-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Dave Hartley
http://www.asheville-computer.com/dave



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, February 22, 2000 1:24 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [LeadingEdgeResearch] Nader's Agenda for a New Democracy




An Agenda for a New Democracy

Control of our social institutions, our government, and our political
system is presently in the hands of a self-serving, powerful few, known
as an oligarchy, which too often has excluded citizens from the process.

Our political system has degenerated into a government of the power
brokers, by the power brokers, and for the power brokers, and is far
beyond the control or accountability of the citizens. It is an arrogant
and distant caricature of Jeffersonian democracy.

Originally written by Ralph Nader in 1992, The Concord Principles sets
forth ten arguments of how democracy has been abused, and the
constructive tools that citizens can use to regain their rightful
participation in their own destiny. Nader urges all Presidential
candidates to adhere to these principles in their campaigns and in
whatever public offices they may hold.

First:  Democracy must empower and enable citizens to obtain timely and
accurate information from their government, enable citizens to band
together in civic associations in pursuit of a just society, and
communicate their judgments through modern technology.

Second:  The American people should have reasonable control over the
public lands, public media airwaves, pension funds, and other societal
assets which the public legally owns, rather than having these public
assets controlled by a powerful few.

Third:  We need modern mechanisms so that civic power for
self-government and self-reliance can correct the often converging
power imbalance of Big Business and Big Government that weakens the
rights of citizens.

Fourth:  Citizens should have measures to ensure that their voting
powers are not diluted, over-run, or nullified. Such measures include
easier voter registration, state-level binding initiatives and
referendums , public financing of campaigns, and term limits not to
exceed 12 years.

Fifth:  Citizens must have full legal standing to challenge in the
courts the waste, fraud, and abuse of government spending. Overly
complex, mystifying jargon in our laws and procedures must be
simplified and clarified so that the general public is not shut out
from readily understanding and challenging them.

Sixth:  Citizens should be accorded computerized access in libraries
and in their homes to the full range of government information. Inserts
in billing statements from monopolized utilities and financial
companies should invite consumers to join consumer action watchdog
groups. The public, which owns the tv/cable/radio media airwaves, which
are leased for free to large commercial businesses, should have its own
Audience Network to inform, alert, and mobilize democratic citizen
debate and initiatives.

Seventh:  Effective legal protections are needed for ethical
whistleblowers who alert Americans to abuses or hazards to health and
safety in the workplace, or contaminate the environment, or defraud
citizens. Such conscientious workers need rights to ensure they will
not be fired or demoted for speaking out within the corporations, the
government, or in other bureaucracies.

Eighth:  Working people need a reasonable measure of control over how
their pension monies are invested, rather than it being controlled by
banks and insurance companies.

Ninth:  Shareholders, who are the owners of companies, should not have
their assets wasted or worker morale victimized by executives who give
themselves huge salaries, bonuses, greenmail, and golden parachutes,
self-perpetuating boards of directors, and a stifling of the proxy
voting system to block shareholder voting reforms.

Tenth:  Our country's schoolchildren need to be taught democratic
principles in their historic context and present relevance, with
practical civics experiences to develop their citizen skills and a
desire to use them, and so they will be nurtured to serve as a major
reservoir of future democracy.

The Concord Principles outlines the tools for enabling a better
informed and strengthened civic participation by citizens in their
roles as voters, taxpayers, consumers, workers, shareholders, and
students. All political candidates should commit to these principles
unless, that is, they just want your vote, but would rather not have
you looking over their shoulder from a position of knowledge, strength,
and wisdom.

Ralph Nader





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