{news} Nader endorses Harold Burbank for Congress

Tim McKee timmckee at mail.com
Tue Sep 2 22:12:30 EDT 2008


this is a good article,,but Nader has endorsed many candidates for
Congress including Ralph ferrucci  for Senate

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: "David Bedell"
  To: haroldburbank at yahoogroups.com, ctgp-news at ml.greens.org
  Subject: {news} Nader endorses Harold Burbank for Congress
  Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2008 14:06:53 -0400


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  http://www.thecornerreport.com/index.php?title=nader_channels_eugene_debs_gains_support
  [some typos corrected]

  Nader channels Eugene Debs; gains support; endorses Burbank for
  Connecticut'
  s 5th Congressional District
  English (US) September 1st, 2008 by admin ( Email )

  By Gale Courey Toensing

  SHERMAN, Conn. - When people ask presidential candidate Ralph Nader
  what he
  wants to achieve, he has a simple answer: A better world, he says.

  "I simply start with what we all hope to achieve -clean elections,
  universal
  heath care, and a living wage - the modest first stage improvements
  for a
  civilized, caring society," Nader told a group of several dozen
  people at a
  private house party on Sunday.

  Not many people would disagree with those goals or with Nader's
  battle to
  take back the country from the multinational corporations that now
  control
  the government, or the dozen or more put-people-first issues that he
  and his
  vice presidential running mate Matt Gonzalez have put "on the table"
  on
  their website http://www.votenader.org , Nader said.

  A visit to the website details Nader and Gonzalez's platform, but
  also
  provides a reminder of the remarkable list of achievements Nader has
  gained
  as a citizen activist for more than four decades. He was responsible
  for
  safety belts in cars, the creation of the Freedom of Information Act,
  the
  Environmental Protection Agency, the Occupational Safety and Health
  Administration (OSHA), the Consumer Product Safety Commission, and
  the Safe
  Drinking Water Act, and more. He founded or helped start more than
  100
  public interest groups that help improve safety and the quality of
  life for
  all Americans.

  "Ralph Nader has saved more lives than anyone else in America," one
  supporter said.

  The party had two objectives: to raise funds for Nader's presidential
  campaign and to announce his support for Harold Burbank II, the Green
  Party
  candidate who is running for Congress in the state's 5th District
  against
  first term Democratic incumbent Chris Murphy, and his Republican
  challenger
  David Cappiello, a state senator from Danbury.


  Harold Burbank II is challenging first term Democratic incumbent
  Christ
  Murphy for the 5th District congressional seat.

  Burbank, a civil rights attorney, introduced both himself and Nader
  to the
  gathering. The two men's friendship goes back several years. Burbank
  volunteered his legal services to Nader's 2004 presidential campaign.

  Burbank has worked in the peace and justice movement for 30 years.
  During
  that time he worked in the public sector, including the attorney
  general's
  office, and has never worked for a corporation. Among the issues
  Burbank
  supports are universal health care, full employment with a living
  wage and
  job protection, and ending the war in Iraq and U.S. imperialism.

  He calls for the impeachment of President George Bush and Vice
  President
  Dick Cheney for war crimes.

  "No one is above the law, especially for war crimes under
  international
  treaties such as the UN Charter, Geneva Conventions and Nuremberg
  Charter,
  which make war crimes the ultimate crimes against humanity," Burbank
  said.
  More information about Burbank and his positions is available at his
  website
  at http://www.newmenu.org/haroldburbank

  Burbank is the only candidate for Congress that Nader has ever
  supported
  during his long career as an advocate for public safety, the
  environment and
  honest government.

  Nader launched his fifth bid for president last February. So far, he
  has
  qualified for the ballot in 45 states, plus the District of Columbia
  without
  having filed a single ballot access lawsuit. This year, Nader has
  exceeded
  his "personal best." which occurred in 2000 when he was on the ballot
  in 43
  states and D.C.

  Relaxed and informal, Nader spoke extemporaneously to the group and
  held a
  question and answer period afterward.

  This is the first time in the history of the country that a minority
  party
  actually represented the majority opinion of the people, Nader
  observed.

  The public's "discomfort" level is reflected in the current polls: 81
  percent of Americans polled think the country is going in the wrong
  direction; 75 percent think corporations have too much control over
  our
  lives; and 61 percent think the two major parties are failing.

  Historically, most third parties espouse issues that are supported by
  a
  minority and later picked up by one of the major parties, such as the
  19th
  century anti-slavery and pro-women's rights movements.

  "So, were coming in on a bizarre situation where we now are the
  dissenters
  and our positions are supported by the majority," Nader said.

  But people have bought into the two major party system and the
  likelihood -
  or certainty - that one of its candidates will win - and that's why
  they
  keep voting for them, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy.

  "This always upsets me because the 60th seat at Wimbledon has a shot
  at
  center court; the 60th seat at the NCAA has a shot for the final
  four, but
  the third seat in the presidential candidacy is considered tilting at
  windmills," Nader said.

  The major parties understand "intuitively" that the system itself is
  "monumentally obstructive," locking out challengers through a variety
  of
  questionable methods, including harassing petitions and getting
  petition
  signatures for specious reasons.

  That's why one of Nader's top priorities is to open up the elections
  process
  and the presidential debates. The first step is to get rid of all
  special
  interest funding and have public funding of elections, an initiative
  that
  the two parties claim to support, but they never actually implement,
  Nader
  said.

  It's all about civil liberties, Nader said.

  "Let's face it, people who are well to do can live in a world of
  their own
  that's pretty comfortable and they have a lot of personal freedom,
  but along
  with tens of millions of other Americans, they don't have civic
  freedom,"
  Nader said.

  He quoted Cicero, who said, "Freedom is participating in power."

  "That's a fantastic definition of freedom," Nader said. Civic freedom
  is
  having a say in whether the country goes to war or not, how taxpayer
  dollars
  are used, and whether everyone is going to have health insurance, he
  said.

  People often ask Nader why he doesn't try to achieve his goals
  outside of
  the electoral system.

  "Because for 20 years ever since the Democrats started dialing big
  time for
  corporate dollars, they've shut the door on solutions and we can't
  get
  anything done. We can't get congressional hearings; we can't get
  regulatory
  agencies to respond to our petitions," Nader said.

  Perhaps one of the most cogent questions Nader posed - and answered -
  was
  "When was the last time we solved a major problem? We couldn't even
  clean up
  and help people after Katrina and it's because of the paralyzed
  government.
  The government has been hijacked by big corporations whether it's the
  Defense Department or the Treasury. So you try to bring young people
  into
  the electoral area, try to mobilize new energies and you push the
  system so
  its fangs come out when you challenge it and you force people to look
  at
  themselves in the mirror and ask themselves how do they continue to
  succumb
  to a two party duopoly that makes them vote against people they
  believe in
  and for people they don't believe in," Nader said.

  He quoted labor leader Eugene Debs, an American labor leader in the
  19th and
  early 20th centuries, who was one of the founding members of the
  International Labor Union and the Industrial Workers of the World
  (IWW).

  More than 100 years ago, Debs said, "It's better to vote for someone
  you
  believe in and lose than vote for someone you don't believe in and
  win
  because that someone's going to betray you."

  Nader stressed the importance of bringing young people into the
  process. "If
  you don't do that the future is pretty clear: Things are going to get
  worse
  and the concentration of power gets worse."

  He rolled out the statistics:
  --100 million poor people "and the Democrats never mention the poor,
  only
  the middle class, which is shrinking";
  -- 47 million people who make $10 an hour or less before deductions.
  "You
  can't live on that," Nader said.
  --50 million people without health insurance
  --50 million who are underinsured
  --18,000 people dying each year because they cannot afford health
  care
  --58,000 people dying because of work-related diseases
  --65,000 people dying because of air pollution.

  "At the end of his career, Eugene Debs was asked by a reporter around
  1920 -
  and, by the way, he ran for president five times so I have an
  affinity for
  him - 'What's your greatest regret?' And he said, 'My greatest regret
  is
  that under our Constitution Americans can have almost anything they
  want,
  but it just seems like they don't want much of anything at all,'"
  Nader
  said.

  Americans' expectations -- or demands - of their government are the
  worst in
  the western developed world, Nader said.

  He pointed out that, at the end of World War II when Europe was in
  rubble
  and America was the most powerful country in the world, Europeans
  through
  their social democratic governments, trade unions, associations and
  other
  non-governmental organizations demanded -- and got - universal health
  care,
  decent pensions, living wages, efficient public transportation
  systems, four
  weeks or more of paid vacations, day care, paid maternity leave, paid
  family
  sick leave, and universal free tuition to universities.

  "We don't have any of that here today, 63 years later," Nader said.
  People are faced with two choices, Nader said.

  "We can sort of give up on ourselves and live in our comfortable
  personal
  lives and accumulate our estates or we can elevate our own self
  respect and
  develop a determination to turn things around. And I have no doubt
  that they
  can be turned around. There are a lot of good people in this country.
  They'
  ve just got to get to know each other civically, not just socially,"
  Nader
  said.

  He estimated that the political system and agenda could be turned
  around by
  about one million people organized into congressional watch dog
  groups,
  2,000 per district with two full time staff to bring the first stages
  of
  improvement to the collective life in America.

  "It's not all that much. I'm told there are 10 million bird watchers
  in our
  country," Nader said.


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******************************************
Tim McKee, Manchester CT, main number cell-860-778-1304, 860-643-2282
 National Commitee member of the Green Party of the United States and is a spokesperson for the Green Party of CT.
BLOG-http://thebiggreenpicture.blogspot.com

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