Does Nader Have It Right About Obama?
ByBetween Hope And Reality
By Ralph Nader
Dear Senator Obama:
In your nearly two-year presidential campaign, the words “hope and change,” “change and hope” have been your trademark declarations. Yet there is an asymmetry between those objectives and your political character that succumbs to contrary centers of power that want not “hope and change” but the continuation of the power-entrenched status quo.
Far more than Senator McCain, you have received enormous, unprecedented contributions from corporate interests, Wall Street interests and, most interestingly, big corporate law firm attorneys. Never before has a Democratic nominee for President achieved this supremacy over his Republican counterpart. Why, apart from your unconditional vote for the $700 billion Wall Street bailout, are these large corporate interests investing so much in Senator Obama? Could it be that in your state Senate record, your U.S. Senate record and your presidential campaign record (favoring nuclear power, coal plants, offshore oil drilling, corporate subsidies including the 1872 Mining Act and avoiding any comprehensive program to crack down on the corporate crime wave and the bloated, wasteful military budget, for example) you have shown that you are their man?
To advance change and hope, the presidential persona requires character, courage, integrity– not expediency, accommodation and short-range opportunism. Take, for example, your transformation from an articulate defender of Palestinian rights in Chicago before your run for the U.S. Senate to an acolyte, a dittoman for the hard-line AIPAC lobby, which bolsters the militaristic oppression, occupation, blockage, colonization and land-water seizures over the years of the Palestinian peoples and their shrunken territories in the West Bank and Gaza. Eric Alterman summarized numerous polls in a December 2007 issue of The Nation magazine showing that AIPAC policies are opposed by a majority of Jewish-Americans.
You know quite well that only when the U.S. Government supports the Israeli and Palestinian peace movements, that years ago worked out a detailed two-state solution (which is supported by a majority of Israelis and Palestinians), will there be a chance for a peaceful resolution of this 60-year plus conflict. Yet you align yourself with the hard-liners, so much so that in your infamous, demeaning speech to the AIPAC convention right after you gained the nomination of the Democratic Party, you supported an “undivided Jerusalem,” and opposed negotiations with Hamas–the elected government in Gaza. Once again, you ignored the will of the Israeli people who, in a March 1, 2008 poll by the respected news- paper Haaretz, showed that 64% of Israelis favored “direct negotiations with Hamas.” Siding with the AIPAC hard-liners is what one of the many leading Palestinians advocating dialogue and peace with the Israeli people was describing when he wrote “Anti-semitism today is the persecution of Palestinian society by the Israeli state.”
During your visit to Israel this summer, you scheduled a mere 45 minutes of your time for Palestinians with no news conference, and no visit to Palestinian refugee camps that would have focused the media on the brutalization of the Palestinians. Your trip supported the illegal, cruel blockade of Gaza in defiance of international law and the United Nations charter. You focused on southern Israeli casualties which during the past year have totaled one civilian casualty to every 400 Palestinian casualties on the Gaza side. Instead of a statesmanship that decried all violence and its replacement with acceptance of the Arab League’s 2002 proposal to permit a viable Palestinian state within the 1967 borders in return for full economic and diplomatic relations between Arab countries and Israel, you played the role of a cheap politician, leaving the area and Palestinians with the feeling of much shock and little awe.
10 Comments
November 11th, 2009 at 9:08 am
Interesting. Unlike Nader, however, Obama knows how to get elected. Nader may criticize but you can’t do anything at all unless you can appeal to the voters.
I’m sure Obama will try to do the right thing for the country but we are a diverse nation with differing viewpoints and the president has to take those varied viewpoints into account.
November 11th, 2009 at 11:04 am
No
November 11th, 2009 at 1:20 pm
bLAH, BLAH, BLAH…..
Same old same old.
November 11th, 2009 at 4:08 pm
Would not it have been easier to post a link?
November 11th, 2009 at 6:09 pm
OH MY GEEEEEEEEE
November 11th, 2009 at 7:49 pm
I think Nader is correct. Obama has raised expectations – but will he deliver? The policies of both the Democrats and Republicans are not all that different – Obama is centre-right, McCain is hard-right.
We are entering a recession and when Obama’s policies of continuation with the status-quo, of corporate buyouts of politicians continue, people will become frustrated and start looking for a third-party alternative.
Nader’s vote was squeezed, not because of a failure of his policies, but because his campaign was ignored completely by the media and he was not given the chance to get the message out.
See source below.
November 11th, 2009 at 9:47 pm
He very well may have it right about Obama. Time will tell.
and I agree with a lot of the points he’s made there. Particularly regarding Palestine.
Nader, however, will forever be opposed to the current two party system (and rightly so). I think he would write a letter like that one to anybody who wins the Presidency, republican or democrat.
I take his opinion with a grain of salt, not because I question his motives, but because of the very nature of his candidacies.
November 11th, 2009 at 10:37 pm
I doubt McCain would have gotten a friendlier letter from Nader and I think McCain would have been far worse for the palestinians than Obama could ever be. You can do nothing in this country if you say anything that might disturb the Jewish community. Now that he is in a position to act I think Obama will do the right thing trying to broker a deal for Palestinians and Israelis to live in Peace. The lives ofthe Palestinian people have been on hold for too long.
November 12th, 2009 at 5:04 am
Well, as Nader said in a recent interview, Obama is just a Tom,, and his tpolicies will be the same as the previous administration’s in essence. His appointment of Emanuel, the hardest line zionist you could find in the US, proves that he isn’t even going to soft-pedal his support of the zionists diplomatically.
November 12th, 2009 at 8:36 am
Nader hasn’t had anything right yet. What a fool he is. It was his laughable last attempt at gaining office that caused the “Greens” (an alleged political party if you’ve been fortunate enough never to hear of them) to actually vote against the man who has become the international spokesperson for their one and only cause. How foolish, how inept, how utterly laughable is that? Green’s go down in flames again. But this time, they didn’t take us all with them!