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 ACCEPTANCE STATEMENT OF
RALPH NADER
For
the Association of State Green Parties Nomination
for
President of the United States
Denver, Colorado, June 25, 2000
On behalf of all Americans who seek a new
direction, who yearn for a new birth of freedom to build the just society, who
see justice as the great work of human beings on Earth, who understand that
community and human fulfillment are mutually reinforcing, who respect the urgent
necessity to wage peace, to protect the environment, to end poverty and to
preserve values of the spirit for future generations, who wish to build a deep
democracy by working hard for a regenerative progressive politics, as if people
mattered — to all these citizens and the Green vanguard, I welcome and am
honored to accept the Green Party nomination for President of the United States.
The Green Party stands for a nation and a world
that consciously advances the practice of deep democracy. A deep democracy
facilitates people’s best efforts to achieve social justice, a sustainable and
bountiful environment and an end to systemic bigotry and discrimination against
law-abiding people merely because they are different. Green goals place
community and self- reliance over dependency on ever larger absentee
corporations and their media, their technology, their capital, and their
politicians. Green goals aim at preserving the commonwealth of assets that the
people of the United States already own so that the people, not big business,
control what they own, and using these vast resources of the public lands, the
public airwaves and trillions of worker pension dollars to achieve healthier
environments, healthier communities and healthier people.
These goals are also conservative goals. Don’t
conservatives, in contrast to corporatists, want movement toward a safe
environment, toward ending corporate welfare and the commercialization of
childhood? Don’t they too want a voice in shaping a clean environment rooted
in the interests of the people? Don’t they too want a fair and responsive
marketplace, for their health needs and savings? Let us not in this campaign
prejudge any voters, for Green values are majoritarian values, respecting all
peoples and striving to give greater voice to all voters, workers, individual
taxpayers and consumers. As with the right of free speech, we may not agree with
others, but we will defend their right to free speech as strongly as we do for
ourselves.
Earlier this year, I decided to seek your
nomination because obstacles blocking solutions to our society’s injustices
and problems had to be overcome. Feelings of powerlessness and the withdrawal of
massive numbers of Americans from both civic and political arenas are deeply
troubling. This situation had to be addressed by fresh political movement
arising from the citizenry’s labors and resources and dreams about what
America could become at long last. The worsening concentration of global
corporate power over our government has turned that government frequently
against its own people, denying its people their sovereignty to shape their
future. Again and again, the will of the people has been thwarted and the voice
of the people to protest has been muted.
In the past, citizens who led and participated
in this country’s social justice movements faced steep concentrations of power
and overcame them. A brief look at American history is instructive today. Common
themes occur from the Revolution of 1776 against King George III’s empire to
the anti-slavery drives and women’s suffrage movements of the 19th century, to
the farmers’ revolt against the large banks and railroads that began in 1887,
and on to the trade union, civil rights, environmental and consumer protection
initiatives of the 20th century, culminating in the demands for equity by
Americans who are discriminated against due to their race, gender, tribal
status, class, disability or sexual preference.
All these movements took on excessive power,
pressed for relinquishment or sharing of that power despite vigorous opposition
by elements of the dominant business community. Many years were lost to the
resolutions of these injustices before justice began to prevail and corporate
power receded. However, when citizens won, and Tory merchants, cotton slave
holders and corporations were compelled to share that power with the people they
oppressed or excluded, America was a better place for it. America became more
beautiful. Moreover, the companies behaved better and prospered more.
Over the past twenty years we have seen the
unfortunate resurgence of big business influence, generating its unique brand of
wreckage, propaganda and ultimatums on American labor, consumers, taxpayers and
most generically, American voters. Big business has been colliding with American
democracy and democracy has been losing. The results of this democracy gap are
everywhere to be observed by those who suffer these results and by those who
employ people’s yardsticks to measure the quality of the economy, not
corporate yardsticks and their frameworks. What we must collectively understand
about the prevalent inequalities is important because so many of these
conditions have been normalized in our country.
Over the next four and one half months, this
campaign must challenge the campaigns of the Bush and Gore duopoly in every
locality by running with the people. When Americans go to work, wondering who
will take care of their elderly parents or their children, irritated by the
endless traffic jams, stifled by their lack of rights in the corporate
workplace, ripped off by unscrupulous sellers and large companies, put on
telephone hold for the longest times before you get an answer to a simple
question–so much for this modern telecommunications age, beset by having to
pay for health care you cannot afford or drug prices you shouldn’t have to
suffer, aghast at how little time your frenzied life leaves you for children,
family, friends and community, overcome by the sheer ugliness of commercial
strips and sprawls and incessantly saturating advertisements, repelled by the
voyeurism of the mass media and the commercialization of childhood, upset at the
rejection of the wisdoms of our elders and forebears, anxious over the ways your
tax dollars are being misused, feeling that there needs to be more to life than
the desperate rat race to make ends meet, then think about becoming a part of a
progressive movement of Greens, of this citizens’ campaign, to change the
political economy so that healthy environments, healthy communities, and healthy
people become its overwhelming reason for being.
Look at Europe. During the Fifties and Sixties,
several European countries provided all their citizens with health care
coverage, day care and other services for children, labor laws which facilitate
the organization of trade unions, a statutory "social wage" for all
workers, union and non-union, providing one month paid vacations, retention of
pay while caring for sick family members, pensions and other services. In the
year 2000 A.D., most workers in our country do not have these basic rights. In
fact, according to the World Health Organization, the United States was ranked
37th among nations in the world regarding the quality of health care a country
provides its people. This is not only embarrassing but also unacceptable.
Western European countries provided for their people thirty to fifty years ago.
Why can’t we do it now in a period of economic boom? It’s possible. We can
make a difference. Together we can chart a new course.
However, what we must first do, as I mentioned
already, is to collectively understand the inequalities afflicting so many of
our citizens to translate this understanding into a demand for solutions. What
is so normalized now must now be defined as intolerable and unworthy of this
great country of ours.
A collective understanding must distinguish
peoples’ yardsticks to measure the quality of the economy from corporate
yardsticks. Consider business money in politics which overpowers labor money by
eleven to one. Corruption reaches new peaks every two years and further
nullifies what the voting franchise is supposed to mean. What about the bragging
about the economy’s nearly ten straight years of spectacular performance? Try
applying people’s yardsticks instead of the measures of record GDP, corporate
profits and stock exchange prices. A very different picture emerges. Because the
benefits of this boom have accrued to the wealthier and especially wealthiest
classes, the majority of Americans are left behind. There is over 20 percent
child poverty, 25 percent for pre-school children. This is by far the highest
percentage among comparable countries in the western world. There are about 47
millions workers, over one-third of the workforce, making less than $10 per
hour, many at $5.25, $6.00, $7.00, with no or few benefits. The majority of
workers still, after ten years of overall economic growth, make less today, in
inflation adjusted dollars, and work 160 hours longer per year than workers did
in 1973!
Moreover, today’s workers have to spend more
to get to work and commute longer distances. They pay more for what were family
functions that were once free or inexpensive. A record number of people are
without health insurance. $6.2 trillion in consumer indebtedness to supplement
living wages, and inadequate crumbling public works that serve the mass
populace, from schools, health clinics, mass transits, drinking water systems
and other services. The lower unemployment rate is masked by low wages and
millions of part-time laborers who are registered as employed if they work 21
hours a week and cannot get a full-time job.
The need for more than one job to pay one’s
bills, the fear and reality of medical expenses for the uninsured , the growing
distance between home and job, home and shopping, the lack of affordable day
care all combine to form a daily, exhausting frenzy with less time for children
and community. Who designed this economy anyway? Was it topsy or was it economic
forces beyond the control of regular people? An economy that grows with more
ways to leave people behind raises the question of what will happen when a
recession or worse occurs?
Then, there is the people’s yardstick for
individuals who pay most of the taxes to their
governments. Given proliferating corporate tax
shelters, trillions of dollars in corporate and individual tax havens overseas,
corporate income tax contributions to the federal treasury are well under ten
percent, notwithstanding awesomely record profits. Between 1981-83, a worker in
a General Electric plant or office paid Uncle Sam more in actual total dollars
than did giant GE which paid no federal income taxes on over $6 billion in
profits and received a refund to boot.
In 1941, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis
made a prescient observation when he wrote: "We can have a democratic
society or we can have the concentration of great wealth in the hands of the
few. We cannot have both." Today, that concentration of wealth and its
political power has reached stunning intensities. In large companies, people who
work in the same enterprise are now earning $1 for every $416 that the CEO takes
away. In 1940, it was $1 for every $12. Today the financial wealth of the top 1
percent of households exceeds the combined wealth of the bottom 95 percent of
American households. Earlier this year Bill Gates’ wealth was equal to the
combined wealth of the poorest 120 million Americans. Whatever this enormous
imbalance says about the Great software imitator from Redmond, Washington, it
means that about tens of millions of Americans, who work year after year, decade
after decade, are nearly broke. What democracy worth its salt would have led to
this profound inequity? Globally, the combined annual income of the world’s
poorest 3.5 billion people equals the world’s two hundred richest people who
more than doubled their net worth between 1996 and 1999.
The net would be much smaller were other forms
of corporate welfare such as subsidies, erased corporate debts to Uncle Sam,
giveaways and bailouts to be subtracted. Of course, small businesses don’t
have such complex shelters to avoid taxes. When small businesses get into
trouble, they are free to go bankrupt, unlike speculating, mismanaged or corrupt
big businesses that can go to Washington for a complex bailout.
What about measures of environmental
devastation? These don’t appear on the balance sheets of Exxon, DuPont,
General Motors, or Peabody Coal. Degrading the air, water and soil that we use
does not register with any reports of such companies. Global warming, ozone
depletion, oceanic deterioration and forest clear-cutting do not have company
logos on them. GE still has not been held responsible for the PCB poisoning of
the Hudson River and got away with a trivial charge for what it did to my home
area’s Housatonic River.
A low level flight across the USA would reveal
the enormous wounds and scars, toxic hotspots, runoffs and dumps exacted by the
timber, mining, paper, chemical and metals industries, taking out the livability
of entire communities and their legions of worker-victims. More coal miners have
lost their lives from black lung disease and mine collapses in the past 110
years than all the American lives lost in WWII. And that is just one industry’s
casualty toll. The epidemic of silent environmental violence continues. Whether
it is the 65,000 Americans who die every year from air pollution, or the 80,000
estimated annual fatalities from hospital malpractice, or the 100,000 Americans
whose demise comes from occupational toxic exposures or the environmental racism
where the poor and their often asthmatic children live in pollution sinks, to
cite a few preventable conditions. The mortality and morbidity toll is far in
excess of the appalling street- level homicide numbers that amount to about
20,000 annually. The corporate youth addictors, tobacco and alcohol, the
deliberate over-medicators, bear some responsibility for yet more fatalities and
sicknesses.
The economic indicators preferred by Chairman
Alan Greenspan and most politicians from the two parties exclude much more that
matters to people: consumers who are defrauded, injured and killed by hazardous
or mis-sold products and services such as drugs, medical devices, vehicles,
pesticides, flammables, medical malpractices, insurance and bank reports,
credit, low income repair and loan scams. These tragedies are ignored, although
they do sometimes come before the courts and are covered in excellent major
media investigative features. Then, to the chagrin of the dutiful reporters, too
often nothing happens.
The percentage of union members in the private
economy has just dropped below 10 percent, the lowest in 60 years and the lowest
percentage in the western world. This indicator of people’s plight explains
much more about why many workers do not earn enough to support their families,
why they have to bear more of the health insurance premiums, if they receive any
from their employer, and why they go without or endure shrinking retirement
benefits.
What we must achieve is a stronger democracy to
turn all these deplorable conditions around. Because we know from our own inner
strength and knowledge as a nation and from the experiences of our courageous
forebears who surmounted their injustices, we can and we must. Just as with past
resistance, the dominant business lobbies are saying no to advanced consumer
protection, no to environmental law enforcement, no to an end to corporate
welfare on the backs of taxpayers, no to worker’s rights to decent living
standards and safer workplaces. Simply read the mainstream press, along with
stalwart smaller publications such as the Nation, Washington Monthly, Harpers,
Atlantic Monthly, The Progressive magazine and the Progressive Populist, to name
a few, and you will have your evidence, your heart-wrenching reports, your
manifest injustices.
All this signifies the gradual closing down of
civil society symbolizing an underdeveloped democracy and an overdeveloped
plutocracy or corporate state, in short, business acquisition of government to
serve its insatiable short-term interest.
This country has more problems than it deserves
and more solutions than it uses. Because our democracy is underdeveloped, there
is little accountability. The corporate commercialization of our country, our
government, our universities, our schools, our youngsters, our very expectation
levels continues unabated. Health, safety, justice, education, respect for the
environment and future generations are subordinated to boundless greed and
commercialism. Much of our foreign policy is driven by unsatiable corporate
pressures to sell military hardware to both the Defense Department and directly
to foreign dictators. This happens even if it goes against the interests of our
country, taxpayers and the principle of prudently allocated public budgets.
Weapons manufactures foist weapons systems onto the Pentagon, working through a
PAC-greased, supine Congress. Lower level Pentagon analysts are left to fume in
private, powerless to stop the waste and distortions of our policies.
There is more to collectively understand.
Corporatization is fast going global with autocratic support structures such as
the World Trade Organization (WTO). The WTO undermines our legitimate local
state and national sovereignties which enable America to lead the way in worker,
consumer, environmental standards. Global corporations command the capital,
technology, labor and many governments. How have they used this unprecedented
supremacy to alleviate the world’s problems? The big drug companies avoid
research into global infectious diseases, such as malaria and TB, that claim
millions of lives a year and are heading to our shores in drug resistant form.
Despite adverse publicity over their duplicitous behavior, the tobacco companies
are straining to hook every possible youngster in the Third World with portents
of massive cancer and other tobacco-related deaths yearly. The munitions makers
are busy expanding their lethal export trade, using your tax dollars in the form
of subsidies.
The food processing giants and the fast food
chains are busy displacing indigenous foods with fat and sugar pumps a la
McDonalds fast food. At the same time, the biotechnology companies drive to
change the nature of nature without answering basic scientific or need
questions. The banking giants and their IMF and World Bank cohorts are
continuing their structural adjustment polices in Third World countries that cut
public budgets, end critical consumer subsidies and replace real food acreage
with cash crops for exports, while imposing environmentally damaging
megaprojects that enrich the local oligarchy. The timber companies, working
directly or through local firms are rapidly destroying the rich biological
diversity of the equatorial forests. The large energy companies want these
countries to buy more nuclear and coal-burning plants, develop the same fossil
fuel-nuclear alliances that undermine local renewable solar technologies and
energy efficiencies. By cutting such deals and supporting dictatorial regimes
and the domestic oligarchies, democratic developments that would help the
people, for example, land reform, agrarian credit, cooperatives, trade union
rights, and political reforms are stymied and destroyed.
These conditions come back to plague us one way
or another, as in the billions of wasted taxpayer dollars Congress has
appropriated for the International Monetary Fund. When we overspend on
munitions, the arms companies make money. Should we wage peace through
preventative diplomacy and defense, they would make very little. One would think
with the demise of the Soviet Union ten years ago, we would have had that Peace
Dividend allocated to improve peoples lives.
Fifty years after World War II, tens of
thousands of our troops are still in Europe and East Asia, defending prosperous
nation allies who are fully capable of defending themselves against non-existent
enemies. Yet, useless massive weapons systems remain on the drawing boards to
further mortgage our fiscal future and drain money and talent from long overdue
civilian projects.
At home our criminal justice system, being
increasingly driven by the corporate prison industry that wants ever more
customers, grossly discriminates against minorities and is greatly distorted by
the extremely expensive and failed war on drugs. These prisons often become
finishing schools for criminal recidivists. At the same time, the criminal
justice system excludes criminally behaving corporations and their well defended
executives.
A most insidious influence of corporations is
their way of making us feel powerless, as did the auto industry for so many
years. They did this by withholding information on better ways to build cars
that they know how to design. We grow up corporate, thinking that this is the
way things are and that will always be and reducing our expectation levels in
the process. It was Ford Company Vice President William Gossett who wrote in
1959 candidly, that the modern corporation is the dominant institution in our
society.
* * *
I grew up corporate at a time of the ascendancy
of the motor vehicle highway expansion and the deliberate tearing up of the
electrified trolley system (by GM and company) and blocking new systems of
public transit. Research information about unsafe cars, sponsored by the
Department of Defense, because soldiers were dying in highway crashes here at
home in large numbers, liberated my civic perspectives. Good things happened. As
a nation, in 1960 we started to raise our expectations about what levels of
safety, emission controls, fuel efficiency should come with motor vehicles. As a
result of federal regulation, motor vehicles became much safer than they were
and millions of casualties have been prevented since then. The options were much
wider than we had been led to believe.
We can remind ourselves that through our state
governments, we give business corporations the charter that brings them into
existence. We can, therefore, as was done in the 19th century, condition this
charter on good behavior and withdraw the charter for recidivist companies which
then become subject to trusteeships for rehabilitating the companies with new
leadership. Bad trade unions had to undergo such rehabilitation. Ultimately, it
is always the people who bear the fundamental responsibilities to correct the
course of their societies and their wayward institutions.
One of those critical responsibilities is to
ensure that our children are well cared for. This is an enormous undertaking
because our children are now exposed to the most intense marketing onslaught in
history. From the age of 9 months to 19, years precise corporate selling is
beamed directly to children separating them from their parents, an unheard of
practice formerly, and teaching them how to nag their beleaguered parents as
unpaid salesman for companies. There is a bombardment of their impressionable
minds.
Through television, the Internet stores, samples
and mailings, these companies convey their message to the little ones. They
teach them how to crave junk food, thrill to violent and pornographic
programming, interact with the virtual reality mayhem. The marketeers are keenly
aware of the stages of child psychologies, age by age, and know how to turn many
into Pavlovian specimens powered by spasmodically shortened attention spans as
they become ever more remote from their own family.
Conditioned to become gazers and spectators for
an average of 30 hours a week, youngsters now register as more obese and out of
shape than any previous generation since 1900 when such records began to be
collected. Their teachers see the results of this addictive commercial
exploitation, the rat pack product conformity, the intrusion of commerce into
the schools themselves. This does not prepare the next generation to become
literate, self-renewing, effective citizens for a deliberative democracy.
Instead, this commercial traffic makes them even more vulnerable to the streets.
So offensive are these intrusions to the basic
norms of nurturing a wholesome childhood that people, conservative and liberals
alike are joining together to protest, demand restraints and encourage a wider
association of adults, including retired adults, with children. There are good
reasons why every major religion long ago warned about giving too much power to
the merchant mind. Why? Because its singular focus and its self-driven impulses
run roughshod over the more non-commercial values that define a worthy society.
How badly do we want a just and decent society,
a society that raises our expectation levels about ourselves and our community,
a society that foresees and forestalls future risks, a society that has the
people planning the future of their country, not global corporations as is the
case now? A just and decent society is the dream of all those good citizens
across our land who fight the good fight daily, it is the dream of the Green
Party, it is the dream of a growing number of people seeking to involve
themselves more actively in reclaiming this democracy of ours.
This campaign is about strengthening our
Republic with "liberty and justice for all" so that freedom is defined
as participation in power: power to solve our problems and diminish our
injustices that cause such pain and stultify so many Americans and their
children. It is good to have such dreams, my mother would tell us, but she added
a challenge. She taught us that determination puts your dream on wheels.
Together we reviewed the problems and have understood that inequalities are
getting worse. Together we can change the course of events as our forebears did.
With commitment, dedication and determination we can put our dreams on wheels in
this campaign.
The people of this country have options. There
are more citizen organizations and individuals knocking on the doors of their
governments than a government responding. This means we must persist until we
prevail. There are hopeful signs across the country as this campaign is
demonstrating. We are campaigning all over the country with citizen groups on
the ground who are working to lift standards of living and quality of life. The
tide is starting to turn.
Last year our campaign promised to journey to
all fifty states. I am the only Presidential candidate to have completed
campaigning in every state of our country since the first of March. In Boise,
Idaho, recently, a reporter asked me: "Since Bush is expected to win Idaho
and Gore has essentially conceded Idaho, neither of them are coming here, why
did you? "Because," I replied, "if you’re going to run for
President of the United States, you should campaign in every one of our
states."
Campaigning with the people in all the places we
visited is illuminating and heartwarming. The impulse for changes as if people
mattered are visible everywhere. Let me share some examples.
In Toledo, Ohio, we joined with members of a
community of some 80 householders and 16 small businesses taken by the City,
under threat of eminent domain, to provide Daimler/Chrysler with a landscaping
area. Already, the cowed city had given Chrysler ample acreage for its Jeep
Plant. The city of Toledo cleared the land for the giant company, absorbed any
environmental liabilities, gave Daimler/Chrysler a long tax holiday as part of a
nearly $300 million package in federal, state and local subsidies. The auto
company got the additional land it wanted for its shrubbery and a long-time
cohesive neighborhood was utterly demolished just like Detroit’s Poletown in
the 1980s. A World War II veteran told us that when he was fighting the
fascists, he never dreamed his long-time home would be taken for corporate
shrubbery. In stark contrast, Daimler/Chrysler, recording record profits, had
$20 billion cash in the bank. ~
In Madison, Wisconsin, we marched with workers
picketing for a livable wage. They were working for an independent contractor
who provided services for the University of Wisconsin.
In Atlanta, we stood in solidarity with a large
homeless shelter in the downtown Business District where homeless people are not
supposed to be seen. The city has not given the Shelter a kitchen permit for two
years.
In Nashville, Tennessee, I met Tom Burrell, now
running for the U.S. Senate on the Green Party line. Mr. Burrell returned from
Vietnam to work in the auto industry and then came home to Tennessee to farm a
large tract of land. There he learned about the shocking state of Black farmers
in America, dispossed of most of their land and forced to give up their farms
over the last seventy years, in no small part due to blatantly discriminatory
behavior by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The Department is only now
offering to make inadequate amends. Mr. Burrell has been a transforming leader
of these farmers seeking recompense and land. We had reported on this situation
nearly 30 years ago.
In Boston, right next to Fenway Park, we
gathered with members of the neighborhood at a news conference. The issue was a
forthcoming demand by the Boston Red Sox organization that some $300 million in
tax monies be used to help build a new ballpark nearby. The neighborhood groups,
disturbed by diversion of tax dollars from neglected needs of the city, wondered
why renovation of this historic park was not wiser than demolition. Did not the
Red Sox learn from the experience of the New England Patriots football team who
were sent fleeing back to Boston after their $500 million bonanza for a stadium
in Hartford was successfully blocked? There, an aroused citizen coalition
spearheaded by the Connecticut Green Party effectively routed the power of a
determined executive-legislative alliance by the Republicans and Democratic
parties.~
In Montana and Idaho, we heard unassailable
arguments that stopping the logging in national forests made superior
environmental, economic and job sense. Enjoy these forests now and for future
generations rather than destroy them for 3 percent of the nation’s annual
timber harvest and $1.2 billion of annual taxpayer subsidies to the timber
barons. "Let the Forests breath for us," America’s great
environmentalist, David Brower told us.
In Hartford, Connecticut’s grim inner city
amidst the office buildings of the affluent insurance companies, we met with
clergy from the Churches and social activists and discussed what this so called
booming economy has left behind in misery, deprivation and neighborhood heroics.
In Nebraska and Iowa we learned about the
shocking crisis of much rural farm country where small farmers and ranchers,
despite working from dawn to dusk, cannot make a living. They are being
mercilessly squeezed by giant suppliers and giant buyers, who are relentlessly
driving toward an industrialized corporate-contract agriculture mutated by
genetic engineering.
In Hawaii, we visited one of the only two plots
in the United States (the other is on the Pine Ridge Reservation) legally
permitted to grow industrial hemp, that 5000 year old, versatile plant with
thousands of uses, including textiles, fuel, food and paper. A fraction of an
acre was surrounded by barbed wire fence, saturation night lights inside a
larger fenced area. This medieval experience brought home once again that for
the sake of farmers, the environment, consumers and energy independence, it is
necessary to free industrial hemp from the proscribed list of U.S. Drug and
Enforcement Agency.
In West Virginia, the misbehavior of King Coal
is painfully visible. Some coal companies think nothing of blowing the tops off
of mountains and producing a polluting rubble and consequent jamming of streams
for many miles. Imagine! Against prevailing public opinion, King Coal is
dynamiting mountains, whose lore and beauty formed the natural space for the
mountain people. There was no objection from the Clinton-Gore Administration.
Similarly, the company that operates the giant incinerator, an extremely
hazardous polluter in southwestern Ohio benefitted from the broken promises of
the Clinton-Gore team made in 1992, to the citizen groups that fought and
continue to fight to shutdown the incinerator.
From Minnesota, my vice-presidential running
mate, Winona LaDuke and called a conference of tribal leaders about the need to
respect Treaties, and end the budgetary and other discriminations against the
impoverished reservations. This is long over due.
Around the country from Delaware to Kentucky to
Oregon to Minnesota, we joined with students deeply involved with the
anti-sweatshop movement and with workers who have lost their jobs to these
sweatshops abroad. We surveyed and confirmed the need for modern public transit
and the wonderful new technologies that community groups were demanding to
enable low- income people to get to work and to relieve the enormous time wasted
in chocking bumper to bumper traffic. We spoke with nurses from coast to coast
about furthering their leading role in advancing patients’ rights, the quality
of health care and universal health care for all. And, a tip of the hat to the
California Nurses Association, the standard-setter for unions everywhere, for
being the first union to support this Green Party Presidential campaign.
How uplifting were our conversations with peace
and nuclear arms reduction groups whose members, most of them sagacious,
experienced and determined elderly women and men whose concern is first and
foremost for the "Seven Generations" ahead. They set a new standard
for grandparenting. We should recall that the nuclear freeze movement began in
town meetings in New England.
We saw struggling small businesses, the Main
Street core of their community, slipping before the onslaught of the Walmarts
and other giant chains that have privileges not available to these merchants. We
met with volunteers and donors at receptions filled with civic activists excited
over the premises and promise of an expanding Green Party. It would take about
one million Americans, pledging 100 volunteer hours a year and raising $100 a
year, advancing a broad and deep agenda for the just society congenial to
millions of other Americans, to establish a majority political Party in a few
years.
The citizens of this country are not a backdrop
for political maneuvering by big business. They are central to a democratic
politics. They are central for reality testing, to help the politicians stay
close to growing inequalities because politicians can insulate themselves by
design. Did we really need a World Health Organization report to tell us how
badly we stand on health care issues? Big money in electoral politics produces a
kind of institutional insanity. This campaign will set an example of what can be
accomplished with the honest dollars of individuals, by refusing to take PAC
money or use soft money. This is a sane choice, now and in the future. It offers
the citizens of this country an authentic role in defining and solving problems.
A progressive political party is most authentic
when it connects with or arises from citizen movements and does not forget where
it is coming from or the reason for its being. Major changes for the betterment
of human beings start with major changes of direction. Such changes start with
small steps taken by each individual and their community together with other
individuals and these small steps evolve into ever larger steps which are
thereby more tested and surefooted.
The question we have to ask of ourselves is how
badly, how urgently do we want these changes? Do we want public financing of
public elections, which will remove any roadblocks to progress? Do we want
universal, accessible and quality health care, with an emphasis on prevention,
for all children, women and men in America, at long, long last? Do we want the
repeal of restrictive labor laws such as Taft-Hartley which fuel the obstruction
of trade union organizing for tens of millions of American workers who do not
earn a livable wage? Do we want adequate budgets and do we have the willpower
for enforcing and strengthening the environmental, consumer protection and job
safety laws against corporate crime, fraud and abuse so often and well reported
in the mainstream media but, alas, to so little effect? Do we want to end
hundreds of billions of dollars of corporate welfare, the so familiar subsidies,
giveaways and bailouts? Do we wish to discover the small and medium-size
businesses in the Social Venture Network, and other places that believe in
sustainable economies, like the Interface Corporation in Atlanta, Georgia, so as
to refute the chronic nay saying of Big Business? Can we not move our rich
country to become a society that abolishes poverty? Do we want an expansive
transformation of our energy sources to the many kinds of solar energy, some of
which have been around for centuries? Do we wish to advance the appropriate
technologies that define efficiency and productivity as if consumers,
environment and workers mattered?
Do we want to elevate the many civil servants in
our federal government above the demeaning stereotypes that politicians have
pasted on them and liberated their knowledge, insights and imagination to make
government our servant?
Can we assure that these civil servants —
physicians, engineers, scientists, lawyers, cost analysts, procurement managers
and others — have a place where they can bring their conscience and ethics to
work everyday?
Do we want our own media, our own television,
radio and cable networks as a functioning and deliberative democracy desires and
needs? Do we want to reserve part of the public airwaves which the people own in
the first place for programming that reflects our solutions, our cultures, our
sense of the heroic and the many models of little known success that need to be
publicized and emulated?
Do we wish to so lift the horizons of the
pursuit of happiness in our society through the pursuits of justice so that
bigotry, discrimination and virulent intolerance recedes toward oblivion?
Do we wish to expand the definition of national
security and national purpose to show how, with reasonable amounts of knowledge,
resources and goodwill, we can rapidly begin to defeat the global scourges of
poverty, contagious disease, illiteracy, lack of shelter, environmental
devastation, and to recognize the genius of Third World peoples to help it
flower?
Isn’t it about time that the United States
government stop supporting dictatorships and avaricious oligarchies with our tax
monies, munitions and diplomacy? Isn’t it time that our government takes a cue
from numerous studies and model projects, and advances foreign policies that
support the peasants and the workers for a change.
Do we want to say to the 70 million non-voters,
the Greens want to help you build a new beginning? Here is your chance to come
forth and support what you have long wished for, a progressive movement that is
for the people because it is of the people.
To the contented classes in America, the top
five percent on the income ladder, I ask, is your choice only to exit or is it
also to voice? Your income enables you to exit and buy bottled water when you
are concerned about the quality of your communities’ drinking water, to send
your children to private schools, and to move to some more pleasant community.
But you are the people who can get your calls returned. You are the citizens who
can give voice to the powerless and the beleaguered to improve their conditions.
My classmates at Princeton University and
Harvard Law Schools have chosen to voice. Over ten years ago our Princeton class
of 1955 established a Center for Civic Leadership to place undergraduates in
dozens of civic organizations dedicated to systemic change. The Center is also
pursuing a major effort to reorder our public health budget so that a major
assault on global tuberculosis can be mounted. In 1993, members of my Law School
class of 1958 established the Appleseed Foundation that organized state-based
Centers for Law and Justice. Over a dozen of these centers are underway, for the
purpose of furthering systemic approaches to systemic injustices. How many other
older alumni classes, undergraduate and graduate, can develop their systemic
initiatives for building democracy and justice?
A progressive political movement highlights
civic energies which are dedicated to the proposition that a society which has
more justice is a society that needs less charity. Too many good people are
walking around with invisible chains which restrict their contributions to the
good life for themselves and their fellow citizens. A progressive political
movement liberates their wisdom, judgment, experience, creativity and idealism.
To the millions of retired Americans with such
capacities, a progressive political movement offers endless opportunities for
this community-based patriotism to blossom. We need you in this fresh campaign.
Small numbers of large corporations are playing roulette with the planet.
To the youth of America, I say, beware of being
trivialized by the commercial culture that tempts you daily. I hear you saying
often that you’re not turned on to politics. The lessons of history are clear
and portentous. If you do not turn on to politics, politics will turn on you.
The fact that we have so many inequalities demonstrates this point. Democracy
responds to hands-on participation. And to energized imagination. That’s its
essence. We need the young people of America to move into leadership positions
to shape their future as part of this campaign for a just society. Let’s
prepare to take the politicians and the lobbyists on a tour of the People’s
America.
Two premises are basic to this political
campaign. First, that a basic function of leadership is to generate more
leaders, not more followers. Secondly, this political movement is first and
foremost movement of thought, not of belief. There is nothing wrong with beliefs
but it would be better to have them preceded by thought and followed by action.
By debating, phoning, e-mailing, and marching
during the next four months, we the people will grow a new political start, a
green plant pushing up between the two fossil parties.
With a new progressive movement, we the people
have the ability to vastly improve our lives and to help shape the world’s
course to one of justice and peace for years to come.
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