[Reader-list] Ralph Nader, "White" Boy?

V Ramaswamy rama.sangye at gmail.com
Mon Nov 10 08:48:01 IST 2008


Nader's "Uncle Tom" comment is not in his "open letter". I believe that was
made in an interview on Fox tv.
>From what I understood (from an earlier age of literacy), the term "Uncle
Tom" was used by radical blacks, to refer to what they perceived as a
servile, non-threatening, accommodating attitude, of accepting the white
man's game and his domination but seeking something better for oneself
within that.

The term itself of course comes from the novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin", by
Harriet Beecher Stowe, where the protagonist, a slave, Uncle Tom, silently
suffers indignities, but never turns against his white masters, whom he
continues to love and whose overlordship he neither questions nor rejects.

If I am not wrong, Dr Martin Luther King had also been called "Uncle Tom" a
few times.

Ralph Nader has contested the US presidential election a few times. I don't
think he or anyone else seriously believes he will ever win. He has a
specific political objective in contesting the elections. To say certain
things, to raise certain issues, to ask certain questions. He is ultimately
a valuable asset to the US democratic system. In fact this time I was
surprised to learn - 2 days ago - that he had contested. That says how
marginalised he was in the mainstream media.

Even if no one else does so, perhaps Nader sees it as his task to say
certain things, to call a spade a spade. For instance, the whole
Israel-Palestine thing, on which he has elaborated in detail in his "open
letter". I was struck by the fact that notwithstanding Obama's bending over
backwards to please Israelis and thus American Jews,  most Israel-based
Americans apparently did not vote for Obama.

Electoral politics is, as we know, a dicey matter, a game that has to be
played cunningly. So I suppose non-cunning people should not be in that
game, and only cunning people will play. But I would like to think that
"cunning" need not always be a negative term! But I would also like to think
that by and by, the ways of electoral politics will change, and people can
by the force of their convictions, speak the truth, be honest, say what has
to be said, and yet prevail.

I would like to see Nader as a conscience keeper, rather than a sore,
sour-grapes loser, or sniveler. He is holding up the mirror to Obama. He is
challenging him with what he must do, if he is to be true to the
expectations and hope he has unleashed. I have learnt from life that one's
harshest critics turn out to be one's best supporters. "With enemies like
these, who needs friends!"

For those interested, I am mailing separately Vinay Lal's article on Obama
(written before his victory) that appears in the current EPW. And a blog
post that expressed the feelings unleashed by Obama's victory.

Best

V Ramaswamy
Calcutta
cuckooscall.blogspot.com


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