Date: Mon, 3 Jul 2000 22:27:26 -0700 From: tal pomeroy <•••@••.•••> Subject: why not to vote for Gore >Date: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 21:22:22 -0700 >From: tal pomeroy <•••@••.•••> >Subject: why not to vote for Gore > >----- Original Message ----- From: ><mailto:•••@••.•••>Michael Eisenscher To: >May 29, 2000 4:57 PM Subject: FW: Promoting spoilage > >[I would have thought that the Greens'motto might be "One person's >spoilage is another's compost." > >-----Original Message----- From: Scott McLarty >Friday, May 26, 2000 5:39 PM To: Hugh Esco; > >"I really need some help on addressing this Judicial Appointment >concern. Someone promised more on this subject a couple of weeks >ago in our thread about responding to the spoiler argument [i.e., >that Nader will spoil for Gore and allow a Bush win]. This is my >request for follow-through on that." --Hugh Esco > >Hi Hugh & al. > >The chief article discussing this is: > >John Nichols, "The Clinton Courts: Liberals Need Not Apply," The >Progressive, Sept. 1996 > >I'll see if I can find a link to it. (If anyone else finds it >first, send it out.) > >In the meanwhile, since Greens have begun to face more serious >accusations of spoilage, I threw together some comments and quotes, >appended herebelow. > >If you have other arguments or lists of Clinton/Gore horror stories, >send them to me. I'd like to compile a list of reasons not to vote >for Gore. We should anticipate hatchet jobs on Nader and the >Greens, similar to the recent smear in The New Republic, over the >next few months. > >If people begin to feel embarrassed and apologetic about voting for >Gore and other compromised Dems, it's a first step in persuading >them to vote Green. > >Scott > >* * * * * * * * * * * > >ARGUMENTS FOR SPOILING > >Let the Democratic Party prove it deserves votes, with positions and >arguments based on issues, not with a Republican gun held to >people's heads. The Democrats do not or "own" people's votes; no one >is morally obliged to vote Democrat. The Greens and Nader cannot >"steal" votes from anyone. > >We are in politics not to defer to people more powerful than we are >but to win elections and advance Green values. > >Our obligation, as we feel it, is to build a third party. The >short-term consequences (such as a Bush win) are less dire than the >Democratic Party's drift to the right, which has already resulted in >"free trade" agreements, greater power for corporations to control >every aspect of our lives, compromise on everything from the >environment to labor to human rights, etc. Without the presence of >the Green Party, our elected officials -- including Democrats -- >will be even MORE Republican ten years from now. The Green Party's >role is a historical necessity. > >The Green Party will -- if we achieve any measure of success -- >inspire people to vote who've been alienated in the past because of >the lack of candidates who represent their interests. Such new >voters are more likely to vote for progressive Democrats for local >office if they vote for Nader for President. (Unless there's a >Green candidate for the same office, of course.) > >The Green Party is not a left-wing or environmental extension of the >Democratic Party, and we owe Democrats no fealty. The media and >public opinion tend to place the Dems and the Greens on the left >side of the spectrum and the GOP on the right. This is wrong. The >Democratic and Republican Parties stand together -- not on the right >or the left but at the TOP, with their corporate benefactors and >masters, and the Greens stand BELOW with ordinary taxpayers, working >people, and the poor and disenfranchised, as well as with the earth >itself. The question before voters is: who represents you? (The >answer is not "Green candidates represent you" but "Greens want a >true democracy in which you have more power to represent yourself.") > >In March, 1995, Bill Clinton and Newt Gingrich stood on a dais in >New Hampshire and shook hands over a pledge to enact campaign >finance reform. The handshake ended the possibility of reform for >the rest of the decade. Whether the Democrats and Republicans reach >"bipartisan" agreement or they argue an issue within narrow >corporate-determined limits, the rest of us lose out. It's what >happened with health care reform, with global warming, with bombs >and embargoes for Iraq and the former Yugoslavia and other nations, >with international lending and free trade (most recently with >China), with SDI ("Star Wars") and defense spending, etc. >(Corollary: If you believe corporate special-interest money has >corrupted politics, vote for the party that refuses all such >donations.) > >The Democrats can no longer hold Supreme Court appointments for >ransom. Clinton appointee Stephen Breyer is a conservative and a >patsy for big business interests; Bush appointee David Souter is now >one of the Supreme Court liberals. (Nader: "People are kidding >themselves if they think either Gore or Bush will pick the next >Supreme Court nominee. Orrin Hatch will pick the next nominee." >Hatch is the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which >clears nominees.) > >The Clinton/Gore legacy on civil liberties: more than double the >number of wiretaps of the Reagan and Bush administrations, the >Anti-terrorism Act (sanctioning secret evidence, weakening habeas >corpus and Fourth Amendment protections), the War on Drugs, >Democrats for the death penalty, "don't ask, don't tell" and >increased anti-gay witchhunts in the military, zero tolerance, >mandatory sentencing and weakening of judges' discretion, racial >disparities in drug sentencing, more people in jail for marijuana >offenses, Waco, military training of urban and town police forces >(ordered by Clinton himself), a burgeoning private prison industry >(an effect of which is to creative an investment incentive to lock >more people up, i.e., criminalize more people and give them longer >sentences), dismissal of Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders for candid >discussion of sexuality and criticism of drug laws, the DC >Revitalization Act (establishing a bureaucracy accountable only to >Congress to rule DC), attempts to federalize prosecution of crimes >the Constitution says are the domain of states (the Supreme Court >last week struck down one such law), condemnation of medical >marijuana and needle exchange, the Defense of Marriage Act, >Katherine Willey's private letters. (Sam Smith can probably double >this list!) > >Had we elected a Republican president in 1992 and 1996, most of the >above would never have happened, or would have faced fierce >Democratic opposition. Instead, Clinton and Gore ensured the >acquiescence and cooperation of most Democrats, as well as many >mainstream liberal organizations. We are LESS FREE than we were >eight years ago -- thanks to Democrats and "liberals." > >Ralph Nader: "You can't spoil what's already rotten." > >Tim Hermach, executive director of the Native Forest Council in >Eugene, Oregon: "How often can we be betrayed, lied to, cheated and >stolen from and still have us go back to that trough?" > >David Brower, late of the Sierra Club: "President Clinton has done >more to harm the environment and to weaken environmental regulations >in three years than Presidents Bush and Reagan did in 12 years" > >Eugene Debs: "It's better to vote for what you want and not get it >than to vote for what you don't want and get it." > >Tal Pomeroy, M.D. >•••@••.••• >www.pigheaven.com >Cancer Prevention and Treatment Center of the Central Coast >3035 Main St. , Soquel, Ca 95073 >831-462-8750 Tal Pomeroy, M.D. •••@••.••• www.pigheaven.com Cancer Prevention and Treatment Center of the Central Coast 3035 Main St. , Soquel, Ca 95073 831-462-8750