Friday, September 4, 2015

Noam Chomsky: What Bernie Sanders' Campaign Is Doing to the Democratic Party




With video from the time Sanders brought Chomsky to Vermont.

By Zaid Jilani / AlterNet

The linguist and political analyst Noam Chomsky is one of the most quoted people in the world, and one of the globe's most prominent thinkers. Although he has a sizable following, his work is rarely seen in mainstream media, and he has only been called to testify before Congress once (during the Vietnam War).
Yet Chomsky finally has a mutual admirer in the political system and he happens to be out-polling every GOP contender.
In May 1985, then-Burlington mayor Bernie Sanders brought Noam Chomsky to Vermont to talk about the U.S. military intervention in Latin America. “At a time when many intellectuals...find it more comfortable to be silent and to go with the flow as it were, it is comforting to find on occasion individuals who have the guts to speak out about the important issues of our time, and certainly Professor Chomsky has been the person to do it,” Sanders said.
A friend of mine emailed Chomsky recently to ask about the Sanders campaign. This is what Chomsky said:
"I'm glad that Sanders is running. A good way to bring important ideas and facts to people. His candidacy might also press the Dems a little in a progressive direction. In our system of bought elections he has scarcely a chance of getting beyond the primaries, and even if by some miracle he were elected he wouldn't be able to do anything, lacking any congressional representatives, governors, etc. As far as I can see he's a thorn in the side of the Clinton machine, which is not a bad thing."
A few months ago, the Guardian asked Chomsky about Sanders, and received a similar response. When Sanders heard about Chomsky's response, he said he was “not as pessimistic as Noam....He’s right, we live in an increasingly oligarchic form of society, where billionaires are able to buy elections and candidates, and it is very difficult, not just for Bernie Sanders but for any candidate who represents working families. But I think the situation is not totally hopeless, and I think we do have a shot to win this thing.”
Watch Chomsky's address to the people of Burlington, VT:

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