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- From: odin@world.std.com (Hank Roth)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Subject: Universal Human Rights
- Message-ID: <1992Dec18.202252.6769@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 18 Dec 92 20:22:52 GMT
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- HUMAN RIGHTS
- by Hank Roth
-
- Universal Human Rights, as spelled out in various declarations,
- including the United Nation's Universal Declaration of Human
- Rights are practically useless when power is only vested in the
- hands of a few.
-
- Human rights became vogue towards the end of the
- eighteenth century and were strong enough to topple several
- powerful governments, but individual rights also were transformed
- into national rights and duties were imposed which also set limits
- to desire.
-
- Government by consent is not a modern idea, but in return for
- governance (protection, etc.) there were duties to the sovereign.
- And with greater rights there was also a dichotomy of rights,
- whereby natural rights became formal and description of status,
- which also legitimatized inequalities and that anomaly has become
- universal in modern capitalist societies.
-
- Marx explored these consequences of natural rights as
- conditions necessary for the accumulation of wealth by the
- bourgeoisie. To put this in other terms, it was, he felt, a
- meaningless mockery to those who were propertyless that
- there be rights to property, since ones status often
- prevented one from ever owning the means of production. And
- a natural right to work doesn't guarantee work. Eric Fromm speaks
- of America's cherished freedoms as the freedom to be poor,
- and thus free to starve, free to be homeless, etc.
-
- It would seem to me that we have also lost sight of the tendency
- to think in communal terms. Individualism has led to
- alienation and heightened egoism and selfishness.
-
- This movement today towards nationalism is a breaking with
- the communal nature of the world. More division is bound to
- lead to more differences. The United Nations started with 51
- countries and now there are close to 200.
-
- It has been established that human rights are no longer simply a
- matter of domestic jurisdiction, that the U.N. can issue decrees
- condemning national conduct (even if it is and can be ignored---as
- happened with us when the United States embargoed Nicaragua and
- mined its harbors.). The United States was been rightfully condemned
- for its embargo of Nicaragua and is rightfully criticized for its
- current embargo of Cuba because of the human cost.
-
- It was in 1926 that slavery was officially condemned and its
- abolition brought about by U.N. initiatives. Even though de facto
- slavery still exists when women are abused by husbands and kept
- from leaving their imprisonment as the law looks the other way or
- favors the man, and in other countries women are kept in their
- lower status; or a caste system is maintained in India, Pakistan,
- Bangledash, etc.
-
- In 1948 when the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- was passed by the General Assembly of the United Nations and
- declared it to be universal, it said that everyone should enjoy
- certains rights as basic, the right to life, liberty and securty,
- freedom from slavery, freedom from torture, freedom from
- discrimination and to equal protection of law, presumption of
- innocence until proved guilty, freedom of thought, conscience,
- religion, freedom of opinion and expression, rights to
- social security, right to work, right to equal pay for equal
- work (ERA) right to an adequate standard of living, right to
- education. Certainly not rights in the technical sense that
- they are legally enforceable. They meant these to be a basis
- for conduct. A really profound statement. To be apart of a
- customary international law and binding upon states in this
- international system, that is now breaking apart into many,
- many nations.
- *************************************************************************
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