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In The Public Interest
Political Equivalence
by Ralph Nader
I wish to declare the principle of political equivalence as
grounds for the moral authority to govern through shared benefits and
sacrifices between these in Washington, D.C. who rule and the citizens
who are ruled.
Two simple, short bills in Congress will illustrate this major way to
improve the quality of public deliberation, enhance
the well-being of the populace and provide equity, now sorely lacking
as the gap between Congress, the White House and the people widens
recklessly.
The first legislation would state that anytime the Congress and the
White House plunge our country, either constitutionally or
unconstitutionally, into a war or significant armed conflict beyond our
borders, all age-qualified and able-bodied children and grandchildren
of all members of Congress and the President and Vice President will be
conscripted immediately into the armed forces.
President George W. Bush, who took our country into an illegal,
continuing war of aggression against Iraq in 2003 on
a platform of lies, deceptions and cover-ups, has caused the loss of
4,200 American lives, 100,000 injuries and over one million civilian
Iraqi lives.
At $14 million per hour, plus the long term expenses, this
war will cost taxpayers three trillion dollars according to Nobel
Laureate economist, Joseph Stieglitz. Imagine how many public
facilities throughout America such a sum could repair, expand and
modernize. Imagine the well-paying jobs
in every community.
Mr. Bush has stated often that the Iraq war and occupation has been
“worth the sacrifice.” By whom? Certainly not the Bush and Cheney
families. Their children, starting with
Jenna and Barbara, are enjoying their comfortable lives far from the
horrors inflicted on that distant country and its people.
The clear anticipation that the politician’s offspring be at
risk or, at the least, be very inconvenienced by commencing their
military career, would induce much more careful public deliberations on
Capitol Hill and in the White House.
As long as the political rulers, with the savoring corporate profiteers
by their side, can send other young Americans
to die and kill – mostly poor whites, African Americans and
Latinos—they will be more susceptible to be swept by emotions of giving
over their constitutional responsibilities
to presidential warmongers who bully and stampede them toward funding
violent follies.
Equivalence would provide members of Congress with incentives to avoid
the triad of being gutless, spineless,
and deliberately clueless so as to acquire deniability.
The second bill would stipulate that no member of Congress, and no
President, Vice President or Cabinet member would have any health
insurance, pension or other benefits until all Americans are provided
these long overdue essential benefits of a giant, modern economy.
With such equivalence, members of Congress would not be so cavalier
about indexing their salaries to inflation but denying such to the
federal minimum wage now wallowing
at $6.55 per hour. Inflation-adjusted since 1968, when labor
productivity was half of what it is today, the minimum wage would now
be $10 per hour. Even at that level, it would still be far less than
the $100 per hour, including benefits that Senators and Representatives
now receive.
In the nineteen thirties, John Maynard Keynes thought it would not be
long before high-productivity economies would solve what he called “the
economic problem.”
After World War II, Western European peoples, rising from the ruins of
that conflagration, secured for themselves universal health insurance,
decent wages, decent pensions, four-week paid vacation, paid maternity
and family sick leave. Most of these nations abolished the chronic
poverty such as that which exists and is growing in our country.
Who will introduce these two legislative bills? Congressman Dennis
Kucinich? Senator Russ Feingold? Will readers of
this column communicate with their members of Congress about the
wondrous effects of political equivalence on a
much needed sense of community between the rulers and
the ruled?
END.
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