as usual, this commentary of Mage makes so much sense to me.

ahmet tonak

Shane Mage wrote:

Doug Henwood asks:

Could someone explain what Ralph Nader's candidacy has to do with the
development of a socialist party in the U.S.? I could swear he was a
petit bourgeois who believed in the beauties of small business and
competition.


Very simple.  The central class issue in US politics for my entire
political life has been the repeal of Taft-Hartley.  In 1948 Truman,
as one of his demagogic counters to the Henry Wallace third party
candidacy, promised the repeal of that "slave-labor law"--and,
once elected, dumped that as well as all his other promises.  Nader
has explicitly and strongly called for the repeal of Taft-Hartley.
So much for any impression of him as "petit-bourgeois."  As for
the development of a socialist party in the US--the condition
sine qua non for that consumation devoutly to be wished is,
and has always been, the breaking away of the US Labor Movement
from its slavish subordination to the Dumbocratic faction of
the US capitalist class.  Any electorally meaningful progressive
third-party campaign is a step in that direction.  And all the
hysteria about Nader--maybe--costing the Dumbocrats enough
marginal votes in Florida and Missouri to return Ubu and his Bushits
to the White House is proof that Nader's campaign is electorally
meaningful.  And this is not to express any indifference to the
threat of a continuation of Ubuism.  On the contrary, the more
attractive and powerful is the Nader candidacy the larger
the prospective turnout (Spain, last Sunday, proved how
much fascistic parties are hurt by a big turnout).  And the
more possible is the crushing of Ubu by a tactical alliance
fin Octobre between Nader and Kerry (Kerry withdraws from
the race in Texas, Mississippi, Indiana, Virginia, Louisiana, and South
Carolina in return for Nader withdrawing from the race in
Florida, Missouri, Ohio, Michigan, Oregon, and West Virginia).  You
say that Kerry would rather see Ubu elected than make
such a deal?  My point about class politics, then, would be proven.

Shane Mage

"When we read on a printed page the doctrine of Pythagoras that all
things are made of numbers, it seems mystical, mystifying, even
downright silly.

When we read on a computer screen the doctrine of Pythagoras that all
things are made of numbers, it seems self-evidently true."  (N.
Weiner)



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