Monday, June 1, 2026

What to think of Norman Finkelstein

I like reading columns and books written by Norman Finkelstein.  I like listening to him in interviews.  He's brilliant, he has an incredibly deep historical understanding, and he's one of the best, if not THE best, critics of Israeli propaganda ever.*

All that being said, I do not agree with Finkelstein 100%.  I never have.   And even then I may have missed a lot of things. 

I find him convincing on historical facts but not on current politics and strategies.  From the moment I heard him denouncing BDS on Democracy Now! a long time ago (perhaps 2016)  I knew we disagreed on that.  And he held up the two state solution as an "achievable" international consensus. I had long thought that impossible and even misconstrued.  It has seemed to me that the Zionist movement was committed to ethnic cleansing from the very beginning.  They wanted every else to leave Palestine so they could have it for themselves.  Zionists even often claimed there was nobody there. Anyone with access to books, old movies, or Wikipedia can see that is not true.  The history of Palestine is fairly well known going back over 2000 years.  There was never a time when it was not occupied by not just one but many groups.  It has always been a very busy and popular place centrally located to the world.

Finally, and worst of all, Finkelstein has consistently from 2012 onwards denounced the Palestinian refugee's Right to Return as being impractical, or politically impossible as long as there is an Israel.  He says that this being impossible, it should not be demanded either.  (Which all suggests he chooses not to imagine a time past the defeat and dismantling of Israel.  IOW, he is giving this a 'liberal Zionist' frame.  Most people now believe the defeat and dismantling of Israel is a prerequisite to peace in the middle east if not the world.)  Finkelstein doesn't defend his view in principle, except the principle of practicality, which he then claims all successful radical movements have all followed.  Well, I say this time is different in many ways.  Similar to global heating and mass non-human extinction, Israel is an issue to the entire world. It is a partner to US Imperialism in bringing the entire world to war.  (Which ironically was a basis of crackpot Christian Zionism.).  Therefore, and for many reasons actually, there is only one solution, "practical" or not, the defeat and dismantling of Israel.  (Another solution might be the defeat and dismantling of USA, which would probably achieve the same effect on Israel too.)

Though Finkelstein often sounds like the fiercest anti-Zionist I've ever heard, but you have got to listen very carefully to a few of his words which give the game away, as Tony Greenstein has shown in several masterful deconstructions over the years.

Tony Greenstein admires Finkelstein books the way I do, but has written several scathing critiques of Finkelstein's appearances and commentaries for the last 15 years based on the above and similar issues.  This is the latest one I could find: 

 https://azvsas.blogspot.com/2024/12/norman-finkelstein-was-so-stung-by-my.html

When Finkelstein calls Israel a "lunatic state" that sounds to me like he has now accepted that the reform and/or existence of Israel is unacceptable and that that only a single non-discriminatory state is possible.

But Tony sees this differently.  He sees Finkelstein refusing to call Israel a Zionist state, and therefore suggesting that Zionism is or at least at one time was possible and not "lunatic."  

Both Tony and I see Zionism as genocidal from the time when it was being conceived in 1897 at the first Zionist conference.  Zionists could only imagine ethnic cleansing the current inhabitants, not somehow cohabiting with them, and devoted much ink to defending what we now call "ethnic cleansing."  Tony and I see present day "Israel" as the embodiment of the original Zionist vision, not a pathological deviation from it.  It was pathological from the outset.

A neat distillation of Tony's 20 page post (!) is in his one one comment to the above:

https://azvsas.blogspot.com/2024/12/norman-finkelstein-was-so-stung-by-my.html?showComment=1734556764761#c7642573257318051544

The problem with Norman F, besides the lack of any serious class analysis of the forces behind the Israeli state or imperialism, is that he is extremely mercurial and lacks judgement. It was obvious to anyone who had any understanding of Zionism and he should have done since his Ph.D thesis was on Zionism, that there was no way Israel would ever allow a Palestinian state to emerge.

Anyone with any sense of judgement would not have called BDS a 'cult' when it is clearly the chosen strategy of the solidarity movement. There are arguments as to how effective it really is etc. but there is no doubt that BDS activities in themselves help build the solidarity movement.

And why he chose to attack the slogan of the movement 'From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be free' is beyond me. The fact that the British Government and Sue Braverman don't like it is reason enough to chant it. To say it leaves room for doubt and 'what about Israel' calls into question just what Norman's politics are really about.

As for no-one having read my book well of course I'd like it if far more people did but it has certainly played a major role in people seeing that Israel originated in the acceptance of anti-Semitism and that Zionist claims to inherit the memory of those who died in the holocaust are bogus and false.

Tony takes this personally perhaps, but we can't blame him.  Tony has written a much needed history book on how Zionist cooperated with Nazis in various ways even up to and during the Holocaust.  Finkelstein, an authority on Zionist books and seems to have read nearly everything about Zionism, dismisses Tony's effort as a non-book that nobody has read.

If Finkelstein has any issues with the facts in Tony's book, he should state them rather than smearing Tony as a non-author.  We should be comrades in the liberation of Palestine.  And why is Finkelstein smearing Tony in the first place?  Aren't they on the same side?  Well, no, as it turns out.  Only Tony is the true anti-Zionist.  Finkelstein is the practical man who refuses to imagine a world beyond Zionism, still clinging, by the longest imaginable thread now, to liberal zionism, and the usefulness of interational agencies, agreements, etc. (all of which have proven futile).  The present govnerment is insane, all the Jewish Supremacists in Israel are insane, but somehow sanity will be achieved, as in many other cases, first by being sure to make properly targeted demands and slogans.

[Satire: We demand no rape of Palestinian prisoners after 6 PM.]

Greenstein's denunciations of Finkelstein go back to at least 2012 when he wrote this post which is actually more thorough and principled, and less personal, so perhaps I should have linked it first.  (This is the one where he says Finkelstein was different 5 years prior.)

https://azvsas.blogspot.com/2012/02/tragedy-of-norman-finkelstein-time-to.html

[More should be added here]

The latest flap concerns something far less important.  Finkelstein suggesting (I don't hear him actually saying it, but suggesting it) that Tucker Carlson's newfound critical voice against Israel is driven by antisemitism.

I think it's good that Tucker Carlson has taken this turn.  He has been doing a good job in his commentary on Israel and interviews of key observers.  I appreciate those as good things.  Meanwhile I do not endorse Tucker Carlson's worldview in toto.  He is a pro-capitalist and in my view a bigot.  But I can't much believe he is antisemitic per se.  He never says purely antisemitic things.  He was on Jewish Supremacist owned TV networks!  I think he like others is seeing the cost of Israel to the US.  And that it a good thing.  All sides need to unite to remove the Zionism from the government of USA.

Meanwhile, there is another thing which bugs me much more than Tucker Carlson's "conversion" on Israel.  And that is Conspiracy Theories.

Conspiracy Theories

When Finkelstein does engage the belief that Israel was behind the JFK assassination, he does so only derisively.  He points out that Kennedy ran on being more anti-Communist than Nixon.  

No theorists deny Kennedy's famed anti-communism, they typically say Kennedy had a change of heart after the Cuban Missile Crisis and/or The Bay of Pigs.  They point out that Kennedy signed order NSAM 263 on October 11, 1963 which would begin a phased withdrawal of US forces from Vietnam.  This order was reversed by LBJ immediately after the assassination.  Some claim it was "political,"  but it was classified Secret and not known to the public until after his death.

JFK demonstrated that he was not a committed cold warrior in two acts: refusing to send US bombers after the failed Bay of Pigs invasion by CIA, and making a deal with the USSR to end the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Kennedy also gave many impassioned speeches regarding making peace with USSR.  It is true that by themselves, such speeches mean little.  But then we have the facts above which give them more weight.

I can see in the press conferences that Kennedy made after the Bay of Pigs that he is being attacked from the pro-war side by the press.  It's "why didn't you do this" and "why aren't you going to do that" and "how is this going to work."  In late 1963, Kennedy is widely seen as weak and especially on Communism to the point where in the still Cold War thumping USA it is widely believed he will lose the election in 1964.

Many conspiracy theorists and even the great Oliver Stone who made two movies about the Kennedy Assassination, didn't mention Israel.  Stone's JFK movies were funded by a well known Jewish Zionist.

And here we begin to see an issue with the Chomsky/Finkelstein critiques of JFK assassination theories.  A capable secret agency like Mossad would indeed produce limited hangout theories that point to everyone and everything but the one thing they want to remain most hidden.

It's actually much more logical that Israel had JFK assassinated than the CIA/MiC had him assassinated, for several reasons.

1) The MiC could simply 'wait out' Kennedy's eventual defeat.  JFK's tiny steps could be thwarted all the way until then.  Israel was on a roll and needed to get the bomb done now, no time to waste.  Kennedy was demanding inspections (and more I have heard, but that he was demanding inspections is well known) and was outspoken about preventing Israel from having the bomb.

2) A successor like Goldwater might be as disinclined to let Israel have the bomb as JFK.  LBJ was a long time proven Zionist supporter and currently owned too, probably the most Zionist owned of all, and especially after the election it seems, as proven by his non-response to the Numec thefts and the USS Liberty incident.  His last girlfriend is said to be a well known Zionist in Hollywood (after having separated from his Austin, TX girlfriend over the Vietnam War).

3) Ruby, a nightclub owner, was not CIA connected but he was Jewish Mafia/Lanksy connected.  As Oswald's assassin, Ruby was clearly involved.  It is said that Ruby himself once said he did it, "So the Jews wouldn't get blamed."

4) At least one Lansky mob shooter in prison for life has confessed to the job (I have the tapes from the most famous one, and he makes no mistakes from the known record).  Well known CIA clandestine operator E Howard Hunt made a deathbed confession (after a lifetime denial) that he was "there" (not specified) but not the actual shooter.  Meaning it likely was the mob guy, not the CIA guy, who made the shot.  EHH was probably there as backup shooter (among many), in case all the previous failed, he could take the worst angle.  Likely from the grassy knoll.

5) Lansky himself was barely mentioned in many pre-2006 accounts (as we'd expect from their being limited hangouts).  But he was The One who lost out biggest in Cuba, having reinvested his Las Vegas winnings, as "The Mob Accountant," in a new hotel in Havana.  (Played mostly historically as Hyman Roth in Godfather 2 and 3.). For that alone, he's be the biggest mob boss most likely to be involved.  PLUS, he had been well known to be involved with Zionists ever since shipping weapons to Zionist gangs.  Almost certainly he'd been in touch with Mossad ever since.  And he emigrated to Israel subsequently, though it didn't last.  One thing never mentioned in this is that he could never be worshipped as a hero in Israel for helping bring the bomb to Israel for many reasons, including that Israel (and the US officially) has never recognized that Israel even has the bomb.

6). I have heard that at least one early conspiracy author mentioned Israel if not as the key organizer.  But nearly all conspiracy theories have mentioned James Jesus Angleton, who was at none other than the Israel deak at CIA.

7). The official story could hardly need more debunking at this point.  Johnson's committee was created by Johnson--himself a key actor--to give himself cover.  Warren begged not to be on it (and probably got favors for doing so and threats if not, in the Johnson fashion, Johnson needed a credible committee chair).  A likely conspirator committee member was the CIA director who had been fired by JFK a year before over Bay of Cuba--Allen Dulles, who famously had lunch with many witnesses before they spoke.  One, curiously, was Gerald Ford, a later President.  Nixon, GW Bush, and E Howard Hunt are all implicated as having been in Dallas.  GW Bush had ties to the Bay of Pigs Invasion--his rig for 'Zapata Oil Company' very close to Cuba was the platform for the invasion.  Four future Presidents and a known CIA fixer were there.

Oswald was not a professional shooter, he was a professional spook asset and FBI informant, an issue never addressed once even evaded (it was mentioned that Oswald was getting checks from the FBI), he had a infamously terrible gun bought more for pranks, a terrible vantage point, and personally failed a nitrate test for gun use.  Nitrate tests are no longer used because they tend to produce false positives, not false negatives.  Oswald himself said he had not used a gun at all and was a Patsy that the murder was being pinned on.  He was never allowed to testify in his own defense, and his one allowed call (to a likely CIA contact) was intercepted and blocked.  He was killed after being in custody after only one day, by a Jewish Mafia connected, friend of Meyer Lansky, nightclub owner who should never have had access to Oswald but was well regarded by the corrupt Dallas police.  Much of the original after death photos of JFK in the Parkland Hospital were lost, some of the key ones appear to be fabrications.  Parkland staff all believed Kennedy was struck from the front, to explain this away 'confusion' is alleged by the Warren Commission and their defenders.  We only have the third coroners report, written a day after the first, with the first destroyed and the second burned.  The chain of command of the body of JFK was suspicious, it went with Johnson.  The final "autopsy" was done in secret under military command.  Congress itself declared in the late 1970's that a conspiracy was most likely involved, and they didn't have much of the information now public, especially some photos which are clear fabrications.  While USSR officially recognized LBJ, in secret they told all embassies that LBJ was a likely JFK conspirator, and USSR intelligence was among the best in the world.  Many witnesses said they heard many shots.  Many readings of the Zapruder film identify more than 3 shots, and the fatal one from the front (grassy knoll).  One of Oswald's best friends, and a longtime known CIA asset Russian emigre George de Mohrenschildt, who suggested the Book Depository job to Oswald (then in New Orleans) said Oswald liked JFK.  George was to testify before Congress for the committee investigating the JFK assassination, and was found suicided that morning.  He had testified a lot before the Warren Commission but only after talking to Committee member Allen Dulles.  Most reasonable explanation is that Oswald was an informant investigating assassination plots.  Several of Oswald's reports went straight to J Edgar Hoover as unclassified under a twisted name (Harvey Lee) to avoid suspicion.  Hoover loved to keep tabs on everyone.  Kennedy also was fond of mentioning the Palestinian Right to Return (or be compensated) as fundamental.  LBJ did not. 

More thinly sourced: Oswald had met and talked with Ruby--who was seeking a Kennedy assassin at the time.  Oswald refused the deal after Ruby refused to pay the money up front.  A Lansky associated prisoner serving life sentence for multiple shooting murders confessed to the murder of JFK, getting no known detail wrong.

Finkelstein didn't mention these things.  But).  He mentions that Muammar Gaddafi said Israel did that (very derisively, as if nobody should believe Gaddafi, while frankly Gaddaffi is seeming more and more credible and as victim of US Imperialism until his death from a US attack).

Finkelstein doesn't mention where Gaddafi got this idea.  He got it from none other than Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli whistleblower who also revealed the Israeli nuclear program.  Vanunu revealed that Israel was behind the JFK assassination shortly after he was released in 2004, and since then hardly a credible theorist has not mentioned Israel.

Vanunu is seen as pitiful liar by Zionists, virtually ignored by Western Media, but anyone who knows anything believes at least his original claims that Israel had created Nukes and was elaborately hiding the nuclear weapons program from US inspectors.  Why then not believe he was correct also that Israel was, because of the bomb, behind the JFK assassination?


Well, Finkelstein like Chomsky hides behind the academically and mass respectable (liberal) media mantra that conspiracy theories are crazy talk or foreign disinformation.

And it's sad, I think.  Especially when it is well known that Israel assassinated many other well known figures.  Assassination conspiracies are far smaller and easier to hide than say, conspiracy theories about the anti-usefulness of covid vaccines or faked moon landings.

It's interesting that while (known to FBI) many early conspiracy theories about the JFK assassination included Israel, few books made much of it, pointing in other directions.  (As I've said, we'd expect limited hangouts.) when key bits, Lansky being the big loser in Havana and a fellow Jewish mobster and night club owner with Ruby, were obvious as hell.  Just too Jewish to be mentioned.  THAT was the problem.

According to some Jews, even on the lefter JVP side, we should have theories about bankers controlling the world because that implicates Jews even if Jews aren't being mentioned and don't even control a majority of banking (though a very disproportionate amount).  

I suppose the same thing could be said about concentrated ownership in big media, we can't think about media controlling minds for nefarious purposes, since that would implicate Jews, who included most Hollywood media owners, producers and stars.  Hollywood is mostly Jewish and always has been.  Jewish Mafia too.  And much promotion was infamously through nepotism and mob-o-tism.

Which gets to the point.  Excessive concern for the image of Jewishness inhibiting even our ability to think about wide pictures, and connect dots.  That's unacceptible to me.

I don't blame Jews in general for Zionism, though it's the crime of most Jews.  But I don't want fear of implicating Jews stand in the way of understanding how things work in general, and oppressive banking and media in particular.

And we know the bourgeoisie have many pow wows and perks.  It's a big club...  And Billionaire Jewish Supremacists and their courtiers have a big section in that club worth being aware of.

Even Tony Greenstein is derisive of conspiracy theories.  He denounces David Miller both as a conspiracy theorist and more as a plain old antisemite (I agree that some of Miller's statements quoted by Greenstein were antisemitic, but I agree with Miller that power networks do need to be understood and dismantled, and the term Jewish Supremacist is not antisemitic, it doesn't have to apply to all Jews any more than White Supremacist applies to all whites.  It's curious that Finkelstein views the term Zionist as mostly being used incorrectly (as if it could include some good people) and that  he prefers the term Jewish Supremacist for the insanity of Israel and Israel supporters, as if he doesn't want to give Zionism a bad name.

I do see a lot of antisemitic comments on X.  But not people I follow, and I've never myself seen David Miller make an actual antisemitic comment except as quoted in Greenstein's blog.  Likewise I have never seen Tucker Carlson make an actual antisemitic remark.

*Some say that Finkelstein's debunking of In Time Immorial (ITI) and Dershowitz is too technical.  In Dershowitz for example he found plagary.  In ITI Finkelstein found a few key falsified numbers.  Finkelstein is laser focused on such details and not the big picture ideas.  So for example he dossn't criticize Dershowitz for opposition to the Right to Return.  In my view, any thinking person ought find the ideas in ITI ridiculous to the point of insanity.  Endless evidence including documentary footage shows Palestine full of people going way back.  It was never "empty," and it has always been one of the world's most venerated places.  It only makes sense that the people there, the Palestinians, were the descendants of people who originally lived there at 0CE, their intermediate ancestors had just changed their religion a couple of times.  Only some of the people were in the levant were ever expelled by the Romans, and some converted to Jewish Christianity (or already were), (Roman) Christianity, and then Islam when it was convenient.  One doesn't need to prove the lack of a mass expulsion, that's the presumption for which considerable evidence is necessary for the contrary to be believable.  Though that threshold has long been passed by the Nakba and Gaza.  Jews today aren't even all the descendants of the original Jews as many Jewish descendants converted away from Judaism (and vice versa).  And intermarriage and false paternity.  Jewish Judeans were never the only ones in the Levant either, except during the era of the Maccabees when most were forcibly converted to Judaism, then you could say all of the Hasmonean Empire was Jewish by religion, but only part of it was Judean Jews, and the rest weren't much committed to it (either).  Jews were a sect that emerged among late Bronze age Canaanites who were not Samaritan or Phoenician.  As late as the 1950's mainstream Jewish organizations insisted that Jews were a religious group, not a 'Nation.'  Many Orthodox still do.

Conclusion

Norman Finkelstein has made himself into a limited hangout that represents the last gasp of liberal zionism.  One the one had he brings a wealth of historical facts and a very important debunking of Zionist lies, very useful.  On the other, he brings a denunciation of BDS, the Right to Return, and the one State of Palestine solution, as well as conspiracy theories at least some of which are likely true, like the conspiracy to kill JFK so that Israel could finish the bomb.

He has taken a lot of this from Chomsky, to whom he gives the highest possible praise.  Finkelstein is an independent person, but unshakable admiration for Chomsky has weakened his independence.  Chomsky, more like a true limited hangout, has similar strengths and weaknesses, but was also part of the ultimate western Zionist network of Epstein and himself a one time Kibbutzim.  Chomsky became most politically active in the aftermath of the JFK assassination, and never wavered from denunciating JFK conspiracy theories and Communism, which has been Zionism's biggest and most principled and consistent enemy.  Chomsky has weakened the enemies of Zionism for decades.  His Anarchism has been politically useless, and especially with regards to defeating Zionism.  He has created dissent in the ranks of the Palestine Liberation Movement by insisting on things like the Two State Solution, which was always fake.  (Word is that Chomsky's Universal Grammar is also useless.  It appears there are universal concepts, like one vs many, but not universal grammar as such.)

There is no doubt that Zionism must be defeated.  I too wished it weren't true, but there is now no question that it is.*  The defeat of Zionism requires that Capitalism and Jewish Supremacist power networks need to be dismantled.  We must apply things like diversity and inclusion in banking, media, education, and government to inhibit undue Jewish Supremacist control and influence.  The very minimum we can do is boycott the worst Zionist offenders in solidarity with the Palestine Liberation Movement.

(*I actually must leave this determination to Palestinians.  The Palestinians alone must decide when to stop fighting Israel, since they are doing the fighting, and I'm just sitting in front of my computer.  They have my solidarity either way.  But I believe they are on this page, and that it is the correct one.)

Like Trotsky and Trotskyites, neither Finkelstein nor Chomsky can be fully trusted.  That being said, and their weaknesses never forgotten, they make great entertainers.

The exact same can be said about many of the people Finkelstein and Chomsky criticize, like Tucker Carlson.

(Interestingly, many right wing critics of Israel like Carlson and Meirsheimer believe US should focus on a bigger 'enemy' than Iran: China, and Finkelstein and Chomsky are also on the anti-China page, denouncing the fake "Uyghur Genocide".  Now the limited hangout of anti-Communist Israel critics is coming into focus.)

(Now you may ask, how do I have the balls to take on such heavies?  I'm just a guy lacking both credentials and experience.  I haven't written a hundred books, or even a few key ones.  Well, I have seen the high and the mighty fall to dust many times before, proving their critics right.  I have courage in my lack of conviction and comparative isolation.  At least I have the potential of thinking independently.  Perhaps I'm just another fool, but perhaps not.)

Sunday, May 24, 2026

What to think of Stephen Colbert

 I've hardly ever watched Stephen Colbert's late night show, I'd seen him a few more times as the satirical character on Jon Stewart's show.  I only watched such things while staying with my sister and brother in law, who watched all the well known programs on CNN, HBO, MSNBC, CBS, and ABC.  I visited them for a week every year or two.  But after awhile, I got so pissed with such programs they never played them for me anymore, watching them behind closed doors if at all so as not to disturb me.

I got particularly upset after seeing how MSNBC personalities like Rachel Maddow were so anti-Bernie.  And then, right after the revelation of how the DNC had suppressed Bernie was made public, the very next day the entire dialog flipped to how Russia was influencing the election, based on claims which have been thoroughly debunked but Democrats refuse to let go of them.  This accomplished several things in one go.  And leading the pack with the new fabricated topic (which would dominate the airwaves of the most networks (except Fox) media (aka 'liberal' media) were just those stations and personalities.  It made me sick to my stomach.

To me it was all about changing the dialog from the way Bernie had been sidelined.

So I watched all the usual personalities on the late night shows.  And they all made me sick.   Don't even get me started on Maher, I hated him from Politically Incorrect which was as accurate title.  All except one.  That was Stephen Colbert.  He was very talented in avoiding all the cringy sermons and just hitting the jugulars.  I was sure that he was hired to do just that, within the bounds of 'liberal' corporate media like CBS.

I had remembered him from the right wing character he also played as Stephen Colbert.  He did it so perfectly, better than any real right wing character as he'd maintain the farce to the bitter end. 

It was hard to get used to him as host, but he was the one late night host I felt I could bear.  As I might do, he went for the big picture, not today's gotchas from partisans.  So he looked at Trump as Trump, not so much Russian Stooge or any of the partisan claims.  Of course that was too much for MAGA, so it's not surprising it ultimately led to...his show being ended, but it had a long incredible run.

None of which I ever watched by myself except the very last show, and it was great.

Now I see endless condemnations of Colbert not only from MAGA but from people I follow, fellow leftists.  He is castigated for his lack of 'confrontation' of such people as Kissinger.

But I see this in the context of his network CBS.  What Colbert did, dance around Kissinger's office, was far more entertaining and even challenging than anything done by the notably imperially sychophantic Face the Nation, who'd go after "important things" which were often as often as not rooted in nonsense, like the alleged rapes and baby killings* on October 7.

Colbert was our Court Jester.  And he did that job very well, as far as I have seen (which is 0.001%).  If he did not meet with Kissinger (btw, one of Hillary Clinton's best friends, Kissinger helped make Hillary into a Washington wonder girl just out of college) he wouldn't be suited for that job.

So I praise Colbert.  And he's the one of the very few talk show hosts I could have watched (I recall I liked Dick Cavett back in the day, not to mention Bill Moyers--one of my all time favorites).  But it may have been just as fine not to watch Colbert either.  I don't feel like I missed anything important, except his last show which I couldn't miss.  To do his job as well as he did, and he may not be the most honorable or knowledgable person in the world, but he was obviously a comedic genius, and a very sensitive one too, to be that good and still be on TV four times a week for eleven years, and occasionally even barb the President and other top dogs, so hard working too. 

He wasn't as great a comedian as, say, George Carlin, but George Carlin was only ever a talk show guest (most famously, 130 times with Johnny Carson, who was so "dumb" (his act) as to never be watchable even with smart ass Carlin).  Carlin was no where near as sensitive and thoughtful as Colbert.

(*No personal testimonies, videos, or hard evidence of rapes despite vast searching and endless propaganda to the contrary.  One baby was killed, "by accident".  Don't get me started on the official propaganda of "Russian atrocities" which are most often falsely labeled.  But that's all the sort of stuff your mind will be filled with on the 'serious' broadcast network news channels, which still have the largest audiences, need to the most advertising money to exist, and are heavily monitored and controlled by the powers that be.  Inevitably they are all about manufacturing consent for war.  It's better to watch their comedy shows, at least the best ones, if you can stand them.)

Monday, May 18, 2026

The only way AI can be for the common good

There is only one way to make AI work for the common good, and that is Communism.

There is a very similar set of issues wrt global heating.  Any solution to that at any time in our current trajectory (up, up, and over the cliff, crashing down, finally creating the next civilization) will require Communism, if not now then later, and the sooner the better.

Commanding Heights

I say Communism in the way that current Communist countries such as China, Cuba, Vietnam, and North Korea understand it.  They recognize Communism as the movement created by Lenin and his successors known as Marxism Leninism.

Marxism Leninism has an evolving set of visions as to how to implement the best version of socialism, and it has varied from country to country, but Lenin's original concept still stands, the Central Committee of the People must control the Commanding Heights of the economy.

So that means that in China today there may be very rich people, and something akin to capitalism in operation, but they do not as a class control the direction of the economy. The People do.

Pure communism

There is a different notion of communism, the one with a lower case c, which represents the ultimate evolution of socialism, the one in which there is no oppression of any kind, including oppression from rentiers and capitalists and states themselves, and there is society of the kind envisioned by many spiritual leaders beforehand (including the Apostle Paul): "from each according to their abilities and to each according to their needs."  I read Marx as grinning while he says this, knowing the religious origin of it, and not at all suggesting this will be short in coming.  First the Communist movement to create it needs to come into power and then they will need to work over time to achieve it.  The Communist revolution would be short in coming, but the ultimate achievement of socialism it defined--pure communism--which would take awhile or perhaps even be a never ending pursuit--which is to say, an ideal.  I believe that ideals are quite often necessary to give us focus, and otherwise we have nothing to endlessly pursue.

Nikita Khrushchev predicted pure communism, as a stateless and even moneyless society, would be achieved by 1980.  Instead, or course, USSR went neoliberal under Gorbachev who weakened the state and authority and popularity so much by permitting market control and even unemployment so that that western backed puppet Yeltsin could take over and wreck it completely.

Pure communism is a dicey proposition for marxists of all kinds to talk about because it is an ideal, and marxism of all kinds claims to be about materialism, not idealism.  But I see the ideal there in the famous phrase (and that's about it).  And that is what marxism is supposed to be about ultimately, and preferably with no time wasted except for decency, achieving.  Existence without any kind of exploitation.  

"Realm of Freedom" were Marx's ultimate words in Volume 3 of Capital, as a society in which no one would have to work, but instead develop their own human energy towards that which they valued including art, science, philosophy, and self-actualization.

Wild West AI

Current AI is a perfect illustration of the problems with Capitalism.  All the big money wants to be the biggest money by owning the next big thing, and damn everything else, the people, the environment, communities, electricity, water, future jobs, wasted people power to better fix global heating, etc.

Even when many critics, like me and Gary Marcus and Cory Doctorow say it's really just half baked yet.

Marcus and I and many other say that AI needs symbolic reasoning and built in human-like ideas and even basic 'knowledge' in human-like form.  Neural networks by themselves are incomplete...and incredibly wasteful if expected to do everything we need.

Meanwhile China's slower paced rollout makes more sense.  And it is said their systems are much more efficient.


Sunday, May 17, 2026

Debunking Israeli Propaganda about the Nakba

Mouin Rabbani does a good job calling forth the key evidence showing that the enduring Israeli propaganda about the Palestinian Nakba is untrue.

https://x.com/MouinRabbani/status/2055846805787517213

First it was debunked by Erskine Barton Childers, who examined radio archives maintained by intelligence services which showed no radio broadcasts from Arab States ordering Palestinians to evacuate.  It would have been completely illogical for them to do so.  (The next link requires a one pound minimum subscription to read.)

https://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/12th-may-1961/9/the-other-exodus

Israeli historian Benny Morris debunked similar claims regarding the 1967 war, showing that there was no preceding attack by Arab states.

In 1948, there was an attack by Arab states, but only months after Palestinian refugees had already begun accumulating in their countries.  This was certainly not an attempt to "genocide Jews," nor was it a unified attempt to dismantle Israel, which some countries had already established agreements with.  They each had different agendas, but they all wanted Palestinians to be returned to Palestine.

The X thread above also includes Israelis attempting to refute these and other points, wherein you can see some lively debate.

Norman Finkelstein also debunks the Israeli propaganda, referencing Childers and Morris, in his marvelous book Beyond Chutzpah.

Collapse of Civilizations

 https://youtu.be/yV-Cwcy8K6A?si=fCrGnvzu50cZwlD2

Where the title says "identical" what the video actually shows are repeated patterns, not precisely identical but similar.

This time *may* be different, in that there is something like a global civilization, that includes "outsiders."  But likely it is going to be the Western Imperium that collapses first, then disasters of global heating will ultimately cause all to collapse.

Mor On AI vs Jobs

AI proponents claim that the history of increasing automation and productivity is that they result in more jobs, not less.

I'm not going to argue with that in general, though clearly automation has at many times caused difficult or impossible job displacement that many people have struggled to deal with.  So, while in the long run there may be more jobs, in the short run many people lose theirs, and as Keynes famously quipped:

“In the long run we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy, too useless a task if in tempestuous seasons they can only tell us that when the storm is long past the ocean is flat again.”

But even if past automation has ultimately been in some ways beneficial  to most people (probably not to the natural environment including most other species, and even many people, but in terms of 'jobs' and obscene wealth for the wealthy with a bit for some others near the top) and is often felt to be that way overall, I'm also going to argue that AI is Different.  Surely that is also what AI proponents claim.

I just argued for this essential difference in my previous post.  Previous automation systems have dealt with the heavy, awful, boring, and repetitive work, not the creative and thinking parts which people like and benefit from doing.  I have also argued that the Limits to Growth mean there is not enough there for AI to achieve the better world proponents imagine, and instead we'll be left with a cruel and sloppy world with most people making do with less.  Finally it seems that AI related layoffs are already occurring, the only this is probably the only way--replacing most rather than augmenting people--that the vast investment and justify itself to investors.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Knowledge vs Slop

Knowledge and Symbolic Reasoning

When people gain useable insights into the operation of the universe, such as Einstein's law of Special Relativity, they have encoded those insights into "knowledge" which can be efficiently (if not completely) transmitted to other people, usually by explanation.

Generally this means that they have encoded insights into a reduced symbolic form, like E = MC^2.

When neural networks learn information, it is encoded into vast numbers of coefficients.  This form of knowledge cannot be efficiently transmitted to people, and it probably does not match symbolic concepts people already have.  So LLM's implicitly learn how different words are used, without necessarily learning or using our general categories such as noun and verb (which may be the most intuitive to us even if they present troubling exceptions to LLM's).


AI is making us dumber

Proponents of LLM believe this is fine.  They want AI to deliver solutions.  They don't need AI to explain itself.  They feel that it is unnecessary for AI to help us learn how to solve problems for ourselves.  We stand on the shoulders of AI to do more.

But if AI is letting us solve problems without fully understanding them, then it is making us dumber.  The "solutions" that we are thereby creating might best be understood as slop (the word popularized by Cory Doctorow, who is an excellent critic of AI).

When you are a homeless person passing through a soup kitchen, they dish out slop.  That's fine because they have limited resources and limited staff and that is the only way they can feed so many people cheaply.  But when you are an aristocrat dining in a fine restaurant, or just a person who has enough time to do so, you want a carefully prepared meal, not slop.

Slop is perhaps unavoidable, but generally it is something we should preferably avoid.  Ideally everyone should have carefully prepared meals.  That's part of a quality life.

Resisting AI means we will not achieve the (alleged) productivity benefits.

But preparing slop makes us dumber.  Preparing meals carefully makes us smarter.  In the long run, this is more important than being "more productive."  It is much better to do less, and to understand what we are doing and learn how to do it better, than just to "do more."

Consuming more slop makes us poorer, not richer.  (Don't trust GDP and similar metrics here.  What is really most important is not how much we consume, or how much money circulates, but deepening our quality of life.)

We should seek to invent the technologies which make us smarter, not dumber.  Only by being smarter can we know and appreciate quality and how to get there.

Therefore, we should seek to build the society that makes us learn more, think, and create, not just dish out more and more slop.

Making people dumber and dumber is the quickest road to collapse of everything.

That also happens to be what you get by mindlessly raising "productivity."

"Higher Level" thinking

Proponents of AI think the sloppiness is fine and it enables us to think at a "higher" (more abstract) level while the AI does the lower level thinking for us.

But this higher level often becomes little more than BS and hand waving.

It is my feeling and my belief that the strongest learning comes from working things all the way through.  This is not a new idea.  Euclid famously told King Ptolemy I: There is no royal road to Geometry.

So when I build my programs, I do it this way.  I think problems through with paper summaries or diagrams first.  I think about the different kinds of ways they could be solved, and choose what appears to be the best one.  If it proves to have been a wrong choice, I flip to another one before I have written much code, if possible.  I build everything from the raw ingredients of my operating system and programming language as much as possible.  Only if things appear to be particularly tricky do I look for previous solutions (aka libraries) that I can use.  If fairly easy, I even reimplement the parts of those libraries that I need.  I rely heavily on built-in language features or libraries including things like associative arrays (aka hashtables) which are capable of dealing with many if not most hard problems.

I know this goes against the grain.  From the very beginning of my 39 year career in computer programming I was taught the mantra "Reuse."  But I reject that as a general rule for many reasons:

1) Learn (everything) by doing (everything).

2) Programs built upon combinations of even fairly simple libraries can become ever more impossible to fully understand.  Often different libraries do not intuitively connect with one another.  Then all your code becomes translating information from one library to another--very dull.

3) Copyright, patent, and similar issues.

During the whole process, even before starting to code, I start writing the user documentation as well.  This is invaluable in determining the fine details of the interfaces.  If something is hard to describe, it's probably not designed well either.

I don't create a 'detailed design' such as including all variables and data structures before coding.  That's basically humanly impossible.  When I was required to use a formal design process, most people could not actually perform a useful Design Review to being well into the coding process if not nearly complete.  As one of my colorful (and PhD) colleagues remarked, "We're supposed to do Design after Coding.  I prefer design while coding."

For over a quarter century, I've either written the documentation into the program itself, or straight into fairly simple HTML.  I like being that close to the metal.  I hate word processing programs.  I do all my editing in Gnu Emacs.

I've had some experience doing things other ways.  Java programming, for example, is traditionally done with the importation of dozens or even hundreds of libraries, with interactions so complex that fancy tools are needed to work out the ramifications and keep each library installed at a compatible version and all the interfaces correct for that version.  General code does little more than call one library after another.  This is the pinnacle of the "Reuse" concept.  I hated it.  It wasn't programming in my opinion, it was dishing out slop.

AI is a vastly greater extension of this.

Now I am very happy to be able to search the web to find code to solve each unfamiliar issue as it comes up.  I don't just cut and paste the bits of found (or generated!) code.  I read them and figure out how they work.  Then I write them into my program.  (My post-retirement program MakePlaylist was created exactly as described above, except I haven't written HTML documentation for it, only in-line documentation that gets spit out into help messages and full documents by built in program options.  But now I am writing HTML for a far more challenging project: a multivolume book about my life.  I can view the result immediate, and also apply simple pre-processing editors I have in mind, along with CSS which I haven't much messed with before.)

DO WE REALLY NEED MORE PRODUCTIVITY ?

Capitalists, oligarchs, and their high priests known as Economists insist that all good things come from increasing productivity.  But they do not.  Increasing productivity may mean more income for them, but lower quality of life for all as everything becomes slop, prepared and consumed mindlessly.

Now old fashioned machines and even automation may be just fine, when they do the heavy lifting and boring routine tasks for us.

But the creative and thinking parts are not only the parts we most like doing, they are also the parts that make us better when we do them.

Now suppose you are a departmental manager responsible for several projects.  You could either have project manager staff for each project, or do them all yourself with AI.

Having a staff working on each project means you can have informed feedback about the practicality of each project.  Doing it all yourself means you don't get that essential feedback.  It is an error of pride to believe that you don't need that feedback from another person.  The end result is slop which lacks humanity and depth, the hallmarks of great art.

It reminds me of the music created by electronic and automated music generation pioneer Raymond Scott.  Scott invented machines to do things like sequencing, pioneering devices that became very useful to many musicians.  For that he should rightly be honored.  But he invented these machines so he wouldn't have to work with other musicians.  The result in his own subsequent life's work is very lively music which is also very shallow. 

The world we want to construct is one in which each person contributes what they are best doing, which is quite often what they like doing best or something adjacent to it.  Turning all jobs into dishing out slop is exactly the opposite.

What we want to do is the thinking and creative parts, and have machines do the heavy, awful, boring, and repetitive parts.  That's what previous automation has done.

And in many cases still and forever, the best machines are machines custom built for their purposes.

In both shirts and intellectual products, hand made is best and always has been.
And it makes us better to make such things, at least so much as we find our calling in doing so.

Limits to Growth

Creating the supercharged high value worlds where most everything is done by AI that people just command, and yet everyone has a job doing something more to their liking commanding that AI, can only be possible by large amounts of growth, the kind of growth nobody is planning for anymore anyway.  It seems more that people are simply being laid off rather than retrained for even more creative positions.

We need to scale back our assault on the environment, including especially our consumption of fossil fuels.  But even generating electricity the very best and most environmentally friendly ways, with wind and solar, still has considerable environmental impact.  We need to use as little electricity as possible.  As little of 'everything' as possible in fact, except our creative minds.

Instead, as everyone knows, data centers of obscene size are being built with obscene levels of consumption of water and electricity--which were going to be if not already scarce anyway, and scarcer still going forwards.

And that's not even counting the environmental cost of the 'value' AI may be adding to society, if it were keeping everyone employed at an ever higher level.  Im not counting that because it's unlikely.

Even just the Data Centers being built are only going to bring on the collapse of everything faster, let alone the vast future of data centers planned and/or approved.

The environmental cost is another problem that AI can't solve.  Though if it were intelligent and free thinking it would tell people not to build any more data centers for a while as part of the solution.

But Again, AI is Slop

Many have written on this, including Cory Doctorow, Ed Zitron, and Gary Marcus.  The latest debunking of AI competence in programming is in a recent update from Gary Marcus:


I have strong feelings about this.

Programming is not just about writing code.  I had a lifelong career in computer programming, and was once even taught (in some software engineering seminar sponsored by GE) that writing code was 10% of the job.  Most was in specification, design, and testing.

I see the most fundamental thing in programming as understanding people.  Hearing what they want and understanding what they mean.  Understanding the people around them too.  Seeing the Big Picture of where this is going to fit.

Then finding a close working approximation of what they mean.  It's a delicate balancing act, also taking into account time and institutional constraints too.

Then understanding the problem space of computer programming languages, algorithms, and related concepts.

An appreciation of beauty, elegance, readability, and simplicity.

Finally, a desire to create something good.

While it may seem mechanical, programming is more of an art than most
engineering and mathematics.  There are endless ways of doing the same thing,
more or less, but some are better, and all depending on circumstances.  At best programmers are driven not just to complete jobs, but do them well.