"I'm basically judging by what I see and read about them, listening to talk radio, but my strong impression is these are people with very real grievances, the grievances are justified, they've been shafted for over 30 years. They give the impression of being hard-working, serious people who think they've been doing everything right - they've been doing what you're taught you're supposed to do. They're God-fearing, hard-working, gun-carrying patriotic Americans - what are they doing wrong? How come their lives are so crummy?
How come, if you open this week's copy of BusinessWeek, the main business journal, the front page story, which has something like 'Wall Street vs. America', and then when you read the story, it's a blistering expose of how the bankers and lawyers and background economists have sold snake-oil trickery to unsuspecting municipalities, people and so on, which had all kinds of devious devices in it, which they're now exploiting to crush education, transportation, decent homes, basically just crush people when they have money pouring out of their pockets and they don't know what to do with it. That's a reason to be upset, and people feel it in their lives.
So I think it's completely wrong to ridicule them. I mean, maybe the answers they - I wouldn't even ridicule the answers. For example, the other day I just happened to be listening to Rush Limbaugh, interviewing Sarah Palin. It's easy to make fun of what they were saying, but I presume they're sincere, like if Limbaugh asks a question "what do you think about this junk science that the elitist liberals are trying to foist on us about global warming just in order to take away our jobs?", and Sarah Palin says "just use common sense, and look out the window - do you see palm trees?" OK, I mean it's not just ridiculous, it's a death sentence for the species, but there's no point approaching people and saying that.
People have genuine grievances, and they're not getting answers. The answers they are getting are not only crazy, but extremely dangerous, so the right response is to ask ourselves why are we failing to organize these people.
...
Because we have not succeeded in unifying people. It's our fault. If we can't ... take, say, health insurance. Most people believe it's just a right - the idea that health care should be determined by wealth, not need, is so profoundly immoral, that I'm sure that if you approach people are talk about it, they'll agree. There is an ideology that has been drilled into people by 50 years of intense propaganda, by the business classes ..."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWs6g3L3fkUand then he goes into how Reagan was very pro-business and interventionist - I'm not going to transcribe it all. So, yes, Chomsky has been saying the protesters should be listened to. He thinks they will see the light if someone sits down with them and properly explains health care. I doubt they've been listening to him, however.