Noam Chomsky 9/11 Imperial Mentality Analysis

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Around 200 AD the Roman Empire was going around Europe and the Middle East conquering vast amounts of land and adding it to its empire, this practice is commonly called imperialism. The idea of expanding the culture of a civilization has been around as long as civilization itself and was common practice until just recently, or was it? Some would argue that the U.S. is an imperialistic country, just one who is hopelessly bad at it. Noam Chomsky is one of those people, in Chomsky’s article “9/11 and The Imperial Mentality” he introduces a few ideas that not many talk about, such as the “first 9/11”, the idea that the U.S. has an imperial mentality, and that the war on terror fuels that mentality. Chomsky first claims that many South Americans will …show more content…

was the perpetrator. September 11, 1973, the Chilean military, backed by the CIA, surrounds La Moneda (the Chilean presidential palace) as their president, Salvador Allende inside broadcasts his farewell speech over the radio. He talks about the dark times Chile is going through and says he has hope that the people of Chile will prevail, he then guns himself down with an AK-47. Why would our own CIA be involved in the president of Chile being overthrown? Well the short answer is that it was 1973 and we were still going through the cold war, President Allende just so happened to a Marxist President, meaning he was involved in the spread of communism. However the story goes a little deeper. Allende was elected though fair democratic elections, the people were fully aware of his political views and still voted for him. So why was it our business? Well on top of the whole cold war deal the U.S. also happened to have the Anaconda and Kennecott copper corporations as well as the

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