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| Nader speaking at BYU's Alternate Commencement |
It’s easier than you think. That’s the way I start discussions and interviews about my new book titled, “Seventeen Solutions.”
The “solutions” were selected for their long-overdue practicality,
fairness, efficiency, safety, employment potential and respect for
future generations. A majority of the people, sometimes a large
majority, support such redirections. The effects of many of the
“solutions” start being seen immediately.
Don’t most Americans believe and want strong law enforcement against
corporate crime and fraud and abuses against consumers, taxpayers, the
environment and workers? The first step is telling your member of
Congress to toughen the weak laws and beef up the law enforcement
budgets which will pay for themselves many, many times over in
deterrence, damage prevention to innocent people, and fines.
It has been taken off the table by both Democrats and Republicans,
but a majority of people (including physicians and nurses) want full
Medicare for all with free choice of doctor and hospital. Better
outcomes, simpler to use, far less expensive per capita, timely
diagnoses and treatment, and tens of thousands of American lives saved a
year, are the fruits.
Who in your communities doesn’t want public facilities (public works)
repaired and expanded to meet needs? Ending the vast disrepair in our
water and sewage systems, schools, clinics, libraries, public transit,
highways and bridges creates well-paying jobs that cannot be exported to
China.
Reducing the well-documented, bloated military budget, can release
monies for repairing America. Demilitarizing our foreign policy will
save the horrendous costs and after costs of these boomeranging wars of
aggressive choice.
Get Congress to have “skin in the game,” such as no health and other
benefits for them, unless all people have them. There would be no
taking our country into war without all able-bodied and age-qualified
children of the Senators and Representatives being drafted into the
armed forces. This duty will encourage Congress to attend to its
deliberative, constitutional obligations and not heave them over to a
lawless, out-of-control presidency.
Build family and community resistance and engage in alternatives to
the commercial exploitation of children by non-stop big corporate
marketers. These tricksters undermine and bypass parental authority to
sell children junk food, violent programming and other things corrosive
of their minds and bodies. Want to poll parent’s reactions to those
tricks among beleaguered parents who have lost much control of their
children to corporatism?
Getting corporations off welfare, making them pay their fair share of
taxes (GE is a profitable tax escapee that even gets checks from the
Treasury Department due to the rigged tax code), taxing dividends and
capital gains the same as ordinary income of working people, and
imposing a tiny sales tax on massive Wall Street speculation are changes
an overwhelming number of people support.
These advances, along with restoring our civil liberties, using
regular government purchasing specifications for better goods and
services to stimulate innovation and safety with our tax dollars, are
easier than you think. The engine for these changes is organizing
Congressional watchdog groups in every Congressional District around
these and other solutions. Taking democratic control of the 535 members
of Congress, with its ample constitutional authorities, is a lot easier
than you think.
Moving our consumer dollars away from global corporations to local
community banks, credit unions, farmer markets, renewable energy, and
community health clinics, with emphasis on prevention, is a lot easier
than you think. Stronger local economies are more self-reliant, they
won’t be shut down and shipped away or abroad by absentee owners making
life-altering unaccountable decisions in their skyscrapers.
Local democracy is, like most ventures in life, a learning process of
civic skills and experience. Starting in elementary and high schools,
youngsters can shed their apathy or despair by working on real problems
in the communities as part of their school-to-community courses. Look
at all those high school physics, biology, and chemistry labs that, for
example, can be testing air, water, soil samples and electromagnetic
levels, and reporting the results to their community.
Studying books such as the newly released Slow Democracy (Chelsea Press, 2012) will give you many examples and tools to demonstrate that it’s easier than you think.
Last September, prominent Cornell Economics Professor, Robert Frank wrote a column for The New York Times
with the headline “Nation’s Choices Needn’t Be Painful.” He wrote of
infrastructure capital improvement programs, new tax policies, reducing
highway congestion, curbing carbon emissions and other remedial actions
that pay off.
Professor Frank, who told me he’s going to write “a small book” on
his assertions, says “the endless hand-wringing about painful economic
choices is misguided. With a few simple policy changes, we could
restore full employment, rebuild crumbling infrastructure and pay down
the national debt without requiring real sacrifices from anyone.”
Making all this and more happen needs some three million Americans
(the other one percent) organized and focused on Congress and state
legislatures in ways that reflect the “public sentiment.” We have to
stop being so discouraged and solution-averse, especially since we have
so many solutions already on the shelf, but not on the ground, because
we’ve let the few make so many centralized, top-down decisions for us –
“we the people.”
No one can stop us from taking these initiatives, except, that is,
ourselves. To send us your “solutions” and to order an autographed copy
of Seventeen Solutions, visit: http://www.seventeensolutions.com/
Source: The Nader Page
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