The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 7, 2000 - 5 C&A d(C ro C0 oxJCI&7'(C By Concerned Writers, Scholars, Artists, and Activists 2000 WE, THE UNDERSIGNED, are deeply disturbed by the continuing national campaign by Ralph Nader, which is growing ever more harmful as Election Day approaches. It is now plain that Mr. Nader is willing to make incredible statements and take unbelievable positions in order to gain the 5% of the vote he seeks. Instead of a liberal or progressive force, his campaign now seriously threatens to elect the dangerous George W. Bush to the presidency. Despite Mr. Nader's past great achievements, and despite the good faith of his rank-and-file supporters, his has now become a wrecking-ball campaign --one that betrays the very liberal, humane and progressive values it claims to uphold. Recently, Mr. Nader has said that: --IF GIVEN A CHOICE BETWEEN BUSH AND GORE, HE WOULD VOTE FOR BUSH. Mr. Nader would happily throw the country to the Right, placing the Supreme Court, the rest of the federal judiciary, and the entire executive regulatory system including the Food and Drug Administration in the hands of the most retrograde elements in our political life. (Outside Magazine, August 2000; see www.outsidemagazine.com/magazine/ 200008/200008campnaderlhtm) --ENVIRONMENTAL REACTIONARIES SERVE A POSITIVE FUNCTION. Mr. Nader has argued that past appointments like Reagan's Secretary of the Interior James Watt usefully serve as "provocateurs" for change. He has also denounced the Sierra Club and other long-standing allies for their "servile mentality" in not supporting him. (New York Times, October 29, 2000; www.msnbc.com/news/481662.asp) --THE REPEAL OF ROE V. WADE WOULD BE OF LITTLE CONSEQUENCE. Never a champion of women's rights, Mr. Nader claims that abortion rights might just as well be left up to the states. (This Week with Sam Donaldson, October 29, 2000, transcript at www.abcnews.com) -ALL U.S. AID TO ISRAEL SHOULD BE CUT. No matter what one thinks of the current situation in the Middle East, such rhetoric is not only irresponsible, it is inflammatory. (Common Dreams News Center, October 24, 2000.) But these are only the latest thoughtless utterances from Mr. Nader. From the start, he said his effort would help the Democrats gain votes in the House of Representatives -- while at the same time he has vilified the Democrats as no different than the Republicans. His supporters in various states talk about a "risk-free" Nader vote in places where Gore or Bush are strong - even as Mr. Nader himself aggressively looks for votes in liberal cities and on college campuses in vital toss-up states. (These toss-ups now may well include California.) Should Governor Bush be elected President, and the Republicans hold the Congress, conservative Republicans will have virtually captured firm control of all three branches of the Federal Government for the first time since 1930. Mr. Nader, who is also supporting Green congressional candidates who have no chance of winning in some tight races, apparently does not care about this -- or worse, seeks it, under the naive impression that it will heighten social contradictions and lead to what he has called "a progressive convulsion"-- that is, the worse, the better. This is sectarianism of a familiar sort in the century just past -- a sectarianism that had reaped nothing but political catastrophe. We implore all liberal and progressive voters to reject the Nader campaign on November 7 and to vote for Gore and Lieberman. Signatories (partial list; list in formation) Benjamin Barber, Rutgers University Paul Berman, writer and critic Michael Berube, University of Illinois Marco Calavita, film critic Ellen Chesler, writer and critic Mitchell Cohen, City University of New York, Dissent Bogdan Denitch, City University of New York Ronald Dworkin, New York University Dagoberto Gilb, writer Todd Gitlin, New York University Francisco Goldman, writer Mary Gordon, novelist and critic Hendrik Hertzberg, The New Yorker John B. Judis, The New Republic David Kusnet, writer and critic Jeremy Larner, writer and critic Wendy Lesser, The Threepenny Review Harold Meyerson, Los Angeles Weekly Toni Morrison, Nobel laureate, novelist and critic Jo-Ann Mort, Open Society Fund Brian Morton, novelist and critic David Osborne, writer (:,nrr - N,-L--.P r n2iC inn critic I I