Pat Buchanan interviews Nader

2004-07-04

Richard Moore

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From: •••@••.•••
Date: Thu, 17 Jun 2004 17:36:13 EDT
Subject: Nader chats with Pat Buchanan -- good read!
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June 21, 2004 issue
Copyright © 2004 The American Conservative


Ralph Nader: Conservatively Speaking


The long-time progressive makes a pitch for the disenfranchised Right.


Ralph Nader recently accepted Pat Buchanan's invitation to sit down with us 
and explain why his third-party presidential bid ought to appeal to 
conservatives disaffected with George W. Bush. We think readers will be 
interested in the 
reflections of a man who has been a major figure in American public life for 
40 years-and who now finds himself that rarest of birds, a conviction 
politician. 

Pat Buchanan: Let me start off with foreign policy-Iraq and the Middle East. 
You have seen the polls indicating widespread contempt for the United States 
abroad. Why do they hate us? 

Ralph Nader: First of all, we have been supporting despots, dictators, and 
oligarchs in all those states for a variety of purposes. We supported Saddam 
Hussein. He was our anti-Communist dictator until 1990. It's also cultural; they
see corporate culture as abandoning the restraints on personal behavior 
dictated by their religion and culture. Our corporate pornography and 
anything-goes 
values are profoundly offensive to them. 

The other thing is that we are supporting the Israeli military regime with 
billions of dollars and ignoring both the Israeli peace movement, which is very 
substantial, and the Palestinian peace movement. They see a nuclear-armed 
Israel that could wipe out the Middle East in a weekend if it wanted to. 

They think that we are on their backs, in their house, undermining their 
desire to overthrow their own tyrants. 

PB: Then you would say it is not only Bush who is at fault, but Clinton and 
Bush and Reagan, all the way back? 

RN: The subservience of our congressional and White House puppets to Israeli 
military policy has been consistent. Until '91, any dictator who was 
anti-Communist was our ally. 

PB: You used the term "congressional puppets." Did John Kerry show himself 
to be a congressional puppet when he voted to give the president a blank check 
to go to war? 

RN: They're almost all puppets. There are two sets: Congressional puppets and 
White House puppets. When the chief puppeteer comes to Washington, the 
puppets prance. 

PB: Why do both sets of puppets, support the Sharon/Likud policies in the 
Middle East rather than the peace movement candidates and leaders in Israel? 

RN: That is a good question because the peace movement is broad indeed. They 
just put 120,000 people in a square in Tel Aviv. They are composed of former 
government ministers, existing and former members of the Knesset, former 
generals, former combat veterans, former heads of internal security, people from
all 
backgrounds. It is not any fringe movement. 

The answer to your question is that instead of focusing on how to bring a 
peaceful settlement, both parties concede their independent judgment to the 
pro-Israeli lobbies in this country because they perceive them as determining 
the 
margin in some state elections and as sources of funding. They don't appear to 
agree with Tom Friedman, who wrote that memorable phrase, "Ariel Sharon has 
Arafat under house arrest in Ramallah and Bush under house arrest in the Oval 
Office." 

Virtually no member of Congress can say that, and so we come to this 
paradoxical conclusion that there is far more freedom in Israel to discuss this 
than 
there is in the United States, which is providing billions of dollars in 
economic and military assistance. 

PB: Let me move on to Iraq. You were opposed to the war, and it now appears 
that it has become sort of a bloody stalemate. You said you would bring troops 
out of Iraq within six months. What if the country collapses and becomes a 
haven for terrorists? Would you send American troops back in to clean it up? 

RN: Under my proposal there would be an international peacekeeping force, and 
the withdrawal would be a smart withdrawal during which there are 
internationally supervised elections. We would have both military and corporate 
withdrawal because the Iraqi people see the corporations are beginning to take 
over 
their economy, including their oil resources. And we would continue humanitarian
assistance until the Iraqi people get on their feet. We would bring to the 
forefront during the election autonomies for Kurds, Sunnis, and Shi'ites. So 
this 
would not be like a withdrawal in Vietnam where we just barely got out with 
the helicopters. 

TAC: You often mention corporations. What is the theory behind this or what 
are the alternatives to corporate economic power? I presume you are not talking 
about state ownership or socialism, or perhaps you are Š 

RN: Well, that is what representative government is for, to counteract the 
excesses of the monied interests, as Thomas Jefferson said. Because big business
realizes that the main countervailing force against their excesses and abuses 
is government, their goal has been to take over the government, and they do 
this with money and politics. They do it by putting their top officials at the 
Pentagon, Treasury, and Federal Reserve, and they do it by providing job 
opportunities to retiring members of Congress. They have law firms that draft 
legislation and think-tanks that provide ready-made speeches. They also do it by
threatening to leave the country. The quickest way to bring a member of Congress
to his or her knees is by shifting industries abroad.

Concentrated corporate power violates many principles of capitalism. For 
example, under capitalism, owners control their property. Under multinational 
corporations, the shareholders don't control their corporation. Under 
capitalism, 
if you can't make the market respond, you sink. Under big business, you don't 
go bankrupt; you go to Washington for a bailout. Under capitalism, there is 
supposed to be freedom of contract. When was the last time you negotiated a 
contract with banks or auto dealers? They are all fine-print contracts. The law 
of contracts has been wiped out for 99 percent of contracts that ordinary 
consumers sign on to. Capitalism is supposed to be based on law and order. 
Corporations get away with corporate crime, fraud, and abuse. And finally, 
capitalism 
is premised on a level playing field; the most meritorious is supposed to win. 
Tell that to a small inventor or a small business up against McDonald's or a 
software programmer up against Microsoft. 

Giant multinational corporations have no allegiance to any country or 
community other than to control them or abandon them. So what we have now is the
merger of big business and big government to further subsidize costs or 
eliminate 
risks or guarantee profits by our government. 

PB: Let's move to immigration. We stop 1.5 million illegal aliens on our 
borders each year. One million still get through. There are currently 8-14 
million 
illegal aliens in the United States. The president is mandated under the 
Constitution to defend the States against foreign invasion, and this certainly 
seems to constitute that. 

RN: As long as our foreign policy supports dictators and oligarchs, you are 
going to have desperate people moving north over the border. 

Part of the problem involves NAFTA. The flood of cheap corn into Mexico has 
dispossessed over a million Mexican farmers, and, with their families, they 
either go to the slums or, in their desperation, head north. 

In addition, I don't think the United States should be in the business of 
brain-draining skilled talent, especially in the Third World, because we are 
importing in the best engineers, scientists, software people, doctors, 
entrepreneurs who should be in their countries, building their own countries. We
are 
driving the talent to these shores- 

PB: How do we defend these shores? 

RN: I don't believe in giving visas to software people from the Third World 
when we have got all kinds of unemployed software people here. 

Let's get down to the manual labor. This is the reason the Wall Street Journal
 is for an open-borders policy: they want a cheap-wage policy. There are two 
ways to deal with that. One is to raise the minimum wage to the 
purchasing-power level of 1968-$8 an hour-and then, in another year, raise it to
$10 an 
hour because the economy since 1968 has doubled in production per capita.   

PB: Say we went to $10 an hour minimum wage. It is 50 cents an hour in 
Mexico. Why wouldn't that cause not 1.5 million, but 3 million to head straight 
north where they could be making 20 times what they can make minimum wage in 
Mexico? 

RN: Because 14 million Americans are unemployed or part-time employed who 
want full employment or have given up looking for jobs. The more the minimum 
wage 
goes up, the more they will do so-called work that Americans won't do. They 
are not going to do it at $5.15 an hour and have another used car, another 
insurance policy, another repair bill to get to work, but they are much more 
likely to do it at $10 an hour. 

The second is to enforce the law against employers. It is hard to blame 
desperately poor people who want to feed their families and are willing to work 
their heads off. You have to start with Washington and Wall Street. 

PB: Should illegal aliens be entitled to social-welfare benefits, even though 
they are not citizens and broke into the country? 

RN: I think they should be given all the fair-labor standards and all the 
rights and benefits of American workers, and if this country doesn't like that, 
maybe they will do something about the immigration laws. 

PB: Should they be entitled to get driver's licenses? 

RN: Yes, in order to reduce hazards on the highway. If you have people who 
are driving illegally, there are going to be more crashes, and more people are 
going to be killed. 

PB: The Democrats have picked up on Bush's amnesty idea and have proposed an 
amnesty for illegals who have been in the country for five years and who have 
shown that they have jobs and can support themselves. Would you support the 
Democratic proposal? 

RN: This is very difficult because you are giving a green light to cross the 
border illegally. I don't like the idea of legalization because then the 
question is how do you prevent the next wave and the next? I like the idea of 
giving workers and children-they are working, they are having their taxes 
withheld, 
they are performing a valuable service, even though they are illegally 
here-of giving them the same benefits of any other workers. If that produces 
enough 
outrage to raise the immigration issue to a high level of visibility for 
public debate, that would be a good thing. 

PB: The U.S. population now-primarily due to immigrants and their children 
coming in-is estimated to grow to over 400 million by mid-century. Would that 
have an adverse impact on the environment? 

RN: We don't have the absorptive capacity for that many people. Over 32 
million came in, in the '90s, which is the highest in American history. 

PB: What would you do about it? 

RN: We have to control our immigration. We have to limit the number of people 
who come into this country illegally. 

PB: What level of legal immigration do you think we should have per year? 

RN: First of all, we have to say what is the impact on African-Americans and 
Hispanic Americans in this country in terms of wages of our present stance on 
immigration? It is a wage-depressing policy, which is why the Chambers of 
Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, Tyson Foods, and the 
Wall 
Street Journal like it. The AFL-CIO has no objection to it because they think 
they can organize the illegal workers-   

PB: They switched. 

RN: -because they have been so inept at organizing other workers. There is 
hardly a more complex issue, except on the outside of the issue, the foreign 
policy, the NAFTA- 

PB: I was going to ask you about NAFTA and the WTO- 

RN: Sovereignty shredding, you know. The decisions are now in Geneva, 
bypassing our courts, our regulatory agencies, our legislatures. 

PB: I find it amazing that Congress sits there and they get an order from the 
WTO, and they capitulate. What happened to bristling conservative defiance, 
"don't tread on me" patriotism? I think the problem is that a lot of these 
guys in Congress-I think some of them are basically good guys. But I went up 
there and was asking about some issue, and they would say things like, "I don't 
even know what it is about. My boss tells me Š" 

RN: Did you hear about my challenge to Senator Hank Brown? 

We put a challenge out before WTO was voted in 1995 because we went all over 
Capitol Hill and had never found any Member of Congress or a staffer who had 
ever read the proposal. So I said, "I'll give $10,000 to the favorite charity 
of any Member of Congress who will sign an affidavit that he or she has read 
the WTO agreement and will answer 10 questions in public."

The deadline passed. Nobody. So I extended it a week. A quarter to 5:00 on 
Friday, the phone rings in our office. It is Hank Brown, and he said, "I don't 
want the $10,000 to charity, but I will take you up on it. How much time do I 
have?" I said, "Take a month." So he reserves the Senate Foreign Relations 
Committee for the interrogation.

It gets better. The press is all there, and in the witness chair is Hank 
Brown. We have 12 questions, and he answers every one. They weren't all simple 
either. It was really impressive. And I said, "Thank you very much. That was 
really commendable," and we start to get up and he says, "Wait. I have something
to say." He says, "You know, I am a free trader, and I voted for NAFTA, but 
after reading the WTO agreement, I was so appalled by the anti-democratic 
provisions that I am going to vote against it and urge everyone else to." 

The next day, almost no press. It shows you the bias against anybody who 
challenges those multinational systems of autocratic governance that we call 
"trade agreements." And he didn't convince one extra senator.

Once when I testified before the House Ways and Means Committee, I had to say 
some nice things at the beginning, "Mr. Chairman, distinguished Members of 
the House Ways and Means Committee, it is indeed a pleasure to testify before a 
committee of Congress that has read this proposed trade agreement," and the 
chair looks up and says, "What makes you think we did?" 

Let's put it this way: it is impossible to exaggerate the dereliction of 
diligence
in the Congress. 

PB: Can we move on to taxes? Reagan cut the top tax rate from 70 percent to 
28 percent in terms of personal income taxes. Clinton raised it to 39.6. Bush 
has cut it back to 35 percent. What do you think is the maximum income-tax rate 
that should be imposed on wage earners? 

RN: Zero under $100,000. Now you got to ask me how I am going to make - 

PB: What is the rate above $100,000? What is the top rate? 

RN: Then you have a graduated rate. Thirty-five percent, in that range, for 
the top rate. It comes down to the loopholes. When it was 70 percent, did you 
ever meet anybody who paid 70 percent? 

Now, where would I make it up? This is where the creativity comes in. I would 
move the incidence of taxation, first, from work to wealth. So I would keep 
the estate tax, number one. 

PB: You restore the estate tax to 55 percent? 

RN: That is a little extreme. 

PB: That is where Bush has it, 55, and he is cutting it down gradually to 
zero. What do you think it should be? 

RN: Again, 35 percent. 

PB: Would this be on all estates? 

RN: No. Estates above $10 million. 

PB: Ralph, you are not going to raise much money with this tax. 

RN: There will still be a tax on smaller estates. I think all estates over, 
say, $500,000 should pay some tax. The estate tax as a whole raises about $32 
billion a year, but the thing is the loopholes. Buffett, as an example, won't 
pay because all of it is going to his foundation. 

I think we should have a very modest wealth tax. I agree with the founder of 
the Price Club, who thinks it should be 1 percent. 

PB: One percent of your wealth each year would be turned over to the federal 
government? 

RN: Right. Then the third shift is why don't we tax things we like the least? 
We should tax polluters. We should tax gambling. We should tax the addictive 
industries that are costing us so much and luring the young into alcoholism 
and tobacco and drugs. And we should tax, above all, stock and currency 
speculation. 

PB: A short-term capital gains tax? 

RN: Like a sales tax. If you go to a store and buy furniture, you pay 6, 7, 
or whatever percent. You buy 1,000 shares of General Motors, you don't pay 
anything. So what we are doing is taxing food and clothing but not the purchase 
of 
stocks, bonds, derivatives, and currency speculation. A quarter-of-a-cent tax 
will produce hundreds of billions of dollars a year because of the 
volatility. You remember the days when 3 million shares on the New York Stock 
Exchange 
was a big day? Now it is 1.5 billion shares. 

The point is this: work should be taxed the least. Then you move to wealth, 
and then you move to things we do not like. And you will have more than enough 
to replace the taxes of under $100,000 income and to provide for universal 
health insurance and decent public transit and to repair the public-works 
infrastructure. 

PB: So you have got a $500 billion deficit now, and the early baby-boomer 
retirements start in 2008, and by 2012, the whole Clinton-and-Bush generation 
gets Medicare and Medicaid. These are the biggest payers into these so-called 
trust funds. They are also going to be the biggest drawers out, and 77 million 
of 
them retire in 2030. So how do you balance that budget? 

RN: You repeal Bush's two tax cuts in 2001 and 2003. Then you get out of 
Iraq, and you cut the waste and the shenanigans out of the military contracting.
That would more than take care of the deficit. 

PB: You bring the troops home from Europe and Korea and the Balkans? 

RN: We are presently defending prosperous nations like Japan, Germany, and 
England, who are perfectly capable of defending themselves against nonexistent 
enemies. 

PB: Let me move to the social issues. Would you have voted against or in 
favor of the ban on partial-birth abortion?

RN: I believe in choice. I don't think government should tell women to have 
children or not to have children. I am also against feticide. If doctors think 
it is a fetus, that should be banned. It is a medical decision.

PB: Between the woman and her doctor- 

RN: And whoever else, family, clergy. 

PB: Should homosexuals have the same right in law to form marriages and 
receive marriage licenses from the state as men and women? 

RN: Yes, and if you had that, you wouldn't have to use the word "marriage." 
The reason "gay marriage" is used is because state laws connect certain 
benefits with that word. As a lesbian leader was quoted saying in the New York 
Times
 a few weeks ago, the issue is not the word "marriage." The word is 
"equality."  

PB: Let's go to politics. If you had not been in the race in 2000, who would 
have won? 

RN: That requires me to be a retrospective clairvoyant. If I wasn't in a 
race, would the Democrats have gone all-out to get out the vote in certain 
states 
because they were worried about the percentages I was drawing? And if I was 
not in the race, would Gore have made populist statements day after day-"I am 
for the people, not the powerful"-which polls showed brought him more votes 
than if he went to Lieberman's semantic route? 

Having said that, exit polls showed 25 percent of my votes would have gone to 
Bush, 38 percent would have gone to Gore, and the rest would have stayed home 
and not voted. A month and a half ago, a poll came from New Hampshire that 
showed that 8 percent were for me: 9 percent Republicans, 11 percent 
independents, 4 percent Democrats. 

PB: If you hurt Bush more than Gore, why are the Democrats trying to keep you 
off the ballot? 

RN: Because they will forever think that my progressive policies will take 
more Democrat votes and independent votes than they will take from the other 
side. 

PB: If you got 15 percent of the vote this time, who do you think would be 
the next president of the United States? 

RN: I don't know how it would break. 

PB: Let me ask you about your ballot position because it was around this time 
that we were wrapping up getting on the ballot in all 50 states. How many 
ballots are you on right now? 

RN: None yet, but we'll be on more than 43 states, which is the number we had 
last time. We want to get on them all. The problem is, we haven't 
concentrated on the easy states. 

TAC: Is there any circumstance in which you can come to an arrangement with 
Kerry campaign not to run? 

RN: The time to drop out is before you drop in. You cannot build a national 
campaign and get tens of thousands of volunteers working their hearts out and 
then in October feed the cynicism of American politics by cutting some sort of 
deal. The answer is no. 

PB: What are the reasons a conservative should vote for Ralph Nader? 

RN: Well, largely- 

PB: Rather than Kerry. 

[Laughter.] 

RN: I'm not expecting conservatives to change their minds on certain issues 
that we disagree on, but if we look at the issues where we have common 
positions, they reach a level of gravity that would lead conservatives to stop 
being 
taken for granted by the corporate Republicans and send them a message by 
voting for my independent candidacy. 

Here are the issues. One, conservatives are furious with the Bush regime 
because of the fantastic deficits as far as the eye can see. That was a betrayal
of Bush's positions, and it was a reversal of what Bush found when he came to 
Washington.

Conservatives are very upset about their tax dollars going to corporate 
welfare kings because that undermines market competition and is a wasted use of 
their taxes. 

Conservatives are upset about the sovereignty-shredding WTO and NAFTA. I wish 
they had helped us more when we tried to stop them in Congress because, with 
a modest conservative push, we would have defeated NAFTA because it was 
narrowly passed. If there was no NAFTA, there wouldn't have been a WTO.

Conservatives are also very upset with a self-styled conservative president 
who is encouraging the shipment of whole industries and jobs to a despotic 
Communist regime in China. That is what I mean by the distinction between 
corporate Republicans and conservative Republicans.

Next, conservatives, contrary to popular belief, believe in law and order 
against corporate crime, fraud, and abuse, and they are not satisfied that the 
Bush administration has done enough.

Conservatives are also upset about the Patriot Act, which they view as big 
government, privacy-invading, snooping, and excessive surveillance. They are not
inaccurate in that respect.

And finally, two other things. They don't like "Leave No Child Behind" 
because it is a stupidly conceived federal regulation of local school systems 
through misguided and very fraudulent multiple-choice testing impositions. 

And conservatives are aghast that a born-again Christian president has done 
nothing about rampant corporate pornography and violence directed to children 
and separating children from their parents and undermining parental authority. 

If you add all of those up, you should have a conservative rebellion against 
the giant corporation in the White House masquerading as a human being named 
George W. Bush. Just as progressives have been abandoned by the corporate 
Democrats and told,"You got nowhere to go other than to stay home or vote for 
the 
Democrats," this is the fate of the authentic conservatives in the Republican 
Party. 

I noticed this a long time ago, Pat. I once said to Bill Bennett, "Would you 
agree that corporatism is on a collision course with conservative values?" and 
he said yes. 

The impact of giant corporations, commercialism, direct marketing to kids, 
sidestepping parents, selling them junk food, selling them violence, selling 
them sex and addictions, selling them the suspension of their socialization 
process-years ago conservatives spoke out on that, but it was never transformed 
into a political position. It was always an ethical, religious value position. 
It 
is time to take it into the political arena. 

PB: Well, it's a pleasure. Thank you very much for coming over, Ralph. 

RN: Thank you very much.  

June 21, 2004 issue
Copyright © 2004 The American Conservative
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