Re: Nader film

More than a little weird! As did his definition of personal loyalty,
when he was defending his attack on Joan Claybrook when she was in
the Carter admin. Loyalty for Ralph is all constructed around the
issue, and when there’s disagreement on the issue, then all all
claims to loyalty are off. He could have said that he had to disagree
but it was emotionally difficult for him, but whole portions of the
human sensibility seem to be missing in Nader.

Doug

On Feb 4, 2007, at 11:44 PM, Auguste Blanqui wrote:

I agree, though the zero-sum logic about having a girlfriend/wife/ family vs. doing public service was a little weird…

On 2/3/07, Doug Henwood < dhenwood@panix.com> wrote:We saw the
documentary about Ralph Nader, An Unreasonable Man , the other night. It’s quite good - mostly positive, but not cheerleader-y at all - and left both Liza & me with an increased admiration for the guy (that recent presidential thing aside). At a Q&A after the show, one of the filmmakers, Henriette Mantel, said that Lynne Stewart recently gave her a hard time for liking Ralph. She didn’t elaborate, but I’m guessing that Stewart thinks that a Gore admin would not have indicted her.

Doug

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