Julian Sanchez | July 9, 2006
Via Andrew Sullivan, the Ali G interview with Noam Chomsky:
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I think Noam's head hurts they way that mine does after listening to him talk about politics. thanks Ali G.
Ali G. Has there ever been anything more effective at exposing
the obtuseness of the pompous?
Word out.
Booyakacha!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ul3e90VmCw8
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5199494249131470785
"At least his dick isn't sitting on his shoulders, you
ingnorant fuck."
Desktop computer: $400
Internet Connection: $30/month
Making an ass out of yourself when you misspell ignorant:
Priceless.
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Come see my movie this fall. I get all libertarian on my
nuts...
Not one of Ali G's better interviews, imho. One or two laughs. Chomsky might be pompous, but he actually knows what he's talking about when it comes to linguistics. Ali G is much more effective when he's interviewing the pompous who have ridiculous theories or ideas that are dressed up, clouded in jargon or half-baked reasoning, to looked respectable. So, I think it would have been funnier if he'd gone after Chomsky's anarcho-syndicalism, stressed the syndicalism part, talked about a cousin in the mob with good street cred, asked questions about how it would work for the Corleone family to run the whole government, etc.
yeah noam is a dick at least partially in the political
sphere...he gets the analysis right but his conclusion come out of
...well far left field.
anyway he comes off looking pretty good in this interview...much
better then others i have seen.
Chomsky might be pompous, but he actually knows what he's
talking about when it comes to linguistics.
Yeah, in the field of linguistics, Chomsky is brilliant, and very
well-respected even by those who could give a shit about his
politics.
He sure looks humorless in this clip, though.
The whole joke is Ali G confusing "bilingual" and "bisexual". It's a sad waste of Noam Chomsky's valuable time.
"Chomsky might be pompous, but he actually knows what he's
talking about when it comes to linguistics.
Yeah, in the field of linguistics, Chomsky is brilliant, and very
well-respected even by those who could give a shit about his
politics."
Actually, in the field of linguistics, the knives have been out for
him for a long, long time. He has his disciples, and they are
prominent in a lot of departments, but he has many detractors. Even
back in the seventies he was already staring to sound played out
and his proposals were looking more and more desperate. He comes
across as a Platonist - pretty strange for somemone working in an
empirical science.
Exactly what benefit is the field of linguistics to any normal
person? What valueable good or service does this man produce? How
does his work make the world a better place?
Knowing little about linguistics, I'm tempted to believe that
Chomsky's existence will ultimately make many more people worse off
than better off.
Chomsky sure doesn't say anything here that an intelligent four-year-old couldn't come up with. "I would love to be bilingual"??? This guy is the world's greatest linguist or something and he couldn't, you know, teach himself Spanish along the way?
Chimpsky was being a bit modest. From what I've heard he speaks
a French quite well and knows Hebrew and a smattering of other
languages. Besides, linguistics is not about becoming a polyglot as
many people assume.
What value is the field of linguistics? Well, research in
linguistics has fed into the computational sciences for one.
Understanding the incredibly complex nature of language and natural
language processing has led into rich insights into computational
work. The link between cognitive psychology and linguistics is
particularly strong as well, which can tell us many things about
how the mind works. See Steven Pinker. This research is valuable in
so many ways - to dealing with people recovering from head
injuries, to understanding what children need and probably more
importantly, don't necessarily need, in their development, to the
development of tools or ideas for dealing with autism, down
syndrome, to just understanding an important part of what makes the
human species unique.
Understanding how people learn first and second languages
potentially leads into pedagogical insights about what to teach and
not to teach as well as how one can negotiate one's own learning of
another language. There's interesting work in language as a
mediating tool between language, culture, and the development of
the self. Then there's insights into in the study of discourse
analysis, the construction of narratives - which leads into
investigating other tools of reasoning and thinking through
problems - how do people construct their view of themselves, what
makes them tick, what are the narrative elements and moments that
influenced them and related to their current construction of self
(which could potentially be of benefit to the libertarian movement
which seems pretty clueless when it comes to understanding what
moves people, how people change their minds if they do, etc.) which
can be helpful to curriculum development in language learning and
the language arts in general. That's not a complete list either. I
suppose though the question could be posed for just about any
academic discipline. What good is entomology?
This is not to say I defend his politics. While he's a useful for
digging up a lot of U.S. government dirt, his own solutions seem
terribly regressive and ultimately authoritarian. Too bad he knows
nothing about how economic systems work.
Mark:
AI research and much of post Wittgenstein philosophy of mind spend
a lot of energy on linguistics.
I'm just not a fan of the ambush interview. It is really the
same thing Michael Moore does. It's easy to make someone look like
an ass when you have a plan and a camera and the other guy doesn't
isn't in on it.
I can't stand Chomsky, but the same approach would work on Ron
Paul, Milton Friedman, or any one of us.
Making an ass out of yourself when you misspell ignorant:
Priceless.
All Bob's base are belong to mediageek.
It's a sad waste of Noam Chomsky's valuable time.
The yuks just never quit on this thread.
"I can't stand Chomsky, but the same approach would work on
Ron Paul, Milton Friedman, or any one of us."
Not me. I watch Da Ali G Show on occassion.
And if you want to see funny, his interview with the BATFE guy is
great.
I'm just not a fan of the ambush interview. It is really the
same thing Michael Moore does. It's easy to make someone look like
an ass when you have a plan and a camera and the other guy doesn't
isn't in on it.
If you ever watched Ali G, the point really isn't to make people
look like an ass. It isn't political like Michael Moore. It is
pretty much just pure comedy and entertainment.
What is interesting, is that in the Pat Bucanan Ali G interview,
Pat actually managed to look smarter than the Chompster.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwEd_tcKBfU&search=ali%20g%20pat
I never saw that Buchanan interview before. He really handled it well. You've got to hand it to Pitchfork Pat: Even his biggest enemies say he's really likable in person, and I can believe it.
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