Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Where It All Went Wrong: The case against John Howard eBook : Remeikis, Amy: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Where It All Went Wrong: The case against John Howard eBook : Remeikis, Amy: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

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Where It All Went Wrong: The case against John Howard
by Amy Remeikis (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (86)



#1 Best Sellerin History of Australia



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On the thirtieth anniversary of John Howard coming to power, a searing analysis of the untouchable prime minister: how the ‘great economic manager’ sold our future.

John Howard is often revered as one of the great Australian prime ministers (1996–2007): economically prudent, politically astute, ‘relaxed and comfortable’ with Australia’s identity, venerated by the Liberal Party and grudgingly admired by the left.

Why then – just twenty years after his government ended – are we in such a mess?

Amy Remeikis is one of our most astute and convincing political commentators, and here she argues for a complete revision of how we see Howard’s tenure, for the first time holding him to account for the future he created. Of our modern crises, most are caused by his policies. Housing crisis? Guilty. Work insecurity? Guilty. Giving away gas? Guilty. Climate denial? Guilty. Rise of the far right? Guilty. America's lapdog in foreign relations? Guilty. Jingoistic tracksuits and flag-wrapping? Guilty and convicted.

Far from being ‘great economic managers’, the Howard government bought boomer votes with franking credits and negative gearing, sacrificing the generations now inheriting the nation. They sold out their children and grandchildren for mining billionaires, investment properties and annual cruises.

Amy Remeikis is the highly informed voice of these dispossessed generations. In showing us where it all went wrong, she illuminates the path to a better future.
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Print length

200 pages


Review

'Amy Remeikis has written a powerful account of the stories John Howard told this country and the grip they still exercise on our collective imagination. At the same time, she has given us a timely reminder of just how much a prime minister can change Australia – as long as they possess determination and belief and know what they want to get done.' -- Sean Kelly

About the Author

Amy Remeikis is the Chief Political Analyst at The Australia Institute and a contributing editor for The New Daily. Amy is renowned for her incisive political commentary and extensive experience as a journalist, author and former political reporter for Guardian Australia. Amy regularly appears in national media and is celebrated for her powerful writing on gender, politics and social justice. Her work continues to influence public debate and policy discussions across Australia. She is the author of On Reckoning. Where It All Went Wrong is her second book.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FXBM11GF
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster Australia
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 24 February 2026
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2.6 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled 
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled 
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 200 pages 
  • ==
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11 customer reviews
From Australia


Jim KABLE
5.0 out of 5 stars J Dubya H
Reviewed in Australia on 3 June 2026
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
This was the pompous little walker who selected an Anglican Archbishop to be Governor-General whose protection of a chap he elevated to the position of Bishop over the woman who had been 14 when seduced by him - a married chaplain at the Anglican boarding school she attended - saw the Captain’s pick forced to resign - yet up until his recent death retained his half-million AUD per annum pension while his victim spent 30 years seeking an apology he did not really ever give though to be fair the Anglican church with his disappearance is at last making amends. That woman is a friend…since 1988 - when we were fellow students in a Goethe Institute summer German language class. Amy Remeikis most of what you detail here happened when I was outside Australia teaching in another country and when I returned to Australia it had been remade in such an ugly selfish greedy way that I scarcely recognised it - it took years for me to figure out that Howard was at the root of it - an ugly spiteful mean-minded chap - product of his corrupt father and that man’s participation in a post-WWII rort in PNG which - as I understand it - gave his father the wherewithal to own a service station. The rot goes deep.
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Doc
5.0 out of 5 stars Spot On
Reviewed in Australia on 4 June 2026
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
The current struggle by govt to repeal his CGT & his other lurks proves Amy's point. If Labor prevails in this we might finally be rid of the unflushable turd
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Christine Haynes
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read for all Aussies.
Reviewed in Australia on 4 June 2026
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This book is brilliant! Finally somebody has shown the bushy-eyebrowed rat in his true colours.
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DownunderTrish
5.0 out of 5 stars A brilliant account of the Howard era
Reviewed in Australia on 2 May 2026
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Great book. Well researched & referenced. If you want to know why we have a housing crisis - read this book.
4 people found this helpful
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in Australia on 21 March 2026
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
A must read for those too young to have lived it or those who need a reminder, because the damage he did continues.
5 people found this helpful
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J. Grasso
1.0 out of 5 stars I'm a Lefty and I still can't get over Howard's multiple Electoral Victories....Waah!
Reviewed in Australia on 28 February 2026
Format: Paperback
Clearly delivered by a hard core leftist and written entirely though that prism. As long as you don't expect any objectivity or nuance and are a "Howard Hater", you'll be fine.
12 people found this helpful
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Robert
5.0 out of 5 stars The seed of Australia’s current problems
Reviewed in Australia on 12 May 2026
Format: Kindle
Amy writes a compelling case, layer by layer dissecting the myth of Howard. Exposing from everything from taxation, squandering our mining booms with frivolous handouts, to destroying the unions and us making us despise those on benefits. Amy stacks up the house of cards and exposes that under Howard we became poorer and more divided through his politics. A must read.
3 people found this helpful
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diane dromgold
1.0 out of 5 stars Don’t bother
Reviewed in Australia on 5 May 2026
Format: Kindle
I was keen to read this. I wanted to understand. In the end I gave up, despite persisting too long. So unbalanced even I couldn’t swallow the offered pill. Often reading as hysterically left and constantly negative. Pity. Opportunity missed.
One person found this helpful
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Occasional lapse of reason
5.0 out of 5 stars A national tragedy
Reviewed in Australia on 9 April 2026
Format: Kindle
A much needed book on a Prime Ministership that was electorally successful but was harmful in the long run to the Liberal Party and Australia.


Sadly, in the long run, the legacy of the Honorable John Winston Howard has been:


1. the infliction of multigenerational damage on Australia
2. damage to social cohesion
3. destroying the admittedly always faint hope of becoming a "smart nation"
4. long damage to the Christian church by repelling believers.
6 people found this helpful
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Claire D
5.0 out of 5 stars An eye-opening and sharp analysis of JWH
Reviewed in Australia on 6 March 2026
Format: Paperback
An eye-opening book about the prime minister of my childhood. What a trip to learn that the highly revered tenancy of Howard actually set our country back. Amy Remeikis is brilliant and sharp with her analysis. A terrific read.
8 people found this helpful
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Adam
1.0 out of 5 stars Numerous factual errors
Reviewed in Australia on 9 April 2026
Format: Paperback
Unfortunately all the glaring factual errors make it hard to accept any of the assertions.
4 people found this helpful
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Chomsky and Me: A Memoir eBook : Stohl, Bev Boisseau: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Chomsky and Me: A Memoir eBook : Stohl, Bev Boisseau: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

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Chomsky and Me: A Memoir
by Bev Boisseau Stohl (Author) Format: Kindle Edition

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (32)

Bev Stohl ran the MIT office of the renowned linguist and social critic Noam Chomsky for nearly two and a half decades. This is her account of those years, working next to a man described by the New York Times as “arguably the most important intellectual alive today.”

Through these pages we observe the comings and goings of a constant and varied stream of visitors: the historian Howard Zinn; activists Alex Carey, Peggy Duff, and Dorie Ladner; the inventor of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners Lee; actors Catherine Keener and Wallace Shawn; the writer Norman Mailer; gaggles of fourteen-year-old school students, and the world’s leading linguists. All make appearances in these stories. Many who visit are as careless of their allotted time as Chomsky is generous with his. Shepherding them out in mid-conversation is one of Bev’s more challenging responsibilities.

Other duties include arranging lectures to overflow crowds around the world, keeping unscrupulous journalists at bay, preventing teetering ziggurats of paper and books from engulfing her boss, and switching on his printer when it is deemed “broken” by a mind that is engaged less by mundane technology than the realms of academia and activism.

Over the years, what has commenced as a formal working arrangement blossoms into something more: a warm and enduring friendship that involves work trips to Europe, visits with her partner and dog to Noam’s summer home on Cape Cod, and a mentorship that challenges Bev with all manner of intriguing mental and practical puzzles.

Published with the approval of its subject and written with affection, insight and a gentle sense of humor, Chomsky and Me describes a relationship between two quite different people who, through the happenstance of work, form a bond that is both surprising and reciprocally rich.


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Review


"This is a beautiful, tender and profound book about one of the most important thinkers of our time, by one of the people who knows him best. A masterpiece of observation and memoir."
-Johann Hari, author of New York Times Bestseller Chasing the Scream



"A ringside seat on the life and times of a man regarded by millions as a remote intellectual deity, but who comes into sharp focus through the delightfully warm and humorous lens of Bev Stohl as a relatable mortal ... If you want to know the real Noam Chomsky, this is the book for you."
--Amir Amirani

About the Author


Bev Boisseau Stohl worked for 24 years as Chomsky’s office manager. Her writing has appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education, the MIT Press, and Stethoscopes and Pencils. She has performed stand-up and improv comedy, and has appeared on TV news shows demonstrating her skill in talking backwards. Her dog, Roxy, joined her at work for 13 years, and was christened “The Cat” by Chomsky.

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CBNWTSH2
Publisher ‏ : ‎ OR Books
Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
Publication date ‏ : ‎ 11 July 2023
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 17.1 MB
Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 324 pages
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From other countries

John
5.0 out of 5 stars labor of love by a loving laborer
Reviewed in the United States on 12 November 2023
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
This is a labor of love by a loving laborer who walked the extra mile doing her job. Stohl was Chomsky’s office manager for 24 years beginning in 1993. Her retirement in 2017 coincided with his move from MIT to Arizona.

Stohl was hired as an experienced MIT office worker - not because she was familiar with Chomsky’s work which was new to her. Following the death of his wife Carol Chomsky in 2008 Stohl stepped up. She’d go by his home when he had problems with his computer. On days he was in the office she’d bring him a home cooked meal for lunch. When it snowed she’d swing by his house and shovel the snow.

All this was in addition to running his very busy office. Handling email, phone calls, booking appointments, organizing his travels, buying tickets etc. Over the years Stohl met a steady stream of his friends such as Howard Zinn, Norman Finkelstein, David Barsamian et al.

If you’re interested in Chomsky's work, by all means read him. If you’re interested in Chomsky the person and an intimate view behind the scenes of a great soul - this is a special, unique source.

The book is highly readable, well paced and full of wonderful insights and surprises. Written with Chomsky’s approval; you won’t be disappointed.
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elizabeth
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting read
Reviewed in Mexico on 22 September 2023
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
All in all an enjoyable read by a huge Chomsky fan. Hard to believe he is still going full speed ahead
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maryboo
5.0 out of 5 stars Read this memoir!!
Reviewed in the United States on 29 July 2025
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
I picked up this book 3 days ago & did not put it down until 4 am last night (this morning??)
I -burst into tears- when I finished it.
Such a bittersweet finale to a book & now career we all hoped would last forever.
Bev creates a heartwarming portrayal of one of the greatest minds of our time & not only makes Chomsky attainable, but tells a tale of true friendship that both she and he inspire.
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Ordinary Working Grammarian
5.0 out of 5 stars An important book!
Reviewed in the United States on 26 December 2023
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
Stohl was Chomsky’s administrative assistant at MIT from March 1993 to June 2017. Through his writings, interviews, talks and correspondence, Chomsky developed into a world-wide clearinghouse of political activism. When 9/11 took place, people called him from all over the world asking for interviews to make sense of it all. Countless numbers of people have filed through his office, including frequent film crews, hoping to get advice from him. Over one three-day weekend alone, they received over one thousand e-mail messages. For 24 years, Stohl was the gatekeeper for this vast and chaotic enterprise. Every single person had to go through her to get to Chomsky. Much of the book is about the constant challenges she faced in fulfilling this duty.

Stohl writes in an entertaining and an easy-to-read style. The bottom line is that I really enjoyed this book. I especially recommend it to linguists, who will learn about a side of Chomsky beyond his linguistics persona.
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Mary Elizabeth
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating and Beautifully told story
Reviewed in the United States on 21 August 2023
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
If you know who Noam Chomsky is, it is a must read. Like no other book, this one unfolds to leave you with the sense that you now "know" him on a personal level. The man behind the incredible brilliance and greatness is so endearing, kind and warm. If you don't know who Noam Chomsky is it is a must read. Incredibly well written, the book takes you on the journey through so many hilarious and poignant moments, while weaving a tale of colleagues that become family. A memoir, but also a love story, about the tribe we develop in life, and if lucky, at work, and if really lucky, (and having a Sufi) knowing that has been where we were meant to be all along.
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Gail Walker
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome, compassionate and informative
Reviewed in the United States on 16 September 2024
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
I read this book because Noam Chomsky’s theories relative to linguistics guided me to my chosen profession in speech and language back in the 1970s. Bev’s book gave me so much insight into him as a person, an activist, and a wonderful human being. What a gift she has given us!
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shupta
5.0 out of 5 stars A personal look at the most important living intellectual
Reviewed in the United States on 7 November 2023
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
I've followed Chomsky and his works for a few years now, and this book is essential in seeing the gentle, generous man behind the fearless critic of power.

Bev's style is bright, endearing, and, at times, downright hilarious. It's the type of book you can start anywhere, and it's digestible and easy to orient oneself--this is quite the feat, even for seasoned writers.

I'm hopeful she has more writing to share with us.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars A valuable and entertaining addition to the Canon
Reviewed in the United States on 12 July 2023
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
Outside of a few childhood stories he regularly gives to interviewers, the human being behind the intellectual accomplishments has often remained obscure. As Chomskys, assistant, a job which included myriad duties, among them fixer and stage manager, Ms Stohl gives us the first, and what is likely to be the only view of the very human person who is Noam Chomsky.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Unknown details about Chomsky's circle of friends
Reviewed in the United States on 22 January 2024
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
This book is unique in content and very well-written. I enjoyed the content, the style and the photos! A new window into Noam Chimaky's life through the perspective of a long time friend who worked for him. Strongly recommend it.
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gary r green
5.0 out of 5 stars An Insider’s Story that needed to be told!
Reviewed in the United States on 29 July 2023
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
The humility, humor and heart in this book made it one of the most rewarding books I’ve read in years.
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Chomsky's Assistant of 24 Years: "I Saw Every Message He Sent" | Bev Stohl

Chomsky's Assistant of 24 Years: "I Saw Every Message He Sent" | Bev Stohl
Mar 16, 2026
7 min read
Chomsky's Assistant of 24 Years: "I Saw Every Message He Sent"

This statement will be seen by some merely as an act of loyalty. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have grappled, struggled deeply, over this situation, while seeking to remain faithful to the truth. It is in the service of truth–the very thing Noam Chomsky wanted us to hold in high esteem, rather than himself–that I write this.
By Bev Stohl / bevstohl.substack.com


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Photo by Steph Huddleston



“I was never aware of any other option but to question everything.” - Noam Chomsky

Working as Noam Chomsky’s assistant, and in later years his fellow traveler, the lessons I learned spanned various domains and disciplines, but most valuably, I got to know Noam beyond the pedestal some had placed him on – a pedestal he never wanted.

This statement will be seen by some merely as an act of loyalty. Nothing could be further from the truth. I have grappled, struggled deeply, over this situation, while seeking to remain faithful to the truth. It is in the service of truth – the very thing Noam Chomsky wanted us to hold in high esteem, rather than himself – that I write this.

One of the most important lessons I learned from Noam was to question everything –something I believe his most recent detractors have neglected to do. He taught me to never take at face value all that I read and heard, even after several reviews. I continue this practice. Another of his lessons has me remaining relatively silent while the recent wild accusations of his critics spew different versions of the same story in a redundant loop. Redundant because there is little anyone can say to disparage Noam, even if they misunderstand, misstate, misquote, or misinterpret eighty-five years of his dissenting actions to benefit their own agendas, something Michael Albert pointed out in a recent Substack post. This second practice is not so easy for me.

Recent news about Chomsky’s “friendship and socializing” with Epstein has spread quickly; critics of the Left ripped off their connections with Chomsky like old Band-Aids. I question the goals of these sudden detractors who, without a second thought, with a fevered rush to their keyboards, have worked to extinguish the reputation and integrity of a man whom they claimed to be a close friend, whom they respected, revered, learned from, corresponded with at length, and co-wrote books and shared stages with.

I question the motives of Chris Hedges, who just recently, before trashing his long-admired “friend”, stated, “Noam is arguably our greatest and most principled intellect”. [The Chris Hedges Report, 9 Feb 2026]. I suppose those words were meant to guard Chris’s own reputation, given that he and Noam had engaged in joint public discussions, debates, and interviews. But, he states, without evidence, “He knew about Epstein’s abuse of children. They all knew. And like others in the Epstein orbit, he did not care.” He scurried to take him down, destroy his legacy, perhaps to protect his own from being tarnished by association. Hedges did not know what was in Chomsky’s mind.

Hedges spent over a decade teaching in New Jersey state prisons, building genuine relationships with criminals, some convicted of egregious violent crimes, even publishing a book celebrating the bonds he formed with those folks. Like Chomsky’s, his philosophy is rooted in the idea that convicted people retain their humanity and shouldn’t be permanently defined by their worst acts. This is the same principle Chomsky applied to Epstein: the man had served his sentence. Yet Hedges denies Chomsky the same moral complexity he extends to those convicted of murder. This is not journalism.

Such bravery, to condemn the friend you allegedly loved, as he is silenced by illness.

I question Vijay Prashad, who proudly asserted that he and Noam were long-time friends, and that Noam was his mentor, someone he previously regarded as his moral compass. Until a moment later, when he wasn’t. In another sprint to salvation, Prashad wrote that his now-discarded “friend” took a “shameful and inexcusable turn” by associating with Epstein. [Counterpunch, 3 Feb 2026]. Wouldn’t this raise a simple question for Prashad?

Since Noam was forever his moral compass, shouldn’t he take a minute to think, to examine any actual evidence? He could have taken a breath and considered what was being reported, rather than making the assumption that, nearing ninety, Chomsky took an abrupt and inexcusable turn to become a shameful human being who hung out with questionable people.

Prashad doesn’t know Noam Chomsky. Questionable people – mafia mobsters, petty thieves, ex-cons, American and worldwide political leaders (many of them war criminals), people whose world views he detested – had always been in Chomsky’s orbit, as difficult as that could be for him. This is how he gathered information. In that same orbit were students, colleagues, a wide-ranging spectrum of activists, honest journalists, researchers, and struggling, confused, homeless, everyday people whom Noam listened to, questioned, guided and challenged, whether in the safe, compassionate atmosphere of our MIT office, or somewhere across the globe.

Chomsky agreed to co-write a couple of books with Prashad. Co-writing books was never Chomsky’s idea. He sighed deeply each time he was approached with a persuasive idea, then turned to me and said, despite our agreement that he had enough on his plate, “I’ll do it; they’re good people”.

Speaking of plates, since Mr. Prashad is disgusted with his old friend, I wonder whether he’s donating his royalties from their co-written books to the starving people of Gaza, almost half of them children.

Such bravery, to condemn your mentor, as he is silenced by illness.

Glenn Greenwald threw one of the first stones at Chomsky, making broad assumptions about the recommendation letter Noam was said to have written for Epstein. An unsigned, undated, unaddressed, and seemingly unsent letter.

Greenwald claimed that he and Chomsky, with whom he had shared more than a few stages and discussions, were good friends. To prove it, he posted photos of Noam and Valeria (they married in 2014 when Noam was 85) visiting with him during their travels to Brazil. In a video I found online, he said of Noam, “I love him,” as he outlined the role Noam had played in expanding Greenwald’s political, philosophical, and ideological views, teaching him to critically evaluate things we read and hear.

Jeffrey St. Clair is another who recently called Noam’s association with Epstein indefensible, disgusting, pointing to seriously bad judgment from someone who usually makes such considered and thoroughly reasoned decisions.

There are others, as it has become de rigueur for online Left warriors to denounce Noam.

I read thousands of the letters he wrote during my years overseeing his schedules and correspondence (1993-2017), so I feel my observations hold sway, and may interest members of the public who knew or corresponded with Noam; watched his interviews or talks on problems of social justice and democracy; read his books or articles; participated in his quest to understand human thinking and language using scientific approaches.

In 2006, I joined his family and closest friends to see him through his wife Carol’s illness, through her death in 2008 just before their sixtieth wedding anniversary. During the few years that followed, I saw his pain when writing or talking with others about life without her. What I never saw, even in his most vulnerable moments, when sharing his deepest feelings of sadness and regret, was the kind of laudatory language, romantic hyperbole, clichés, and tone of voice found in the cherry-picked letters of recommendation and support that made their way into the released Epstein files.

Those who made self-aggrandizing rushes to judgment failed to do their due diligence, to make a deeper dive to review what was actually being said in those letters, to consider eighty years of Noam’s writing. Did they stop to question whether the messages reflected Noam’s signature voice, phrasing, or cadence? If they had known him, rather than simply having worn their associations like badges of honor, they would have noticed that the letters were out of character, flagrant deviations from Chomsky’s usual concise, precise writing style, related tangents notwithstanding.

Here, and in general, the concepts of discussion, debate, and meaningful engagement have become victims of fast-paced media news. Will the tarnishing of Noam’s legacy be chalked up to another media casualty? Such sad irony.

How could he not be controversial, not have garnered critics, having generated a voluminous body of work on much-debated issues? As one of the world’s most quoted and prolific writers, he uncovered truths that political and corporate powers would rather have kept out of the public eye. One may not always agree with him, or grasp his point; he spoke in a language foreign to many, one of straightforward truth, not a voice striving for popularity, grandstanding, or social media hits. He did this to exhaustion. At the same time, Noam saw the best in people. He assumed they were good until proven otherwise. When in disagreement, he debated others’ points, not the people themselves – with a few exceptions.

I am somewhat amused, and greatly disturbed, by the assertions I’ve read on Reddit, Substack, and other online venues, that Chomsky was seduced by power and driven by money. Each time we were asked about speaking fees, my reply that we requested only transportation and hotel reimbursements was met with silence. In fact, they often asked me to repeat myself, sure that they had misheard. Noam had to be talked into accepting local organizers’ arrangements for a taxi to take him to their event.

Noam and Carol and their adult children were and remain private, respectful, professional people, a loving family who should never have been drawn into this feeding frenzy. I will add only this: after Carol’s death, Noam came to me, distressed, as he didn’t know the name of his bank, nor how his retirement checks were deposited into his account. Carol had always handled these things.

Other claims I’ve read online, that near his ninetieth year, Noam Chomsky became a party-animal schmoozing with rich and influential people he had scorned are ludicrous. He eschewed socializing beyond close friends and family, even then falling quickly into serious conversation. He wore a filter to block out hearsay and gossip not confirmed through direct correspondence with trusted friends, colleagues, and non-mainstream media sources. Otherwise, how could he have written over one hundred fifty books, thousands of lectures, articles, and essays, decades of class notes, and a thousand monthly emails.

I scheduled office meetings for him three days a week. He taught his own classes, guest lectured for others’ classes, accepted requests for local talks, participated in discussion groups, and lectured worldwide on linguistics, social justice, the media, and the struggle for peace.

Noam Chomsky has stood with the oppressed all of his life. The East Timorese, drawing Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman into the cause. The miners of Iquique, Chile. The families and children of Gaza and the West Bank of Palestine. The Kurds, Turkish dissidents, the Vietnamese. Factory workers in Cork, Ireland. (I was in Cork with him. The meeting brought my partner and myself to tears, not for the first time.) He stood, often literally, with poor and working class citizens, the Joe Hills, Wobblies, folks suffering crimes of hate, race, gender, sexuality, and victims of exploitation and violence. Online videos show Noam vehemently opposing the horrors of pornography, opposing the denigration of women in general.

This is commitment. This is bravery.

Noam won the Sydney Peace Prize in 2011, travelling to Sydney to take part in peace discussions on one of his first solo trips following Carol’s death. I found scores of his awards, including the Kyoto Prize (1988) in dust-covered boxes in the far corners of his sizeable, full-to-the-rafters home office. Nothing honoring his work was displayed. He acknowledged the efforts of the organizations themselves as crucial, but he never wanted his work to shine a light on himself.

Many online are publicly responding, allowing Noam Chomsky the presumption of innocence, balancing his entire life’s work as the context for associating with Mr. Epstein prior to the federal charges that showed the extent of the allegations against Epstein of trafficking, molesting and raping young girls. This knowledge would have sickened him. The writers, like Michael Albert of ZNet, highlight the life, legacy and reputation Chomsky tirelessly earned. To them, his work in science to co-found the cognitive science revolution, and in politics to illustrate the vast suffering that resulted from policies he opposed, stand as beacons of light in an all-too-dark world. I point to some of their writings at the end of this statement.

Noam Chomsky deserves to be judged on evidence, not assumptions. What has transpired in the wake of the Epstein file releases is a smear campaign against a man of integrity who lived in total devotion to exposing truths, seeking them out day and night, often in person, in the darkest of places. He had his head in his work until three or four AM, forgetting to eat, sleeping for a few insufficient hours before getting up to do it all again. Not for the money nor the social media hits, but because he thought all of us in this world deserved his time and effort.

I know, because I saw every message that he sent.

I know, because I was at the other end of the phone, computer, and office from him for a quarter century. I saw the suffering on his own face when he witnessed, even in writing, the torture of an entire country, the suffering of a minority group, or the pain of one individual. Is this a person worth condemning for associating with a horrible human being he in reality knew very little about?

Those who would rather disparage Chomsky might go back and read his words, the ones that moved each of them to see him as their moral compass, the words that elevated him to the level of our greatest and most principled intellect, or to describe him as a person who makes considered and thoroughly reasoned decisions. They should read again the words that made them feel love and respect for him and his body of work. All who have carelessly cast stones should remind themselves who he is and has always been.

NOTES:

I recount in detail some of the vignettes mentioned above in recent Substack posts (bevstohl.substack.com), and in my memoir, Chomsky and Me, OR Books 2023.

I’m thankful to all who took part in lengthy discussions with me so I could keep my head on straight: Kelly Gerling, Norman Finkelstein, Judy Chomsky, Daniel Chomsky, Mark Achbar (Manufacturing Consent, The Corporation), and Sarah Cordery (Notes to Eternity, 2016)

Michael Albert: “Chomsky Reassessed” has appeared on his Substack and other publications. On ZNet (February 24, 2026): “A Few Hopefully Non Redundant Ruminations On Epstein, Chomsky, and Us.”

Greg Grandin writes also on ZNet: (December 15, 2025): “What the Noam Chomsky-Jeffrey Epstein Emails Tell Us”, and has published subsequent articles, originally published in thenation.com.

A Reddit writer posted in February: “The Patriarch in Winter: Grief, Complicity, and the Unraveling of Noam Chomsky’s Final Years.”

Rameez Rahman posted a great piece on YouTube: “Throwing Chomsky Under The Bus.”

Justin Brown’s article (Feb 9, 2026): "In Defence of Noam Chomsky” is worth reading. Subtitle: The emails look damning. I thought they were damning. But I was wrong.
Bev Stohl ran the office of the renowned linguist and social critic, Noam Chomsky, for nearly two and a half decades. Chomsky and Me: A Memoir is her account of those years.
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WWNS? (What Would Noam Say?): I Lean Into Noam Chomsky's Words of Wisdom as the Storm Rages
May his 97th birthday bring him peace.
Bev Stohl · 637 views







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Friday, June 5, 2026

오스트랄리언이라고 하면 백인이 아닌 사람은 포함되지 않는다는 것이네요.

Australian Greens politics, news and discussion | Facebook


Here's an estimated ethnic breakdown of Australia's ~28 million population, ranked by size. The ABS Census allows people to nominate up to two ancestries, so percentages add up to well over 100% — most Australians claim multiple backgrounds. "Australian" as a self-nominated ancestry typically reflects people of Anglo-Celtic descent who identify primarily as Australian rather than by heritage origin.
The Indigenous figure (~900K) reflects the 2021 Census count. Chinese and Indian ancestries have grown through recent migration and are likely higher today given post-2021 arrivals.










Justin Knowles
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Why are the aboriginals ranked 12 instead of 8?

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커멘트해주세요. 오스트랄리언이라고 하면 백인이 아닌 사람은 포함되지 않는다는 것이네요. 
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오스트랄리언(Australian)이라는 조사 항목의 의미 분석

제시된 호주 통계청(ABS) 인구조사 자료에서 이라는 명칭이 백인 중심의 특정 집단만을 의미하는 것처럼 보이는 것은, 이것이 법적인 국적이 아니라 인구조사에서의 <스스로 규정한 혈통(Self-nominated ancestry)> 항목이기 때문이다.

이 자료를 바탕으로 다음과 같은 세 가지 핵심 사실을 도출할 수 있다.

1. 통계적 정의로서의

인구조사에서 을 자신의 혈통으로 선택한 약 840만 명(30%)의 인구는 주로 초기 정착민인 앵글로-켈틱(Anglo-Celtic)계의 후손들이다. 이들은 세대가 수백 년간 이어지면서 출신국(영국, 아일랜드 등)보다 호주인이라는 정체성을 더 강하게 느껴 이를 혈통으로 기재한 것이다. 따라서 이 통계 항목에서의 은 호주 국적자 전체를 뜻하는 것이 아니라, '초기 백인 이주민 후손 집단'을 분류하기 위한 명칭에 가깝다.

2. 다중 선택의 가능성

호주 인구조사는 자신의 혈통을 최대 두 개까지 복수로 선택할 수 있도록 허용한다. 예를 들어, 중국계나 인도계 호주인이라도 자신을 호주인으로 생각한다면 와 을 동시에 선택했을 가능성이 있다. 즉, 이 통계에 나오는 다른 아시아계나 유럽계 수치 중 일부는 이라는 항목과 중복되어 있을 수 있다.

3. 법적 국적과 혈통의 분리

호주 국적(Nationality)이나 시민권(Citizenship) 측면에서 '오스트랄리언'은 인종과 상관없이 호주 시민권을 가진 모든 사람을 포함한다. 그러나 본 통계 자료는 '어느 나라 혈통인가'를 묻는 인구학적 데이터이므로, 백인이 아닌 유색인종이나 최근 이민자들은 대신 자신의 원래 민족적 뿌리인 , , 등을 선택한 것이다.

요약하자면 본 통계에서 항목이 Anglo-Celtic(백인) 중심으로 나타난 것은 통계 조사 방법상 '구체적인 이민 배경을 적지 않은 오랜 정착민 후손'들이 주로 이 항목을 선택했기 때문이다. 따라서 현실의 법적·사회적 의미의 호주인에 백인이 아닌 사람이 배제된다는 뜻은 아니며, 이는 단지 인구조사 항목의 기술적인 분류 방식에서 기인한 결과이다.

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9s 동안 생각함

세진님 해석이 상당히 맞습니다. 이 표에서 말하는 <Australian>은 법적·시민적 의미의 “호주인”이 아니라, 인구조사에서 자기 조상을 적을 때 쓰는 <ancestry/ethnicity category>입니다. 그래서 이 표는 사실상 이렇게 말하고 있습니다.

<“Australian”이라고 자기 조상을 적는 사람들은 대체로 영국·아일랜드·스코틀랜드계, 즉 앵글로-켈틱 백인 주류를 뜻하는 경우가 많다.>

첨부 파일의 설명도 그렇게 적고 있습니다. ABS Census에서는 조상을 최대 두 개까지 적을 수 있기 때문에 비율 합계가 100%를 넘고, “Australian”이라는 자기신고 조상명은 보통 “heritage origin”보다 “Australian” 정체성을 우선시하는 앵글로-켈틱계 사람들을 반영한다고 되어 있습니다. 표에서도 “Australian” 항목이 <mixed/general Anglo-Celtic>이라고 표시되어 있습니다.

하지만 여기서 조심해야 할 점은 두 가지입니다.

첫째, <Australian>이라는 말에는 두 층위가 있습니다.

하나는 <시민적 의미>입니다. 이 경우에는 중국계, 인도계, 베트남계, 필리핀계, 원주민, 아랍계, 아프리카계 등 모두 호주 시민이거나 호주 사회 구성원이라면 Australian입니다.

다른 하나는 <인구조사상의 조상/민족 범주>입니다. 이 경우 “Australian”은 이상하게도 보편적 국민 정체성이 아니라, 주로 오래 정착한 백인 앵글로-켈틱계가 자기 조상을 더 구체적으로 “English, Irish, Scottish”라고 쓰지 않고 “Australian”이라고 적는 방식이 됩니다.

그래서 세진님 말처럼 이 표를 그대로 읽으면, 묘한 효과가 생깁니다.

<중국계 Australian은 Chinese로 분류되고, 인도계 Australian은 Indian으로 분류되지만, 백인계 Australian은 그냥 Australian으로 남는다.>

이것이 바로 호주 다문화주의의 오래된 긴장입니다. 법적으로는 모두 Australian인데, 문화적 상상 속에서는 여전히 “진짜 Australian”의 기본값이 백인, 영어권, 앵글로-켈틱으로 남아 있는 것입니다. 그래서 비백인 호주인은 시민권을 가져도 종종 “Where are you really from?”이라는 질문을 받습니다. 반면 백인 호주인은 그런 질문을 거의 받지 않습니다.

또 하나 문제는 원주민 항목입니다. 이 표에서는 Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander가 12위에 따로 놓여 있는데, 사실 그들은 “호주인” 정체성의 가장 오래된 주체입니다. 그런데 표의 시각적 구조는 오히려 원주민을 “Australian” 바깥의 또 다른 ethnic group처럼 보이게 만듭니다. 이것도 식민지 사회의 분류 방식이 남긴 왜곡입니다.

결국 이 표는 통계적으로 완전히 틀렸다고만 할 수는 없지만, 언어 사용이 매우 정치적입니다. 더 정확히 쓰려면 1번 항목은 그냥 <Australian>이 아니라 다음처럼 써야 합니다.

<Australian ancestry, mostly Anglo-Celtic settler background>

또는

<Self-identified Australian ancestry, often reflecting Anglo-Celtic settler descent>

그래야 “Australian = 백인”이라는 암시를 줄일 수 있습니다.

<English>

Your reading is basically right. In this chart, “Australian” does not mean Australian in the civic or legal sense. It means “Australian” as a self-reported ancestry category. In practice, that category often refers to long-settled Anglo-Celtic white Australians who choose not to identify more specifically as English, Irish, Scottish, and so on.

So the problem is this: a Chinese Australian is counted as “Chinese,” an Indian Australian as “Indian,” a Vietnamese Australian as “Vietnamese,” but many white Anglo-Celtic Australians appear simply as “Australian.” That quietly makes whiteness the default form of Australianness.

The more accurate label would be:

<Self-identified Australian ancestry, often Anglo-Celtic settler background>

Without that clarification, the chart reproduces the old cultural assumption that “real Australians” are white, while everyone else is an ethnic subgroup.
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