Asshole of the Century

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Who To Fear

I’ve been reluctant to discuss last week’s Presidential election, mostly because my guy won, and I think it would be rude to gloat. But it remains on my mind. Here are a few observations:

Obama has been compared to a lot of predecessors, from Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy to Adlai Stevenson. But my own comparison is with another Illinois politician, namely John Anderson, who ran first as a moderate Republican and then as a 3rd party candidate for President back in 1980, eventually garnering a little under 7% of the vote. For a time, Anderson had a grassroots, charismatic appeal, much like Obama, garnering a lot of attention for his “fresh”, non-partisan approach to politics, and Anderson was the darling of political cliques in college campuses around the country. I was living in UCLA’s Sproul Hall in 1980 and witnessed more than one Anderson rally, and the do-gooder unctuousness of these folks really turned my off. I have the feeling that I would have felt the same way about Barack Obama if I was on a college campus today.

In fact, I didn’t care for any of the three major candidates in 1980 and ended up voting for Ed Clark, the Libertarian, back when many Libertarians were actually progressive on social issues. Clark campaigned on a platform of reduced military engagement and “low tax liberalism” (the frightening pro-America, anti-rights folks, a la Bob Barr, didn’t gain a stranglehold on the Libertarian Party until the late 80’s.) Clark ended up getting a little over 1% of the vote, the best nationwide performance for a Libertarian Presidential candidate to date.

Another thought about the recent election originated from my wife, Melissa. A guy we know here in Chicago had been an enthusiastic Obama supporter from early on. When his Brooklyn-based sister-in-law would fret about “the herd that went for Bush” also going moving en masse against Obama, he would, having been raised in Ohio, come to the defense of the mass of middle Americans, saying that “sometimes, you just have to trust the people.” When this debate was reprised after the election, Melissa responded, “They’re just another herd, it’s just that this herd voted for our guy.” Well put.

With two or three possible exceptions, just about everyone in my circle of friends voted for Obama. But the same cannot be said for my in-laws. I’m not exactly sure, but my guess is that there were 2 votes for McCain, 5 for Nader, and 1 for Bob Barr. To the best of my knowledge, the only folks in her immediate family who voted for Obama were Melissa and I. Anyone who has read this site knows that I don’t think much of Bush, McCain, Palin, or just about any of the current crop of Republicans. But I’ve come to the conclusion that, despite the fact that George W. may have set this country back a generation, Republicans are an essentially manageable threat to our democracy. The same cannot be said for Ralph Nader.

There is nothing more dangerous than an idealist, particularly one that dreams of attaining power. When you hear a political leader promise “Peace, Land, and Brotherhood” or call for “A Campaign of One Hundred Flowers,” it is a clear signal to collectively kill that movement by any means necessary, because by the time you realize that they mean to take away the life and liberty of all who oppose them, it will do no good to grab your gun and run for the hills.

Nader’s bloodlust, his preoccupation with “arresting the executive crooks” in corporate America, in fact his desire to eliminate any rights of “corporate personhood,” a path whose logical end is that anyone who opens a business would be subject to the confiscation of his personal property by the legal system, reminds me of nothing so much as the rantings of the Khmer Rouge against the business class of their own country, to whom they proffered the slogan, “To keep you is no benefit; to destroy you is no loss.” As we subsequently found out, Pol Pot meant that quite literally. History has repeatedly demonstrated that when a political leader threatens to spill blood in the name of his cause you should take him at his word.

I admit, I first grew to hate Ralph Nader as a child. Our neighbor, who we called Uncle Bob, was a real car buff, and at one point he drove a Chevy Corvair. He would talk about the mechanical wonders of that car, and how it was a tragedy that it was railroaded out of existence by Mr. Nader, who Uncle Bob referred to as “a real Bozo.” I may have been a child at the time, but even then I hated the tearing down of something beautiful for personal notoriety or out of some oversized notion of justice, and, as it turns out, Uncle Bob was actually right, as the Corvair was eventually tested and found not to have most of the structural flaws that Nader alleged. But it was too late for the vehicle, whose sales had already plummeted

But it is one thing to cripple a car brand and entirely another to cripple your country. Nader had to know that his presence on the ballot in 2000 could tip the balance to George Bush in a close election, and, as it turned out, it did, as Al Gore would almost assuredly have won the state of Florida, and thus the election, if Nader’s name were not on the ballot. Now, I was never a big fan of Al Gore. I didn’t vote for him in the Democratic primary, and I don’t care for him now. He and his hollow blond wife are such typical Baby Boomers, with their smug presumption that they are at the cutting edge of everything interesting and cool, when actually they are two of the dullest fucks on the planet. However, I had the common sense to see that, while Al Gore was personally repugnant, George W. was a national calamity in waiting.

For some reason, Nader never realized this. In fact, years later, he claimed that the election of George W. Bush was essentially no different than a Gore Presidency would have been. Tell that to the 5,000 dead and 50,000 maimed U.S. soldiers in Iraq, or to our children and grandchildren, who will be paying off the budget deficits engendered by the Bush Administration for decades. Nader never did exactly admit he was wrong about Bush not being any worse than Gore, although he did eventually change his tack, claiming that it was actually Al Gore’s fault for not having the competency to win that election by enough votes so that Nader’s impact wouldn’t have mattered. Like I said, if there’s one thing that people need to fear, it is an idealist with no shame.

Admittedly, Nader has become a harmless, irrelevant force in our country. But our collective goal should be to keep it that way and to actively oppress the ability of others like him to spread their virus to, as Melissa calls them, “the herd”, or in more polite terms, the general public, because if history has taught us anything, it’s that we are a bloodthirsty species, easily cowed.

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9 Comments:

Blogger Mike Pryslak said...

Nader's primary objective is to improve democracy, and allowing non-humans (corporations) to participate in the process of making laws that govern humans is the reason to for taking constitutional rights away from corporations.

Nov 12, 2008, 5:02:00 AM  
Blogger Robert said...

you are dead-on about nader. this guy is an idealist which is dangerous enough. but he's also delusional. i saw that clip of him on fox news where he called obama an uncle tom and i thought "this guy has seriously lost his mind."

thank you ralph nader for eight years of GWB. hope you burn in hell.

Nov 12, 2008, 5:14:00 AM  
Blogger hundeschlitten said...

Right on, Robert!

And to Mike, I'm glad to get some critical feedback, but corporations are created by real humans out to make real products for other real humans. Ever run your own business or known anyone who has? It's a risky proposition in the best of cases, and the incorporation laws were designed to limit legal liability, so that you don't end up losing your home after someone sues your hot dog stand because he slipped and fell on the sidewalk outside. In short, eliminating the legal rights of "corporate personhood" does not "improve democracy".

And this whole concept about not allowing "non-humans" to participate in the process of making laws is also a straw dog designed to distract from Nader's real intentions. What about labor unions, or environmental groups, or the PTA? They also are not literally "human persons", but rather an organization of humans, and Nader has nothing against these organizations influencing the political and legislative processes.

Nov 12, 2008, 6:30:00 AM  
Blogger . said...

America is in for historic change.

Nov 12, 2008, 3:30:00 PM  
Blogger hundeschlitten said...

What follows is a salvo from Nader booster Kevin O:

so the corvair was eventually tested and found not to have most of the structural flaws that Nader alleged...I am no car buff but I remember something about the rear axel being unusual and air pressure for the rear wheels needed to exceed the guidelines set by the tire manufacturer, especially with passengers (don't ask me why that stays in my brain) and wasn't there something about an exploding gas tank?...and to suggest Ralph Nader bullied GM is really getting the story backward when it was his phones that got tapped and he was the one being followed by GM's gestapo and he won a giant settlement because of those tactics...and didn't GM fight nader tooth and nail to prevent the implementation of the very kind of safety standards that they now advertise as primary reasons to buy? Imagine, if it wasn't for ralphie boy, american auto makers would be trying to sell their crap cars without seat belts or airbags! So you call his activism bloodlust and then
compare him to Pol Pot. Really. I can remember Nader haters warning that if he were in charge, the economy would collapse, hmmmm, well guess what, Ralph Nader is an "irrelevant force in our country" and the economy is in free fall. Seriously James, you have been watching what has been going on more than most of us and you are telling me that the idealist with no shame that I should fear is Ralph Nader? You'd better get to the Sears eye center before its too late! And if the consumer activism he has inspired are, in your mind, the primary "threat to our democracy" you most certainly have not been paying attention at all.

Oh yeah, and another thing, boomers are typified by the way they cling, like toddlers & safety blankets, to the heroes and villains of that most overblown of American decades. What a horrible generation. The ‘who to fear’ post is the most convincing evidence to date of your membership.

KO

Nov 14, 2008, 9:20:00 PM  
Blogger hundeschlitten said...

And here is my response:

Well, you can probably guess which of your comments bothers me the most... I doubt Ralph Nader ever entered my brain for at least 20 years. Not until he had the hubris to run for President. I personally couldn't give a crap about the battles fought in the 60's, and it is a fervent fantasy of mine that Nader and Co. would just disappear so that I never have to think about them again. But since Nader's original claim to fame was based on a lie, I think that is relevant to understanding him and his motivations. I'm not going to pretend to have thoroughly researched the subject, but here is a brief summary of subsequent studies, as compiled by a pro-Corvair website:

http://www.corvaircorsa.com/handling01.html

Nov 14, 2008, 9:21:00 PM  
Blogger hundeschlitten said...

Another email exchange from an old Nader supporter. Bring on Condonicus:

I still have no regrets for voting Nader in 2000. Bush and Gore were two options I couldn't stomach and I decided neither of them was worth my vote. Nader at least was not an establishment candidate and was against US-Corporate Imperialism, and that appealed to me.

In Florida, voting for Nader had more weight than it did in Illinois, where Gore received 63% of the vote. But Gore's loss to Bush in Florida was due more to the tactics of Katherine Harris and the Florida Election Board than how many votes Nader had received.

Nader did have an effect on the outcome (it is a democracy after all, and there should be more than TWO candidates running for the highest office), but he was not the primary reason Gore lost Florida.

Nader gets 97,000 votes in Florida. How many of these would have gone for Gore? I think the majority of Nader voters would have just stayed home, but I admit enough would have still voted to tip the balance in Gore's favor. But still the Republican dirty tricks had their effect too, and they removed a larger number of voters from the rolls than the votes Nader cost Gore.

Many Democrats spent too much time vilifying Nader (Democrats worked hard to keep Nader off the ballot in '04, democratic of them huh?) and blaming him for the Gore loss when Gore didn't even win his home state! Now what does that say about who lost the election? In an election that close, there is more than one single factor why Gore lost, it's not just Nader.

Nov 15, 2008, 9:59:00 PM  
Blogger hundeschlitten said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

Nov 15, 2008, 10:03:00 PM  
Blogger hundeschlitten said...

And here is my response:

Let's take a look at all of those you say are also responsible for the election of Bush in 2000, and see if any besides Nader are morally culpable:

Gore: He behaved like himself while trying his best to win the election, and maybe because of that he didn't win in places like his home state of Tennessee, but that's like blaming the fat kid in the back of the room for not getting laid. Hey, he tried his best. Give the dork a break.

Republicans and their "dirty tricks": As they say in Chicago, politics ain't beanbag. It's like the story of the frog and the scorpion. What did you expect?

The Supreme Court: You have a point here. I hate those fuckers, too, selling out their country and their principles.

Now, let's summarize how Nader is more culpable than all of the above: In 2000, Nader barnstormed around the country saying that there wasn't any substantive difference between the Democrats and the Republicans, attempting to drive a wedge in the coalition that had helped form pluralities for Clinton (who never actually won a majority of the vote, a hint that this was a tenuous coalition to begin with). The question isn't only how many of Florida's 97,421 Nader voters would have voted for Gore on Nov 7, by which point the damage had been done (and which was still probably a lot more than Bush's margin of 537 votes). The question is how many of those folks would have voted for Gore if Nader hadn't consciously chose to turn the bubbling cold war between moderates and progressives in the Democratic coalition into a full fledged ground war. Nader decided that it was his great moral duty to tear the coalition asunder, even if that meant handing George W. Bush the election.

Nov 16, 2008, 4:19:00 PM  

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