Nader in Havana: U.S. should let Cubans breathe.
=================================================Granma.
10 July 2002.

HAVANA -- Former U.S. presidential candidate Ralph
Nader stated that he is opposed to the concentration of
power within corporations that is impeding the
development of democracy in his country, and criticized
his government's foreign policy on the island which, he
said, doesn't give Cubans a chance to breathe.

During an almost two-hour master lecture in the
University of Havana's Aula Magna, attended by
President Fidel Castro, Nader talked of the current relations between both countries, suggesting that the United States give Cuba the chance to breathe so that it can develop in its own way, without restrictions.

He also advocated that the island should transmit its experiences in various experiences to the rest of the world, and cooperation between the two nations,
particularly in the health sector.

Nader began by saying he would talk about symbols and
governments, the myths and realities of the United
States, some of whose past leaders had warned that a
concentration of wealth and power cannot co-exist with
democracy.

He explained how commercial values have overtaken the
interests of the U.S. people, thus weakening their
civil rights to the point that freedom could be lost
without even amending the Constitution.

If the United States is the greatest military power,
why does it have the highest rate of child poverty in
western democracies, Nader asked, pointing out that the
national level stands at 20%, rising to 30% in the
district of Columbia. Why has the U.S. economy doubled
but six million families are unable to pay their rent?

Nader enumerated a series of questions on the U.S.
system, highlighting that in the wake of September 11,
his country is now spending more on security than on
healthcare for its citizens.

The former presidential candidate, who did not discount
running again in 2004, also criticized the way in which
his country's two political parties establish barriers
to prevent other political groups participating in
government debates.

Wealth is currently concentrated in the hands of the
few, controlling elections, the Government and the
information media, he stated. Nader referred to civil
rights restrictions after September 11, affirming that
this has become the U.S. response every time it feels
threatened, no matter how distant that threat is.

He asked what would happen if his nation were exposed
to attacks, blockades and restrictions for 40 years.
What would happen? he repeated, leaving the answer open
to imagination.

In his opinion, the blockade has not managed to
destabilize the Cuban government, but has strengthened
it, and he questioned the U.S. authorities' double
standard on that point, comparing it with the attitude
of his country's citizens who are increasingly calling
for relations to be normalized.

He likewise believes that the U.S. press should make
more mention of Cuban society's achievements and
positive aspects.

Ralph Nader, Green Party candidate in the 2000
presidential elections, visited the island at the
invitation of the National Assembly of People's Power,
and was received by President Fidel Castro.

He has also met with Rosa Elena Simeon, minister of
science, technology and the environment; Alfredo
Morales, minister of labor and social security; Felipe
P‚rez Roque, minister of foreign affairs; and Osvaldo
Mart¡nez, president of the Parliamentary Economic
Commission. The rector of the University of Havana
presented Nader with a commemorative plaque celebrating
the 270th anniversary of the founding of that center of
higher education.