Nader for President in 2004
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/20.../index_np.html
Who's with me in thinking that Nader really needs to run in 2004? The Democrat and Republican candidates are virtually the same, right, so there's a need for a real left-wing candidate. They all support the war, they're all for varying sizes of tax cut, what's the difference? Go Nader!
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(Honestly, though, anyone agree with me that a few major right-wing donors would be better off donating to the Green party campaign than to the GOP? I'd say that every Nader vote probably siphons off at least 70% of a vote from the Democrats. Given that, I wonder whether at some point right-wing voting dollars would be better spent promoting the Greens against the Dems than by promoting the Republicans against the Dems. It'd be a sort of two-pronged attack - fight against the Democrats for moderates on one side, and then eat away at the Democrats' left-wing base by promoting the Green party. Muahaha.)
Re: Nader for President in 2004
Quote:
Originally posted by Stone
(Honestly, though, anyone agree with me that a few major right-wing donors would be better off donating to the Green party campaign than to the GOP? I'd say that every Nader vote probably siphons off at least 70% of a vote from the Democrats. Given that, I wonder whether at some point right-wing voting dollars would be better spent promoting the Greens against the Dems than by promoting the Republicans against the Dems. It'd be a sort of two-pronged attack - fight against the Democrats for moderates on one side, and then eat away at the Democrats' left-wing base by promoting the Green party. Muahaha.)
While I don't agree with Stone's reason for supporting the Green party, his idea is sound. Democrats aren't going to change if they don't see a need to. The Green party can make an impact if the Democrats see them as a viable contender for Democrat swing votes. Plus with the Green party becoming more and more like the "new" democratic party, an intiative to support them will only make the Democrats reveal their true colors- outdated and stagnant. So should this sort of thing work and the Democrats become the party that they should be, it might be worth it them and their voters if they lost this next election. It's kind of a dividing topic since no one really knows what will happen. If the Democrats change, would it be worth another 4 years of Bush? In my opinion, yes, but then again their is no guarantee they will change. It would be nice to see the Republicans change, but lets face it: Republicans are so set and closed in their ways, they'll never change. Man, I hate the two party system.
SC
PS. Station, Al Gore isn't running and does it really matter? It's not about the individual, it's about the ideology. Al Gore is the same as every other Democrat and Bush is the same as every other Republican. There is rarely (ie Clinton) a candidate that takes a third way.
Re: Re: Nader for President in 2004
Quote:
Originally posted by spacecowboy
PS. Station, Al Gore isn't running and does it really matter? It's not about the individual, it's about the ideology. Al Gore is the same as every other Democrat and Bush is the same as every other Republican. There is rarely (ie Clinton) a candidate that takes a third way.
That is good point yeah, and I should've thought out my post more before I made it. I think my problem lies in being discouraged - lack of understanding of complex issues today in governemt (i know how its run and the contrasting ideologies of liberals and conservatives - i just don't know whats currently going on - I try to educate myself a little bit here and there but its difficult to hold interest in it when I have so little time and so many other things to do and or on my mind.
Perhaps someone will think this is a lame excuse, and maybe it is but its the position I'm kinda stuck in. At the end of the day I couldn't honestly give a fuck because the one thing I've realized in the midst of all this is that we really don't have any individual power anymore.