Well folks, it looks like we've got ourselves a Democratic candidate. While I still support Obama, and will follow through with my promise (to myself) to volunteer for his campaign now that he has the nomination, I have to say a word about Ralph Nader. I just watched the documentary, An Unreasonable Man, about Nader's work and his bid for the 2000 presidency and I have to say, the guy has a point. If you haven't seen the film, I recommend it.
Dissent is an extremely critical part of our political process, it is the basis of free speech. The right to criticize our government doesn't apply just to the people already in power and the policies they enact, it also applies to those who want to represent us, the policies they promise to enact and the process by which those people and policies are elected. If we can't question those things, if we can't shine a light in the crevices of our candidates' contributions and connections and voting and personal histories, then we don't really have free speech or a democracy. Nader says he ran in 2000 because in a two-party system where both parties are heavily subsidized by corporate contributions, there really isn't that much difference between them. He was demonized for that sentiment and subsequently blamed for the Democrat's loss in 2000.
I do not believe he cost the Democrats the election. I do believe that he activated a group of people previously too disillusioned to vote, who largely in the end voted for Gore. Mostly though, I believe in what he's fighting for, real representation of the people. No, I don't think the two parties are indistinguishable, and we've seen that difference in this presidency more than any, but as the father of consumer rights he's right that they owe more to their corporate contributors than they do to us.
The Economist, in their World 2008 special, published their forecast of how much money will be spent in this years election compared to previous years. We started, in 1976 with $25 million spent by all candidates. It increased each election to $38m in 1980, $53m in 1984, $59m in 1988, $70m in 1992, $83m in 1996 and then jumped to $140m in 2000. Strangely, spending almost quadrupled in 2004 to $494m! What in the world is going on? How is that possible? The Economist predicts this year will shoot up $1 billion spent on the 2008 elections but then counters that figure with a quote from the columnist George Will who says that is only half as much as Americans spend every year on Easter candy. Oddly terrifying.
The point is that we need to consider this trend. How comfortable are we with this kind of money being spent on campaigns? Are we willing to examine where this money is coming from? And how, ultimately, does this affect how these people govern our country? They are voted into office by us, they are supposed to be representing us but if their financial backers feel they are representing their interests, we have a serious problem. This is the problem that Ralph Nader was the first person to address back in the seventies. He was the first person to claim rights on the behalf of the consumer. He said it's not acceptable for corporations to bypass those rights in the name of profits. Without Nader, we would not have seat belts, airbags, anti-lock brakes and a host of other features in our cars that keep our families from dying when the car loses control. It took a while for corporations to mobilize efforts against Nader and consumers but they have finally figured out the best way is through our elected officials.
In developing countries, people just starting to fight against corporate corruption, pollution and neglect, base their struggle on Nader's. They see him as an American hero. Here, Democrats have the gall to blame him for the atrocities committed by Bush in office. This is my request. Support your candidate but listen to what Nader has to say because he, as always, is the only one saying it. This issue on his platform, Corporate Personhood, illustrates how our rights are not being respected by our government or our candidates. He says:
In 1886 the Supreme Court, in the case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad, was interpreted to have ruled that corporations were “persons”—before women were considered persons under the 19th amendment to have the right to vote.
But corporations are not humans. They don’t vote. They don’t have children. They don’t die in Iraq.
We cannot have equal justice under law between real people and corporations like Exxon Mobil. There is no way even an individual billionaire can approximate the raw power of these large corporations with their privileged immunities, and their control over technology, capital and labor.
The constitution reads, “we the people”, not we the corporations.
We put these people into office, they need to be beholden to what we want and it's up to us to make that happen. Think about it.
6 comments:
Excellent article! Thanks so much for posting. I see you have a tag 'west wing', what do you think about the story that Santos was modeled after Obama?
Angelique, your larger point about not demonizing Nader is a good one - but it's really not that wrong to believe he threw the election (with the help of Republicans, obviously). In 2000, he scored over 97,000 votes in Florida. If just 1% of those voters had instead voted for Gore, the outcome would have been different, at least inasmuch as it would have been Bush and his people pressing for a recount. That's not to say that Gore would have won, as Katharine Harris and Brother Jeb showed they were more than ready to do anything they could to install W. But...if 10%, or 50% of Nader voters had voted for Gore...well...that would have been a lot harder to fix.
Also, haven't the last four years pretty well demonstrated that the notion that "there really isn't that much of a difference" between the two parties is wrong? Almost everyone agrees that the presence of corporate money taints the process, but does anyone really believe we'd be mired in Iraq, killing Third World Women through ineffective health education, or looking the other way while the climate melts down under President Gore? I could go on and on, but I think you know this too.
Nader has done many great things in his life, and we owe him a lot, but running for President in 2000 turned out to be a serious mistake. I'm not worried about a repeat, as I think the next election is going to sweep bigger majorities into Congress to support President Obama.
(Try saying "President Obama" out loud - it's fun!)
I love The West Wing! The last season, however, was almost unwatchable and I think happened too early to be modeled on Obama, no?
As for Nader causing Gore to lose the election, perhaps it is so. Unfortunately, it's impossible to prove. It's also impossible to know where the country would be if we'd had President Gore for four years. Half of the country didn't want him and wasn't ready to hear his global warming message. He would still have had to deal with 9/11 and we don't know that he wouldn't have taken us to war. I don't believe in regrets or looking backward, only forward and the fact that Obama is our Democratic candidate and that he has a very good chance of winning is something I could not have foreseen in 2000.
Great post! I am one of those who voted for Nader. I knew what I was doing. I got it, believe me I had a few arguments about it, but I saw it as throwing one starfish back in the sea rather than sitting there and agreeing that they are all going to die.
And I would vote for him again. Because I want to believe. And that belief, that same hope, is why I am voting for Obama. He isn't perfect, but who is? At least you can believe him. And believe in him.
Nader absolutely had a right to run and try to get his message out on a national stage. But when he saw what was about to happen - and knowing that the corporate toady two party system was going to continue for at least the foreseeable future - he should've withdrawn toward the end and thrown his support to Gore. He still would have been able to run again (as he is now, though thankfully nobody gives a shit). It was absurdly destructive of him to continue all the way through such a tight election, especially considering the stakes, not the least of which was the Supreme Court and which turned out to be - not surprisingly - so much more. Instead, by throwing the electoral version of a Molotov cocktail, he allowed this criminal administration to take the reins and destroyed a lifetime's worth of good will that many of us on the left had for him. Just because you have every right to do something doesn't mean you ought to. And he oughtn't have. He did his own cause a grave disservice. And, as history has proved, he was wrong. The two parties aren't the same and never were. One believes government can't work and then set out to prove it; the other believes government can improve people's lives and tries (not always successfully) to achieve good government. That's Nader's ultimate problem - he's always been wrong. Unless you believe that Democrats and Republicans will appoint the same judges, stack committees and regulatory agencies with the same people, and have the same exactly priorities (and if you do, you're clearly not paying attention) then Nader's entire premise is deeply flawed, as is his apparent disregard for the ultimate outcome of our elections.
Next time Ralph should run, get his message out, do his damndest, and then if it looks like he's going to lose anyway, make sure the candidate whose agenda is closest to his ends up in the White House.
Next time, Ralph should run,
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