the people may not have a monopoly on the answers, but they understand this economy doesn't benefit for most of the people. for a quarter century we've had an economy where most people can't pay for housing or health care or pay to send their kids to school without going into debt, and that debt has proven unsustainable. meanwhile, most of the profits from corporate growth have flowed to the top, to the people with the corner offices, to the people making the deals on wall street, and there is very widespread anger and a demand for a new kind of economy. you know, it must be said that there's some characterization that this is some sort of a radical movement. >> right. >> these people out on the street as if they are asking for something we've never seen before. women's suffrage. that radical, never had that before. the civil rights movement, taking on an entrenched racial establishment in the south. this was radical. opposing the vietnam war, taking on the pentagon, country truly divided. this country is asking for something they already had. >> in a country that's 9.1%