Green Day
Alex Coolman
Green Party presidential nominee Ralph Nader swooped into Orange
County on Friday, and some of Costa Mesa’s Greens made the pilgrimage to
hear him speak.
The lanky candidate appeared before an overflowing auditorium at
Chapman University in Orange, slamming Republicans and Democrats for
being the pawns of corporate interests that he called craven, myopic and
greedy.
“The only difference between George Bush and Al Gore is the velocity
with which their knees hit the floor when the corporations knock on the
door,” Nader said of the Republican and Democratic nominees for
president.
Taking in the scene with apparent delight were residents Susan
Pallotta and Brian Reynolds, who had made the trip to see Nader with a
group of Newport-Mesa residents.
Pallotta, a business development manager for a software company, said
she planned to vote for Nader in November, having grown disillusioned
with the options offered by mainstream candidates. She said she didn’t
buy the argument that supporting third-party candidates amounted to
wasting a vote.
“Voting out of fear, voting to keep somebody else out of office -- to
me, that’s wasting a vote,” she said.
And voting for either of the two major parties is a waste, Reynolds
said.
“There’s corporate involvement and corporate backing with everything”
they do, he said.
Friday’s event also featured a speech from Green Party U.S. Senate
candidate Medea Benjamin, who called for a higher minimum wage, reforms
in international trade policies and massive defense cuts.
“I think one of the big surprises come Nov. 7 is going to be Orange
County going Green,” Benjamin told the crowd.
Not everyone in attendance was in love with the party line.
Student demonstrators, calling themselves anarchists, set up outside
the auditorium to protest what they called the authoritarian nature of
Green Party politics.
“We’re against all authority, even if it’s fuzzy Green Party
authority,” said one young woman, who gave her name only as “Chinchilla.”
The anarchists had been speaking to attendees for only a few minutes
before police officers arrived and ordered them to disperse.
Inside the auditorium, however, audience and candidates seemed to
agree on a great deal.
Nader dismissed Gore as an environmental fraud and hammered Bush for
his ties to big business.
“[Bush is] nothing more than a giant corporation running for president
disguised as a human being,” he said.
Wouldn’t the prospect of having such a character as president
encourage Pallotta to vote for Gore? Not anymore, she said.
“Election after election, people say ‘I don’t want to waste my vote,’
” she said. “I find the monopoly of power of these two parties more
frightening.”
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