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Deterring Democracy

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Publication date
  
1991

Pages
  
421

Dewey Decimal
  
327.73 20

Originally published
  
1991

Page count
  
421

OCLC
  
243729342

4.1/5
Goodreads

Media type
  
Print

ISBN
  
0-86091-318-X

LC Class
  
E881 .C48 1992

Author
  
Noam Chomsky

Publisher
  
Verso Books

Deterring Democracy t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRJKaY7kZ9K4aKOM

Similar
  
Noam Chomsky books, Foreign relations of the United States books, Propaganda books

Deterring Democracy is a book published in 1991 by Noam Chomsky, which explores the differences between the humanitarian rhetoric and imperialistic reality of United States foreign policy and how it affects various countries around the world.

In the book, Chomsky explores the idea that the US is the only remaining world superpower that works to maintain its dominance, even ruthlessly employing violence such as outright invasions and overthrowing governments pursuing independent economic policies. He also discusses the large difference between public opinion on the Cold War, establishment American educated opinion and reality.

The book also contains criticism aimed at the Soviet Union and other communist states, but its major point centres on the fact that although the United States claimed to support freedom in the Cold War, it still supported authoritarian regimes. The conclusion that Chomsky comes to is that, despite U.S claims of supporting freedom, their actual aim was maintaining dominance over resources and geopolitical power.

Structure

  1. Cold War: Fact and Fancy
  2. The Home Front
  3. The Global System
  4. Problems of Population Control
  5. The Post-Cold War Era
  6. Nefarious Aggression
  7. The Victors
  8. The Agenda of the Doves: 1988
  9. The Mortal Sin of Self-Defense
  10. The Decline of the Democratic Ideal
  11. Democracy in the Industrial Societies
  12. Force and Opinion

References

Deterring Democracy Wikipedia