Manufacturing Consent is well worth seeing, not least for the clip of a 1960s debate with Foucault on Dutch TV in which Foucault PWNS THE HELL OUT OF Chomsky, which nobody ever seems to notice or mention. I have to assume that its inclusion in the film is due to the filmmakers' incomprehension of what had actually gone down.
Also, Chomsky is on record as an apologist for the Khmer Rouge, which I find unsupportable.
Steve wrote:Slavoj Zizek wrote:The argument is that freedom of the press is freedom for all, even for those whom we find disgusting and totally unacceptable - otherwise, today it is then, tomorrow it is us. It sounds logical, but I think that it avoids the true paradox of freedom - that some limitations have to guarantee it.
This is an example of the duplicitous posture of a radical thinker: You only get freedom to say what you like if I agree with you. It's essentially an unenforceable fascism, unenforceable only because the power doesn't rest in Zizek's hands to enforce it, and if it did, it would ultimately strengthen his intellectual enemies. The moment speech (even reprehensible speech) is restricted, then the ideas in debate are immune from criticism or analysis, because they become invisible.
I think this response may arise from a misreading of Zizek's larger point. There are ALWAYS ALREADY restrictions on discourse, no matter what -- in any given context, there is ALWAYS stuff that is unsayable or unwritable or unpublishable, for reasons from the "purely practical" to the "blatantly ideological" to "personal taste" (and any understanding of these as necessarily separate from one another is questionable to begin with). Discourse cannot function without restrictions, just as humans cannot function without some forms of self-regulation. Of course it's crucial to find those limits, to learn about the ways they are enforced (and often self-enforced), and to constantly push them, debate them, etc., but the notion of an absolutely free and unrestricted realm of speech is, in the strictest sense, an ideal. Saying so is NOT AT ALL to devalue it; but to me the actual value lies in the workings of all of the processes by which we continually redefine what that realm is and should be.
[EDIT: This all connects to "noise" (as "unstructured, therefore unintelligible, signification") in music and in communication, but as I seem to be wandering far from the point I'll spare everyone. FOR NOW.]
I agree that trying to stifle controversial speech via externally imposed restrictions usually achieves the opposite of the desired effect.