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Ralph Nader, corporate reformers speak
WASHINGTON, D.C., April 6, 2002 - With a giant corporate shredder shredding away in front of the Capitol, today Ralph Nader and representatives from several public interest, consumer, and labor organizations made it clear that corporate rule in America is bad for democracy, dangerous for the environment, unfair to workers, and inimical to the Constitution. The giant corporate shredder, a true sight to behold at 240 cubic feet, was working overtime today as demonstrators dressed as anonymous corporate executives fed the hungry shredder cherished American values like truth, justice, democracy, families, communities, and spirituality, all in relentless pursuit of profits and power. The event was part of Big Business Day, Citizen Works' national day of action against corporate rule in America with activities in more than 100 locations throughout the country, from Puerto Rico to Portland, Oregon. All over America, citizens took to the streets in protest, theater, and parades to talk about how Big Business is hurting them in their local communities and to discuss the role big corporations play in their lives. At the D.C. event,
consumer advocate and Citizen Works founder Ralph Nader called
on the government to do its long-neglected duty and police corporate crime.
Mildred Brown,
legislative representative of ACORN, spoke about how corporate
greed hurts low-income families. Karen Friedman,
director of policy strategies at the Pension Rights Center, spoke
about how a failure in both the public and private sectors caused the
Enron pension disaster. Lisa Gue, policy
analyst with Public Citizen's Critical Mall Energy and Environment
Program, spoke about how the nuclear industry is endangering the well-being
of 50 million Americans to create a dump at Yucca Mountain. Stephen Kretzmann,
Campaigns Director for the Sustainable Energy & Economy Network at the
Institute for Policy Studies, spoke about how Enron ruthlessly
used $7.2 billion in public financing to build its global network. Chris Townsend,
political action director of United Electrical Workers Union spoke
of the failure of our government to crack down on corporate crime. Tom Devine,
legislative director for the Government Accountability Project,
spoke about the need for increased whistleblower protection to prevent
future corporate disasters sustained by secrecy that threaten the public
and shareholders. For more information on National Big Business Day click here or contact Lee Drutman at Citizen Works at 202-265-6164 or ldrutman@citizenworks.org. Citizen Works is a nonprofit founded by Ralph Nader to advance justice by strengthening citizen participation in power. We give people the tools and opportunities to build democracy. ###
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