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Daily Princetonian 10/16/2000
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Alumnus returns to University to
promote his third party candidacy, offer social criticisms
By Phil Novack, Princetonian Senior Writer
Green Party presidential candidate Ralph
Nader '55 last night gave the Princeton community an hour-long
social commentary -- and the audience loved every bit of it.
"It's nice to be back," Nader
said. Continually
stressing the theme of "human need over corporate
greed," he delivered stinging criticisms of what he claimed
was an American democratic system that has collapsed under
corporate interests.
"This is all about people losing
control of everything that matters to them," he said.
Loss of control to corporate interests has some
"severe consequences," such as "the deception of
reality."
He questioned the widely accepted
contention that the American economy is currently strong and
healthy. "Currently strong for whom?" Nader challenged. "For all the workers
who are making relatively less now than they were 20 or 30 years
ago? For the 20
percent of Americans that live in poverty? For the 10 million
people who still make minimum wage?"
Nader also said the "increasing
corporatization" of universities is causing students'
"horizons [to be] lower."
He pointed out, with pride, the benchmark effort of his
class -- Princeton Project '55 -- as a "civic action
alternative" that "has been very successful for
Princeton undergraduates."
"That's why the class of '55 as they
march down the P-Rade always gets the biggest applause," he
said to a chorus of laughter from the audience.
Nader was quick to note what he says is a
dramatic shortage of differences between Democratic candidate
Vice President Al Gore and Republican Texas Gov. George W.
Bush, whose parties, he said, are "bought, rented and
sold" by corporate interests.
"Did you all watch the second debate?
That thing was an agreement fest!" he exclaimed to
wild laughter from the audience.
He said he counted 36 different times where the two
agreed with each other.
"Bush ran out of agreements with Gore,
he started agreeing with Clinton!" Nader bellowed.
While Nader said he believed the Republican
candidate was the worst choice, he offered little praise for the
Democrats. "Joe
Lieberman, that guy never met a weapons system he didn't like,
and he's all bent on personal morality," Nader said,
contrasting the candidate's views with his own position of
social justice.
Nader said he does not believe that the
government should spend any more tax dollars on national
defense, and instead those dollars should be used to fight
"corporate crime, corporate violence, corporate welfare and
corporate regulation."
Nader also offered a scathing commentary on
what he said was America's "criminal injustice
system."
"We shouldn't be sending drug addicts
to jail," he said to rousing applause. "Addiction
is a health problem."
Nader said the attitudes of young people
toward voting are a paramount issue, pointing out that
two-thirds of younger Americans do not vote.
"If you haven't turned on to politics," he
charged, "politics will surely turn on you."
He commended University students for their
activism against sweatshop labor, but said that greater
evils exist, such as international financial institutions.
Nader charged that corporate globalization
and organizations such as the World Trade Organization, the
World Bank and NAFTA are "autocratic secret systems of
governance." He said NAFTA and the WTO -- with its "anti-democratic
provisions" -- were issues that Bush and Gore would never
raise.
"November 7 is just the starting point
of the first stage of building America's new progressive
political movement!" Nader
exclaimed to wild applause.
He said the Democrats and Republicans need to be forced
to address the "needs of the people," and that
"the only language they understand is the loss of
votes."
"It's time to make some history on
November 7," Nader said, "and move to a democracy
where people matter, first and foremost, here and abroad."
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