[
Health Care | Electoral
Reform | Corporate Crime | Taxes
| Media Bias and Concentration | Agriculture
Policy | Poverty | Jobs |
Workers' Rights | Fair
Trade | Federal Budget | Rights
of Corporations | Education | Iraq
War and Occupation | Civil Liberties and Constitutional
Rights | War on Drugs | Environment
| Energy Policy | Consumer
Justice | Auto Safety | Peace
]
The Bush Administration and the Democratic Party, in varying extremes,
are putting the interests of their corporate paymasters before the interests
of the people. In the Nader Campaign the PEOPLE RULE. Mr. Nader takes
seriously a government "of, by and for the people" within a deliberative
democratic society. Below are initial summaries of many of Mr. Nader's
positions, as you can see, unlike President Bush and the Democratic Party,
Ralph Nader:
Wants to make health care universally available
We need to get the insurance companies out of administering health care,
increase patient choice, expand coverage and save money. The United States
spends far more on health care per capita than any other country in the
world, but more than 45 million Americans have no health insurance. A
single-payer program, with full medical coverage, should provide health
care that provides comprehensive benefits with quality care and cost controls
to all Americans throughout their lives.
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Wants electoral reform that creates a vibrant, active, participatory
Democracy.
Our democracy is in a descending crisis. Voter turnout is among the
lowest in the western world. Redistricting ensures very few incumbents
are at risk in one-party districts. Barriers to full participation of
candidates proliferate making it very obstructive, for most third party
and Independent candidates to run. Obstacles, and deliberate manipulations
to undermine the right to vote, for which penalties are rarely imposed,
are preventing voters from voting. New paperless voting machines are raising
questions about whether we can trust that our votes are being counted
as they are cast. Finally, money dominates expensive campaigns, mainly
waged on television in sound bite format. The cost of campaigns creates
a stranglehold making politics a game for only the rich or richly funded.
Major electoral reforms are needed to ensure that every vote counts, all
voters are represented through electoral reforms like instant run-off
voting, none-of-the-above options, and proportional representation, non-major
party candidates have a chance to run for office and participate in debates,
and that elections are publicly financed.
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Wants a crackdown on corporate crime and abuse
The US needs to crack down on corporate crime, fraud and abuse that
have just in the last four years looted and drained trillions of dollars
from workers, investors, pension holders and consumers. Among the reforms
needed are resources to prosecute and convict the corporate executive
crooks and 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.
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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
The complexity and distortions of the federal tax code produces distributions
of tax incidence and payroll tax burdens that are skewed in favor of the
wealthy and the corporations further garnished by tax shelters, insufficient
enforcement and other avoidances.
Corporate tax contributions as a percent of the overall federal revenue
stream have been declining for fifty years and now stand at 7.4% despite
massive record profits. A fundamental reappraisal of our tax laws should
start with a principle that taxes should apply first to behavior and conditions
we favor least and pinch basic necessities least such as the clearly addictive
industries (alcohol and tobacco), pollution, speculation, gambling, extreme
luxuries, taxing work or instead of the 5% to 7% sales tax food, furniture,
clothing or books.
Tiny taxes (a fraction of the conventional retail sales percentage)
on stock, bond, and derivative transactions can produce tens of billions
of dollars a year and displace some of the taxes on work and consumer
essentials. Sol Price, founder of the Price Clubs (now merged into Costco)
is one of several wealthy people in the last century who have urged a
tax on wealth. Again, it can be at a very low rate but raise significant
revenues. Wealth above a quite comfortable minimum is described as tangible
and intangible assets. The present adjustment of Henry George's celebrated
land tax could also be considered.
Over a thousand wealthy Americans have declared, in a remarkable conflict
against interest , that the estate tax, which now applies to less than
2 percent of the richest estates, should be retained. The signers of this
declaration included William Gates, Sr., Warren Buffett and George Soros.
Mr. Nader does not believe that "unearned income" (dividends, interest,
capital gains) should be taxed lower than earned income, or work, inasmuch
as one involves passive income, including inheritances and windfalls,
while the latter involves active effort with a higher proportion of middle
and lower income workers relying on and working each day, some under unsafe
conditions, for these earning.
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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. Six global corporations
control more than half of all mass media in our country: newspapers, magazines,
books, radio and television. Our democracy is being swamped by the confluence
of money, politics and concentrated media. We must reclaim our democracy
from the accelerating grip of big-money politics and concentrated corporate
media. This requires real campaign finance reform, which means public
financing of public elections; some free access to ballot qualified candidates
on television and radio; vigorous antitrust regulation and enforcement;
ending broadcasters' free licensed use of the public airwaves; and the
reversion of some organized time on our publicly owned airwaves to establish
audience-controlled radio and TV networks to ensure the diversity of voices
and solutions necessary for a really free press and a true civic democracy.
[top]
A family farm-consumer agriculture policy
American agriculture is being dominated by two contrary trends in the
21st Century. First, conventional family farm agricultural production
is being destroyed by low prices and lack of market access due to mergers,
acquisitions by big agribusinesses and their monopsony power over farmers.
Second, there is a boom in more sustainable agricultural production and
consumption due to increased consumer awareness and demand for healthy,
fresh, and nutritious food. Federal policy must focus on the farm and
food system as a continuum that provides many benefits. We must advance
the production, marketing, use and disposal of food and fiber in accordance
with consumer, environmental, worker and family farm standards of justice
and sustainability. Additionally, we must challenge misallocation of resources
caused by the growing concentration and wealth by agribusiness, chemical,
biotechnology and financial corporations over the food and fiber economy.
This entails shifting government policy to provide research and information
relevant to independent food producers, organic farmers, insuring open
and competitive markets, promoting new food infrastructures, and preventing
pollution and degradation of natural resources.
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Wants to end poverty in the United States
As the wealthiest country in the world, with high productivity per capita,
a country that produces an abundance of capital, credit, technology and
food, we can end poverty. Yet, according to the Bureau of the Census poverty
and hunger for children and adults is increasing rather than decreasing
34.6 million Americans lived in deep poverty, 12.1% of the U.S. population.
Many millions of Americans live in what is called "near poverty" by the
Labor Department. We must make ending poverty a priority and weave that
goal into a network of policies truly progressive taxation, end huge
corporate subsidies and military budget waste, jobs, equal pay for women,
child-care, living wages for all workers and restoring the critical social
safety net.
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Wants to create jobs by investing in America's future, invest in Americans
Since January 2001, 2.7 million jobs have been lost and more than 75%
of those jobs have been high wage, high productivity manufacturing jobs.
Overall 5.6% of Americans are unemployed while 10.5% of African Americans
are unemployed. Unemployment among Latinos is nearly 30 per cent higher
than January 20, 2001. By requiring equitable trade, investing in urgently
needed local labor-intensive public works (infrastructure improvements),
creating a new renewable energy efficiency policy; by fully funding education
and redirecting large bureaucratic and fraudulent health expenditures
toward preventive health care we can reverse this trend and create millions
of new jobs.
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Wants to expand worker's rights by developing an employee bill of rights
The rights of workers' have been on the decline. It is time to reverse
that trend and begin to give worker's the backbone of the US economy
the rights they deserve. Workers need a living wage not a minimum
wage; access to health care and no unilateral reductions in medical benefits
and pensions for current employees and retirees. Employers should not
be able to avoid these benefits by hiring "temporary workers" or "independent
contractors." The privacy of employees needs to be vigorously protected.
The notorious Taft-Hartley Act that makes it extremely difficult for employees
to organize unions needs to be repealed. It has resulted in less than
10% of the private workforce being unionized, the lowest in 60 years and
the lowest percentage in the western world. Non-union workers need upgraded
rights against the likes of Walmart.
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Wants fair trade that protects the environment, labor rights and consumer
needs
NAFTA and the WTO makes commercial trade supreme over environmental,
labor, and consumer standards and need to be replaced with open agreements
that pull-up rather than pull down these standards. These forms of secret
autocratic governance and their detailed rules are corporate-managed trade
that puts short-term corporate profits as the priority. While global trade
is a fact of life, trade policies must be open, democratic and not strip-mine
environmental, social and labor standards. These latter standards should
have their own international pull up treaties.
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A federal budget that puts human needs before corporate greed and corporate
militarism
The United States needs a redirected federal budget that adequately
funds the crucial priorities like infrastructure, transit and other public
works, schools, clinics, libraries, forests, parks, sustainable energy
and pollution controls. The budget should move away from the deeply documented
and criticized (by the US General Accounting Office, retired Admirals
and Generals and others) wasteful, redundant "military industrial complex"
as President Eisenhower called it, as well as corporate welfare and tax
cuts for the wealthy that expand the divide between the luxuries of the
rich and the necessities of the poor and middle class.
[top]
Corporations should not be given equal rights with humans
A national debate is needed regarding the necessity to reverse the dicta
in the 1886 Supreme Court Case of Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific
Railroad that first awarded the corporation constitutional status as a
person and in subsequent decision. Corporations are not human beings,
they do not vote; they are artificial entities which should be subordinated
to the rights of human beings There can be no equal justice under the
law if General Motors or Exxon has all the rights of humans plus all the
privileges and immunities to concentrate enormous power and escape responsibility
in ways unavailable to the wealthiest of real people.
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Education for everyone
Education is primarily the responsibility of state and local governments.
The federal government has a critical supporting role to play in ensuring
that all children -- irrespective of the income of their parents, or their
race -- are provided with rich learning environments and equal educational
opportunities and upgraded repaired school buildings. The government has
an important role to play in keeping undermining influences out of the
public schools -- among them, commercialism and private school voucher
programs. The federal government must not impose an overemphasis on high-stakes
standardized tests. Such testing has a negative impact on student learning,
curriculum and teaching by resulting in excessive time devoted to narrow
test participation, de-enrichment of the curriculum, false accountability,
equity and cultural bias, excessive use of financial resources for testing
among other problems. Federal law should be transformed to one that supports
teachers and students; from one that relies primarily on standardized
tests and punishment. And the government should encourage schools to infuse
their curriculum with civic experiences that teaches students both how
to connect classroom learning to the outside world and how practice democracy.
[top]
Opposed the invasion and occupation of Iraq
The quagmire of the Iraq war and occupation could have been averted
and needs to be ended expeditiously, replacing US forces with a UN peacekeeping
force, prompt supervised elections and humanitarian assistance before
we sink deeper into this occupation, with more U.S. casualties, huge financial
costs, and diminished US security around and from the Islamic world. The
faulty and fabricated rationale for war has the US in a quagmire. Already
more than $155 billion has been spent, adding to huge Bush deficits, when
critical needs are not being met at home. We should not be mired in the
occupation of Iraq risking further upheavals when our infrastructure,
schools and health care are deteriorating. Four years of free public college
and university tuition for all students could be paid for by $155 billion.
[top]
Wants to restore and expand civil liberties and constitutional rights
Civil liberties and due process of law are eroding due to the "war on
terrorism" and new technology that allows easy invasion of privacy. Americans
of Arab descent and Muslim-Americans are feeling the brunt of these dragnet,
arbitrary practices. Mr. Nader supports the restoration of civil liberties,
repeal of the Patriot Act, and an end to secret detentions, arrests without
charges, no access to attorneys and the use of secret "evidence," military
tribunals for civilians, non-combatant status and the shredding of "probable
cause" determinations. They represent a perilous diminishment of judicial
authority in favor of concentrated power in the executive branch. Sloppy
law enforcement, dragnet practices are wasteful and reduce the likelihood
of apprehending violent criminals. Mr. Nader seeks to expand civil liberties
to include basic human rights in employment and truly equal rights regardless
of gender, sexual orientation, race or religion.
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Wants to reform the criminal injustice system
We need to get smart on preventing crime, invest in education, rehabilitation
and restore safe neighborhoods and communities. The United States prison
binge has resulted in over 2 million people being incarcerated the US
now holds one out of four of the world's prisoners, half of them non-violent.
To reverse this we need to invest in humane treatment, personal involvement
of youngsters, and job creation. We need to restore sentencing discretion
to judges by repealing mandatory sentences and arbitrary "three-strikes"
laws. We also need to restore due process, judicial discretion and constitutional
restraints on law enforcement that violate equal protection and due process
of law. Mr. Nader opposes the death penalty because its use is racially
and class unfair, does not deter crime and results in innocent people
being executed, and corrupts the exemplary status of the state.
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Wants to end the war on drugs
The drug war has failed we spend nearly $50 billion annually on the
drug war and problems related to drug abuse continue to worsen. We need
to acknowledge that drug abuse is a health problem with social and economic
consequences. Therefore, the solutions are public health, social services
and economic development and tender supportive time with addicts in our
depersonalized society. Law enforcement should be at the edges of drug
control not at the center. It is time to bring some illegal drugs within
the law by regulating, taxing and controlling them. Ending the drug war
will dramatically reduce street crime, violence and homicides related
to underground drug dealing.
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Environment
The epidemic of silent environmental violence continues. Whether it
is the 65,000 Americans who die every year from air pollution, or the
80,000 estimated annual fatalities from hospital malpractice, or the 100,000
Americans whose demise comes from occupational toxic exposures or the
cruel environmental racism where the poor and their often asthmatic children
live in pollution sinks located near toxic hot spots that are never situated
in shrubbered suburbs, to cite a few preventable conditions. Now, as the
evidence of global warming mounts it is evident that we threaten the global
environment with tremendous economic threats facing humanity including
bankrupting the reinsurance industry, the spread of infectious tropical
diseases, massive ecological disruption and increased severe and unpredictable
weather, all of which will significantly impact commerce, agriculture
and communities across America. Toxic standards need to be strengthened.
Currently toxic standards are designed for adults not for more vulnerable
children, this should be reversed. We need to make environmental protection
a priority for our energy, trade, industrial, agricultural, transportation,
development and land use policies, indeed protecting the environment must
be weaved throughout our governance.
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Wants to create a new energy policy
We urge a new clean energy policy that no longer subsidizes entrenched
oil, nuclear, electric and coal mining interests -- an energy policy that
is efficient, sustainable and environmentally friendly. We need to invest
in a diversified energy policy including renewable energy like wind and
other forms of solar power, more efficient automobiles, homes and businesses
one that breaks our addiction to oil, coal and atomic power. A new clean
energy paradigm means more jobs, more efficiency, greater security, environmental
protection and increased health.
[top]
Toward consumer justice
The enforcement of consumer protection laws, especially against the
terrible abuses in low-income communities, needs to be given the leadership
and resources required. Neither Party in control of our city or national
government has concerned itself with such predatory practices. The poor
pay more and are expendable to them. Hundreds of billions of dollars annually
are taken from consumers due to computerized billing fraud, unconscionable
credit and financial services charges, price gouging, shoddy merchandise,
phony repairs, bogus medical treatments, medical malpractice, real estate
scams, identity thefts, and other fraudulent regularly reported and neglected
crimes. There needs to be more, not less, civil action rights to pursue
in court both these economic grievances and wrongful injuries under a
preserved and expanded tort system that internalizes the costs of misconduct
and enlarges deterrence. Safety standards from motor vehicles to pharmaceuticals
and household products need serious enhancement to save lives, injuries
and prevent diseases.
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Toward saving lives by increasing motor vehicle safety
About 800 Americans die on the roads every week on the average or over
40,000 a year, plus hundreds of thousands of injuries and tens of billion
in economic losses. Since 1966 the irregular implementation of the federal
motor vehicle and safety laws have driven down sharply the rate and the
absolute number of highway casualties. Regulation worked when tried. In
the past 24 years, however, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) the federal government's regulator of the auto industry has
been transformed into a consulting agency. This must stop if we are to
save more lives and prevent more injuries. First, existing standards must
be updated. Some have not been changed for 30 to 35 years, including the
key crashworthiness tests themselves. Priority must be given to long over
due stability, side impact and rollover standards, especially for SUV's
vans and light trucks. Heavier trucks need improved braking systems. The
research safety vehicle program of the Department of Transportation needs
to be resurrected after having been mothballed years ago despite the uses
of the model vehicles to push the auto companies for many years beyond
their excuses and engineering stagnations. These include fuel inefficiencies
that waste family budgets, pollute the air and increase global warming.
The small budget of NHTSA has been astonishingly held back, given its
widening missions and recall authority. One early B-2 bomber costs four
years of NHTSA budgets. The exodus of fine engineering and scientific
talent over the past twenty-four years needs to be reversed for advancing
this great life-saving mission of the United States Government. For further
details, see Advocates for Auto and Highway Safety and the Center for
Auto Safety.
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Toward a world of peace, justice, and fulfillment of human possibilities
within a sustainable environment
Our foreign policy must redefine the elements of global security, peace,
arms control, an end to nuclear weapons and expand the many assets of
our country to launch, with other nations, major initiatives against global
infections diseases (such as AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and virulent
flu epidemics) which have and are coming to our country in increasingly
drug resistant strains. Other low cost-high yield (compared to massive
costs of redundant weapons) that extend the best of our country abroad
include public health measures for drinking water safety abroad, tobacco
control, stemming soil erosion, deforestation and misuse of chemicals,
international labor standards, stimulating democratic institutions, agrarian
cooperatives and demonstrating appropriate technologies dealing with agriculture,
transportation, housing and efficient, renewable energy. The UN Development
Program and many NGO's working abroad provide essential experience and
directions in this regard including ending the specter of hunger, malnutrition
and resultant diseases with known and proven remedies and practices. With
this foreign policy orientation overhauls we will discover and facilitate
the indigenous genius of the Third World, recalling Brazilian Paulo Freire
(literacy), Egyptian Hasan Fathi (agrarian housing) and Bangladeshi Mohammed
Yunis (microcredit).