Quotations
from the book
The Ralph Nader Reader
p36
Voter tools include a binding none-of-the-above option on the
ballot, which would trigger a new election if it received the
largest number of votes; term limitations of twelve years; public
financing of campaigns through well-publicized taxpayer checkoffs;
easier voter registration and ballot access rules; binding initiative,
referendum and recall authority in all fifty states and a non-binding
national referendum procedure.
p37
A new audience television and radio network, whose studios would
provide one hour of prime and drive-time programming on every
licensed station, would be set up. It would be controlled by viewer
and listener members in accordance with the principle that the
airwaves, which we legally own together as Americans, should be
more effectively controlled by and for the owners' direct benefit.
p41
The owners of the public lands, pension funds, savings accounts,
and the public airwaves are the American people, who have essentially
little or no control over their pooled assets or their commonwealth.
p43
Federal law says that the public owns the public airwaves which
are now leased for free by the Federal Communications Commission
to television and radio companies
p44
Presently the electronic broadcasting systems are overwhelmingly
used for entertainment, advertising and redundant news, certainly
not a fair reflection of what a serious society needs to communicate
in a complex age.
p58
... the tax code subsidizes foreign investment by U.S. corporations,
that the Export-Import Bank provides subsidies as loan guarantees
for U.S. multinationals operating abroad and that a federal agency,
called OPIC, insures these companies against political risks.
p65
The people legally own major national assets: $3 trillion in pension
funds, more than $2 trillion in savings deposits, hundreds of
billions more in insurance company equity, federal lands (one-third
of America), large blocs of shares of companies on the stock exchanges,
as well as the airwaves. Although the people own these assets,
they do not control any of them. Corporations do. Presidents have
ample backup power to preserve this split between ownership and
control, but they and Congress have little backup power to make
such ownership mean control.
p66
Societies rot from the top down.
p79
... we need a constitutional amendment that declares that corporations
are not persons and that they are only entitled to statutory protections
conferred by legislatures and through referendums. Only then will
the Constitution become the exclusive preserve of those whom the
Framers sought to protect: real people.
p91
Our history has demonstrated that the well-being of society springs
from the growth of daily, active citizenship that provides an
enabling environment for good leaders to come forth. Every significant
social movement m this century has sprung from active citizens
fighting for their cause - women's suffrage, workers' rights,
civil rights, environmental and consumer protection, peace. Put
in today's terms, citizens in our country need to spend more time
being citizens.
p133
General counsel and vice-president of Ford Motor Company, William
T. Gossett, 1957, about the modern business corporation:
"The modern stock corporation is a social and economic
institution that touches every aspect of our lives; in many ways
it is an institutionalized expression of our way of life. During
the past 50 years, industry in corporate form has moved from the
periphery to the very center of our social and economic existence.
Indeed, it is not inaccurate to say that we live in a corporate
society."
p133
Peter Drucker, 1996, fresh from a study of General Motors, about
the modern business corporation:
"What we look for in analyzing American society is therefore
the institution which sets the standard for the way of life and
the mode of living of our citizens; which leads, molds, and directs;
which determines our perspective on our own society; around which
crystallize our social problems and to which we look for their
solution ... And this ... in our society today is the large corporation."
p149
William Greider
"Leaving aside the financial and economic complexities, the
savings and loan bailout is most disturbing as a story of politics-a
grotesque case study of how representative democracy has been
deformed."
p149
Representative Jim Leach, R-Iowa, then a House Banking Committee
member and now the Committee chair, told the Los Angeles Times
in I989, about the S&L scandal:
"At every turn, any effort to rein in the thrifts' powers
and accountability has been shackled. If there ever has been a
case for campaign finance reform, this is it."
p149
In I996, Congress quietly handed over to existing broadcasters
the rights to broadcast digital television on the public airwaves-a
conveyance worth $70 billion-in exchange for... nothing.
Although the public owns the airwaves, the broadcasters have
never paid for the rights to use them. New digital technologies
now make possible the broadcast of digital television programming
(the equivalent of the switch from analog records to digitalized
compact disks), and the broadcasters sought rights to new portions
of the airwaves. In recent years, the Federal Communications Commission
has, properly, begun to recognize the large monetary value of
the licenses it conveys to use the public airwaves-including for
cell phones, beepers and similar uses-and typically auctions licenses.
The I996 Telecommunications Act, however, prohibited such an auction
`) for distribution of digital television licenses, the most valuable
of public airwave properties, and mandated that they be given
to existing broadcasters.
p150
The 1872 Mining Act
This nearly I30-year-old relic of efforts to settle the West allows
mining companies to claim federal lands for $5 an acre or less
and then take gold, silver, lead or other hard-rock minerals with
no royalty payments to the public treasury Thanks to the anachronistic
I872 Mining Act, mining companies-including foreign companies-extract
billions of dollars worth of minerals a year from federal lands,
royalty free.
From I987 to I994, the mining companies gave $I7 million in
campaign contributions to congressional candidates-a small price
to pay to preserve their right to extract $26 billion worth of
minerals, royalty free, during the same period. More recently,
in the I997-I998 election cycle, the industry- led by the National
Mining Association, Cyprus Amax Minerals, Drummond, Phelps Dodge
and Peabody Coal rained more than $2 million in contributions
on congressional candidates.
p155
We have 179 law schools and probably only fifteen of them offer
a single course of seminar on corporate crime.
p156
We own the public airwaves and the Federal Communications Commission
is our real estate agent. The radio and TV stations are the tenants
who are given licenses to dominate their part of the spectrum
24 hours a day and for four hours a day ...
p156
You pay more for your auto license than the biggest TV station
pays for its broadcast license.
p156
We have the greatest communications system in the world and we
have the most demeaning subject matter and the most curtailed
airing of public voices.
p157
The dismantling of democracy is perhaps now the most urgent aspect
of the corporatization of our society.
p342
Our society has the resources and the skills to keep injustice
at bay and to elevate the human condition to a state of enduring
compassion and creative fulfillment. How we go about using the
resources and skills has consequences which extend well beyond
our national borders to all the earth's people.
p337
It is what citizens do between elections that decides whether
elections are to be meaningful exercises of debate and decision
or whether they are to remain expensive contests between tweedledees
and tweedledums.
p337
... the blessings of liberty, will not come to pass until we cease
viewing citizen involvement as just a privilege and begin defining
our daily work to include citizenship toward public problems as
an obligation.
p338
There seems to be less and less relationship between the country's
total wealth and its willingness to solve the ills and injustices
that beset it.
p343
Democratic systems are based on the principle that all power comes
from the people.
p344
Too often, people who are properly outraged over injustice concentrate
so much on decrying the abuses and demanding the desired reforms
that they never build the instruments to accomplish their objectives
in a lasting manner.
p352
"Our country ... when right, to be kept right. When wrong,
to be put right."
p353
Citizenship has an obligation to cleanse patriotism of the misdeeds
done in its name abroad.
p353
There is no reason why patriotism has to be so heavily associated,
in the minds of the young as well as adults, with military exploits,
jets and missiles. Citizenship must include the duty to advance
our ideals actively into practice for a better community, country
and world, if peace is to prevail over war.
p354
A patriotism manipulated by the government asks only for a servile
nod from its subjects. A new patriotism requires a thinking assent
from its citizens.
p404
The information age has produced much information. We are inundated
with data and information, less so with knowledge, even less with
judgment, and almost not at all with wisdom.
p429
The public owns the airwaves. We lease it 24 hours a day, 365
days a year to broadcasters who pay no rent.
p431
The current regulatory regime for radio thwarts the First Amendment
rights and interests of most Americans. We speak little, if at
all, on our own airwaves, while the wealthy may speak through
radio by controlling who uses their stations and for what purposes.
p431
What good is freedom of speech if nobody can afford it? Is speech
truly free if only the wealthy can buy it?
Ralph
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