Saturday, May 31, 2008

Ralph Nader, It's Time to Man Up and Stop Whining

Ralph Nader recently sat for an interview in the Wall Street Journal Weekend edition, May 31, 2008, by Tunku Varadarajan. I'd link it, but the WSJ is a pay site.

Let me first say that I think Ralph Nader has been a great American. Every society needs people standing on the fringes, hurling Molotov cocktails at the establishment, and letting those in power know they are there, and are watching. Nader went one step further. Rather than sit at his dining room table and type some lame blog, Nader went out and railed for change, and created change.

Nader of course ran for President in 2000 as the Green Party' nominee, ran again on his own in 2004 and is running again in 2008. In each of those runs, Nader has presented a lot of great positions, many of which, if adopted as policy, would make the world a better place. I'm glad that someone like Nader is pushing the envelope, and hopefully people will take a look at some of the things he's saying.

But here's the thing, and the reason I am writing: in the interview, Nader complains about being saddled with Al Gore's failure to be sworn in as President. He correctly points out that if Gore had carried Tennessee or performed more ably in Florida, the Green party would not have been a factor. I'll go farther and say that if Gore had been truer to himself, not run so distantly from Clinton, not chosen Lieberman as a running mate, he would have won. Coming off the eight years of prosperity of the Clinton years, the race should not have even been close.

But Ralph, in addition to all of those things, your candidacy caused the result. Yes, all of those things above are true were factors and these: Katherine Harris, Jeb Bush, five Republican Supreme Court justices, all of that. But so too, was your candidacy. It's time for you to pull up your socks and take a cold hard look at the fact that you took votes from Gore, causing, along with MYRIAD failures by the Democrats and aggressive manipulation by the Republicans, George W. Bush to become President. Despite everything else you have stood for all these years, and despite all the good intentions you may have had, your legacy will be, in part, that you participated in electing Bush and were a precipitating cause for Iraq, the Katrina response, No Child Left Behind, the Patriot Act, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Gonzalez, Alito, Roberts, etc.

Why not just be a man and own it? Rather than whining about how Laurence Tribe blames you for the 2000 election and sniveling about all the reasons why it was everyone else's fault and not yours, why not just say it? "Yes, I took votes from Al Gore. I ran a third party campaign on the left, and that's what third-party campaigns typically do. They take votes away on the far right or far left, with the hope of pulling the political discourse in their direction." Would that be so hard? I don't know if you feel this way but you could even go on to say that "I regret that George W. Bush became President, but I still believe in the platform and the message and I think getting those things out was important."

And Ralph, you could certainly go on to point out that "It sure as HELL wasn't my fault he got elected the second time." No one could blame you for pointing that out.

I just can't take it anymore. I can't listen to Ralph Nader whine about how this wasn't his fault. It of course was not entirely his fault. But Ralph, we EXPECTED the Republicans to do all the things that they did, so stop being surprised that liberals are more hurt and angry by your role.

For more from Ralph see www.VoteNader.org.