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Home » Noam Chomsky: The History and Hypocrisy of the War on Terror (Transcript)

Noam Chomsky: The History and Hypocrisy of the War on Terror (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of author, linguist, teacher, and crucial social critic, professor Noam Chomsky’s lecture titled “The History and Hypocrisy of the War on Terror”, which was given on the 15th anniversary celebration of the establishment of the Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) cooperative. The talk was given at the Town Hall Auditorium in New York on 1/22/2002, several months after the 911 attack on the World Trade Center.

TRANSCRIPT:

Noam Chomsky: Well, let me just begin by saying what I’m sure is obvious. It’s a genuine pleasure to be able to take part in this fifteenth anniversary celebration. What the Fair Collective, and the emphasis should be on the word collective, what it’s accomplished in these years is quite remarkable. There are many people, I’m definitely one of them, who are looking forward with eager anticipation to what’s sure to come next, to the insight, correctives, information, general enlightenment that doubtless lie ahead, and I would just like to congratulate the collective on its wonderful achievements and hope that many others will be encouraged to join in this vitally important work.

Well, on to business. The proper topic for an occasion like this, I suppose, is pretty obvious. It would be the question of how the media have handled the major story of the past months, and there’s no question about what that is. The question, the issue is the war on terrorism, so called, and specifically in the Islamic world. And so by media here, intend the term to be understood pretty broadly, so including journals of commentary, analysis, opinion, in fact, the intellectual culture generally.

It’s a really important topic. It’s been reviewed regularly by FARE, by others. However, it isn’t really an appropriate topic for a talk, and the reason is that it requires too much detailed analysis.