_Nader  calls U. S. "corporate fascism"_ 
(http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_jonathan_080514_nader_calls_u__s___22c.htm)
  
 
 
"Nader  ...described his  campaign for President as an effort to "restore 
democracy" and to build  "resistance and enlightenment.". 
hell, he is  better than the other three stooges and he is trying to actively 
run - the  others have bailed out .. crg  
I'd rather  vote for an honest man who has not profited off of American 
workers nor war, nor  greed, nor larceny, and who by his efforts has made every 
Americans life safer  ... 
At least  the man speaks bluntly, without PR prep, without checking with 
donors, and he  gives solutions not sound bites 
Peace,  Hugs, and Purrs  

Carolyn Rose Goyda
Saint Louis, Missouri USA
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) 


    May 14, 2008 at  07:35:13
Promoted to column top on  5/14/08:
_Nader  calls U. S. "corporate fascism"_ 
(http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_jonathan_080514_nader_calls_u__s___22c.htm)
  
by _Jonathan  Nack_ (http://www.opednews.com/author/author10581.html)      
Page 1 of 1 page(s)  
_http://www.opednews.com_ (http://www.opednews.com/)     

 
(http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/print_friendly.php?p=genera_jonathan_080514_nader_calls_u__s___22c.htm)
 
  
(http://www.populum.com/tellafriend.php?page=http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_jonathan_080514_nader_calls_u__s___22c.htm)
 


OAKLAND - Independent candidate for  President Ralph Nader described the 
current government and economic system of  the United States as "corporate 
fascism" at a campaign event held in Berkeley on  May 12.  
"We're living in a country whose democracy is  beyond the breaking point. The 
extent of corporate control has developed into  corporate fascism," declared 
Nader. 
"We don't have a capitalist economic system - it's  corporate fascism. Every 
major tenet of capitalism is violated by corporate  power," said Nader. Only 
small businesses still practice capitalism, according  to Nader. 

Nader explained that major corporations buy  politicians and write the laws 
through their lobbyists, thus owning the Capitol.  They receive billions in 
government subsidies and hand-outs, but 68 percent of  corporations pay no 
federal income tax, according to Nader. 
Corporate fascism not only rules U. S. politics  and the economy, but also 
other aspects of life including the way people think,  said Nader. "We grow up 
corporate with commercialized childhoods. We get a  corporate education." 
Nader has spent his life fighting corporate power,  so his anti-corporate 
theme is not new, having been at the center of his three  previous campaigns 
for 
President. However, he clearly thinks things have gotten  much worse and that 
the accumulation of corporate power has gone beyond the  tipping point. 
"We used to be able to challenge corporate  influence in Washington, but they 
have so much power now that we can't. The  corporations are laughing at us. 
They're daring us to try to take away their  power," said Nader. 
The choice between a Democrat and a Republican is  to Nader a "choice between 
horrible and terrible." He warned against voting for  a candidate because 
they're not as bad as the other. "If you have a low  expectation level of 
politicians, then they're going to oblige you," said  Nader. 
Nader warned against continued complacency.  "What's wrong with us? Are we 
the biggest suckers? Are we super-suckers?" He  exhorted his audience at the 
Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian-Universalists to  find their "constructive 
anger." 
He doesn't think it's too late to turn things  around, but it will require, 
"people to break from corporate thinking." Nader  called on Americans to reach 
out to each other, get active and organized, and to  make demands for what 
they need and want.  
Nader called on people to become "tough citizens"  who are "resilient, 
informed, and able to bounce back." 
He described his campaign for President as an  effort to "restore democracy" 
and to build "resistance and enlightenment.".  Nader and his running mate, 
Matt Gonzalez, former President of the San Francisco  Board of Supervisors, are 
collecting signatures so that they can appear on the  ballot in 





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