I’m a total fan.
Have been since he made a name for himself with Unsafe at Any Speed, and blew my mind. How could anybody who grew up where I did be so smart, I
wondered. Didn’t seem
possible. My admiration went off
the charts when he not only got General Motors to make safer cars, but then
sued them for snooping into his private life and trying to prove he was a
homosexual. He won nearly half a
million dollars and used the money to launch a lifetime of worthy causes.
Ralph has a totally different perspective on Winsted. He never seemed to see it as
provincial, as I did, and apparently spent a whole lot less time aching to get
away. On the contrary, he
romanticizes the hell out of it as a place where people could walk to work,
where you could hear the cows moo one minute and drink their milk the next, and
where people gathered regularly for vigorous exchanges of opinion.
Come to think of it, we did have those exchanges in my
family, too. My father and his
brothers were Republicans, their father a Democrat, and all our family events –
Thanksgiving and Christmas and the 4th of July, were shouting
matches where the atmosphere got so hot somebody always had to leave the room
to cool off. That part I
liked. I liked school, too,
now that I think of it, and I remember Civics as an important course that
involved all of us in town government, where we actually attended town meetings
when I was in junior high school. It’s
just that I never thought of that as something to compensate for all the lonely
hours feeling like an outsider.
Ralph seems to be an exception in his boosterism. Others, such as this blogger, who have
written about Winsted see it as I do, and far less through rose-colored glasses.
The Nader family was exceptional. I doubt anybody would dispute that. Ralph’s mother, Rose, became an
activist in her own right. His
sister, Laura, made a name for herself as an anthropologist and teaches here at
Berkeley. She never ran for
president, but with 280 publications to her name, she’s no also-ran Nader. And their older brother Shafeek turned
the high school we all went to into Northwestern Connecticut Community College,
so he was no slouch, either. Nor,
for that matter was the fourth sibling, a sister, Claire, who was once chairman
of the board at the Council for Responsible Genetics, and has a Ph.D. in
political science. Obviously those
conversations around the table at dinnertime when the Nader kids were young had
a powerful effect.
Shafeek was born in 1926, Claire in 1928, Laura in 1930 and
Ralph, the baby, in 1934. That
means Ralph went through Central Junior High School and The Gilbert School
before me and I can’t claim him as a classmate. I just got a call from my friend Mary Ann, however, who
mentioned that he was often at their house, because he and her brother were
friends. Ralph was also friends
with David Halberstam, another Winsted notable I get to lay claim to. Halberstam was the New York Times
Pulitzer Prize winner for his work on the Vietnam War and author of a book that
pissed off JFK so badly he wanted the New York Times to fire him.
The Best and the Brightest,
if I remember right.
Not bad for a town of about 8000 people, don’t you think?
My admiration for the man lost its lustre when he looked and
felt for all the world like the spoiler in the Bush/Gore contest. I’m getting it back again, just
listening to him, still at it after all these years, still ploughing away at a
hopeless situation, complaining about people like me who throw up their hands
in despair at the loss of democracy.
We can get it back, he insists.
We just have to work locally and keep at it.
I recommend you give his arguments a good listen, if you
haven’t lately. Start with the
interview he gave with Christopher Lydon, who actually went to Winsted to walk
around with him.
Then, if you’d like more, read what he writes about growing
up in Winsted and in a family which has to be one of the all-time best known success
stories of child-rearing. We
should all have been so lucky. It’s called The Seventeen Traditions.
I urge you to buy the book and give Ralph the royalties. But I have to admit I read the book on
line and wouldn’t blame you for doing the same, since I didn’t want to wait and it was offered gratis.
And then to get an idea where Ralph’s mind is now, listen to
the common sense that he delivers so casually in an interview about his latest
book Seventeen Solutions.
One could do worse than share a home town with Ralph Nader.
One could do worse than share a home town with Ralph Nader.
picture credits: http://www.sterlingnametape.com/
3 comments:
"On the contrary, he romanticizes the hell out of it as a place where people could walk to work, where you could hear the cows moo one minute and drink their milk the next, and where people gathered regularly for vigorous exchanges of opinion."
You can flat write, Alan McCornick! And in Southern parlance (and, who knows, other parlances?), that's a huge compliment.
Thank you for your great blog, this new year's day C.E. 2013.
Wow! this is a great place to grow up in. This is a fun read :) Keep up the great work!
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