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Ralph Nader's Holiday Reading Recommendations
'Tis the Holiday Season and a time congenial for reading books. Here are my recommendations of recent books that relate to the quest for understanding today's events:
1. Jeno: The Power of the Peddler, (Paulucci International) is the biography of 89-year-old multiple entrepreneur, Jeno Paulucci, of Duluth, Minnesota and Sanford, Florida. One of a kind, this human dynamo, starting from the raw poverty of the Iron Range, built company after company and sold them when they became successful. Along the way, he championed labor unions for his large companies, workers rights, sued even bigger companies, heralded the need to use the courts, defended prisoners unlawfully imprisoned and launched many other counter-intuitive initiatives. He just started another company before his 90th birthday. If you want to absorb human energy, read this book!
2. The Man Who Hated Work and Loved Labor: The Life and Times of Tony Mazzocchi by Les Leopold, (Chelsea Green) is the story of whom I consider to be the greatest labor leader of our generation. It was Mazzocchi who connected the labor movement with environmental group and scientists specializing in occupational diseases, with a broad humane agenda for working people so that they had a decent living standard and plenty of time for other pursuits. This World War II combat veteran probably traveled more miles, spoke with more blue collar workers and championed "just health care" more than any other American before his passing from cancer in 2002.
3. Corpocracy by Robert A.G. Monks (Wiley Publishers) summarizes its main theme on the book's cover-"How CEOs and the Business Roundtable Hijacked the World's Greatest Wealth Machine-and How to Get it Back." Corporate lawyer, venture capitalist and bold shareholder activist, Monks gives us his inside knowledge about how corporations seized control from any adequate government regulations and especially from their owners, their shareholders, and institutional shareholders like mutual funds and pension trusts. This is a very readable journey through the pits and peaks of corporate greed and power that shows the light at the end of the tunnel.
4. Building the Green Economy: Success Stories from the Grass Roots, by Kevin Danaher, Shannon Biggs and Jason Mark (PoliPoint Press.) This is a practical book about on-the-ground, successful green businesses and neighborhood initiatives that live sustainability, not just talk it. There are also pages of crisp interviews with practitioners and thinkers including Rocky Anderson, Mayor of Salt Lake City and Lois Gibbs, the extraordinary organizer against toxics regarding this emerging sub-economy that challenges greed, concentrated power and destruction.
5. You Have No Rights: Stories of America in an Age of Repression (paperback, The New Press) by Matthew Rothschild. This book by the editor of The Progressive magazine aggregates accurate stories of the post-9/11 violations of the civil liberties and and civil right of the American people, including veterans, by the dictacrats in Washington, DC. Ordinary people exercising their rights of free speech and assembly found harassment, arrest, expulsion from public meetings, surveillance and malicious prosecution to be their rewards. Rothschild end on a hopeful note, describing the resistance by freedom advocates and the various individual and community ways that people are fighting back to defend their Bill of Rights.
6. The Bank Teller and Other Essays on the Politics of Meaning, by Peter Gabel (Acada Books.) Law Professor, Law Dean and college President, Peter Gabel gets down to fundamentals about the "politics of meaning." This is not a muckraking expose but rather a relentless push on readers to examine their isolation and alienation from one another, their neighborhood, workplace, and community without which a functioning democracy cannot evolve.
7. The Four Freedoms Under Siege, by Marcus Raskin and Robert Spero (Praeger/Publishers.) Raskin and Spero take off from Franklin Delano Roosevelt's proclamation of the Four Freedoms in his annual message to Congress, January 6, 1941 and apply them to present day America. These four freedoms are the freedom of speech, freedom to worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. It is not a pretty picture. It can be changed, and this book contains wise words for such liberations.
8. Medicare; Facts, Myths, Problems & Promise (in Canada!), edited by Bruce Campbell and Greg Marchildon (James Lorimer & Company Ltd.) At last an authoritative answer by authorities on health care in Canada and the U.S. to the distortions, prevarications, smears and putdowns of the Canadian health care system by the Wall Street Journal, Rush Limbaugh and other servers of their corporate paymasters. In 39 concise chapters, 39 specialists cover the achievements of Canada's way of guaranteeing everyone health care, how it happened, the pressure by the corporatist lobbies and their thoughtless think tanks to undermine Medicare piece by piece, and the future development of Medicare toward prevention and sustainability. A tour de force for anybody fed up with the "pay or die," wasteful, profiteering corporate morass that blocks comparable progress in the United States.
9. Nobodies: Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of The New Global Economy by John Bowe (Random House.) This book is an eye witness gripper of the conditions of the workers who harvest our fruits and vegetables and make our garments from Florida to Oklahoma to Saipan. Laws are weak, unenforced, and raw power takes over these defenseless workers' lives. You'll soon ask: where are the police, the prosecutors, the politicians? The real question is: "Where are the people to make the required changes on behalf of humanity?"
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42 Comments so far
Show AllHell hath no fury as a Democrat woman who thinks she was scorned.
" you bloviated egomaniac. and thanks for the bushies. its been a thrilling 7 years"
Ralph Nader has done more for the good of the American people then than the last four presidents combined. You might not always agree with him but at least he stands up for what he believes in. And what he believes (like many of us)is that Republicans sold you out a long time ago and Democrats do not have the spine to do anything about it though they are full of promises. So rather than being let down by the Dems he stood up. Ralph Nader stood up to what he believed to be a corrupt system...shocking.
Diebold, gerrymandering, and powerfully dull candidates are what cost the Dems the last 2 elections. In the most important election anywhere ever, what did Kerry stand up for? When did he call Bush out? Your choices were between Skull & Bones. Some of us do not consider that much of choice at all. Nader was not even allowed at the debates. By not demanding that the only candidate willing to speak up for you be allowed to speak at all you have doomed yourself to a two party system which pay only lip service to you, your child's future, and your constitution.
a_mllx@hotmail.com
If only men would complement each other instead of competing, the world would be a different place....and the world IS a different place now that Paul and I have revived Darwin's Sexual Selection....if only, years ago when you were more interested in women, ohhh, if only we had a system of government that had a male AND a female president - in PARTNERSHIP.
Of course you didn't think of selecting female authors - it's OK, you, my hero, are off the hook...but of course, it isn't too late to trust and respect women. Go to Redefining Seduction.com - and also read Redefining Feminism on the same page...ENJOY - NO blame....just a few oversights in history...... love, peace and partnership, donna - also check out BaringWitness.org and watch the film trailer.
>Nice list Ralph.
Are you planning on running again? Last time you helped us get an arrogant, stubborn and truly stupid and dangerous man elected.<
Nice try awegweiser but if all the votes had been counted in Florida Gore would have won. If Al Gore had won his own state of Tennessee he would have won.
Al Gore 1.0 left alot to be desired. Al Gore 2.0 is awesome!
Nice list Ralph.
Are you planning on running again? Last time you helped us get an arrogant, stubborn and truly stupid and dangerous man elected. This time around, thanks to the good folks in Iowa, we might get a more articulate man who believes in magic and a 6000 year old Earth.
He left out, "The Courage To Survive" by Dennis Kucinich.
A look at a candidate who is ONE WITH "We The People"!
If we're talking candidate books:
Mike Gravel's "Citizen Power" will be republished soon after the New Year. Originally written in 1972, each chapter examines the myriad problems we face as a society, with analysis and solutions.
Not so ironically, every problem written about 35 years ago is just as relevant today, if not more so.
Could everyone stop referring to Dennis as the ONLY candidate? Gravel's National Initiative will address problems that no president, no matter how courageous, will ever be able to muscle through Congress. Further, Gravel is far more openly critical of the major evils, ie the Military-Industrial-Complex. "Global warring and global warming" and "Strength Through Peace" don't always do it for me. THIS STUFF does:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=nGVcjvuw6mo
http://youtube.com/watch?v=8LZaKkXADKg
www.ni4d.org
What?!? He couldn't find any female authors?
What about Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine - The Rise of Disaster Capitalism?
What about Naomi Wolf's The End of America?
Peace Czar: I love Gravel too, but let's face it--the mainstream are treating him WORSE than D.K. (If that's possible) and he TRULY has no chance. Personally, a Kucinich/Gravel ticket would turn B.S. as usual on its ear!And the corporatocrcy can't have that!
I met and marched with one of the authors here-Matthew Rothschild. He took the time to join us in our small town pre-Iraq war anti-war protest. He has a remarkable sense of commitment to a better world.
Thanks Ralph.
awegweiser: Get a grip! Not only is that theory proven to be bull rockets, but Nader CARES about the people of this country. People on here bitch and moan for a third party and then Ralph gets involved and they bitch he stole Gore's win. Gimme a F'n
break!!!
If the description is indicative of the contents, then book choice #8 is not reflective of the reality in Canada. Unless by "...39 specialists cover the achievements of Canada's way of guaranteeing everyone health care..." means that the tens of thousands of people who are forced to live on the street are not part of "everyone".
And the healthcare situation in Canada is so dire that communities have to compete by offering extravagant perks to doctors to try and get some to move to their communities, and when they manage to entice one they hold a lottery to see which citizens are lucky enough to get to have a family doctor. Using the Canadian healthcare system as a model for emulation is a fraud. If any healthcare system in the world is to be emulated, then the only deserving one is Cuba's and all others would be rated in a descending order behind the Cuban's.
Sorry Ralph, but I'm booked with Common Dreams for the forseeable future. I can't get away from my computer, I'm losing weight from eating tv dinners at my desk and my family thinks I'm a hermit with a Messianic complex.
"Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, lawyer, and author."
No f***ing comment.
ezeflyer,
For the love of Nader, get out and breathe some fresh air while it's still just slightly laced with uranium.
Peace Czar,
I'm not sure about Gravel's policy on public education. I know Kucinich is for eradicating NCLB, but the only thing I've heard Gravel say regarding the matter is from the debates last summer. He said that our public education is in trouble and people need choices. This comment rang alarm because "choice" when used in reference to public education means vouchers. Vouchers are a backdoor to privatization. What have you got for me?
@ ezeflyer: you may want to break away to catch the national broadcast of "An Unreasonable Man" on PBS tonight. Tuesday, Dec 18 9PM/8PM Central. Broadcast location finder:
http://www.itvs.org/shows/broadcast.php?showID=7713
Of course, there's also a write up over @ nader (dot) org
-----
Anyway, amazon isn't the only online bookstore, there is also Powell's Books: the largest INDEPENDENT used and new bookstore. "Powells (dot) com is the only major online bookseller to be unionized" (see wikipedia reference).
Thought folks might want to know this little bit of trivia, especially in context to some of the books referenced above
Ã
Out local public television station has "An Unreasonable Man" at 9:00 tonight. I haven't seen it yet but am looking forward to it. Can you imagine what the country would have been if Nader had been elected in 2000?
I saw an "Unreasonable Man" on PPV. If Ralph teamed up with Kucinich or Gravel and the Greens, I think he would give conservanazis quite a run for their money. The Greens will eventually win because they reflect more closely the public's will. But they will be late in getting there if we keep electing the lesser of two evils.
Other suggested reading might include Reflections on Socialism by Sam Webb or for cultural/spiritual encouragement, any of the collections from Partisan Press, especially the poetry of Robert Edwards.
A good list. One problem: All the links are to amazon.com. That's a non-union shop.
Try the same titles at powells.com, a fully unionized online bookstore. No, I don't work there. But I buy union, because I am union.
Just thought that was more than a bit ironic...
In Canada ask at book stores for Speaking Out Louder by Jack Layton. This is a wonderful book full of personal and collective experience about making communities workable and sustainable. Jack is not the leader of the New Democratic Party of Canada for nothing. His experience on Toronto City Council and as President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities gives him a unique insight on what works. When peace groups met with him they were surprised because he asked them how he could help rather than asking them to help him. Read the book and let the ideas cook.
Jmacneil is from where? Canada's health system is not perfect but the waiting lists are largely manufactured and the people living on the streets are not part of a failed health system. They are there because right wing Liberal and Conservative government's CHOSE TO PUT THEM THERE. (I work in social housing). We refuse to build what's needed, to integrate ministries so we have a wholistic approach to our social ills and we are , like our neighbour to the South, letting the corporations run and ruin the show! I agree that Cuba has an excellent health care system and I am sure that without the dumb embargo it would be the best in the world. Right now however I'll keep and fight for Canada's health care system. Having had a heart problem last year I have discovered for the first time what a marvel it truly is. No one asked me for money. All the questions were about how I was feeling not how I was going to pay. We have 3,000 people/families with substandard housing in Victoria but that is directly attributable to Gordon Campbell's Liberal government choosing not to build low-income subsidized housing (there has been no new housing for 6 years) it is not the fault of the health care system. Now Gordo the idiot wants to replace the reference-based drug list that makes our drugs 20% less expensive than the rest of the country with expensive and often unsafe drugs. We will be paying a fortune when his blue ribbon committee of drug lobbyists gets through with us. Wake up and smell the coffee. It does no good to rant and rage if you are not also actively working to protect what we have, defend democracy and fight for what we need. Oh and you need to be accurate too. Just a small point.
@ QuakerDave December 18, 2007 3:42PM "just thought...ironic...."
Maybe so, QuakerDave. Then again, when I looked at the links routing to amazon, I saw "commondreams" listed within the link. Commondreams is linked to amazon, not necessari ly Nader. Same thing over at Counterpunch, except it says "counterpunch" in the link rather than "commondreams". Even the CD reference for Nader's book "The Seventeen Traditions" is routed to amazon, which seems ironic, seeing how their is a website titled seventeentraditions.com (where four different buying options are available including "Booksense") Anyway, both CD and CP may be trying to drum up revenue with linking to amazon. I mentioned Powell's Books as an alternative earlier in this thread, however, I don't know if Powell's is set up to pay websites linking to Powell's sales pages. I would assume they would be on the ball in this regard.
I tried to access the "holiday reading list" at Nader.org, but couldn't get the page to load.... (don't ask! heh.,) If Nader linked to amazon as the sole option at his own website, then we could email his staff and encourage them to reevaluate their reference choices. Seeing how the amazon links here at commondreams say CD, I would assume one would want t o send their criticisms to CD.
Just some ideas.
Later,
Robdˇ
My master tells me the only book I should be reading is the bible...
Cuba's healthcare system is the best in the world because, not only is it of high quality, but because all of it's citizens receive full and comprehensive healthcare from birth to death. Of course, the comparison of thousands of people forced to live on the streets cannot be utilized when comparing a healthcare system to Cuba's because no one in Cuba is without a proper place to live. And the fact that tens of thousands of people in Canada are forced to live without proper housing is not a failure of "leaders" but part of a systemic failure of the corporate government system.
Far beyond serving their own needs, Cuba's healthcare system has more than 30,000 doctors working in other countries in solidarity. And even above that, at Cuba's expense, Cuba has graduated more than 5,000 doctors from their Latin American School of Medicine. All of them students of other nations who otherwise would not have been able to buy the higher education. And there are currently more than 10,000 other students, on the same type of full scholarships, studying in 22 Cuban medical universities. In the coming decade, with the opening of campuses in Venezuela and with the solidarity of the Venezuelans, the Cubans expect to graduate more than 100,000 doctors from the same ELAM (Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina), all on the same full scholarship program.
ELAM is a product born of an idea of Fidel Castro and it, along with other excellent programs, raises Cuba beyond their stated self description of a Communist and Socialist state and elevates their society to a higher level that can only be described as Humanism.
In Canada, not only do they have the thousands of unfortunate people living on the streets without any healthcare and eating out of garbage cans, they have a whole segment of society in the First Nations people who have, at best, a second or third rate level of healthcare when compared to what the whites or anyone with money receives. Given the disparity of wealth between the two nations, it is almost obscene to qualify Canada's inconsistent healthcare system with the comprehensive healthcare system of Cuba.
Hey jmacneil! So move to Cuba already. We're clearly not sharing a consenual reality here. I shattered my tibia plateau eighteen months ago. I have had, and continue to have, amazing care. I'm a retiree -- no big bucks here. My husband and I both agree that if we lived in the States either we would be bankrupt or I would not be walking or maybe even both. Anyone who shows up for healthcare here gets the healthcare they need, no questions asked -- even streetpeople and Aboriginals. Ditch the drama and keep it accurate. So what are you doing to house and feed the homeless and improve life on the reserves? Otherwise, kwitcherbitchin!
"What?!? He couldn't find any female authors?
What about Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine - The Rise of Disaster Capitalism?
What about Naomi Wolf's The End of America?"
The Naomis' books have made their own way to the front list of essential books; Ralph's list, with two exceptions, is culled from smaller publishers, and the two from large publishers are by authors who haven't received wide presss.
"Last time you helped us get an arrogant, stubborn and truly stupid and dangerous man elected."
Glad to see that the Ahabs to whom Ralph is Moby Dick are still peglegging it round the desk & swearing eternal vengeance.
Anything rather than confess that the right-wing, pro-corporate, Israel-uber-Alles Democratic Leadership Council is the problem . . .
If anyone wants to read a really good book just published they should try this one, My Life, by Fidel Castro.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/My-Life-Fidel-Castro/dp/0713999209
This is a book which has shelf life and will add to the understanding of anyone interested in current geopolitical affairs and history.
Nader2000 has no idea what she/he is talking about.
Evidence: read ignorant comment above by him/her.
Dear ruthru,
Mike Gravel wants to increase the length of the school day/year, is in favor of merit pay for successful teachers, college tuition paid if you volunteer in the military or a peaceful government group, and I'm not positive, but I think he's in favor of charters schools, I can't remember if I heard him say that or not.
His campaign website says this:
Education Senator Gravel supports re-ordering national budget priorities in order to improve the American education system. He supports government funding of education from pre-kindergarten to higher education.
I'd assume that means increasing funding/scrapping the NCLB. He's the only candidate I've even heard say the words Military Industrial Complex, he proudly rails against it, so from that I think again it would be safe to assume he would pay for it by reducing military spending.
try opensecrets.org for candidate info. Its a real handy site.
Independent Lens is on here at 12:00 midnight and 03:00 Wed morning. Then again 03:00 on Sun morning.
Guess the PBS heads thought prime time for Ralph was not good timing. /snark
He must be quite a threat to go to that trouble.
yeah, i'll read your suggestions, you bloviated egomaniac. and thanks for the bushies. its been a thrilling 7 years. try reading john dean's broken government. whether all the current pols are part of the corprotocracy, or just some of em, a barrel full of disorganized dems beats a government full of smirking war mongers who stole our government. this will take years to straighen out.... please, dont help. oh, and ralph: bite me.
I really like Ralph Nader and pretty much agree with most of what he says. He is definitely a man of principles and no matter how much he's being attacked, he has the balls to keep true to his principles. Where I disagree with Nader is his capitalist solutions to the problems that plague the world. Seems like his reading list hasn't included any by K. Marx who had capitalism and its anti-people and anti-democratic nature figured out and exposed a long long time ago. It would have saved Nader most of his adult life's striving for an understanding of how things really work, had he done some reading of the classics of socialist thought. It's too late now for Nader, but maybe some of the younger folks around here will add K. Marx/F. Engels to their holiday reading list and not need to spend a life time coming to the conclusion that capitalism is not the way forward for humanity.
KQED, which is doing a seemingly endless pledge campaign, put the film out last night at 9 pm.
This was astonishing, since they never put anything smacking of controversy on until 10 or later.
I suppose they figure they needed a break from Suze Ormond and Wayne Dyer infomercials.
The Independent Lens program was EXCELLENT. It made me proud to have voted for Nader in 2000, and very sorry I didn't in 2004 - the nay-sayers were DEAD WRONG. Mr. Nader is a truly great American whose dedication to this country and its citizens, to the citizens of the world, cannot be faulted, though his enemies and his friends tried so hard to do so. The program makes me look deeply at my own commitment - sorry, Mike Moore - in the end I would rather feel good about my vote!
jcephrie,
Thank you for that Gravel on education report. I am a strong advocate of public schools.
I believe merit pay for teachers is a bad idea. It doesn't work in the private sector either because companies understand that it holds the wrong party responsible for his/her constituents. For example, a teacher who teaches in a suburban enclave might have students who come from much different circumstances than an inner-city student. Merit pay is also extremely difficult to implement because of the bureaucratic bloat it creates. Principals alone cannot monitor all of their teachers sufficiently. They would need assistance from additional quasi-administrators. This creates a policing task force that would need additional funding. And who polices the police? I think merit pay also may discriminate qualified teachers based on the needs of the district rather than the needs of the students. For example, bilingual teacher may have a degree in two languages, yet because of state laws that discourage more than one language being taught in their schools, a teacher with a master's degree in English might get merit pay over a bilingual teacher who serves a much larger proportion of the students at his/her school. Also, some of the most educated and talented people cannot teach well. Someone from the outside might be given merit pay for their many years in the private sector as a successful professional, but then get in front of a classroom full of kids and be unable to teach that gift of success.
Teachers need smaller class sizes, more resources, and less policing. Teachers are subjected to more testing and qualifying based on state and district mandates than any other profession in the same salary bracket.
I'm also wary of charter schools. There are exceptions, but more often than not, charter schools expoit their work force because their employees often forfeit their collective bargaining rights when they elect to become charter schools. The employees who elect themselves into becoming a charter school often are unaware that they are giving up their rights because they're young an inexperienced or the school doesn't inform them.
Our school district has many charter schools that compete with the public schools. There is no evidence that these schools perform better than the public schools. Yet, the classrooms of public schools are being reduced because the MSM touts the charter schools as the schools of choice. This is corporate propagandizing. Public schools have been taking the hit for lack of funding for too long. Dennis Kucinich knows this. This is why Gravel doesn't appeal to most people who believe in public education.
I thank you for helping me, and I look forward to your comments.
Ruthie
Mr Nadar, American doesn't need a reading assignment, it needs responsible leadership and citizen participation. We all have a few good books we can share in the unemployment lines or just give away because people that have to work two jobs have little time for reading.