Noam Chomsky Quotes About Labor

We have collected for you the TOP of Noam Chomsky's best quotes about Labor! Here are collected all the quotes about Labor starting from the birthday of the Linguist – December 7, 1928! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 27 sayings of Noam Chomsky about Labor. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
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  • There could be an independent labor-based party, which might over time become an important force the way the Labor Party did in England. To all of these things there are plenty of barriers, in the culture and in the social and political institutions, the concentration of economic power. But these are not insuperable barriers, I think. They can be overcome. And it is urgent that this be done, because there are really incredible problems that are simply not being addressed.

    Source: www.brooklynrail.org
  • The community itself didn't support the union. Now that's kind of interesting about [Barack] Obama, because Obama was supposedly a community organizer in Chicago at that time. Now I'm sure he read the Chicago Tribune, so he knew about it, but when he went to show his solidarity with the workforce, the first place he went was Caterpillar. I don't think he's forgotten, and the labor movement didn't react. Even radical labor historians didn't remember. It was only 15 years ago, after all, but that's a real triumph of propaganda in many ways.

    Source: www.iww.org
  • The Fourteenth Amendment, after the civil war, in principle brought former slaves into the category of persons, theoretically. But if you actually look, almost all the cases brought up for personal rights under the Fourteenth Amendment were by corporations. Freed slaves couldn't do it. In fact they were pretty much driven back into something like slavery by a north - south compact, that allowed former slave states to criminalize black life, which made a criminal force that was basically used as a forced labor force, up until the 1930s.

    Interview with Jegan Vincent de Paul, chomsky.info. August 15, 2012.
  • Every single one cabinet appointment: education, environment, labor - every single one is selected to undermine any aspect of government that's of any help to people, and that doesn't benefit the super-rich. And it's absolutely systematic. The interesting question will be how long Donald Trump's constituency can fall for the con game.

    Source: www.truth-out.org
  • I don't feel that there is anything deep in the political culture that prevents "educating the masses." I'm old enough to recall vividly the high level of culture, general and political, among first-generation working people during the Great Depression. Workers' education was lively and effective, union-based - mostly the vigorous rising labor movement, reviving from the ashes of the 1920s. I've often seen independent and impressive initiatives in working-class and poor and deprived communities today.

    Source: www.truth-out.org
  • Like most terms of political discourse, socialism has more or less, lost its meaning. Socialism used to mean something. If you go back far enough it meant basically control of production by producers, elimination of wage labor, democratization of all spheres of life; production, commerce, education, media, workers control of factories, community control of communities, and so on. That was socialism once. But it hasn't meant that for a hundred years. Socialism meant something different.

    Source: pennpoliticalreview.org
  • Free markets are based on the free circulation of labor. If you don't have free circulation of labor, you don't have free markets.

    "Noam Chomsky: Drug Cartels and the Growing Border War". Interview with Luis Fernando Cárdenas, chomsky.info. August 15, 2011.
  • People will find some ways of identifying themselves, becoming associated with others, taking part in something. They're going to do it some way or other. If they don't have the options of participation in labor unions, political organizations that actually function, they'll find other ways. Religious fundamentalism is a classic example.

    Source: chomsky.info
  • A consistent anarchist must oppose private ownership of the means of production, and the wage-slavery which is a component of this system, as incompatible with the principle that labor must be freely undertaken and under the control of the producer.

    Noam Chomsky (2013). “The Essential Chomsky”, p.115, The New Press
  • Modern science and technology can relieve men of the necessity for specialized, imbecile labor. They may, in principle, provide the basis for a rational social order based on free association and democratic control, if we have the will to create it.

    Noam Chomsky (2003). “For Reasons Of State”, p.404, Penguin Books India
  • Part of the NAFTA legislation required studies of labor practices, and there was quite a good study that came out by a labor historian on the use of NAFTA to undermine and destroy unions.

    Source: www.iww.org
  • The major organizing centers, like the labor movement, have been severely weakened in the United States by policy.

    Source: pennpoliticalreview.org
  • All public resources go to the rich. The poor, if they can survive in the labor market, fine. Otherwise, they die. That's economics in a nutshell.

  • Labor #‎ Unions are the leading force for #‎ democratization and #‎ progress .

  • The [Ronald] Reagan administration told the business world that they were not going to enforce the labor laws.

    Source: www.iww.org
  • Thomas Jefferson, the leading Enlightenment figure in the United States, along with Benjamin Franklin, who took exactly the same view, argued that dependence will lead to "subservience and venality", and will "suffocate the germs of virtue". And remember, by dependence he meant wage labor, which was considered an abomination under classical liberal principles.

    "Education and Democracy". Talk at Michigan State University, March 28, 1995.
  • The labor movement had been pretty much killed in the 1920s, almost destroyed. It revived in the 1930s and made a huge difference. By the late 1930s the business world was already trying to find ways to beat it back.

    "Noam Chomsky on America's Economic Suicide". Interview with Laura Flanders / GRITtv, www.alternet.org. May 4, 2012.
  • Labor has been severely undermined, but that's happened before. In the 1920s, the labor movement was virtually crushed, in large part by Wilson's Red Scare, but it dramatically revived in the 1930s. It spearheaded the social-democratic New-Deal style changes which were beneficial to the country - not sufficient, but beneficial. That could happen again.

    Source: www.brooklynrail.org
  • You take a look at the history of African Americans in the US. There's been about thirty years of relative freedom. There was a decade after the Civil War and before north/south compact essentially recriminalized black life. During the Second World War there was a need for free labor so there was a freeing up of the labor force. Blacks benefitted from it.

    "Noam Chomsky on America's Economic Suicide". Interview with Laura Flanders, www.alternet.org. May 4, 2012.
  • The fact of the matter is that the U.S. is run by an unusually class-conscious, dedicated business class that has a very violent labor history, much worse than in Europe.

    Source: www.iww.org
  • Through much of its history, the US did not have high inequality as compared with Europe. Less so, in fact. That began to change in the industrial age, reaching a peak in 1928, after the forceful destruction of the labor movement and crushing of independent thought. Largely as a result of labor mobilization, inequality declined during the Great Depression, a tendency continuing through the great growth period of regulated capitalism in the early postwar decades.

    Source: www.truth-out.org
  • The labor movement can be rebuilt, as has happened before after sharp declines.

    Source: www.brooklynrail.org
  • More generally, independent farmers had to be trained to become docile workers in the expanding industrial system. It was necessary to drive from their heads evil ideas, such as the belief that wage labor was not much different from chattel slavery. That continues to the present, now sometimes taking the form of an attack on public education.

    Source: www.publicanthropology.org
  • For a while, after the Second World War, when there was strong support for labor, this was done subtly.

    Source: www.iww.org
  • Trump's principal policies make clear what's going to happen. This gives an opportunity. Right now it's going to take hard work, but it's possible that there could be a real revival of the labor movement.

    Source: www.brooklynrail.org
  • I think a decent society should protect rights to private property within limits, but not concentrations of private power that infringe on the freedom and rights of others, including exploitation of labor, and that convert any democratic forms into what have been called sometimes "hierarchical democracies," like ours, in which some have vastly greater influence over public policy than others. Spelling all of this out is a complex matter that raises many issue and problems that are impossible to address here.

    Source: www.washingtonpost.com
  • In the late 19th century there was a major union organization, Knights of Labor, and also a radical populist movement based on farmers. It's hard to believe, but it was based in Texas, and it was quite radical. They wanted their own banks, their own cooperatives, their own control over sales and commerce.

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Noam Chomsky quotes about: Abuse Achievement Acting Activism Advertising Affairs Afghanistan Age Aggression Aids Alcohol Aliens American Revolution Anarchism Anarchy Animals Apartheid Apathy Arguing Army Assumption Atheism Atheist Attitude Authority Awareness Balance Belief Bin Laden Biology Books Bureaucracy Capitalism Cars Castro Challenges Changing The World Character Chemistry Children Choices Church Cia Civil Disobedience Civil Rights Civil War Climate Change Clinton Cold War College Commitment Communication Community Computers Concentration Conflict Conformity Congo Consciousness Constitution Consumerism Corruption Country Crash Creation Creativity Crime Criticism Critics Culture Debate Decision Making Decisions Democracy Desire Devil Dictatorship Difficulty Dignity Dogma Doubt Drugs Earth Eating Economics Economists Economy Education Education System Effort Elections Enemies Energy Enlightenment Enthusiasm Environment Evidence Evil Evolution Exercise Expectations Exploitation Exploring Eyes Failing Fascism Fate Fathers Feelings Fighting Focus Foreign Policy Free Market Free Speech Free Trade Freedom Freedom Of Speech Fringe Gas Gaza Genocide Giving Global Warming Globalization Goals Gold Google Great Depression Greece Greek Growing Up Growth Guns Hamas Hard Work Hate Hatred Health Care Healthcare Hebrews High School Higher Education Home Honesty Honor Horror House Human Nature Human Rights Ideology Ignorance Immigration Imperialism Independence Injustice Inspirational Integration Integrity Internet Iraq War Judging Jury Justice Justification Killing Labor Labour Language Latin Latin America Lawyers Leaving Liberalism Liberation Liberty Libraries Listening Logic Loss Lying Management Mathematics Memories Middle Class Military Miracles Mistakes National Security Nato Navy Nazis Negotiation North Korea Nuclear War Nuclear Weapons Obedience Office Opinions Opportunity Oppression Optimism Osama Bin Laden Overcoming Palestine Parents Parties Past Peace Perception Personality Philosophy Physics Planning Police Political Parties Politicians Politics Popular Culture Power Prisons Progress Prohibition Propaganda Property Prophet Protest Psychology Public Education Public Relations Purpose Quality Racism Reading Real World Reality Recognition Reflection Refugees Republican Party Responsibility Revolution Rhetoric Ridicule Risk Running Sailing School Security Self Defense Selling September 11 Settlements Seven Slavery Slaves Social Contract Social Media Socialism Society Soldiers South Africa Soviet Union Speculation Speed Sports Strategy Struggle Students Study Style Suffering Supreme Court Survival Syria Taliban Taxes Teachers Teaching Technology Terror Terrorism Terrorists This Day Tobacco Today Torture Trade Tradition Tragedy Train Training Truth Tyranny Understanding Universe Values Victory Vietnam War Violence Virtue Voting Waiting Wall War War Of The Worlds War On Drugs Water Wealth Welfare Winning Winter Worry Worship Writing