Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Ralph Nader is Tired of Running for President by Chris Hedges

Published on Monday, July 4, 2011
Ralph Nader Is Tired of Running for President
by Chris Hedges

The most important moral and intellectual voices within a disintegrating society are slowly discredited when their nonviolent protests and calls for justice cannot alter intransigent and corrupt systems of power. The repeated acts of peaceful civil disobedience, efforts at electoral and political reform and the fight to protect the rule of law are dismissed as useless by an embittered, dispossessed and betrayed public. The demagogues and hatemongers, the purveyors of violence, easily seduce enraged and bewildered masses in the final stages of collapse with false promises of vengeance, new glory and moral renewal. And in the spiral downward the good among us are reviled as naive and ineffectual fools.


There is no shortage of courageous dissidents in America. They seek to thwart
the imperial disasters, looming financial insolvency and suicidal addiction to
fossil fuel. They have stood in small knots on street corners week after week,
month after month, year after year, to denounce the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. They have occupied banks, shut down coal-fired power plants,
attempted to halt mountaintop removal, interfered with whaling ships and
walked in blustery weather to the White House, where they were arrested. They
are struggling to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza on a ship called the
Audacity of Hope. But because the corporate state and the two major political
parties are indifferent to principled calls for reform, and because the mass
of the public still buys into the myths of globalization and the American
dream, the plundering and destruction continue unimpeded.

When most Americans face the nightmare before us, when they realize the
irreversible devastation unleashed on the ecosystem and the economic misery
from which they cannot escape, violence will have a broad and terrifying
appeal. Those of us who demand a return to the rule of law and remain
steadfast to nonviolence will find ourselves cast aside—the useful idiots
Lenin so despised. I watched this happen in the social and political
implosions in El Salvador, Guatemala, the Palestinian territories, Algeria,
Bosnia and Kosovo. I watched the same cocktail of despair, economic collapse
and callousness from a corrupt power elite mix itself into potent brews of
civil strife. I watched the same untiring efforts by those who detested the
violence and cruelty of the state, and the nascent violence and intolerance of
the radical opposition. I covered as a reporter the disintegration that tore
these societies apart. Those who held fast to moral imperatives, including
Archbishop Oscar Romero in El Salvador and Ibrahim Rugova in Kosovo, were
thrust aside and replaced with killers on both sides of the divide who
embraced violence.

“Wait until October,” Ralph Nader said when we spoke this weekend. “That’s
when the budget cuts will hit home. It is one thing to have the governors of
Ohio, Wisconsin and Florida and the legislators saying we will cut this and
that. We don’t know what will actually happen when the guillotines are put in
place. You may have a different kind of surge of public resistance and
protest.

“There will be more and more people in the streets, homeless and hungry,” he
said of the looming cuts. “Babies will be sick. Everything will be overloaded
from the free food to the clinics. You never know where the spark will come
from. Look at the guy who robbed the bank for a dollar. That was not quite the
spark, but that is what I am talking about. This is what you have to do to get
health care. Let’s say 50 people did that. There are a lot of dry tinder piles
like that."

The death of liberal institutions that once made incremental and piecemeal
reform possible, which once could respond to the suffering of the poor, the
unemployed and working men and women, which once sought to protect the Earth
on which we depend for life, means the last thin hope for reform is embodied
in acts of civil disobedience. There are no established institutions that will
help us. The press ignores the cries of the underclass and the poor. The labor
movement is atrophied and dying. Public education is degraded and being
rapidly dismantled. Our religious institutions no longer engage in the core
issues of justice. And the Democratic Party is on its knees before Wall
Street. The most basic government services designed to ameliorate the pain,
including Head Start and Social Security, are targeted by our corporate
overlords for destruction. The Kyoto Protocol, which was not nearly ambitious
enough to prevent environmental collapse, has been gutted so companies like
Exxon Mobil can continue to amass the largest profits in history.

Radical reform, including a breaking of our dependence on fossil fuel, must
happen soon to thwart the effects of dramatic climate change and economic
disintegration. And this radical reform will come only through us. I will
join, for this reason, those planning the prolonged occupation of Washington
on Oct. 6. Acts of civil disobedience are our last,
thin line of defense against chaos. Make a resolution this Independence Day to
join us. You owe it to your children and to the generations who come after us.
I am not naive enough to promise you we can reverse these trends. I know the
monolith we challenge. But I do know that if we do not begin to take part in
these nonviolent protests then we have, in effect, given up all realistic hope
of change and succumbed meekly to corporate enslavement, environmental
catastrophe and severe social unrest.

“The first sign that there is a real breakdown is that the bridge between the
people you mentioned and the people who should be speaking out as a result of
their professional status is not there,” Nader said. “I am talking about the
deans of law schools and law professors, as well as leading members of the
bar. The obverse of that is that in 2005 and 2006 there was a bridge built. It
was the president of the [American Bar Association] Michael Greco. He thought
the destruction of the rule of law by George Bush was historically very
dangerous. He commissioned three reports, using members of the ABA who were
formally in national security agencies such as the FBI, the NSA, the CIA and
the Justice Department. They came up with three white papers on three
subjects, one of them being signing statements
. They concluded
that the recurrent violations by President Bush had risen to the state of
serious violations of our Constitution. These papers were made public. They
sent them to President Bush. He never replied. Apart from The Associated
Press, the press, including the [New York] Times and the [Washington] Post,
ignored it. That to me was a much bigger litmus test. It showed how deep the
institutionalized official illegality has become, more important than the
ignoring of people like Chomsky and us.

“Usually people who are candid in calling things as they are, are viewed as
people on the outside who want to change the system,” Nader said. “In the
historic past they were socialists. They were radical labor leaders such as
the [Industrial Workers of the World]. This time those people who are speaking
out want a restoration of the rule of law. This is a pretty conservative goal.
The extreme radicals are now in charge of our country, the military-industrial
complex and the White House. It is not so much the military as the civilian
leadership, the neocons in the White House. The military does not like to get
into wars, but once they are in it is very hard to control them because they
want to win.

“It’s not like Japan in 1939, which really was a militaristic society,” Nader
went on. “It is exactly the opposite of what the constitutional founders
thought would be the case. They put the civilians in charge to restrain the
military. In effect, these people are activating and pushing the military into
places the military does not want to go. They use a volunteer Army, flatter
it, give it a lot of weaponry and send it abroad. Only about 5 million people,
soldiers and their families, feel what is going on. Once it is entrenched,
once you accept this neocon ideology, which is a vitriolic, aggressive,
empire-spreading ideology, run largely by draft dodgers who in their youth
gung-hoed the Vietnam War but wanted their friends to go and die for it, then
democracy is too weak to overcome that. Two dozen people plunged this country
into war. The first arena designed to stop this is the Congress, but it does
not observe its constitutional duties or require a declaration of war.”

While protests are useful, Nader does not see any possibility for reform until
there is a widespread effort to organize a sustained and radical opposition
movement. This will come by building a movement that offers an alternative
ideology and vision to that of unfettered capitalism, consumerism, empire and
globalization. It is something Nader tried and failed to do during his own
presidential campaigns.

"There is a tremendous asymmetry,” Nader said. “Seven hundred thousand people
demonstrated in London. But where are they the next day? And where are their
adversaries? The next day their adversaries are on the job. Where are the
700,000 people? They are out of there. How many organizers are on the ground
in the 435 districts? Could labor unions have been organized without
organizers? Could the suffragist movement have been organized without
organizers? Could the anti-slavery movement or the civil rights movement been
organized without organizers? If you don’t have organizers on the ground you
know ipso facto that your demonstration is going nowhere.”

When I asked Nader, who mounted campaigns for the presidency in 2000, 2004 and
2008, if he would consider running again, he answered that it was “very
unlikely.”

“You have millions of people who say run, run, run,” he said. “Then you put
yourself out there and find they are voting for Obama. Until they become
mature, until they realize that if they generate 5 to 8 million votes behind a
progressive third-party candidate for leverage, what is the point? Why should
people try four or five times? Let someone else do it.

“The people who go out there with some credibility and record, go into 50
states, sweat it out month after month, beating back ballot access obstacles,
fighting the Democrats who are trying to suppress free speech and candidate
choices for the voters, and then you still can’t get on the air to discuss
civil liberties,” he said. “Never mind that they do not want to upset dear
Obama or dear [John] Kerry. They don’t give you airtime to discuss the simple
issue of the denial of civil liberties and the crushing of third parties.”

If elections were that effective, as the anti-war activist Phil Berrigan used
to say, they would be illegal. We must follow the path Nader forged,
attempting to sway enough people with conscience to sever themselves
permanently and unequivocally from the mainstream and especially the
Democratic Party. This defiance will again be dismissed as counterproductive
and ineffectual. The sacrifices we are called to make will be real,
uncomfortable and immediate, while the goals will be distant and uncertain. It
will remain hard, for this reason, to jolt people awake. The expediency of the
moment has a habit of subsuming the moral imperatives of the future. But time
is not on our side. The impending disasters that await us, ecological and
economic, are already visible on the horizon. If we do not sever ourselves
from established systems of power, if we do not become in every action we
undertake agents of rebellion, then the ecological, economic and, finally,
human distortions that arise in times of confusion, suffering and collapse
will overwhelm us.


Why are we playing Russian roulette with the American people for nuclear
plants whose principal objective is simply to boil water and produce steam?
This is technological insanity.

Ralph Nader

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

This just might be the nuttiest commentary you folks have ever published. You are completely detached from reality.

Anonymous said...

It appears that Chris Hedges had one too many tokes before writing this nonsense.

Anonymous said...

This is the greatrst problem we, as a world, have to face: IRRELEVANCE. Here is a great example of ego at work. People who write bullshit because they think the world has to read what they write; others talk bullshit because they like to hear their own voices; and those who do bullshit because they really don't give a damn about what is really happening. The end result... it's all bullshit, and what a shame that is! Really, guys, worst piece of crap you've ever published!

al crespo said...

I covered several of Nader's campaigns, and one of the photos I'm most proud of was one I took in 2004 a stairwell in Portland, Oregon right after he had learned that he had not gathered enough signatures to get on the Oregon ballot. Americans of every political stripe owe a great deal to Ralph Nader for all of his activism. You can disagree with his prescriptions for solving the country's problems, but America would be a far worse place had he not lived and taken on the car companies and fought for clean water and clean air, among a list of things that we now consider part of our lifestyle.

I will miss him on the campaign trail next year.

Anonymous said...

for the person who believes this is crap or bullshit please take your time and refute the arguments made above. Any Chimp can fling feces. Educate the rest of us as to why you think what was said "stinks".

Anonymous said...

Al, you have crystalized the thoughts of his contributions. Nader had a roll to play. He was a divergent voice who pushed for us to have better dialogues and deal with the dirt that was swept under the rug. He helped to keep us honest in many ways.

The real AnthonyVOP said...

Nader campaign against the Auto industry was based on lies, psuedo-science and the protection of people who shouldn't even have a driver's license......AND $$$$$$