Nader’s candidacy: we should expect nothing less of him

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Common Sense, so uncommon today

The candidate is a brilliant man of the highest integrity. He is generous, dedicated public servant responsible for world-altering reforms which have saved, literally, countless lives. In the words of one of his published critics:

More than any other single person, Ralph Nader is responsible for the existence of automobiles that have seat belts, padded dashboards, air bags, non-impaling steering columns, and gas tanks that don’t readily explode when the car gets rear-ended. He is therefore responsible for the existence of some millions of drivers and passengers who would otherwise be dead. Because of Nader, baby foods are no longer spiked with MSG, kids’ pajamas no longer catch fire, tap water is safer to drink than it used to be, diseased meat can no longer be sold with impunity, and dental patients getting their teeth x-rayed wear lead aprons to protect their bodies from dangerous zaps. It is Nader’s doing, more than anyone else’s, that the federal bureaucracy includes an Environmental Protection Agency, an Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and a Consumer Product Safety Commission, all of which have done valuable work in the past and, with luck, may be allowed to do such work again someday. He is the man to thank for the fact that the Freedom of Information Act is a powerful instrument of democratic transparency and accountability. He is the founder of an amazing array of agile, sharp-elbowed research and lobbying organizations that have prodded governments at all levels toward constructive action in areas ranging from insurance rates to nuclear safety. He had help, of course, from his young “raiders,” from congressional staffers and their bosses, from citizens, and even from the odd President. But he was the prime mover. – Hendrik Hertzberg, in The New Yorker, March, 2004

He is a highly-educated man. His first languages are Arabic and English, and he later acquired Chinese, Russian, Spanish, and Portuguese. He is a crusading attorney, a prolific writer, and he tirelessly delivers speeches with an energy, eloquence and control equal to that of the best nineteenth-century orators. His entire life has been dedicated to public service. An enormously important social critic, but a very private man, he hasn’t been content with the role of intellectual gadfly. Instead he has moved into the more dangerous stage of a personal political activism, most dramatically (but gently) regularly entering himself as a candidate for the Presidency since 1992.
He has been absolutely correct on every issue with which his candidacy has been associated, but the fundamental issue which underlay everything he stood for in each of these elections and which underlies it today is the most important of all: The stranglehold of corporate power over the nation’s political institutions and the economy. Nader is properly disgusted with the Republicans and Democrats equally on this issue.
No other candidate, compromised as they are, can or will ever address this problem, but until it is addressed and resolved there will be no real change, This is the strength of the argument and the campaign identified with a man who, remarkable as it may be, seems to have no personal ambitions for political office.
But so many reject him at the polls, even though they must know he is absolutely right.
My countrymen vote over and over again for far lesser candidates, but for many blind partisans it isn’t enough to simply refuse to support the man and his principles. Nader has to be wiped off the ballot so that no one else can vote for him. The man has to be eliminated from the scene altogether, and this must be done with a venom and an implied violence that often surpasses that directed at Bush and the Republicans who created him.
Yesterday a friend of mine sent an email around to a number of people he knew bearing the subject line, “stop him before he kills again”. It was basically a short note with a hysterical warning about the old bugbear of a Ralph Nader candidacy. There was a link to a story speculating about the former candidate’s plans.
I have no idea where this rabid nonsense comes from about Nader being responsible for all of our travails since the coup which brought us a Bush presidency, but it reminds me of the continuing popularity of the myth which would have Saddam Hussein responsible for 9/11.
I had first replied to my friend that Nader never was the problem, is not now and will not be the problem should he decide to run again. I had been most upset about the email’s call, “stop him before he kills again”. I asked what that was supposed to mean, and suggested that everyone has the right to run for office. I couldn’t help adding that this should be especially important if she or he is right, unlike the competition anointed by the corporations, party bosses and the media.
His response was that “flighty principles” have to be thrown aside and that pragmatism is now the order of the day. He also referred to a comment from a friend of his who suggested that a vote for Nader was a “self-satisfying” act at a time when the Bush menace threatened and that “pragmatism” was now the order of the day.
I couldn’t simply go back to him with another reply; I was spending too much time on the subject to keep it just between the two of us. Like any good blogger, I decided to do a post instead.
Let me say first that I don’t vote in a way to show or feel that I’m right. My votes are never “self-satisfying”. In fact, if I wanted to satisfy myself I’d vote Republican or not at all (the former in the interest of my pocket, the latter in order to accept the basic lie of our system and for my peace of mind).
Politics really are an almost full-time occupation for me, and they’ve been so at least since I sort of campaigned for Dewey in 1948 [yeah, but I’ve gotten smarter, and my parents can’t influence me now], yet I leave the strategizing and maneuvering up to the politicos. It’s the strategizing and maneuvering that produces the abominations which occupy (and always occupy) the highest offices in the nation. It’s the strategizing and maneuvering that gives do-nothing Congresses and play-it-safe presidents. It’s the strategizing and maneuvering that arranges things so that the professional politician’s own special, vetted confederate gets in.
Am I the only one bothered by the fact that American political life has almost nothing to do with “policy” [def. “a course or principle of action adopted or proposed by a government, party, business, or individual”]?
Electoral politics are not a “game” for me, although most Americans seem to see it that way, and the American media definitely plays it that way. Sadly however, the game approach may in fact make a lot of sense, since what we continue to refer to as “politics”, in this country, are not the politics of a free and democratic society. The system has always been in the hands of the powerful. Originally that meant powerful, wealthy individuals, but in the nineteenth century it came to mean powerful corporations, and the Supreme Court certified that development. Our Congress, our Executive Branch and our Supreme Court are all the product of collaborating or competing corporate interests; everything is arranged for profit. The policies you or I vote for are the policies of the candidates and office holders only if they are the policies of the corporations which created them.
Nader has been the only modern candidate for the office of President who has ever told the truth about corporate ownership of Congress and the White House and he has founded his candidacy on a fundamental change in the system. Kucinich has been almost equal to Nader in his dedication to a cause which should be the priority of every citizen. I have voted for both men, whenever I have had the opportunity and with the best conscience. It doesn’t “satisfy” me to do so, because I’ve known each time I did so that the corporations and the media were ensuring that what my candidate stood for would remain invisible to the voters who most need them and who would gain the most from their election.
In a 2004 post I quoted a letter to the NYTimes by Alexi Arango which I thought perfectly explains what drives Nader’s repeated candidacies:

Ralph Nader’s central thesis is that corporate influence on lawmakers is a greater danger to democracy than even a Bush presidency. In this context, Mr. Nader’s run for president is easier to understand.

Nader has never killed anyone, and he’s not going to start now. He runs for office because the Democrats have totally abandoned what they represent they stand for, but he runs for office above all because the party (including both Clinton and Obama) is in the pay of the corporations. In fact in a very real sense today we all live in “the company town”. You may think these are desperate times which demand that I and every other voter, even the smart ones, dance with the big donkey, but I think the times are more desperate than most people realize and I know that nothing will change if we continue to accept the lie about our electoral freedom. It’s the Democrats who threw away the 2000 election, and every election since, including the Congressional elections. By now we have no excuse for not knowing how or why.
It’s up to the Democrats to defeat or overcome a Nader candidacy by making it unnecessary or redundant. To decide to change nothing, but to demand that his candidacy and that of any other true reformer be prevented so that we might get more of nothing (Democratic “winners” forever and ever stuffed into corporate pockets) is simply to assume an absurd position, not a pragmatic position.
Looking at what the Democrats have been saying and doing about domestic and foreign policy for almost two decades, even now with a Democratic Congress, can we blame Nader’s 2000 run for the way the Democrats have behaved since then?
It’s Nader who is the patriot.
When I was very young, like everyone else of my generation, I was told that any American could grow up and run for President. Nobody said, “. . . except for the best ones”.

ADDENDUM: For what I will call the definitive statement on the significance of Nader’s candidacy, read John Nichol’s piece on CommonDreams.

[image from Amazon.com]

“No, no! Sentence first – verdict afterwards”

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Alice begins to doubt that justice really will be done.

And still they don’t get it.
I’m having trouble enough sleeping at night, thinking about the horrors routinely executed in our name around the world, but this headline to an AP story I saw on line last night looked particularly alarming:

Executions May Be Carried Out at Gitmo

Lewis Carroll is alive and well in America today; it’s just too bad for the knaves that not enough people are noticing.

[image from storynory]

“They hate our freedoms”

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the enemy is us

“They hate our freedoms” [from Bush’s 2002 State of the Union address]

But just yesterday:

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Senate overwhelmingly passed a bill on Tuesday granting retroactive immunity from lawsuits to telecommunications companies that took part in President George W. Bush’s warrantless eavesdropping program.
[The bill would replace a 15-day extension of a surveillance law which expires this week, a law whose provisions for the protection of privacy and personal freedoms the Bush administration and the companies have repeatedly, and avowedly, violated.]
The 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requires that the government receive the approval of a secret FISA court to conduct surveillance in the United States of suspected foreign enemy targets.
But after September 11, Bush authorized warrantless surveillance of communications between people in the United States and others overseas if one had suspected terrorist ties [although in fact we do not know the full extent of the warrantless wiretapping program, or the extent to which FISA has been violated].

[image from ABC news]

yes, of course we torture

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We do torture. The whole world knows it, and even in the land of the brave and the free and the righteous none of us needed to wait for the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights or anyone anyone else to tell us what we all know already.

Waterboarding should be prosecuted as torture: U.N.
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – The controversial interrogation technique known as waterboarding and used by the United States qualifies as torture, the U.N. human rights chief said on Friday.

Why do we do torture? Because we want to, and because we can. And by the way, ordinary Americans have repeatedly shown they’re okay with it, or it wouldn’t continue today.

[image from Wikipedia via mindfully.org]

Guantanamo: is there no limit to the obscenities?

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a view of the camp we’ve known about for six years, not the secret one

Really?!!!
We learn tonight that the regime in Washington has been maintaining a separate concentrated concentration camp totally hidden inside the Guantanamo camp we already knew about, a concentration camp which had already been created and maintained, with the explicit or tacit support and approval of members of both parties, outside of any legal system existing anywhere on the planet.
Even now, a year and a half after the last Congressional election, the Democratic majority hasn’t been able to bring itself to talk about even the original camp. Please tell me once gain about the genius of the vaunted two-party system which is supposed to promote liberty and justice for all.

[image by Carlotta Gall and Andy Worthington from the NYTimes]

Israel’s civilian blockade war crime creates panic in Gaza

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desperate people

Israel’s blockade of Gaza is a war crime*, but the world will not say so.
Desperate Gazans themselves spoke out today when they blew up the wall separating them from Egypt. Tens of thousands have crossed the normally-sealed border to obtain both critical and ordinary supplies unavailable at home.
Much of the beleaguered territory’s 1.5 million residents have faced critical shortages of electricity, fuel, food, medicine and other supplies for months, but in the last week the closure has been tightened dramatically by Tel Aviv.
But we all knew this already, didn’t we? So . . . .

*
Article 54 of the additional protocol of the 1949 Geneva Conventions states that starvation of civilians as a method of warfare is prohibited, and that it is also prohibited to attack, destroy, remove or render useless objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, “whatever the motive”.

[image by Abid Katib from Getty Images via NYTimes]

GUANTANAMO DELENDA EST!

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Out of sight and out of mind. Our concentration camp in Guantanamo is still off the chart (literally); missing from the Democratic Congressional agenda; “not present” in presidential campaign rhetoric; and, most frighteningly and damningly of all, it still appears to have completely escaped our national conscience.

[fabric color swatch, otherwise unrelated to Guantanamo, from froggtoggs]

the obscenity of organized hate under cover of religion

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A girl, who was wounded in a bomb attack, receives treatment in a hospital in Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) northeast of Baghdad, December 25, 2007. U.S. forces killed two gunmen and detained four others in operation near Baquba, the U.S. military said. Hours later, a suicide bomber killed four people and wounded 21 at the funeral of the two men who were killed by the Americans, police said.

I’m not feeling good about religion today, any religion, but nothing new there.
I’m listening to a magnificent recording of Handel’s “Messiah” (the music, the music). I’d just read the CD liner notes which refer to Handel’s beneficences to the children’s home, London’s Foundling Hospital, which has been associated with his oratorio since 1750. Then I opened my computer to the news stories on my home page. The lead item from Reuters cried out with the image and caption at the top of this post.
There are no words for this obscenity.

[image and caption from an unidentified stringer working with Reuters]

Reverend Billy free this time, but the assaults never stop

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cover of a 1909 pamphlet created to protect the right of free speech at a time Emma Goldman was being prevented from speaking

How often does the NYPD have to be reminded about the First Amendment?
Two days ago all charges which the police had brought against the Reverend Billy for reciting the First Amendment to officers harassing Critical Mass cyclists in Union Square on June 29th were dropped.
New York’s guardians of [certain kinds of] law and order have once again failed to have their behavior upheld by the courts. Fortunately this time it was not the soft tissue of a citizen victim that bore the injury, but the tissue of the civil liberties each one of us shares. The escalating, accumulative record of police misconduct like this, regularly authorized and protected by Departmental and civilian municipal authorities, assaults our Constitutional protections and it may some day effect a mortal wound.
The NYTimes article by Anemona Hartocollis barely hints at what should have been a huge embarassment for the arresting officers and those who had handed them their assignment:

The Manhattan district attorney�s office quietly dropped its prosecution today of Reverend Billy, a street performer accused of harassing police officers by reciting the First Amendment at a rally in Union Square Park.
Prosecutors said today that they deliberately allowed the case to be dismissed by failing to meet a court-ordered deadline to file papers explaining why the arrest of Reverend Billy, whose real name is William Talen, was justified.
�Sometimes not making a decision is a good decision,� one prosecutor said.

Norman Siegel, Billy’s lawyer, let the Times know that the incident wouldn’t end there.

He said he would file a federal lawsuit against the city and the Police Department charging false arrest, malicious prosecution and violation of Mr. Talen�s free-speech rights.
�We call this trial by inconvenience,� Mr. Talen said, adding that between the two cases he had been required to appear in court six times and spend three nights in jail.
�There are a number of questions,� Mr. Siegel said. �Who ordered the arrest? Why put him through the system when he should get a desk appearance ticket? Who made the decision to take five months before getting the case dismissed?�
He called the case �a classic example of government abuse of power.�

The hundreds of plaintiffs suing the city and the Hudson River Park Trust over the dangerous condition of the holding pens in which they were dumped following their arrests during the 2004 Republican Convention are experiencing their own continuing abuse and hardship. A article written by Chris Lombardi, “Pier 57 cops also exposed to toxins during 2004 RNC“, which appeared in a recent issue of Chelsea Now, is interesting for many of its revelations. In it Lombard reports:

Right now, the suits are still at the deposition stage, with the 500-plus plaintiffs spending days at the federal courthouse downtown.
�They�re keeping them for eight hours at a time, sometimes,� said [Environmental Justice Law Project] co-founder Martin Stolar.

Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom, but do we have to pay for despotism too?

[image from the Emma Goldman papers, sunsite.berkeley.edu]

GUANTANAMO DELENDA EST!

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This post is part of a series begun on May 21, 2007, which will continue until the U.S. concentration camps at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere around the world have been razed.

Two things this time around: First, we haven’t been screaming about Guantanamo for five years only to watch painfully as this miserable concentration camp is broken up and its internee victims removed and dispersed among any number of new facilities established inside the U.S. border, fresh black holes even less open to our own conscience and the world’s scrutiny than their notorious progenitor. Second, today is the eighty-ninth anniversary of the armistice which ended the Great War; it would be nice if we could believe our never-ending supply of old men in suits and brass had learned anything at all in the interim.

[fabric color swatch, otherwise unrelated to Guantanamo, from froggtoggs]