I don't "disagree" with any of them, just think they're very "Pie-in-the-Sky" and are anything but realistic. Let me explain point-by-point (since I'm at work and obviously have all the time in the world)Originally posted by Dr. Gaper
Which Nader ideas do you disagree with or deem intangible and why?
Seems all of his take on the issues - or at least the issues he finds most important - completely coincide with the beliefs of the majority on this message board.
Electoral reform is an issue that's brought up every fucking year. The problem (just like term limits) is that the system in place put these lawmakers in power. No one wants to gut their re-election chances, so many words are spoken, yet not much happens. Look at McCain/Feigold - a truly landmark law that was supposed to take big money out of the equation. The first thing that happened was exploitation of loopholes that were DELIBERATELY left in place.Wants electoral reform that creates a vibrant, active, participatory Democracy
This last partsmacks too much of socialism. Will never fly in the US. The rest is common sense - thus a "loaded issue" kinda like asking "when did you stop beating your wife?"Wants a crackdown on corporate crime and abuse ... to democratize corporate governance so shareholders have real power; pay back ill-gotten gains; rein in executive pay; and enact corporate sunshine laws, among others.
And this differs from the long-standing Democratic stance on the tax-code HOW?Wants a fair tax where the wealthiest and corporations pay their fair share, tax wealth more than work, and tax activities we dislike more than necessities
How EXACTLY would you propose to regulate this? Remeber - the FIRST amendment says, among other things, that Congress shall enact no laws abridging the Freedom of the Press. Also, if you start charging for the use of the airwaves you're diminishing the pool of broadcasters to those who can afford it. How does this democritize anything? Finally - legislating diversity seems to have the opposite effect than it intends - it causes more divisiveness between the factions since somebody is always getting favorable treatment.Opposes media bias and media concentration
The mass media in the United States is extremely concentrated, and the messages that they send are too broadly uniform
Exactluy what was discussed at the last WTO meeting in Cancun. The end-effect was that unless we (the West) subsidise our farmers we cannot compete with the third world, since their costs are so much less than ours. We cannot compete with a country like Burkina Faso where a pond of potatoes costs pennies to produce. Even if you include the cost of shipping it's still cheaper with them. Look what happened to the cotton industry when we opened our markets to the third world. King Cotton indeed - in EGYPT. Thus the only answer is protectionism - subsidizing farmers. Make no mistake - a family farm gets the same subsidy as a corporate farm. It's simply a matter of scale and overhead that allows the corporate farm to be more profitable.A family farm-consumer agriculture policy
Who doesn't? Who wants to pay for this? Why does the name "Karl Marx" keep popping into my mind? Why am I laughing?Wants to end poverty in the United States
Seems like I've heard this one before from candidates from ALL parties. Not a single politician on this planet is AGAINST job-creation. Not very ground-breaking.Wants to create jobs by investing in America's future, invest in Americans
"No Child Left Behind" is kinda not working. Clinton had a great idea that would have guaranteed everyone a college education... oops. Again - nothing new here.Education for everyone
No shit. Been discussed here for weeks, and in the Dem's campaign for even longer.Opposed the invasion and occupation of Iraq
yet the ACLU stands behind...Wants to restore and expand civil liberties and constitutional rights
Yet the policeman's union stands behind...Wants to reform the criminal injustice system
Nader campaign song: Pass the Dutch on the left hand side.Wants to end the war on drugsGive me a fucking break. That'll fly like my outhouse.
.
.
Once again - the President only suggests policy. CONGRESS makes all laws. If the Green party truly wants to affect change in these areas they need Senators & Congressmen - not a fringe Presidential candidate with a history of being a blow-hard naysayer.
I welcome your well-reasoned rebuttal.
Bookmarks