Noam Chomsky defended the Khmer Rouge while they were killing 25% of Cambodia's population.
He kept his position at MIT. His reputation kept growing. His books kept selling.
Thomas Sowell predicted this would happen. He explained exactly why it always does.🧵
Chomsky's linguistics work was genuinely brilliant.
It made him one of the most cited academics alive and gave him a platform far beyond his field. He decided, so, to use that platform not to side with the oppressed, but to cast doubt on genocide survivors.
When the Khmer Rouge took Cambodia, Chomsky didn't defend the victims. He questioned their testimony.
In 1977, he and Edward Herman published "Distortions at Fourth Hand" in The Nation, arguing that Western media was exaggerating the killings to justify U.S. intervention. He wrote that refugee accounts deserved "great care" because refugees are "subject to pressure."
He even dismissed François Ponchaud, a French priest who documented the massacres in ”Cambodia: Year Zero”, as unreliable. Called his figures inflated.
Paul Johnson tracked what happened next in Intellectuals (2007). Chomsky's position shifted four times as evidence mounted.
— First: no massacres, just propaganda.
— Then: small-scale killings, exploited by cynical humanitarians.
— Then: killings were real, but caused by American war crimes.
— Then: the Khmer Rouge weren't real Marxists anyway.
The evidence kept changing, but America was always the villain
No retraction. No apology. No lost position. No revoked degree. No serious professional consequence of any kind. Chomsky remained an Institute Professor at MIT.
The Cambodia episode became a footnote in his biography, not a mark against his reputation. He kept giving lectures. His books kept getting assigned.
What matters here is who this protection applies to. Chomsky sadly isn’t the anomaly. Leftist intellectuals who get things catastrophically wrong keep their chairs.
Sowell noticed this pattern and named the mechanism behind it.
In Intellectuals and Society, he observed that intellectuals are the only professionals never judged by consequences.
A doctor who kills patients loses their license. An engineer whose bridge collapses faces lawsuits. An intellectual whose ideas contribute to millions of deaths writes another book. Nobody calls him to account. Nobody takes the degree back. The next conference invitation still arrives.
Sowell's point was not that intellectuals are uniquely evil. It was that they operate inside a system with no penalty for being wrong, which means being wrong carries no cost worth avoiding.
Marxist-inspired regimes killed between 60 and 100 million people in the 20th century. The Soviet Union. Maoist China. The Khmer Rouge. North Korea. These were not fringe misreadings of Marx. They were direct political applications, built by people who read him, cited him, and named him as their foundation.
And yet Marxism remains a legitimate intellectual framework in sociology, history, political science, and literature departments across the Western world. Professors who identify as Marxists hold endowed chairs without controversy.
Now consider Ayn Rand. No regime. No atrocity. No gulag. No famine. No political program that killed anyone, anywhere, at any point in history.
Rand is treated as intellectually unserious by many of the same academics who assign Marx with reverence and cite Chomsky as a moral authority. The thinker whose followers killed nobody is a punchline. The thinker whose framework justified more state violence than any other secular ideology in history is a syllabus staple.
The difference is not about rigor. Rand was a rigorous thinker who defended capitalism. Marx was a rigorous thinker who gave cover to people who built gulags. Only one of them remains embarrassing to cite in a faculty meeting.
The people who got it right were punished for it.
– Orwell struggled to publish Animal Farm because it offended Soviet sympathizers in British publishing.
– Camus was shunned by the French left for denouncing labor camps. Sartre mocked him publicly.
– Solzhenitsyn was expelled from his country for documenting what Chomsky was busy doubting.
All of them were vindicated by history. None of them received an apology.
Paul Johnson studied Rousseau, Marx, Tolstoy, Sartre, and Chomsky over decades of research. His conclusion was blunt:
"One of the principal lessons of our tragic century is: beware intellectuals. Not merely should they be kept well away from the levers of power, they should also be objects of particular suspicion when they seek to offer collective advice."
Johnson was not arguing against thinking. He was arguing against the specific habit of rewarding thinkers regardless of what their thinking produced. The 20th century gave us enough evidence to take that argument seriously.
Chomsky denied a genocide and kept his chair. Marx inspired regimes that killed tens of millions and kept his syllabus. Rand's followers never harmed anyone, and she lost her reputation. What does that tell you about how intellectual credibility actually gets assigned?
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A Czech playwright predicted the Soviet collapse 11 years before it happened.
While CIA analysts studied missile counts and economic indicators, Václav Havel explained why communist regimes would fall from moral exhaustion, destroying itself from the inside.
The experts dismissed him. History proved them wrong. 🧵
In 1978, The Soviet System Looked Permanent
Western analysts treated communist rule as unchangeable fact. Military power. Total surveillance. Complete control.
Political scientists predicted gradual reform at best. Revolution seemed impossible.
But they were missing one important factor.
Havel Understood What The Data Couldn't Capture
In his underground essay "The Power of the Powerless," written in 1978, Havel identified the regime's hidden fragility.
Communist systems didn't survive through force alone. They required mass participation in obvious lies.
Every citizen had to pretend the system worked. Every worker had to attend celebrations for policies they knew were failing. Every student had to repeat slogans contradicting observable reality.
This created exhaustion that military strength couldn't cure.
Ronald Coase set out to prove that Socialism was superior to the chaos of the market.
So he went to America to see how giant industries were actually managed.
What he found destroyed his worldview. And won him a Nobel Prize.
This is the story of how a young socialist became one of the most important economists of the 20th century by following evidence over ideology. 🧵
London, 1929. A 19-year-old economics student at LSE calls himself a "soft socialist."
The intellectual consensus seemed obvious: markets were chaos, central planning was science.
His professors had a compelling argument: businesses are already mini-planned economies. If planning works inside firms, why not scale it to entire nations?
For young Coase, the logic felt inevitable. Scientific management promised order. The invisible hand looked like randomness.
But in 1931, he won a scholarship that would change everything: a chance to study American industry firsthand.
He went expecting to document techniques for improving socialist planning. He found something that shattered his worldview instead.
Everyone Wants Democratic Transition for Venezuela
But how do you restore democracy in a kleptocratic state captured by criminal elites?
To understand the problem, you need to understand how Venezuela got here. This story is a stark reminder that freedom isn't lost overnight, but slowly dismantled, one piece at a time. 🧵
The Liberation Myth: Venezuela Started With a Promise
In 1811, Simon Bolivar liberated Venezuela from Spanish rule. He dreamed of a unified, free South America built on republican ideals.
But Bolivar's revolution created a nation, not stability. What followed was a century of chaos.
A Century of Strongmen: The 19th Century Belonged to Caudillos
After independence came civil wars, military coups, and regional warlords fighting for control. Venezuela cycled through dozens of governments.
Power didn't come from elections. It came from controlling enough armed men to take Caracas. Whoever seized the capital claimed to speak for the nation.