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Democracy and Power: The Delhi Lectures

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Noam Chomsky visited India in 1996 and 2001 and spoke on a wide range of subjects, from democracy and corporate propaganda to the nature of the world order and the role of intellectuals in society. He captivated audiences with his lucid challenge of dominant political analyses, the engaging style of his talks, and his commitment to social equality as well as individual freedom. Chomsky's early insights into the workings of power in the modern world remain timely and compelling. Published for the first time, this series of lectures also provides the reader with an invaluable introduction to the essential ideas of one of the leading thinkers of our time.

192 pages, Paperback

First published December 7, 2014

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Om Raizada.
20 reviews
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February 11, 2023
Notes:
-US was friendly to Saddam Hussein until he decided to disobey them (this was the time when he had committed mass genocides and other crimes) and invade Kuwait.
-US and Britain were friendly to Stalin inspite of what he did, but only turned against him when he didn't follow their rules.
-US although shows to be against fundamentalism supports Saudi Arabia and supported Suharto in killing almost a million Indonesian to stop democratic ascension of PKF.
-US has organised many terrorist activities throughout Central America especially the Church which decided to support the poor in 1960s instead of supporting the rich as it had done throughout the history.
-NAFTA has made people from all three countries worst off, it only benefits the minority of rich people. It is more of a 'free investment agreement' rather than 'free trade agreement'.
-All developed countries in the world are the ones which did not embrace open market, US does this today in the name of National Security, using public funds to subsidize businesses. Britain had numerous trade restrictions until 1862 when their per capita capitalisation was twice that of any other country. They only embraced free market when the playing field was so tilted towards them that they couldn't lose.
-Democracy today don't work on popular mandate, they are controlled by corporates, that's why people find themselves disillusioned by them. The things which corporates want happen anyway, only the trivial stuff which does not affect corporates is discussed in elections.

*I personally may or may not agree to these ideas. This is simply a summary of all the ideas discussed in the book. Nothing special in context to India. Just the usual Chomsky stuff.
Profile Image for Prabhat Gusain.
125 reviews22 followers
July 21, 2020
In the 20th century, three forms of totalitarianism emerged - Bolshevism, Fascism, and Corporations. While the first two were mostly dismantled globally, the third flourished. Over the course of the cold war, the two world wars, and the subsequent struggle for world domination, corporations worked towards preserving their hegemony over national "democratic affairs" through "narrative building" or propaganda. Eventually, unbeknownst to the common man, corporations turned into "private tyrannies", especially in the west.
Over the course of the 20th century, the fallacy that rule by private tyrannies is freedom was drilled into the heads of westerners. The power of this propaganda has been extraordinary. In the 1920s, one of the founders of the PR industry wrote that the goal of the industry is to regiment the public mind every bit as much as the army regiments the bodies of its solders. You can't have democracy otherwise.
What came next was fascinating. Because the population will do what they want and that won't be securing the permanent interests of the country, namely the rights of the rich who have to be protected from the majority. Through such narrative control, the super-rich continue to preserve their power and control (evident in worsening poor-rich divide and the Gini coefficient) in the name of "democracy". Chomsky, in these lectures, expounds the idea of "libertarian socialism" or "anarchism", that fundamentally questions the concentration of power, wherever it is unnecessary. The strong historical and modern premise makes the reading fascinating and highly educational.
Profile Image for Shuvopriyo.
24 reviews
January 21, 2022
This book is like a transcript from the 1990s. You read it, and you can't help but feel nostalgic, imagining quaint classrooms in B&W.

The book basically documents the lectures that Chomsky delivered in various Indian universities during his visit to India circa 1996.

While very old, the book is still extremely relevant as it talks about how the world has evolved with private corporations gaining unbridled powers, and how western hegemony and imperialism played out in different parts of the world.

The book is a great read for anybody who wants to understand Chomsky's thoughts and ideologies in an absolute basic sense. There are also a series of q&a documented that touch upon the cold war, socialism, relevance of Marxism etc.
286 reviews8 followers
August 8, 2015
In the USA the growth of unaccountable corporate power is supported by a filtering process where those who say the right things are able to climb the ladder, and the rest are left behind. A corporate-sponsored mass-media and university system looks pluralistic and adversarial, but restricts debate to a narrow framework that suits the privileged. It trumpets "free markets", when the corporates are in fact highly protected and subsidized by the state. It opposes state sponsored social programs large enough to make a difference, but supports small social responsibility pilots by "private" corporates. This system is hard for many to see: “…the architects of power in the United States must create a force that can be felt, but not seen. Power remains strong when it remains in the dark. Exposed to the sunlight, it begins to evaporate” (Huntington, american politics). There is democracy in the sense that leaders are elected by free and fair elections, but to a large degree elected leaders are a façade for the exercise of power by a non-democratically chosen group of corporations and the wealthiest Americans. Chomsky takes these ideas in many provocative directions, including a call for mass mobilization to change towards broad based participation in policy and decision making.

His work is important in opening up new ways of thinking. But his reading of recent history is highly selective. For example, he focuses on US government defense expenditures, which increased starting in the 1950s in response to a concern by the leadership about the soviet threat. This spending has continued even after the end of the cold war, and Chomsky is correct that there are powerful corporate constituencies that benefit from it, and help to keep it at high levels. However, he doesn't discuss much another recent US spending surge: the vast increase in welfare programs, which responded to popular expectations and group demands that started increasing in the 1960s, and these trends continue today. Federal entitlements have increased in the last 20 years from less than half of spending to nearly 62% in 2012, dominated by Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Anti-poverty programs have surged by 49 percent in just the past decade, even after adjusting for inflation. Spending for food stamps alone has more than tripled since 2002. Health programs, including Medicaid, have increased by 38 percent, and housing assistance by 48 percent (source: 2012 edition of Federal Spending by the Numbers.
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