November 30, 2000
Rage Guitarist Talks Presidential Election
By Gary Graff

After performing a renegade concert for protesters at the Democratic
National Convention last August in Los Angeles, guitarist Tom Morello says
that he and his politically conscious bandmates are getting a chuckle out of the 
post-election shenanigans going on in U.S. presidential politics these days. But at 
the same time, he notes, it's a matter of laughing to keep from crying.

"The underreported crisis of American democracy came long before the
hanging-chad debacle in Florida," says Morello, who's preparing for the Dec. 5 release 
of Renegades, the Rage set of cover versions that marks recently departed frontman 
Zack de la Rocha's last studio work with the band. "The fact that both of the major 
parties are in a large measure owned, controlled, and leashed by corporations is a 
bigger problem, and the fact there is such agreement on issues such as NAFTA, the WTO, 
the IMF, the death penalty.

"It seems to me we live in basically a one-party system with two factions;
that, combined with the fact that more than 50 percent of eligible voters
still stay away from polls, means that no matter which of the pro-big
business candidates is eventually anointed, 75 percent of Americans don't
want them. So I think that there are more fundamental sort of crises in
American democracy that need to be examined beyond the minutiae of
pregnant-chad legalities."

Morello calls the low voter turnout "tremendously shameful," but he adds
that he's not quite ready to beat people up just for not going to the polls.

"You can ask people who don't vote; they don't believe that it matters,"
says the Harvard-educated guitarist.

"If there were a candidate who was running, say, for a six-hour work day at
full pay, you might get more people going to the polls. But the vast
majority of Americans clearly do not feel represented, especially when you
have the threshold of having to raise hundreds of millions of dollars in
order to run for president, in order to purchase the advertising time and
whatnot. That very much narrows the class strata that will be represented by the 
candidates. The deck's stacked; I mean, Ralph Nader couldn't even get a seat to sit in 
one of the debates."

Morello says that following the Renegades release, he and his remaining
Ragemates — bassist Tim Commerford and drummer Brad Wilk — will get together to 
discuss the future of the band in the wake of de la Rocha's departure.




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