In Collection
#180
Seen It:
No
Owner:
Tom and Kathy Tuell
Location:
Marathon, Fla.
Documentary, Special Interest
USA / English
The hypocrisy of the U.S. government is powerfully scrutinized in
Distorted Morality, a scathing thesis presented by renowned scholar Noam Chomsky. Speaking before an intimate audience at Harvard University on February 6, 2002, Chomsky sets fair and logical parameters to his thesis (namely, we are
all hypocrites and, for the purposes of debate, the U.S. government should
always be given benefit of the doubt) before outlining, with academic precision and citation of
real history (as opposed to biased
written history), the reasons why America's post-9/11 war on terror is a logical impossibility.
This, according to Chomsky's carefully supported analysis, is because the U.S. government has been, and continues to be, a major supporter of state-supported terrorism, favoring retaliatory or preemptive aggression over mediation in the world court, and avoiding accountability by excluding itself from the globally accepted definition of terrorism. (To underscore his point, Chomsky repeatedly volunteers his sources, inviting scrutiny at every turn.) With an additional hour-long Q&A session (in some ways more compelling, since it offers Chomsky's response to opposing viewpoints), Distorted Morality deserves the widest possible audience. In the short period between Chomsky's Harvard speech and the start of America's war against Iraq in March 2003, Chomsky's thesis has attained the chilling status of prophesy. Inevitably, Chomsky will be labeled anti-American, but at least his morality is crystal clear, immune to the obfuscation of politics and mainstream news. --Jeff Shannon
| Distributor |
Ak Press |
| Barcode |
824943501796 |
| Region |
Region |
| Release Date |
12/28/2004 |
| Packaging |
Keep Case |
| Screen Ratio |
1.33:1 |
| Subtitles |
Chinese; English |
| Audio Tracks |
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo |
| Layers |
Single Side, Dual Layer |
| No. of Disks/Tapes |
1 |
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