, but you have to make distinctions. Franklin
Delano Roosevelt was the best President we’ve had, in my opinion, and was
committed to maximizing American power, and the role of [American] economic interest
in the world, and so on. Adolf Hitler, in the same years, was committed to that
in Nazi Germany, but that doesn’t lead us to conclude that they’re the same
thing.
I thought that’s what I was saying, a little bit. Trump seems to
care about his own interests and his own survival, and you have talked about
American foreign policy previously being driven by the interests of a whole
ruling economic élite. I guess maybe that’s a distinction without a difference,
because it’s economic élites who are supporting Trump and allowing him to do
this, in some sense.
Not
only are they supporting him, but he’s serving them slavishly. It’s hard to
find an American President who has been more dedicated to enriching and
empowering the ultra-rich and the corporate sector—which is, of course, why
they’re happy to tolerate his antics. For example, the one real legislative
achievement is the tax scam, which was just a giveaway to the very rich and the
corporate sector. In fact, everything I’ve just mentioned is the same. When you
reduce regulations, you’re putting more money in the pockets of the rich and
harming the working class and the poor and everyone else. That’s extreme. When
you refuse to fill the National Labor Relations Board with members so that
employers can get away with anything they want, you’re serving the rich. We can
go right down the list. He’s a very loyal servant of private power, private
wealth, and the corporate sector—which is why they let him get away with the
kind of antics you see.
It’s
kind of striking when you see the great and powerful get together. Take a look
at the last Davos conference, in January. There were three keynote speakers.
The first, of course, was Trump. They don’t like him. They don’t like him at
all because they like to put forward an image of humanism, civilized behavior,
decency, “put your trust in us,” that sort of thing. But when he spoke, they
gave him rousing applause. They couldn’t stand anything he was saying. There’s
this braggart up there ranting about how wonderful he is. They were probably
cringing in their seats, but they gave him rousing applause because there’s one
line that he said that they understand, which is meaningful: I’m going to put
plenty of money in your pockets, so therefore you better tolerate me. That’s
the way he’s regarded by the powerful élites here. Yeah, we can’t stand him,
he’s a disgusting creature, but he knows which side the bread is buttered:
ours.
What you’re saying seems more similar to the mainstream
center-left discourse on Trump and the unique threat he poses to American
democracy than it does to some left-wing discourse on the same. I’m curious if
you’ve been aware of that in your own analysis and if you think that that’s
interesting or funny.
Well,
I haven’t noticed that. For example, we just went through two of the
quadrennial extravaganzas, the Conventions. Lots of coverage of them. Did you
hear a phrase about the threat of nuclear war? I didn’t. Maybe somewhere.
That’s the one major threat that the world faces. It’s not discussed. You heard
some comments about maybe Trump isn’t doing nice things on the climate. Did you
hear anything about his being the worst criminal in human history?
The worst criminal in human history? That does say something.
It
does. Is it true?
Well, you have Hitler; you have Stalin; you have Mao.
Stalin
was a monster. Was he trying to destroy organized human life on earth?
Well, he was trying to destroy a lot of human lives.
Yes,
he was trying to destroy lots of lives but not organized human life on earth,
nor was Adolf Hitler. He was an utter monster but not dedicating his efforts
perfectly consciously to destroying the prospect for human life on earth.
Let’s
take some of their publications. A couple of years ago, you may recall the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration published a
several-hundred-page analysis. They concluded that, on our present course,
we’re likely to reach four degrees Celsius, seven degrees Fahrenheit, above
preindustrial levels by the end of the century. That’s an utter cataclysm. Any
climate scientist will tell you that. And they drew a conclusion from it. We
should not put restrictions on automotive and truck emissions. We should limit
the restrictions. Can you find a counterpart to that in human history? Please
tell me.
I—
Well,
I can think of one thing that maybe comes close. The Wannsee declaration, in
1942, where the Nazi party put the finishing touches on the plans to wipe out
all the Jews and kill tens of millions of Slavs. Pretty horrifying. Is it as
bad as that publication I just mentioned?
I don’t disagree about Trump’s badness. I’m not sure if he’s
intending to destroy the planet so much as he’s intending to watch Fox News and
is just following terrible policies out of some combination of laziness and
nihilism, and being surrounded by crooks and nihilists.
I’m
not talking about Trump the human being. I couldn’t care less about him. I’m
talking about the policies. The policies are clear; the understanding is clear.
There is nobody that’s not living under a rock that can’t comprehend that
maximizing the use of fossil fuels and eliminating the restrictions is going to
lead to disaster. The document I just mentioned assumes that we’re racing
toward total disaster.
One thing that you’ve been criticized for, in the past, is not
looking at people’s intentions, especially in the context of foreign policy.
You say you don’t care so much about them. That’s where it seems like we were
slipping up with the Stalin or Hitler comparison, where their intentions were
obviously to get people killed.
I’m
sorry. I don’t agree.
You don’t agree?
Stalin’s
intentions were to maintain power and control. He didn’t purposely want to kill
people. He had to kill people as a means toward this end. Take, say, Henry
Kissinger. When he sends a directive to the American Air Force saying, about a
massive bombing campaign in Cambodia, “anything that flies on anything that
moves,” does he have the intention of committing genocide? Do I care? No. I
just care that that’s what he said.
To return to a previous point: the left has often described Trump
as a symptom of American decline or American bad behavior, and said that the
real threat to American democracy is all of these things that have been true
about us for a long time. The center-left has often described Trump as a
uniquely malignant figure, who is threatening a democracy that was working
better than some people on the left thought. You were seeming to come down on
the latter side of that debate—which, given your status in the American left, I
thought was interesting.
Sorry.
I think [American] democracy, first of all, was never much to write home about.
Do you really want to talk about it? The Founding Fathers, let’s go back to
them. They were committed to reducing democracy. The major scholarly work on
the Constitutional Convention, the gold standard for today, is Michael
Klarman’s book, and it’s called “The Framers’ Coup”—their
coup against democracy. The general population wanted more democracy. The
Framers wanted to restrict that; they didn’t like the idea of democracy. Their
picture was more or less that of John Jay: the people who own the country ought
to rule it. James Madison explained that one of the prime goals of government
is to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority, and the
Constitution was designed to try to prevent what is called the tyranny of the
majority, meaning democracy. You’ve got to protect the minority; the opulent
have to be protected.
There are all sorts of
ways in which this was done. There’s been a battle about that over the
centuries. But since roughly 1980, since the neoliberal regression began, there
has been a significant decline in the partially functioning democracy that
existed before. That’s an immediate reflection of the policies that were
chosen. You recall Reagan’s [first] Inaugural Address: government is the
problem. What does that mean? Decisions are being made somewhere. If they’re
not made in government, which is under at least partial influence of the population,
they are being made in the private sector by unaccountable private
institutions.
You
take a look more closely, and 0.1 per cent of the population now hold twenty
per cent of the wealth of the country. It’s had a major effect on the political
system for perfectly obvious reasons. You have somebody elected to Congress.
The first thing they have to do is get on the telephone, call the donors to
make sure they’re going to be funded in the next electoral campaign. That’s the
kind of democracy we had before Trump. He’s hit it with a wrecking ball and
made it much worse.
Just to change tack for a minute, how old are you now?
Well,
in a couple of months, I’ll be ninety-two.
What are your days like?
My
days are mostly like this, except it’s usually Zoom rather than the telephone.
Today, probably four hours of interviews; other days, talks. I gave a long talk
Monday in Brazil, a couple of tens of thousands of people criticizing their
government and its policies. The day before that, I gave a keynote address for
the opening meeting of the Progressive International. It’s interspersed with
interviews, talks, statements, meetings on technical scientific work that go on
at the same time. So it’s pretty intense.
What do you do for fun?
I
can’t say the word, or there’ll be a rush for the door by some canines at my
foot, but that’s one of the things I do.
What are you most proud of in your career, and what do you most
regret?
I
can’t really answer that. One of the priorities I try to keep is to just keep
away from personal questions. Things that are good, things that are bad—that’s
for other people to judge.
I didn’t mean good or bad. Is there a book or talk or something
you’re most proud of?
Well,
when I look back, as I do often to look things up, I realize how much better
[my earlier work] could have been. The kind of work I really like is the
professional work. I mean, if the world would go away, I would be perfectly
happy to just work on the problems of real intellectual interest. They are
exciting. I think there’s been real insight into the fundamentals of language,
mind, human thought, how it’s constructed, its nature, its origins, and so on.
That’s really exciting work and much more engaging to the mind than what we’ve
been talking about—which is very important but pretty much on the surface.
I interview a lot of people, and when I interview writers, they’ll
often say, “Oh, too much time on politics. I wish I’d focussed on art or
literature or science or something else, but politics has a way of taking up
too much brain space and time.” Is that what you meant?
Time—but
not much brain space. I mean to tell you the truth: while I’m giving interviews
and talking about things, one part of my mind is working on technical problems,
which are much more interesting.
So while we’re talking, part of your brain is focussed on language
or science or something?
Yeah.
Always. It’s just in the background, thinking about problems that have come up.
What we’re talking about has to do with the most urgent things you can imagine—human
survival, the fate of my grandchildren, all sorts of things. I’m reminded of a
comment that Bertrand Russell once made, back around 1960 or so. He was asked
why he was out marching at his age in anti-nuclear demonstrations, when he
could be working on serious problems of philosophy for the ages. His answer was
something like, if I’m not out here demonstrating against nuclear weapons,
there won’t be anybody around to read the philosophy.
What about art? Are you a consumer of it?
Well,
over the summers, I try to indulge myself by reading half a dozen novels or so,
maybe going to a museum or going to concerts. This summer, I haven’t been able
to do it. The tensions have been so high, the pace has been so intense, that I
can’t even do things like that.
The tensions of what’s going on in the country, you mean?
And
the world. For one thing, I’m absolutely bombarded with requests for talks and
interviews. As I just said, the last couple of days, one in Brazil, one in
Iceland, one somewhere else.
You could say no to some of them, right?
I
say no to a large percentage of them, but they’re very important. This morning,
I happened to have one with a small group in India. Some other time, it could
be a group in southern Colombia. It’s all over the place. There’s a lot of
people who really are doing very serious things. Interacting with them is
extremely important for me—and I assume for them, because they keep asking. So,
yes, all over. I must get probably a thousand letters a day. I try to answer
what I can.
You’re famous for signing any petition sent to you.
Quite
a lot of them. Nowhere near all, but a fair number. If I think they have any
serious merit, like maybe saving somebody’s life. If I don’t like the way
they’re framed, I won’t usually sign it.
I think the biggest controversy you ever had was probably the
Faurisson affair. That fits into, I guess, what I said about you being willing
to answer e-mails and letters and sign petitions or so on. Do you have any
regrets about that and how that played out? [Four decades ago, Chomsky
repeatedly defended the free-speech rights of Robert Faurisson, a French
professor of literature and a Holocaust denier.]
No,
I have no regrets about standing up for freedom of speech and opposing the
Stalinist-style laws in France—which say that the state, the holy state, has
the right to determine historical truth and to punish deviation from what it
asserts. I have no reservations about opposing that.
You signed the Harper’s letter about free speech
and “cancel culture.” What did you make of that letter?
That
letter was so anodyne and insignificant; I barely noticed it. The only
interesting thing about that letter is the reaction to it. The reaction was
extraordinary. It showed that the problem is far greater than I thought it was.
Say more.
The
problem was that people were outraged that somebody should make an anodyne
statement, a simple statement, saying we should have some commitment to freedom
of speech, even views we don’t like. I thought that’s the kind of thing people
say to each other in their sleep. But apparently many people said, “No, can’t
say that, too dangerous”—all kinds of crazed interpretations. Some of the
interpretations were really wild. A lot of the protest was about the people who
signed it. How can you sign a statement when such-and-such a person signs it?
It takes thirty seconds of thought to understand that if you accept that
principle, there are no statements, for very simple reasons. You’ve gotten
plenty of statements to sign. Do you know who else is going to sign it? If the
question of who else signs a statement is a criterion for signing it, then
nobody in their right mind ever signs anything. Just that simple point of logic
couldn’t fit the people who were so outraged that someone should say it’s not a
good idea to shut people up.
Putting the Harper’s letter
aside, I do think that people’s intentions matter and that we should take them
into account. If a census worker says there are a lot of Jews working in
Hollywood, stating it as a fact, that is different from Donald Trump saying it
at a rally. We all know that one has different intent, and it seems like we
should react to them differently based on the person saying it. Maybe this gets
back to you not caring about intentions so much.
Yes,
people read things differently. What I’m talking about is how they read it.
Probably different signers had different intentions, no doubt. I can see that
from the list of signers. But, as far as I was concerned, what’s in the back of
my mind is very straightforward, and I’ve been saying it to activists for
decades. Don’t pick up the techniques that are used regularly by the mainstream
for repression. Don’t adopt them for yourself. So cancel culture didn’t happen
to be mentioned in the statement, but a lot of people read that into it.
O.K.,
let’s say it’s talking about cancel culture. Cancel culture is all over the
mainstream. I can give you plenty of examples from my own experience of things
cancelled, books withdrawn, appearances on the national radio being cut off
because somebody didn’t like it, some manager, some right-winger didn’t like
it, endless numbers of this. It goes on all the time. That’s standard
mainstream establishment behavior. People of the left are making a serious
mistake when they try to imitate it. It’s wrong in principle; it’s wrong
tactically. It’s a gift to the far right, and they run with it. They love it.
In fact, Trump’s building his own campaign on it. Therefore, for the left, who
I’m interested in, and their activists, pay attention to principle and tactical
consequences. They are important. Pay attention to them and do not adopt the
characteristic repressive behavior of the mainstream. That’s what I took the
letter to mean.
I think one of the things people objected to was the letter saying
that freedom of speech was becoming more and more constricted. To your point,
this has always been going on, and has always been part of the mainstream, and
some people thought that by saying it was getting worse, the drafters of the
letter were making a specific point about the left and cancel culture.
Well,
what you’re saying is correct. Worse, but that doesn’t mean it was good before.
So to add a small fraction to what the mainstream always does is a mistake.
There’s also a lot more openness in certain ways. People of
different races and gender identities are able to speak their voices more
clearly now, and that in many ways—
That’s
all to the good. That’s all positive and great. That’s what activism has been
about. I’ve been part of it all my life and supported it, but it’s a mistake
when you go beyond that to try to silence others.
Do you think that there’s any tension on the left between appeals
for racial justice and gender equality and so on, and more class-based appeals?
It’s
perfectly understandable that four hundred years of vicious and often extremely
violent repression without end having left a bitter legacy—that that should be
the highest concern for the United States. I’m talking about the fate of
African-Americans, of course. It’s perfectly understandable that the
marginalization, mistreatment, suppression of women’s rights should be a major
concern. It’s also very significant to bear in mind that the United States has
an unusually violent and brutal labor history and a long history of repression
of labor. It’s gotten much worse since the neoliberals all began. Reagan and
Thatcher, both of them, or whoever was behind them, recognized, right away,
that if we’re going to hand everything over to the rich and the private sector,
we’ve got to remove people’s ability to defend themselves, and the ability to
defend themselves is primarily in the hands of labor unions. So the first moves
they made were to impact and severely undermine the labor movement. That’s a
brutal part of a long history. So, yes, that must be brought in as well.
Now, all of these things ought to be brought together. I’m sure you recall that Martin Luther King, Jr., at the end of his life, at the point where he was sharply losing liberal support, was trying to organize a poor-people’s campaign, Black and white, wherever you’re from—you’re poor, struggling, working people. That’s our campaign. That’s what ought to be done. All of these concerns interact. They’re integrated. They all ought to be dealt with. You can understand why, for some people, some of them are more important than others, but it’s a matter of bringing them all together, because they’re basically all on the same side. With regard to the huge crises that humans face, much worse than anything in their history, crises literally for the survival of humanity: on these, it’s not just a matter of black and white and others; it’s a matter of internationalism. These problems are all international in scale, and, going back to the Trump Administration, they’re smashing to pieces every part of international coöperation. It’s a major attack on the kinds of institutional structures that are going to be needed to overcome the enormous crises that are impending.
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