Der Wulf wrote: Actually, it was addressed to pei guy,
You're right. I'm sorry peiguy and kensloft.
Der Wulf wrote: I have a big problem with demigogs that adopt a political philosophy, then manipulate historical facts to support their predisposition. Read, listen, debate, then think and form your own belief systems ---then re-think and adapt as your mind or new facts redirect you.
You made an excellent point in another thread about the imperfection of humans. The point is not to reach a level of perfection, then park, the real excellence in mankind is the constant quest for improvment. that cannot happen without intellectual honesty.
Wow! That could've come from my own mind, except I'd take twice as long to say it. LOL
Der Wulf wrote: The article by Horowitz probes that quality in Chomsky's political essay's.
IMHO The history of the United States as propounded in this thread is nothing less than at best, an uninformed, unthinking, recitation of US basher talking points. At worst it's a twisted and bigoted diatribe.
I haven't read the Horowitz article yet. I'll be curious to see what PEIguy says about it. But I do agree that Chomsky makes some massive leaps that I can't follow. Especially when he's disrespecting Jefferson, one of my favorites. LOL.
I haven't read anything he's said about Iraq. So I'm wimping out and leaving it to those who have read him.
Der Wulf wrote: Wanna debate the points, --I'm on. But we must get the facts straight before assuming intentions. BTW in my world, ladies do not step aside, they add a special dimension.

Charmer! Effective, by the way.
Getting the facts straight...I guess that's part of my point. Oftentimes people have such opposing viewpoints that it takes forever to agree on the smallest detail, much less debate the points at hand.
Let's take item 1 and 2 from your quote. Chomsky's interpretation is brutal, but I have often heard that we did use Nazis against the Soviet Union. We'd have to first research to find out if that's true or not, and then analyze who we were using, why, and how. Then we could finally debate the right and wrong of how we fought the Cold War in this instance. That debate would probably lead to using bin Laden against the Soviets in Afghanistan later on. Same basic principle.
Some people are going to get completely lost in the immediate outrage over using Nazis. Period. They can't go forward with their thinking. The debate has to start so small, with defining the term 'Nazi', understanding the roles of the various people, and then trying to make a judgement call on what we did.
I think that so often the ideas we argue are nebulous, views are lost in opposing ideaologies. Chomsky puts it right out there in a way that we can grasp, wrestle with, and finally conquer.
We seem to agree, overall (unless I am grossly misunderstanding you.) I don't feel any anger towards the twistings of Chomsky, even though I allowed myself to be mislead by them for a time. He does spark thoughts and questions; surely that's a great gift.
Again, I'm curious to see what PEIguy says.
