An Unreasonable Man Returns

February 4, 2008

Staunch antiwar candidate Ron Paul — the only voice that consistently exposed the proto-fascist tendencies of the Republican party and castigated its warmongering — was already brought down by the so called ‘left’ for which an Iraqi’s right to life is less important than an American woman’s choice not to use contraception. 

With the exit of the last progressive candidate, John Edwards, from the Democratic race longtime consumer advocate Ralph Nader has launched a presidential exploratory committee to decide whether to run as an independent candidate. I think he must, because otherwise, as he writes, there is ‘No Debate‘.

It was billed as the great debate that, in the words of moderator Wolf Blitzer, “could change the course of this presidential race and the nation.”
Situated at the packed historic Kodak Theatre-site of the Hollywood Oscar awards, thousands of people, including anti-war protestors, were outside, where tickets were being scalped for $1,000.

The burgeoning excitement swept up Mr. Blitzer into an introduction reminiscent of a heavyweight boxing title fight. Referring to the “glamour on this stage…one of the great stages of all time,” he declared that “this will be the first time that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama will be debating face to face, just the two of them, one-on-one.” The crowd ROARED!

When it was over two hours later, here is how the reporters, not the columnists, of the New York Times described the showdown: “Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama sat side by side here Thursday, sharing a night of smiles, friendly eye-catching and gentle banter…It was almost as if the battle was to see which of them could outnice the other.”

Since neither scored a knockout, a knockdown, and neither stumbled, the audience left without many feeling the pain of their champion being bested. Even the Times’ critic, Alessandra Stanley, she of the usual barbed pen, could only marvel at the smooth harmony ideology both candidates decided to adopt. She wrote: “They let their eyes make nice…As they stood in front of the audience before the debate, Mr. Obama leaned down to Mrs. Clinton and whispered a few words in her ear, as if continuing the fun chat they had just shared backstage.”

The two candidates were unperturbed by any questions from the reporters that they had not answered before or they were soft balls they could hit out of the ball park.

As in all debates involving presidential candidates, the reporters were unwilling or incapable of asking the unconvential questions reflecting situations and conditions widely reported or investigated by their own colleagues.

This phenomenon of invincible reluctance should be studied by anthropologists or psychologists. Examples follow:

I called up Chris Hedges, former New York Times Middle East bureau chief and author for a question he would have asked. He offered this one. “The Israeli government is imposing severe and continual collective punishment on the 1.5 million people of tiny Gaza, which includes restricting or cutting off food, fuel, electricity, medicines and other necessities. Malnutrition rates among many children resemble the worst of sub-Saharan Africa. Israel’s leading newspaper, Ha’aretz, has reporters and columnists describing these horrific conditions and concluding that the ferocity of the blockade is detrimental to Israel as well as the Palestinians.

“Collective punishment is clearly a violation of established international law. Prominent, former military, security and political leaders in Israel are speaking out against this punishment and calling for negotiations with Hamas. Do you, Senator Clinton and Senator Obama, agree with these Israelis or do you continue to support the policy of collective punishment against innocent men, women and children in Gaza?”

The Nation magazine’s columnist, Alex Cockburn suggested this question:

“Senator Clinton, in all your previous debates, you have not criticized the bloated military budget so often documented by the media, Pentagon audits and GAO reports for Congress to be replete with waste fraud and abuse. The Soviet Union is gone. Yet military spending now consumes half of the federal government’s operating expenditures.

“Specifically, what would you do to significantly reduce the tens of billions of wasted dollars and eliminate redundant weapons systems?

“And, further, would you abolish the missile defense project, deemed by the American Physical Society and other leading physicists to be technically unworkable? It costs about $10 billion a year with a total expenditure of over $150 billion since its inception under Ronald Reagan, without any indication that it can fulfill the function for which it was designed? Please be specific.”

***

Here are a few questions of my own. “Senator Obama, you have taught Constitutional law. Has President Bush violated the Constitution, federal statutes and international treaties during his two terms of office? If so, please elaborate and tell the American people what you think should be done about holding the self-described “responsibility” President accountable under the impeachment authority of Congress and other laws of the land?”

“Senator Clinton, you represent New York, which includes the large banking, brokerage and investment firms colloquially called Wall Street. Eliot Spitzer, became Governor of your state largely on his widely reported reputation for prosecuting corporate crooks who fleeced investors, pensioners and workers of hundreds of billions of dollars. He often remarked that the federal criminal laws were too weak and the Securities and Exchange Commission was too lenient.

“As the Senator from New York, what specifically have you done to advance a strong crackdown on corporate crime with tougher laws and larger enforcement budgets? And, specifically, what do you intend to do as President?”

“Senator Obama, you have often spoken about your health insurance plan as a way to reduce costs. Yet you do not discuss three major cost reduction opportunities. The GAO, the investigative arm of Congress, estimates that ten percent of the entire health expenditures in this country go down the drain due to computerized billing fraud and abuse. This year, that amounts to $220 billion.

“Under a single payer plan, administrative expenses would be cut by about two-thirds. That would amount to hundreds of billions of dollars a year in savings. And the Harvard School of Public Health study estimates about 80,000 people die every year from medical malpractice in hospitals, estimating costs years ago of $60 billion a year. These are large savings in a $2.2 trillion a year health care industry.

“Do you agree and, if so, why have you ignored proposing practical actions in these areas?”

“Senator Clinton, you have long urged more money for children’s programs. One way to make this possible is to end or diminish the complex system of corporate welfare-subsidies, handouts, giveaways and bailouts of business corporations. These amount to hundreds of billions of dollars a year, directly and through tax loopholes. Why have you not moved against such spending so that some of the money may go to help needy children? And specifically, what would you do as President to develop standards curtailing runaway corporate welfare programs pushed by corporate lobbyists?”

Is reportorial self-censorship limiting the questions presented to the Presidential candidates? You decide.

Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, lawyer, and author. His most recent book is The Seventeen Traditions.

8 Responses to “An Unreasonable Man Returns”

  1. Staunch antiwar candidate Ron Paul — the only voice that consistently exposed the proto-fascist tendencies of the Republican party and castigated its warmongering — was already brought down by the so called ‘left’ for which an Iraqi’s right to life is less important than an American woman’s choice not to use contraception.

    I have to take issue with that. Ron Paul opposes the war, and on that I agree with him, but virtually everything else he says is wrong-headed and offensive. He panders to the most racist sections of the libertarian right, he promotes conspiracy theories about a North America Union, and he has a hatred of those on welfare to match anyone at the Daily Mail.

    As for a woman’s right to choose, I think you’re wrong to trivialise it in the first place, but it’s definitely not fair to say that choosing not to support Ron Paul for this reason diminishes the victims of the Iraq war. Lots of people opposed the war – Pat Buchanan opposed the war – but that’s no reason to support the reactionary right.

    I also think you’re a bit too easy on Edwards. Progressive, maybe, in a best-of-the-bad-bunch kind of way, but I wouldn’t worry too much about losing out on that: I can’t see a more likely candidate for Vice President. Nader will have to do. Again.

  2. Thucydides said

    I too agree that Edwards “mysterious” pullout and subsequent non-endorsement of the candidates is most likely to secure the Vice-President berth.
    As some have stated he will be the token white male on the democrat ticket.

  3. m.idrees said

    Ron Paul opposes the war, period. Ron Paul speaks about it, period. He is running on opposition to a genocidal criminal war, when the so called ‘left’ would rather talk pensions. What else besides racism would explain weighing a westerner’s ‘Choices’ against an Iraqi’s ‘Rights’?

    As for Edwards, it would be obvious to everyone but the purblind that the statement is contextual. Among the remaining candidates he was the only one who came out for immediate withdrawal, attacked lobbying and corporate influence, and as a result was hounded and brought down by the media. As for his future choices, they don’t interest me. A certain platform has disappeared from the electoral debate. That is the point.

  4. “What else besides racism would explain weighing a westerner’s ‘Choices’ against an Iraqi’s ‘Rights’?”

    That’s not the kind of weighting I’m doing, for one. Yes, Ron Paul is outspoken in his criticism of the war, and yes that sets him apart from the other presidential candidates. But in terms of building a real challenge to the corporate-political consensus, his politics are pretty devoid of hope. It’s petty libertarian paranoia, and it leads nowhere.

    As for Edwards, I suppose it is a shame that his anti-corporate talk has disappeared from the debate, but it was always going to be so. I certainly don’t think he would have followed through on his promises. And what’s this “left” that doesn’t talk about the war? Where I am we never shut up about it.

  5. m.idrees said

    It was always clear that Ron Paul never had a chance of being nominated, let alone being elected as president. The important thing was to allow his power indictment of what he called ‘creeping fascism’ and his principled stance against the war to stand without his name being dragged through the mud. Paul, unlike the rest, is not a new convert to the antiwar platform. I had first heard of him when Michael Parenti quoted at length a highly eloquent indictment of the war delivered by Paul on the eve of the war (interestingly enough, in the almost empty chamber, the other eloquent indictment came from Bob Byrd, alleged by some to be a former clansman). His voice was a much needed corrective — a reality check — to the distorted republican debate. And his common sense view even bowled over the Fox audience which declared him the winner of the first republican debate.

    As for the antiwar movement, I’m afraid a handful of marches in nearly 5 years, each drawing numbers less than the previous one, even as resentment against the war has been growing, don’t quite count as resistance. As Chalmers Johnson put it, America will never be able to live down reelecting the Shrub even after he had launched a genocidal war. Neither will Britain with Blair, I might add.

  6. Rumple Stiltskin 24 said

    It is very interesting to note that as the resistance of South America;Hamas;Hizbollah and Iraq gets more effective the support for these resistance movements from the Western left gets more and more “qualified” , attitude to granting private land ownership to barrios dwellers in the first case and a plethora of “feminist liberation” objections from those that would deny the right of woman in the west to wear Hijab against the rest.

    The most bizarre faultine is Iran in which the neo-cons and the left seem to be falling over themselves to offer the most convincing justification for “extrenal interference” a.k.a. a Strike.

    Until the left in the west give up the dream of elite change using an 19th century failed template and fully embrace being being leading organisers of universal global social justice they will be irrelevant in all spheres as the rest of the world pushes forward agends to address the 21st century.

  7. Well all I can say is that some people have a funny idea of the Left. We just had a largeish Stop The War meeting today, most of which was spent arguing against the “logic” of orientalist humanitarian- interventionism. Sure, there are media pundits pushing wars for women’s rights etc, but they’re an overrepresented fringe cult. Most people are well aware that the US armed forces are not radical feminists!

  8. Boris_Posternak said

    One will find most elites are an over-represented fringe cult.

    You can either be of the view that the left are a success or not as far as being an effective counter to imperialism.

    If the answer is not , then looking to see where and how successful challenges to imperialism are taking place and emulating them would be the best , even only, way forward.But , and here is the big but , dogma and the arrogance of europe having nothing to learn from South America and Mid-east is what is barring the left from developing.

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