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I Can't Wait to Learn What New Tricks Ralph Nader Has Up His Sleeve This Time Around

nader.jpgPerhaps it’s apropos that, at this time when our right to access the food of our choice is under frontal attack in New York and California, Ralph Nader should declare himself a candidate for president.

This is the same Ralph Nader whose Public Citizen’s Health Research Group pressed a reluctant U.S. Food and Drug Administration to place a ban on interstate sale of raw milk in the mid-1980s, and eventually got its way via the courts. Nader’s role was discussed previously on this blog last November.

There’s a detailed account of his group’s role on a site I wouldn’t normally reference, QuackWatch (the site is pretty much opposed to all natural health remedies), but it’s worth taking a look at for historical purposes. His group was unrelenting over many years in its pursuit of consumer "protection."

He was so successful in bringing the FDA around to his point of view that it has become more rabid in its opposition to our right to consume raw milk than he probably ever could have hoped. I think it's also safe to assume that much of the hysterical anti-raw-milk propaganda presented in California, cited on my previous post, are the result of his efforts.

So, let’s see, Ralph Nader helped cost us access to raw milk. He helped siphon enough votes to give us George Bush during the ultra-close 2000 election. What might he have in store for us this time around?

I ask this question having been favorably inclined toward him earlier on—first, because of his bravery way back in the 1960s in exposing the auto industry over car safety and, more recently, because of his willingness to challenge the limited choices inherent in the two-party system. I figured his political challenge alone was a worthwhile cause if it helped move us to more of a muti-party system.

But he didn’t do that. All he seems to want to do is re-appear every four years, a la Harold Stassen, and offer us the benefit of his arrogant form of protection.
Posted on Monday, February 25, 2008 at 10:46AM by Registered CommenterThe Complete Patient in , | Comments11 Comments

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Reader Comments (11)

Or possibly he just wants to screw with those candidates who aren't 'liberal enough' for him. Last time he did that, we ended up at war.
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered Commentervalereee
David, Nader is little more than a mentally deficient wannabe that needs institutionalization. Here in GA we have a bed waiting for him in Milledgeville. Other states have their own state mental hospitals as well that he needs locking up in.

Bob Hayles
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterBob Hayles
Ralph Nader is on NPR right now.
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterElizabeth McInerney

I had some interaction with Nader back in the seventies after taking some college courses in business and consumerism. I found him a very appealing personality--a sort of warm, erudite, cardigan-sweatered intellectual. He pretty effectively sold the idea that the powerful were hurting us for their own gain, but that we needn't worry--he and his Raiders would protect us, like mother hens.

There was truth in what he said about powerful special interests, but I gradually came to realize that for Nader the "mothering" instinct drove him far more than a desire to fight for freedom and justice. He is, IMHO, a classic psychological case: Weak, fearful, and rationalizing his personality with activism. I think he found favor with an overly-mothered generation.

(By the way, the old maxim says that if you're 20 and not a liberal you have no heart; if you're 40 and not a conservative you have no brain. Notably, libertarianism cultivates both heart and mind, and is naturally accepted at any age. It is the one political strain that works to cut the marionette strings of socio-cultural conditioning.)
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDave Milano
Sorry Dave, but I am 53 and MOSTLY libertarian, but I do pay attention to which strings I cut...an example being that I don't agree with the libertarian philosophy on abortion. Libertarians see it as women's choice. I see it as baby murder.

Bob Hayles
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterBob Hayles
i definitely see it as woman's choice. but that's not what we're talking about here, bob. and since you're not a woman, i imagine you'll shut up humbly and wisely.
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterjean
I also have gone from supporter to opponent of Nader running and it all has to do with one issue:

<a href="http://www.systemsthinker.com/blog/2008/02/key-issue-missing-from-ralph-nader-table/">The Key Issue Suspiciously Missing from Ralph Nader's "Table"</a>
February 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSystemsThinker
Thank you for this information. So much for Nader's image as a brainiac.

I don't understand that fear of REAL (real = raw, not real = corporate trademarked lie, aka pasteurized or "cooked") milk.

Keep up the good work, sir. I thank you and our grandson thanks you.
February 26, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterTana
I like his stance on eliminating the rights of corporations. I think they have just about ruined this country by co-opting our government.
February 26, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKirsten
Corporations have only "co-opted" the government becasue the government has agreed to it. If the governmental bodies did not choose to hop in the sack with cororate and globalist bodies, it would not happen.
February 29, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterkathryn
Hey Jean, who made you the hall monitor here! I agree with both you and Mr. Hayles. I see it as a womans choice to murder her baby. One that should be allowed the same freedom as any other travesty of justice. However, since we are discussing justice and you are a self-avowed supporter of such a tragedy as murdering defenseless gifts from God, I imagine you'll shut up humbly and wisely.
March 6, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterRick Trim

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