Who Rules the World?
Noam Chomsky. Metropolitan, $28 (320p) ISBN 978-1-6277-9381-0
Equally depressing, thorough, and necessary, this new work from Chomsky (Because We Say So) shows why he is still among our most insightful public intellectuals. Here, he turns his attention to the U.S.’s current place on the world stage and how it got there. The author pulls no punches while dismantling the mainstream narrative about the Cuban Missile Crisis, American exceptionalism, the threat posed by Iran, and, through many lenses, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A key theme in this work is that the stories Americans tell about themselves are precisely that: stories. Received wisdom and mainstream history conveniently ignore the hard-to-swallow stories of U.S. support for dictators in the Middle East and Central and South America. Moreover, Chomsky observes, American maintenance of the status quo exacerbates climate change and perpetuates the threat of nuclear annihilation. This book is unwavering in its excoriation of U.S. policy, past and present. It supplies no easy answers to the questions it raises, which may very well be the point. Nevertheless, these questions must be posed, and Chomsky does so with contagious fervor. (May)
Details
Reviewed on: 03/28/2016
Genre: Nonfiction
Compact Disc - 978-1-4272-6175-5
Other - 978-1-62779-382-7
Paperback - 978-957-13-7473-4
Paperback - 336 pages - 978-1-250-13108-9
Paperback - 240 pages - 978-0-241-18945-0