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Book reviews for "Nader,_Ralph" sorted by average review score:

Canada Firsts
Published in Paperback by Yankee Books (1990)
Author: Ralph Nader
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Nader give Canada some of its long overdue recognition
This book is as it says a "salute to Canada and Canadian achievement." It includes some well known, several lesser known and some unexpected Canadian firsts. A must for anyone who wants to understand more about Canada and does not want a textbook like book. It is well organized with short free standing sections and entries. In short, it is a very interesting book that gives a breif overview of Canadian achievement.


The Case Against Free Trade: Gatt, Nafta and the Globalization of Corporate Power (An Earth Island Press Book)
Published in Paperback by North Atlantic Books (1993)
Authors: Ralph Nader, William Greider, Margaret Atwood, David Philips, and Pat Choate
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It'll Change your Mind
This is an excellent book written by some of the leading authorities on NAFTA and GATT (Including Ralph Nader). Each "chapter" written by a different person is short and to the point. You can read as much or as little as you want, without feeling the need to finish the chapter. This book WILL make you sweat with anger at points. It is an excellent read.


Cash for the Final Days: A Financial Guide for the Terminally Ill and Their Advisors
Published in Paperback by Bialkin Books (1997)
Authors: Gloria Grening Wolk and Ralph Nader
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Vital info to the terminally ill who dont want to die poor
As a social worker and PWA --I have seen the effects of not planning or even worse not utlizing a benefit wisely.I have benefited not only from the financial planning advice that Ms. Wolk has offered --as well as the peace of mind that maximizing the use of assess such as life insurance to bring joy (a few trips, nice dinners) to the life which is deserved when facing the uncertainties of terminal diseases. the old science writers axiom:There are two headlines in medical reporting, "Drug X found to have highly effective in treating blank disease"and "Drug X found to cause...severe side effects and ....other horrible things.The war is not over why die poorer than you need to.


Cybermedicine: How Computing Empowers Doctors and Patients for Better Care, Revised and Updated
Published in Paperback by Jossey-Bass (15 August, 2001)
Authors: Warner V. Slack and Ralph Nader
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The computer can improve and simplify medical care
The 2001 version of Slack's Cybermedicine, although having the same title as the 1997 volume, is much more than simply a paperback edition. Cybermedicine is using the computer as a tool for medical care rather than an adjunct to administration. Slack has kept abreast of the fast-changing computer world and has added a good deal of new material. The book is eminently readable, with both content and language understandable by lay people as well as physicians and computer experts. He demonstrates compellingly that the computer can be "friendly"and can simplify life for both physician and patient, can improve dramatically the quality of patient care, and can help to control its cost.


Nader: The People's Lawyer,
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (1972)
Author: Robert F., Buckhorn
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The man who deserves the world.
Ralph Nader, in one word... genious. This man was my hero before I read the book, this just heightens my belief in him. He stands up for what he believes, never backs down, and will fight forever. He shut down the production of the corvair because it had defects that turned out to be deadly. He stood up to the corporate power of GM. Great man. Nader.


Ralph Nader: Man With A Missio
Published in Library Binding by 21st Century Books (2002)
Author: Nancy Bowen
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Excellent for reports
Nancy Bowen's Ralph Nader: Man With A Mission provides over a hundred forty pages of information on Nader's activities as a consumer activist, his involvement with human rights campaigns, and his political encouragement of reforms. Excellent for reports.


Unsafe at any speed; the designed-in dangers of the American automobile
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Author: Ralph Nader
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A must for persons interested in Road Safety
As a Traffic Safety Specialist, this book is a MUST, this old book needs to be mandatory reading for any person interested in Road Safety, Ralph documented the resistance of car companies to the introduction of safety features, like safety belts, that looks timely today, for example with the lobby that produce a delay in the mandatory fitting of air bags. Also you will learn how the primitive road safety components, still used in USA, called the three E's (Engineering, Enforcement, Education ) was born as a device to direct the efforts to the community away from the real problems of safety of the vehicles, some of the that was sell with tires that don't resist the weight of the fully loaded vehicle !.

Finally you can understand the lacking level of road safety in US versus European countries that have in service safety policies that will reduce the absolute number of killed by 30% over 5 years.

This book is the necessary building stone to the effort to make car manufacturers accountable for the safety level of his products.

I can't understand why some publisher is not doing a new edition of it.


No Contest: Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America
Published in Paperback by Random House Trade Paperbacks (1999)
Authors: Ralph Nader and Wesley J. Smith
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Essential for lawyers or anyone interested in justice
This is one of my favorite books I've read in recent years. It opens your eyes to the horrible tactics used by corporate lawyers to deny victims their full day in court. Also, Nader and Smith present bulletproof arguments against tort reform. You will learn a TON by reading this.

Required Reading for Law Students
As a law student, I have to say that this should be on every law students "must-read" list! Nader and Smith clearly describe the hardball ruthless tactics used by today's corporate lawyers. This is not the kind of stuff they teach you in law school!

It took real guts and courage to expose the unethical tactics used by too many lawyers today, and I'm grateful that they did so. Highly recommended.

THOSE SUE-HAPPY CORPORATIONS
Beware of the multinational corporations. Not only do they stick it to the taxpayers in forms of bailouts, tax "incentives", and other similar accounts recievable, they are quite willing to stick it to citizens in court and screw up the meaning of the word "due process" in America and the world. A sad commentary on our justice system but a MUST READ.


Nader: Crusader, Spoiler, Icon
Published in Hardcover by Perseus Publishing (15 October, 2002)
Author: Justin Martin
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Ralph Nader Makes a Little More Sense Now
I read this book because I admire Nader and I wanted to find out more about him. Nader: Crusader, Spoiler Icon is a very detailed and well-written book. It doesn't waste too much time on his childhood but instead dives into the interesting stuff: the work Nader tirelessly did to make the country better.

I was hoping for some more info on Nader's private life, but apparently he never really had one. When you work 18-20 hours a day, 7 days a week there isn't much time for leisure. I enjoyed reading about his ascent to power and (being 22) I never realized how much power he had when he was in his prime. This book is quite balanced: it covers his successes as well his wacky failures. Example: Fight to Advance the Nation's Sports, a silly campaign against bad food and high ticket prices at sports games. We learn about Nader's extreme myopia, fighting hard to get something done and mercilessly lambasting anyone who gets in his way, even former allies. Apparently Nader developed a bad habit of alienating people when he needed them the most.

In the end, despite learning of Nader's many blunders, I came away respecting the guy more than I did before. He is certainly one of the most important people of the twentieth century. Never have I come across a figure in history who so throroughly rejects the pleasures of life in favor of a constant devotion to the cause. Nader is, apparently, something of a secular saint. If you want to get the inside scoop on the battles Nader fought, I recommend this book.

The PR Guy Who Reads
I gotta say, who knew this guy was this cool? I kind of thought Ralph Nader had a story behind him. And here I find it in full living color. Martin, who wrote the fab Greenspan book from the high falutin era, now takes on an "icon" whom no one really knows...which is the point. Since Nader's plan was to stay silent and mysterious so it is wild to see Martin foil it in such an artist, comprehensive and above all, surprisingly fun manner. (Nader with his clothes off, so to speak...) I'm sure no one expected to see 'fun' and 'Nader' in the same sentence and in this book you finally get to see what all the fuss was about. I'd stood at a brick bookstore perusing a copy of Nader's quasi-autobio and thought "What is this?" Was all jargonish propoganda. This book is terrific and fascinating cause Martin goes for the jugular in a style that is refreshing - and yet not muckraking in the least. I say this bio is a new form of art: taking the wraps off someone no one knew or even thought of as more than a figurehead, and showing what that person has really done - and the consequences too. Oh and the cool part - that he's more than a political geek, that's for dessert.

Balanced (though not overly favorable) view of Nader
I've long followed the career Ralph Nader, so when
I saw NADER: CRUSADER, SPOILER, ICON by Justin
Martin, I just had to read it . . . and I'm
glad I did, in that in doing so, I came away with a balanced
(though not overly favorable) view of the consumer advocate
that I have long admired.

Nader has been tireless in his efforts to bring about change
in America . . . while sometimes spreading himself too thin,
he nevertheless has accomplished a great deal in his lifetime.

Though he tries to deny it, Nader had a profound impact on the
last presidential election . . . this book helped give me
a better understanding as to his thinking on why he ran.

I also came away with the impression that he rarely sleeps . . . and I got a chuckle out of the description of one appearance with Jay Leno . . . when asked about what he did for fun, he said "no" to dating and movies . . . but when pressed, he did finally admit that he ate strawberries!

There were many memorable passages; among them:
* Alan Morrison--a longtime friend and colleague of Nader's--has the following observation: "I have never known anybody who has more ideas about more things than Ralph. He's not interested in two or three or five or ten things. He's interested in a million. He sees things differently
from everybody else. He just sees injustices, unfairness, and improper ways of handling situations that everyone else just accepts. He has a cosmic view of these things, very broad, but at the same time, he is a person who pays enormous attention to details. I never met anybody who can think so big and think so small at the same time."

* As a boss, Nader remained an original. He once claimed that his number-one criterion for hiring people was that they be thick-skinned. "People often ask me how I choose the people to work with me," he explained. "Well, you start off by saying they have to be bright, hard-working, the usual traits. But the one key probably is how willing they are not to be loved."

* Nader asked [Bobby] Fischer his secret. Fischer explained that there was calculation in many of his decisions, whether showing up late to matches, canceling interviews, even refusing an invitation to visit the White House. It made him seem like a
temperamental genius, even more than he actually was, and the
public ate it up. "If you want to get attention to the game, you have to manipulate the press," Fischer explained.

For Nader, this was confirmation of his own instincts. His aim was to draw attention to the cause of consumerism. During this era, he was a marionette master when it came to the press. At every opportunity, Nader cast himself as an indefatigable advocate, grave, selfless, working away while the innocent citizenry sleeps. This had the advantage of not being too far from the truth. But it was not the whole truth.


Crashing the Party: How to Tell the Truth and Still Run for President
Published in Digital by St. Martin's Press ()
Author: Ralph Nader
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It's all true, but slow paced and sometimes hard to read
Nader's fundamental failure; he tells us what we don't want to hear. It is also what makes him one of the most important citizens of our nation today. If you are interested in knowing more about the Nader phenomenom, interested in learning about the campaign after the abysmal failure of the mainstream media to cover it even when the campaign was drawing 10,000 people who paid to hear him speak, this is a good book for you.
It is also a book that will require substantial careful reading, and unfortunately, Nader's dry personality comes across very clearly in the book. Having met the man once, it's something that he can't escape, no matter how compelling and important the material he is discussing. He certainly learned a lot about public speaking over the course of the campaign, but we Greens need to acknowledge that his lack of charisma was certainly a factor in his lack of coverage. (Compare gonzo Reform Party politician Ross Perot),
Nader also has a self-righteous streak in him that can be quite distracting from the content. We all know that Nader isn't perfect, but to hear him speak about himself, he is. He's not a lovable character; like medicine, he's just what we need. In short, you need to be really interested in the topic or a die-hard fan to enjoy this book. I'm both, so I liked it, but I can't reccomend without those caveats. It was much more entertaining to read the book I bought this with, Michael Moore's "Stupid White Men."

"Must Read" Indictment of Both Major Parties


I was among those who thought Ralph Nader was a "spoiler" and deprived Al Gore of the election. After reading this book, I now realize that Nader is correct-the major premise of his book is that both the Democratic and Republican parties have become so corrupt and so removed from citizen interests as to be identically disqualified from putting forward viable candidates for the future. He puts forth a vision for a new democracy in which the citizens take back the power and demand that third party candidates be allowed to join the Presidential debates and be heard by America.

Some will accuse Nader of name-dropping and self-aggrandizing in this book, but that is an unfair charge. He has dedicated 40 years of his life to a quest for fairness in American life. As I went through the book and reflected on his very early efforts on everything from women's rights to product safety to the environment I could not help thinking that the breadth and substance of his accomplishments make the Democratic and Republican candidates look like Johnny-come-latelys who are also bluffing snake oil salesmen. This guy is "the real deal."

I recommend that two books be read prior to reading this one: Halstead & Lind's "The Radical Center: The Future of American Politics" and Ray & Anderson's "The Cultural Creatives: How 50 Million People are Changing the World". Two other books could add useful underpinnings to the points Nader makes that I summarize below: Lewis' "LOSERS: The Road to Everyplace but the White House" which immortalizes citizen-businessman Morry Taylor (the "Grizz"); and Williamson's "IMAGINE: What America Could be in the 21st Century."

A few points about Nader's book that I hope will dispel all the negative reviews and demonstrate that this is required reading:

1) This is the only book that addresses the totality of the challenges and threats to America in a sensible balanced way, without platitudes and upon a foundation of fact.

2) This is the only book representing the new political paradigm in which the citizen-voters take back the power by wiping out the ability of corporations to buy politicians.

3) This is the only book that thoughtfully and convincingly demonstrates that the Democrats have morphed into shadow Republicans, and both parties have completely lost their ethical and popular foundation.

4) This is the only book that bluntly confronts the fact that we get the government we deserve--democracy is hard work and demands citizen time and thought.

5) Among the useful details that should outrage and mobilize citizens, and all according to Nader:

a) the Commission on Presidential Debates is a fraud perpetrated upon the public--it is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Democratic and Republic parties created explicitly to displace the more honest League of Women Voters and to bar third party candidates from being visible to America in the crucial Presidential debates.

b) there is an incestuous relationship between the media, the polls (most funded by the media) and the Presidential debate and public policy process.

c) global threats are not well-understood by Americans, and a major effort spanning the next generation must be undertaken to restore global or foreign affairs and foreign trade understanding to the public.

d) public budgets are neither public nor honest. They are massively distorted with a "proliferating array of taxpayer subsidies, giveaways, and bailouts (known as corporate welfare) to corporations." A recurring theme in Nader's book, based on factual legally-viable documentation, is the manner in which corporations are looting the commonwealth with the active connivance of our elected officials. The people need to wise up.

e) the Internet has *not* has the anticipated leveling effect of bringing out citizen-voters to take back the power and stop corporate socialism.

f) the non-profit organizations and popular organizations (e.g. the Sierra Club, the AFL-CIO) consistently misrepresent their members by choosing the "lesser of two evils" in the two traditionalist corporate candidates, not realizing that a) a lesser evil is still evil and b) their members are smart enough to consider third party alternatives and could--if enough such organizations banded together, cause a third party to be instantly visible as a mainstream alternative.

g) the public commonwealth (the airwaves, land, water, etc.) has been taken away from the people. It is time to get it back and demand, as one small example, that those using the airwaves granted by the public provide for free political time for all viable candidates, ending the advertising rip-off that also deprives the people of clear access to all competing views.

h) community building from the neighborhood up is the place to start. We need to focus on empowering and exciting the young people and building a cadre of volunteer civic activists that will sustain progressive public interests for the decades to come.

I would make one personal observation that was inspired by reading this book: I do not believe that any one President, from any party, is viable as a "one click" choice for leading America. In my view, the next President should not be elected without two fundamental changes in how we elect Presidents: 1) instant run-off voting must be enacted, allowing second choice votes to play a role if a third party candidate is not elected (while qualifying the third party for funding in future elections based on the first choice vote); and 2) Cabinets must be announced in advance of the election and be the focus of at least one Presidential debate including at least three but ideally four parties. It is time for a third party candidate to pull together a Cabinet that includes the best choice for key posts irrespective of parties, and specifically including the Pat Buchanan's, Sam Nunns, Colin Powells, and key others like Ross Perot, Morry Taylor, even Jello Biafra (as new Minister of Culture!).

This is really a superb book, in the tradition the Committees of Correspondence that helped bring about the American revolution, and I recommend it to all.

Great book, great ideas...
I'm 20 years of age (not a rich yuppy as one reviewer might assume) and was a close follower of the Ralph Nader 2000 campaign. His politics are about empowerment, democracy, and justice. How can you disagree with that?
If you are doubtful of Ralph's intentions in running for president, if you were with him all the way, or if you're just looking for hope in light of the current state of America, you'll gain a lot from this book.
Don't believe the spoiler allegations! Read this book and you'll see that the real spoilers are those that are quick to make these accusations. This book is one third diary, one third republicrat/corporate political system critique, and one third looking ahead to the future of grassroots politics. And, as always, Ralph Nader backs himself up with plenty of facts and first person experiences. Even if you're not a Ralph Nader fan, this book is worth the read for its revealing look at American politics. You don't believe that we can have more than one and a half choices? Just look at Canada - they had five people in their presidential debates. America has a strong history of third parties and movements for justice. Ralph offers intellect, experience, and an unmatchable strive for a better America that will leave you with higher expectations, a renewed desire to do your part, and hope that this movement for social justice and democracy will soon overcome.


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