Fill prisons with corporate criminals instead of non-violent drug offenders, said presidential candidate Ralph Nader at a press briefing at the Nader Gonzalez campaign headquarters. Nader called for a reversal of the War on Drugs, which unfairly targets minorities and the poor.
"Nader-Gonzales would shift the billions saved from the War on Drugs to a war on corporate crime," said Nader
Thousands of Americans die or are injured each year because of "preventable corporate violence," Nader said. 56,000 Americans die each year because of work-related diseases such as black lung and asbestosis.
Unlike presidential candidates Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and John McCain (R-Az.), Nader has a comprehensive plan to combat corporate crime and violence, according to Nader. With 2.1 million prisoners, the United States accounts for one-fourth of the world's prison population.
Nader's "12-point program" would increase power and resources for the Internal Revenue Service to chase down tax avoiders, grant shareholders of corporations the right to nominate and elect the board of directors, and impose a separation of commercial and investment banking services, which would prevent "conflicts of interest among financial entities." Nader's plan also asks publicly-traded corporations to unveil their tax returns to the public.
In 2004, Nader wrote a letter to President Bush asking him to grant clemency to 30,000 non-violent drug offenders incarcerated in American prisons. The letter recalled President Bush's use of cocaine and posited that if Bush had been imprisoned for his substance abuse, he would not have had such a successful career, Nader said.
End the violence of white-collar crime, says Nader
"Nader-Gonzales would shift the billions saved from the War on Drugs to a war on corporate crime," said Nader
Thousands of Americans die or are injured each year because of "preventable corporate violence," Nader said. 56,000 Americans die each year because of work-related diseases such as black lung and asbestosis.
Unlike presidential candidates Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and John McCain (R-Az.), Nader has a comprehensive plan to combat corporate crime and violence, according to Nader. With 2.1 million prisoners, the United States accounts for one-fourth of the world's prison population.
Nader's "12-point program" would increase power and resources for the Internal Revenue Service to chase down tax avoiders, grant shareholders of corporations the right to nominate and elect the board of directors, and impose a separation of commercial and investment banking services, which would prevent "conflicts of interest among financial entities." Nader's plan also asks publicly-traded corporations to unveil their tax returns to the public.
In 2004, Nader wrote a letter to President Bush asking him to grant clemency to 30,000 non-violent drug offenders incarcerated in American prisons. The letter recalled President Bush's use of cocaine and posited that if Bush had been imprisoned for his substance abuse, he would not have had such a successful career, Nader said.