The following story seems to have been ignored by many of the newspapers I just checked (on the Web). While it was not exactly a slow news day, the event certainly felt important enough to be reported. NYC.IndyMedia.org reports: NADER SELLS OUT MADISON GARDEN by Mike Burke 11:04pm Fri Oct 13 '00 Green Party Candidate Ralph Nader sold out Madison Square Garden here in New York at the largest Nader "super rally" to date. Just two weeks after the Ralph Nader campaign secured the historic Madison Square Garden, thousands and thousands of supporters spent $20 each in what Nader described as the largest political event in the country. While two of his presidential opponents, Al Gore and George W. Bush have been struggling to keep the public interested in their lackluster campaigns (to find out why check out clips from their gentlemanly "debates" where viewers had to struggle mightily to spot their differences), Nader has seen a new surge of support capped off with a historic stop in New York Friday night. He will continue campaigning in New York City Saturday afternoon when he will speak at Riverside Church (on Riverside Drive, between 120 and 122 Streets in Harlem). He is one several speakers at the "Stop the Poisoning: Learn the Truth About Pesticides." The event is free and will go from 2:30 to 6 p.m. On Friday he lashed out at corporate America and the two parties that big businesse subsidizes, the Republicans and Democrats. Urging supporters to seek inspiration from great radicals of the American past including abolitionists and working farmers, Nader called for renewed civic duty and a stronger democracy - not corporate globalization but civic globalization. Nader shared the spotlight with a host of all-star musical stars including Patti Smith, Ani DiFranco, Eddie Vedder and Ben Harper as well as a couple surprise musical selections from Bob Roberts (aka Tim Robbins) including his mocking pro-drug war/ pro-death penalty tune "Drugs Stink." In addition former talk show host Phil Donahue, film maker Michael Moore and actor Bill Murray backed Nader's candidacy. After Nader's speech that touched upon more real issues than Bush and Gore have covered together in the past year on their gold-plated campaing trails, Patti Smith with help from Vedder, Harper and others ended the evening with an inspirational version of her tune "People Had the Power." And on Friday the power was with the thousands of Nader and Green Party supporters who have been marginalized by the mainstream media and the Commission on Presidential Debates which excluded Nader from participating. It is sad statement of our times that Nader has to rent out Madison Square Garden (and sell it out) in order to get attention. But when Eddie Vedder sang Friday night in his moving version of Bob Dylan's "The Times They Are a Changing" supporters could feel the politcal climate changing, warming up to Nader. After hosting similar super rallies in Portland, Minneapolis and Boston, Nader's campaign has gained the popular momentum where it can only get stronger in the next month. This will help create a wave of support for true progressive, democratic reform, if not in the White House, then on the city streets and country roads where Nader has reminded hundreds of thousands of supporters who has the real power. And its not the corporations. ------------------------------------------------------ This message has been sent as a Free Love mailing from artcontext.org. To be removed from this list, visit: http://artcontext.org/list/