They don't, but they owe it to themselves, because Dems will be that little bit more receptive than Reps, allowing green causes to be slowly embraced more and more. Take a page from the Christian Right's playbook, and you'll see how it's done. Heck, it's how politics and democracy is supposed to work- slowly! Those who have delusions of grandeur that they can change "the system" overnight are either hopelessly lost causes or will actually succeed- and be the kind of reformers that make the "trains run on time", if ya catch my drift. Fast changes in government, whether for ultimate good or bad, are undesirable- the long hard struggle for civil rights, for example, is the price we pay in a democracy to also have a long hard road towards things we won't like but in a few years of national wackiness we might embrace, such as fascism or eroding our own civil liberties. While these things can and do happen, in a democracy they are forced to happen slowly and therefore with more chance to stop them before they get too bad- which also means good change will likewise take a long time, even though historical hindsight will bemoan how long it took. Hey, it took a long time for corporations to be so deeply ingrained in politics- it'll take a long time to get them out.
Likewise, this tilting at windmills notion that Ralph was a realistic candidate is simply asinine- hey, if there were already a decent number of Green party senators and governors and congresspersons, then maybe you have a case that Nader was a legitimate candidate. But there wasn't, so Greens will have to focus on local, state, and federal elections to build a base for the presidential election, then revisit the whole White House thing down the road when Nader or someone else is ready for it. Sheesh!
posted by hincandenza at 1:50 PM on September 6, 2001
Exactly, that's what I said as well! My frustration with Nader is that he ran a quixotic campaign and seemed more interested in the odd notion of getting Bush elected so as to "scare" people into voting left down the road than in actual constructive change. It's like encouraging your best friend to cheat on his wife so that later after they divorce you can make your move on her...
posted by hincandenza at 5:38 PM on September 6, 2001
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Tim Robbins wrote an interesting piece for The Nation last month about why he voted Nader. I don't agree with a word of it and would like to throw Robbins and all other Nader voters off a bridge, but it's an interesting piece nonetheless.)
posted by rcade at 7:10 AM on September 6, 2001