That being said, I agree that there are systemic changes that need to be effected to move our country closer to being a democracy. But is it the role of the president to lead the nation in that regard? Nader is decidedly left of center in America. Our country was founded on a discourse of individual freedoms, and this continues to resonate with most of America, even on the liberal end. The nature of the office of president is such that the president will never stray very far from the center; she or he has to persuade the majority of Americans to vote for her or him. This involves doing exactly what Obama is currently doing, building a coalition of interested parties that don’t drive the others out. That is why he supports corn-based ethanol–it’s somewhat forgivable (not to me, it makes me not want to vote for him) to those concerned about global warming, but it gains him a lot of votes in Iowa. A big difference between Obama and Nader is that Obama is running to actually gain the office of president, while Nader is running to make a statement. Is it your goal to have Nader become the president? That’s an honest, not a rhetorical, question. Consider the fact that Nader has a hard time winning friends in Washington; who in Congress would support him to accomplish any of his campaign goals?
I do not believe that Nader is to the left of the progressives in America, and I know that he is often very popular with true conservatives-people who inveigh against illegal war, bloated military spending, corporate welfare and who advocate for health issues and election reform. I do not think that a centrist would vote for Nader (although I can think of many good reasons one might, Read the rest of this entry »



I haven’t been able to post a lot since I have been speaking on college campuses, but I am going to try to post a lot in the next few days. Tonight I spoke on a panel at the University of Wisconsin about police brutality and repression at the DNC. As part of that panel, I tried to make a connection between a failing media, a failing democracy, and the repression of dissent.
