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The United States and the "Challenge of Relativity"
In Tony Evans (ed.), Human Rights Fifty Years on: A Reappraisal, Manchester University Press, November, 1998
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| The adoption of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 1948
constituted a step forward in the slow progress towards protection
of human rights. The overarching principle of the UD is
universality. Its provisions have equal standing. There are no
moral grounds for self-serving "relativism," which selects
for convenience; still less for the particularly ugly form of
relativism that converts the UD into a weapon to wield selectively
against designated enemies. The
50th anniversary of the UD provides a welcome occasion for
reflection on such matters, and for steps to advance the principles
that have been endorsed, at least rhetorically, by the nations of
the world. The chasm that separates words from actions
requires no comment; the annual reports of the major human rights
organizations provide more than ample testimony. And there is no
shortage of impressive rhetoric. One would have to search far
to find a place where leadership and intellectuals do not issue
ringing endorsements of the principles and bitter condemnation of
those who violate them -- notably excluding themselves and their
associates and clients. I
will limit attention here to a single case: the world's most
powerful state, which also has the most stable and longstanding
democratic institutions and unparalleled advantages in every sphere,
including the economy and security concerns. Its global
influence has been unmatched during the half century when the UD has
been in force (in theory). It has long been as good a model as
one can find of a sociopolitical order in which basic rights are
upheld. And it is commonly lauded, at home and abroad, as the
leader in the struggle for human rights, democracy, freedom and
justice. There remains a range of disagreement over policy: at
one extreme, "Wilson idealists" urge continued dedication
to the traditional mission of upholding human rights and freedom
worldwide, while "realists" counter that America may lack
the means to conduct these crusades of "global meliorism"
and should not neglect its own interests in the service of others.
By "granting idealism a near exclusive hold on our foreign
policy," we go too far, high government officials warn, with
the agreement of many scholars and policy analysts. Within this
range lies the path to a better world. To
discover the true meaning of principles that are proclaimed, it is
of course necessary to go beyond rhetorical flourishes and public
pronouncements, and to investigate actual practice. Examples must be
chosen carefully to give a fair picture. One useful approach
is to take the examples chosen as the "strongest case,"
and to see how well they withstand scrutiny. Another is to
investigate the record where influence is greatest and interference
least, so that we see the operative principles in their purest form.
If we want to determine what the Kremlin meant by human rights and
democracy, we pay little heed to Pravda’s denunciations of
racism in the United States or state terror in its client regimes,
even less to protestation of noble motives. Far more
instructive is the state of affairs in the "people's
democracies" of Eastern Europe. The point is elementary,
and applies generally. For the U.S., the Western hemisphere is
the obvious testing ground, particularly the Central
America-Caribbean region, where Washington has faced few external
challenges for almost a century. It is of some interest that
the exercise is rarely undertaken, and when it is, castigated as
extremist or worse. Before
examining the operative meaning of the UD, it might be useful to
recall some observations of George Orwell's. In his preface to
Animal Farm As
if to illustrate his words, the preface remained unpublished for 30
years. In
the case under discussion here, the "prevailing orthodoxy"
is well summarized by the distinguished Oxford-Yale historian
Michael Howard: "For 200 years the United States has preserved
almost unsullied the original ideals of the Enlightenment..., and,
above all, the universality of these values," though it
"does not enjoy the place in the world that it should have
earned through its achievements, its generosity, and its goodwill
since World War II." The record is unsullied by the treatment
of "that hapless race of native Americans, which we are
exterminating with such merciless and perfidious cruelty" (John
Quincy Adams) or the fate of the slaves who provided cheap cotton to
allow the industrial revolution to take off -- not exactly through
market forces; by the terrible atrocities the U.S. was once again
conducting in its "backyard" as the praises were being
delivered; or by the fate of Filipinos, Haitians, Vietnamese, and a
few others who might have somewhat different perceptions. The
favored illustration of "generosity and goodwill" is the
Marshall Plan. That merits examination, on the "strongest
case" principle. The inquiry again quickly yields facts
"that `it wouldn't do' to mention." For example, the fact
that "as the Marshall Plan went into full gear the amount of
American dollars being pumped into France and the Netherlands was
approximately equaled by the funds being siphoned from their
treasuries to finance their expeditionary forces in Southeast
Asia," to carry out terrible crimes. And that the tied
aid provisions help explain why the U.S. share in world trade in
grains increased from less than 10% before the war to more than half
by 1950, while Argentine exports reduced by two-thirds. And
that under U.S. influence Europe was reconstructed in a particular
mode, not quite that sought by the anti-fascist resistance, though
fascist and Nazi collaborators were generally satisfied. And
that the generosity was overwhelmingly bestowed by American
taxpayers upon the corporate sector, which was duly appreciative,
recognizing years later that the Marshall Plan "set the stage
for large amounts of private U.S. direct investment in Europe,"
establishing the basis for the modern Transnational Corporations,
which "prospered and expanded on overseas orders,...fueled
initially by the dollars of the Marshall Plan" and protected
from "negative developments" by "the umbrella of
American power." It
is, again, of some interest that thoughts of that nature were
"silenced with surprising effectiveness" during the 50th
anniversary celebration of this unprecedented act of generosity and
goodwill, the strongest case put forth by admirers of the
"global meliorism" of the world's most powerful state,
hence of direct relevance to the question being addressed here. The
"prevailing orthodoxy" has occasionally been submitted to
tests beyond the record of history. Lars Schoultz, the leading
academic specialist on human rights in Latin America, found that
U.S. aid "has tended to flow disproportionately to Latin
American governments which torture their citizens,... to the
hemisphere's relatively egregious violators of fundamental human
rights." That includes military aid, is independent of need,
and runs through the Carter period. More wide-ranging studies
by economist Edward Herman found a similar correlation world-wide,
also suggesting a plausible reason: aid is correlated with
improvement in the investment climate, often achieved by murdering
priests and union leaders, massacring peasants trying to organize,
blowing up the independent press, and so on. The result is a
secondary correlation between aid and egregious violation of human
rights. It is not that U.S. leaders prefer torture; rather, it has
little weight in comparison with more important values. These
studies precede the Reagan years, when the questions are not worth
posing. By
"general tacit agreement," such matters too are "kept
dark," with memories purged of "inconvenient facts." The
natural starting point for an inquiry into Washington's defense of
"the universality of [Enlightenment] values" is the UD.
It is accepted generally as a human rights standard. U.S.
courts have, furthermore, based judicial decisions on
"customary international law, as evidenced and defined by the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights." The
UD became the focus of great attention in June 1993 at the World
Conference on Human Rights in Vienna. A lead headline in the New
York Times read: "At Vienna Talks, U.S. Insists Rights Must
be Universal." Washington warned "that it would oppose any
attempt to use religious and cultural traditions to weaken the
concept of universal human rights," Elaine Sciolino reported.
The U.S. delegation was headed by Secretary of State Warren
Christopher, "who promoted human rights as Deputy Secretary of
State in the Carter Administration." A "key purpose"
of his speech, "viewed as the Clinton Administration's first
major policy statement on human rights," was "to defend
the universality of human rights," rejecting the claims of
those who plead "cultural relativism." Christopher said
that "the worst violators are the world's aggressors and those
who encourage the spread of arms," stressing that "the
universality of human rights set[s] a single standard of acceptable
behavior around the world, a standard Washington would apply to all
countries." In his own words, "The United States will
never join those who would undermine the Universal Declaration"
and will defend its universality against those who hold "that
human rights should be interpreted differently in regions with
non-Western cultures," notably the "dirty dozen" who
reject elements of the UD that do not suit them. Washington's
decisiveness prevailed. Western countries "were relieved
that their worst fears were not realized -- a retreat from the basic
tenets of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights..."
The "Challenge of Relativity" was beaten back, and the
conference declared that "The universal nature of these rights
and freedoms is beyond question." A
few questions remained unasked. Thus, if "the worst
violators are the world's aggressors and those who encourage the
spread of arms," what are we to conclude about the world's
leading arms merchant, then boasting well over half the sales of
arms to the third world, mostly to brutal dictatorships, policies
accelerated under Christopher's tenure at the State Department with
vigorous efforts to enhance the publicly-subsidized sales, opposed
by 96% of the population but strongly supported by high tech
industry? Or its colleagues Britain and France, who had
distinguished themselves by supplying Indonesian and Rwandan mass
murderers, among others? The subsidies are not only for
"merchants of death." Revelling in the new prospects for
arms sales with NATO expansion, a spokesman for the Aerospace
Industries Association observes that the new markets ($10 billion
for fighter jets alone, he estimates) include electronics,
communications systems, etc., amounting to "real money"
for advanced industry generally. The exports are promoted by the
U.S. government with grants, discount loans and other devices to
facilitate the transfer of public funds to private profit in the
U.S. while diverting the economies of the "transition
economies" of the former Soviet empire to increased military
spending rather than the social spending that is favored by their
populations (the U.S. Information Agency reports). The
situation is quite the same elsewhere. And
if aggressors are "the worst violators" of human rights,
what of the country that stands accused before the International
Court of Justice for the "unlawful use of force" in its
terrorist war against Nicaragua, contemptuously vetoing a Security
Council resolution calling on all states to observe international
law and rejecting repeated General Assembly pleas to the same
effect? Do these stern judgments hold of the country that
opened the post-Cold War era by invading Panama, where, four years
later, the client government's Human Rights Commission declared that
the right to self-determination and sovereignty was still being
violated by the "state of occupation by a foreign army,"
condemning its continuing human rights abuses? Further
questions are raised by Washington's (unreported) reservations
concerning the Declaration of the Vienna Conference. The U.S. was
disturbed that the Declaration "implied that any foreign
occupation is a human rights violation." That principle the
U.S. rejects, just as, alone with its Israeli client, the U.S.
rejects the right of peoples "forcibly deprived of
[self-determination, freedom and independence]..., particularly
peoples under colonial and racist regimes and foreign occupation or
other forms of colonial domination,...to struggle to [gain these
rights] and to seek and receive support [in accordance with the
Charter and other principles of international law]" -- facts
that also remain unreported, though they might help clarify the
sense in which human rights are advocated. Also
unexamined was just how Christopher had "promoted human rights
under the Carter Administration." One case was in 1978, when
the spokesman for the "dirty dozen" at Vienna, Indonesia,
was running out of arms in its attack against East Timor, then
approaching genocidal levels, so that the Carter Administration had
to rush even more military supplies to its bloodthirsty friend.
Another arose a year later, when the Administration sought
desperately to keep Somoza's National Guard in power after it had
slaughtered some 40,000 civilians, finally evacuating commanders in
planes disguised with Red Cross markings (a war crime), to Honduras,
where they were reconstituted as a terrorist force under the
direction of Argentine neo-Nazis. Such matters too fall among
the facts "that it `wouldn't do' to mention." The
high-minded rhetoric at and about the Vienna conference was not
besmirched by inquiry into the observance of the UD by its leading
defenders. These matters were, however, raised in Vienna in a Public
Hearing organized by NGOs in an attempt to break through the wall of
silence erected to protect Western power from "inconvenient
facts." The contributions by activists, scholars, lawyers, and
others from many countries provided a detailed review of
"Alarming evidence of massive human rights violations in every
part of the world as a result of the policies of the international
financial institutions," the "Washington Consensus"
among the leaders of the free world. This
"neoliberal" consensus is based on what might be called
"really existing free market doctrine": market discipline
is of great benefit to the weak and defenseless, though the rich and
powerful must shelter under the wings of the nanny state. They
must be allowed to persist in "the sustained assault on [free
trade] principle" that is deplored in a scholarly review of the
post-1970 period by GATT secretariat economist Patrick Low, who
estimates the restrictive effects of Reaganite measures at about
three times those of other leading industrial countries, as they
"presided over the greatest swing toward protectionism since
the 1930s," shifting the U.S. from "being the world's
champion of multilateral free trade to one of its leading
challengers," the journal of the Council on Foreign Relations
commented in a review of the decade. It
should be added that such analyses omit the major forms of market
interference for the benefit of the rich: the transfer of public
funds to advanced industry that underlies virtually every dynamic
sector of the U.S. economy, often under the guise of
"defense." These measures were escalated again by the
Reaganites, who were second to none in extolling the glories of the
free market -- for the poor at home and abroad. The general
practices were pioneered by the British in the 18th century and have
been a dominant feature of economic history ever since, and a good
part of the reason for the contemporary gap between the first and
the third world (growing for the past 30 years along with the
growing gap between rich and poor sectors of the population
worldwide). The
Public Hearing at Vienna received no mention in mainstream U.S.
journals, to my knowledge, but citizens of the free world could
learn about the human rights concerns of the vast majority of the
world's people from its report, published in an edition of 2000
copies in Nepal. The
provisions of the UD are not well-known in the United States, but
some are familiar. The most famous is Article 13 (2), which
states that "Everyone has the right to leave any country,
including his own." This principle was invoked with much
passion every year on Human Rights Day, December 10, with
demonstrations and indignant condemnations of the Soviet Union for
its refusal to allow Jews to leave. To be exact, the words
just quoted were invoked, but not the phrase that follows: "and
to return to his country." The significance of the omitted
words was spelled out on Dec. 11, 1948, the day after the UD was
ratified, when the General Assembly unanimously passed Resolution
194, which affirms the right of Palestinians to return to their
homes or receive compensation, if they chose not to return,
reaffirmed regularly since. But there was a "general
tacit agreement" that it "wouldn't do" to mention the
omitted words, let alone the glaringly obvious fact that those
exhorting the Soviet tyrants to observe Article 13, to much acclaim,
were its most dedicated opponents. It
is only fair to add that the cynicism has finally been overcome.
At the December 1993 U.N. session, the Clinton Administration
changed U.S. official policy, joining with Israel in opposing U.N.
194, which was reaffirmed by a vote of 127-2. As is the norm, there
was no report or comment. But at least the inconsistency is
behind us: the first half of Article 13 (2) has lost its relevance,
and Washington now officially rejects its second half. Let
us move on to Article 14, which declares that "Everyone has the
right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from
persecution." Haitians, for example, including the 87 new
victims captured by Clinton's blockade and returned to their charnel
house, with scant notice, as the Vienna conference opened. The
official reason was that they were fleeing poverty, not the rampant
terror of the military junta, as they claimed. The basis for
this discovery was not explained. In
her report on the Vienna conference a few days earlier, Sciolino had
noted that "some human rights organizations have sharply
criticized the Administration for failing to fulfill Mr. Clinton's
campaign promises on human rights," the "most dramatic
case" being "Washington's decision to forcibly return
Haitian boat people seeking political asylum." Looking at the
matter differently, the events illustrate Washington's commitment to
its uplifting rhetoric on "the universality of human
rights." The
U.S. has upheld Article 14 in this manner since Carter (and
Christopher) "promoted human rights" by shipping miserable
boat people back to torment under the Duvalier dictatorship, a
respected ally helping to convert Haiti to an export platform for
U.S. corporations seeking supercheap and brutalized labor -- or to
adopt the terms preferred by USAID, to convert Haiti into the
"Taiwan of the Caribbean." The violations of Article 14
were ratified formally in a Reagan-Duvalier agreement. When a
military coup overthrew Haiti's first democratically elected
President in September 1991, renewing the terror after a brief
lapse, the Bush Administration imposed a blockade to drive back the
flood of refugees to the torture chamber where they were to be
imprisoned. Bush's
"appalling" refugee policy was bitterly condemned by
candidate Bill Clinton, whose first act as President was to make the
illegal blockade still harsher, along with other measures to sustain
the junta, to which we return. Again,
fairness requires that we recognize that Washington did briefly
depart from its rejection of Article 14 in the case of Haiti.
During the few months of democracy (Feb.-Sept. 1991), the Bush
Administration gained a sudden and short-lived sensitivity to
Article 14 as the flow of refugees declined to a trickle -- in fact,
reversed, as Haitians returned to their country in its moment of
hope. Of the more than 24,000 Haitians intercepted by U.S.
forces from 1981 through 1990, 11 were granted asylum as victims of
political persecution (in comparison with 75,000 out of 75,000
Cubans). In these years of terror and repression, Washington
allowed 28 asylum claims. During Aristide's 7-month tenure,
with violence and repression radically reduced, 20 were allowed from
a refugee pool 1/50th the scale. Practice returned to normal
after the military coup and the renewed terror. Concerned
that protests might make it difficult to maintain the blockade, the
Clinton Administration pleaded with other countries to relieve the
U.S. of the burden of accommodating the refugees. Fear of a refugee
flow was the major reason offered as the "national
security" interest that might justify military intervention,
eliciting much controversy. The debate overlooked the obvious
candidate: Tanzania, which had been able to accommodate hundreds of
thousands of Rwandans, and would surely have been able to come to
the rescue of the beleaguered United States by accepting a few more
Black faces. The
contempt for Article 14 is by no means concealed. A front-page
story in the Newspaper of Record on harsh new immigration laws
casually records the fact and explains the reasons: Because the United States armed and financed the army whose brutality sent them into exile, few Salvadorans were able to obtain the refugee status granted to Cubans, Vietnamese, Kuwaitis and other nationalities at various times. The new law regards many of them simply as targets for deportation [though they were fleeing] a conflict that lasted from 1979 until 1992, [when] more than 70,000 people were killed in El Salvador, most of them by the American-backed army and the death squads it in turn supported, [forcing] many people here to flee to the United States. The
same reasoning extends to those who fled Washington's other
terrorist wars in the region. The
interpretation of Article 14 is therefore quite principled:
"worthy victims" fall under Article 14, "unworthy
victims" do not. The categories are determined by the
agency of terror and prevailing power interests. But the facts
have no bearing on Washington's role as the crusader defending the
universality of the UD from the relativist challenge. The case
is among the many that illustrate an omission in Orwell's analysis:
the easy tolerance of inconsistency, when convenient. Articles
13 and 14 fall under the category of Civil and Political Rights.
The UD also recognizes a second category: Economic, Social, and
Cultural Rights. These are largely dismissed in the West.
U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick described these provisions of the
UD as "a letter to Santa Claus... Neither nature, experience,
nor probability informs these lists of `entitlements,' which are
subject to no constraints except those of the mind and appetite of
their authors." They were dismissed in more temperate tones by
the U.S. Representative to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights,
Ambassador Morris Abram, who emphasized in 1990 that Civil and
Political Rights must have "priority," contrary to the
principle of universality of the UD. Abram
elaborated while explaining Washington's rejection of the Report of
the Global Consultations on the Right to Development, defined as
"the right of individuals, groups, and peoples to participate
in, contribute to, and enjoy continuous economic, social, cultural
and political development, in which all human rights and fundamental
freedoms can be fully realized." "Development is not a
right," Abram informed the Commission. Indeed, the proposals of
the Report yield conclusions that "seem preposterous," for
example, that the World Bank might be obliged "to forgive a
loan or to give money to build a tunnel, a railroad, or a
school." Such ideas are "little more than an empty vessel
into which vague hopes and inchoate expectations can be
poured," Abram continued, and even a "dangerous
incitement." The fundamental error of the alleged "right
to development" is that it presupposes that: Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control. If
there is no right to development, as defined, then this statement
too is an "empty vessel" and perhaps even "dangerous
incitement." Accordingly this principle too has no status:
there are no such rights as those affirmed in Article 25 of the UD,
just quoted. The
U.S. alone vetoed the Declaration on the Right to Development, thus
implicitly vetoing Article 25 of the UD as well. It
is unnecessary to dwell on the status of Article 25 in the world's
richest country, with a poverty level twice that of any other
industrial society, particularly severe among children. Almost one
in four children under six fell below the poverty line by 1995, far
more than other industrial societies, though Britain is gaining
ground, with "One in three British babies born in
poverty," the press now reports, as "child poverty has
increased as much as three-fold since Margaret Thatcher was
elected" and "up to 2 million British children are
suffering ill-health and stunted growth because of
malnutrition." Thatcherite programs reversed the trend to
improved child health and led to an upswing of childhood diseases
that had been controlled, while public funds are used for such
purposes as illegal projects in Turkey and Malaysia to foster arms
sales by state-subsidized industry. In accord with "really
existing free market doctrine," public spending after 17 years
of Thatcherite gospel is the same 42 1/4% of GDP that it was when
she took over. In
the U.S., subjected to similar policies, 30 million people suffered
from hunger by 1990, an increase of 50% from 1985, including 12
million children lacking sufficient food to maintain growth and
development (before the 1991 recession). 40% of children in
the world's richest city fell below the poverty line. In terms of
such basic social indicators as child mortality, the U.S. ranks well
below any other industrial country, right alongside of Cuba, which
has less than 5% the GNP per capita of the United States and has
undergone many years of terrorist attack and increasingly severe
economic warfare at the hands of the hemispheric superpower. Given
its extraordinary advantages, the U.S. is in the leading ranks of
relativists who reject the universality of the UD by virtue of
Article 25 alone. The
same values guide the international financial institutions that the
U.S. largely controls. The World Bank and the IMF "have
been extraordinarily human rights averse," the chairperson of
the U.N. Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Philip
Alston, observed with polite understatement in his submission to the
Vienna counter-session. "As we have heard so dramatically at
this Public Hearing," Nouri Abdul Razzak of the Afro-Asian
People's Solidarity Organization added, "the policies of the
international financial institutions are contributing to the
impoverishment of the world's people, the degradation of the global
environment, and the violation of the most fundamental human
rights," on a mind-numbing scale. In
the face of such direct violations of the principles of the UD, it
is perhaps superfluous to mention the refusal to take even small
steps towards upholding them. UNICEF estimates that every
hour, 1000 children die from easily preventable disease, and almost
twice that many women die or suffer serious disability in pregnancy
or childbirth for lack of simple remedies and care. To ensure
universal access to basic social services, UNICEF estimates, would
require a quarter of the annual military expenditures of the
"developing countries," about 10% of U.S. military
spending noted, the U.S. actively promotes military expenditures of
the "developing countries"; its own remain at Cold War
levels, increasing today while social spending is being severely
cut. Also sharply declining in the 1990s is U.S. foreign aid,
already the most miserly among the developed countries, and
virtually non-existent if we exclude the rich country that is the
primary recipient (Washington's Israeli client). In
his "Final Report" to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights,
Special Rapporteur Leandro Despouy cites the World Health
Organization's characterization of "extreme poverty" as
"the world's most ruthless killer and the greatest cause of
suffering on earth": "No other disaster compared to the
devastation of hunger which had caused more deaths in the past two
years than were killed in the two World Wars together." The
right to a standard of living adequate for health and well-being is
affirmed in Article 25 of the UD, he notes, and in the International
Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, "which
places emphasis more particularly on `the fundamental right of
everyone to be free from hunger'." But from the highly
relativist perspective of the West, these principles of human rights
agreements have no status. Article
23 of the UD declares that "Everyone has the right to work, to
free choice of employment, to just and favorable conditions of work
and to protection against unemployment," along with
"remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence
worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other
means of social protection." We need not tarry on the respect
for this principle. Furthermore, "Everyone has the right
to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his
interests." The
latter right is technically upheld in the United States, though
legal and administrative mechanisms ensure that it is largely
observed in the breach. By the time the Reaganites had
completed their work, the U.S. was far enough off the spectrum so
that the International Labor Organization, which rarely criticizes
the powerful, issued a recommendation that the U.S. conform to
international standards, in response to an AFL-CIO complaint about
strikebreaking by resort to "permanent replacement
workers." Apart from South Africa, no other industrial country
tolerated these methods to ensure that Article 23 remains empty
words; and with subsequent developments in South Africa, the U.S.
may stand in splendid isolation in this particular respect, though
it has yet to achieve British standards, such as allowing employers
to use selective pay increases to induce workers to reject union and
collective bargaining rights. Reviewing
some of mechanisms used to render Article 23 inoperative, Business
Week reported that from the early 1980s, "U.S. industry has
conducted one of the most successful antiunion wars ever, illegally
firing thousands of workers for exercising their rights to
organize." "Unlawful firings occurred in one-third of all
representation elections in the late '80s, vs. 8% in the late
'60s." Workers have no recourse, as the Reagan Administration
converted the powerful state they nurtured to an expansive welfare
state for the rich, defying U.S. law as well as the customary
international law enshrined in the UD. Management's basic goal, the
journal explains, has been to cancel the rights "guaranteed by
the 1935 Wagner Act," which brought the U.S. into the
mainstream of the industrial world. That has been a basic goal since
the New Deal provisions were enacted, and although the project of
reversing the victory for democracy and working people was put on
hold during the war, it was taken up again when peace arrived, with
great vigor and considerable success. One index of the success
is provided by the record of ratification of ILO conventions
guaranteeing labor rights. The U.S. has by far the worst
record in the Western hemisphere and Europe, with the exception of
El Salvador and Lithuania. It does not recognize even standard
conventions on child labor and the right to organize. "The
United States is in arrears to the ILO in the amount of $92.6
million," the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights notes, part of
the huge debt that Washington refuses to pay (in violation of treaty
obligations). This withholding of funds "seriously
jeopardizes the ILO's operations"; current U.S. plans for
larger cuts in ILO funding "would primarily affect the ILO's
ability to deliver technical assistance in the field," thus
undermining Article 23 still further, worldwide. Contempt
for the socioeconomic provisions of the UD is so deeply engrained
that no departure from objectivity is sensed when a front-page story
lauds Britain's incoming Labor government for shifting the tax
burden from "large businesses" to working people and the
"middle class," steps that "set Britain further apart
from countries like Germany and France that are still struggling
with pugnacious unions, restrictive investment climates, and
expensive welfare benefits." Industrial "countries"
never "struggle with" huge profits, starving children, or
rapid increase in CEO pay (under Thatcher, double that of
second-place U.S.); a reasonable stand, under the "general
tacit agreement" that the "country" equals
"large businesses," along with doctrinal conventions about
the health of the economy -- the latter a technical concept, only
weakly correlated with the health of the population (economic,
social, or even medical). The
attack on unions has many effects. The U.S. Labor Department
estimates that these violations of Article 23 account for a large
part of the stagnation or decline in real wages under the
Reaganites, "a welcome development of transcendent
importance," as the Wall street Journal described the
fall in labor costs from the 1985 high to the lowest in the
industrial world (U.K. aside). The violations also contribute to
undermining benefits guaranteed by the UD, including health and
safety standards in the workplace, which the government chooses not
to enforce, leading to a sharp rise in industrial accidents.
Elimination of unions also helps to weaken democracy, as ordinary
people lose some of the few methods by which they can enter the
political arena. And it contributes further to the
privatization of aspirations, dissolving the sense of solidarity and
sympathy, and other human values that were at the heart of classical
liberal thought but are inconsistent with the reigning ideology of
privilege and power. The
"free trade agreements," as they are common mislabelled
(they include significant protectionist features and are
"agreements" only if we discount popular opinion), make
further contributions to these ends. Testifying before the
Senate Banking Committee in February 1997, Federal Reserve Board
Chair Alan Greenspan was highly optimistic about "sustainable
economic expansion" thanks to "atypical restraint on
compensation increases [which] appears to be mainly the consequence
of greater worker insecurity," plainly a desideratum for a good
society and yet another reason for Western relativists to reject
Article 25 of the UD, with its "right to security." The
February 1997 Economic Report of the President, taking pride in the
Clinton Administration's achievements, refers more obliquely to
"changes in labor market institutions and practices" as a
factor in the "significant wage restraint" that bolsters
the health of the economy. Some
of the causes of these benign changes are spelled out in a study
commissioned by the Labor Secretariat of the North American Free
Agreement "on the effects of the sudden closing of the plant on
the principle of freedom of association and the right of workers to
organize in the three countries." The study was carried out
under NAFTA rules in response to a complaint by telecommunications
workers on illegal labor practices by Sprint. The complaint was
upheld by the U.S. National Labor Relations Board, which ordered
trivial penalties after years of delay, the standard procedure.
The NAFTA study, by Cornell University Labor economist Kate
Bronfenbrenner, has been authorized for release by Canada and
Mexico, but not by the Clinton Administration. It reveals a
significant impact of NAFTA on strike-breaking. About half of
union organizing efforts are disrupted by employer threats to
transfer production abroad, for example, by placing signs reading
"Mexico Transfer Job" in front of a plant where there is
an organizing drive. The threats are not idle. When such
organizing drives nevertheless succeed, employers close the plant in
whole or in part at triple the pre-NAFTA rate (about 15% of the
time). Plant-closing threats are almost twice as high in more
mobile industries (e.g., manufacturing vs. construction). These
and other practices reported in the study are illegal, but that is a
technicality, as the Reagan Administration had made clear,
outweighed by the contribution to undermining the right to organize
that is formally guaranteed by Article 23 -- or in more polite
words, bringing about "changes in labor market institutions and
practices" that contribute to "significant wage
restraint" within an economic model offered with great pride to
a backward world. A
number of other devices have been employed to nullify the pledge
"never [to] join those who would undermine the Universal
Declaration" (Christopher) in the case of Article 23. The
elimination of the welfare system, which had been sharply reduced
from the '70s, drives many poor women to the labor market, where
they will work at or below minimum wage and with limited benefits,
and an array of government subsidies. The obvious (hence
surely intended) effect is to drive down wages at the lower end,
with indirect effects elsewhere. A related device is the
increasing use of prison labor in the vastly expanding system of
social control. Thus Boeing, which monopolizes U.S. civilian
aircraft production (thanks to massive state subsidy for 60 years),
not only transfers production facilities to China, but also to
prisons a few miles from its Seattle offices, one of many examples.
Prison labor offers many advantages. It is disciplined,
publicly subsidized, deprived of benefits, and "flexible"
-- available when needed, left to government support when not. Reliance
on prison labor also draws from a rich tradition. The rapid
industrial development in the southeastern region a century ago was
based heavily on convict labor (Black of course), leased to the
highest bidder. These measures maintained the basic structure
of the plantation system after the abolition of slavery, but now for
industrial development. The practices continued until the
1920s, until World War II in Mississippi. Southern industrialists
pointed out that convict labor is "more reliable and productive
than free labor" and overcomes the problem of labor turnover
and instability. It also "remove[s] all danger and cost
of strikes," a serious problem at the time, resolved by state
violence that virtually destroyed the labor movement. Convict
labor also lowers wages for "free labor," much as in the
case of "welfare reform." The U.S. Bureau of Labor
reported that "mine owners [in Alabama] say they could not work
at a profit without the lowering effect in wages of convict-labor
competition." The resurgence of these mechanisms is quite
natural as the superfluous population is driven to prisons. The
attack on Article 23 is not limited to the U.S. The
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions reports that
"unions are being repressed across the world in more countries
than ever before," while "Poverty and inequality have
increased in the developing countries, which globalisation has drawn
into a downward spiral of ever-lower labour standards to attract
investment and meet the demands of enterprises seeking a fast
profit" as governments "bow to pressure from the financial
markets rather than from their own electorates," in accord with
the "Washington consensus." These are not the consequences
of "economic laws" or what "the free market has
decided, in its infinite but mysterious wisdom," as commonly
alleged. Rather, they are the results of deliberate policy
choices under really existing free market doctrine, undertaken
during a period of "capital's clear subjugation of labor,"
in the words of the business press. The
ability to nullify unwanted human rights guaranteed by the UD should
be considerably enhanced by the Multilateral Agreement on Investment
(MAI) that is now being forged by the OECD and the WTO (where it is
the MIA). If the plans outlined in draft texts are
implemented, the world should be "locked into" treaty
arrangements that provide still more powerful weapons to undermine
social programs and to restrict the arena of democratic politics,
leaving policy decisions largely in the hands of private tyrannies
that have ample means of market interference as well. The
efforts may be blocked at the WTO because of protests of
"developing countries" that are not eager to become
wholly-owned subsidiaries of great foreign enterprises. But
the OECD version may fare better, to be presented to the rest of the
world as a fait accompli, with the obvious consequences. All
of this proceeds in impressive secrecy, so far. Washington's
rejection of the Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights guaranteed by
the UD does receive occasional mention, but the issue is generally
ignored in the torrent of self-praise, and if raised, elicits mostly
incomprehension. To
take some typical examples, Times correspondent Barbara
Crossette reports that "The world held a human rights
conference in Vienna in 1993 and dared to enshrine universal
concepts," but progress was blocked by "panicked nations
of the third world." American diplomats are "frustrated at
the unwillingness of many countries to take tough public stands on
human rights," even though "Diplomats say it is now easier
to deal objectively with human rights abusers, case by case,"
now that the Cold War is over and "developing nations, with
support from the Soviet bloc," no longer "routinely pass
resolutions condemning the United States, the West in general or
targets like Israel and apartheid South Africa." Nonetheless,
progress is difficult, "with a lot of people paying lip service
to the whole concept of human rights in the Charter, in the
Universal Declaration and all that," but no more, U.N.
Ambassador Madeleine Albright (now Secretary of State) observed.
On Human Rights day, Times editors condemned the Asian
countries that reject the UD and call instead for "addressing
the more basic needs for people for food and shelter, medical care
and schooling" -- in accord with the UD. The
reasoning is straightforward. The U.S. rejects these
principles of the UD, so they are inoperative. By calling for
such rights the Asian countries are therefore rejecting the UD. Puzzling
over the contention that "`human rights' extend to food and
shelter," Seth Faison reviews a "perennial sticking point
in United States-China diplomacy, highlighting the contrast between
the American emphasis on individual freedom and the Chinese
insistence that the common good transcends personal rights."
China calls for a right to "food, clothing, shelter, education,
the right to work, rest, and reasonable payment," and
criticizes the U.S. for not upholding these rights -- which are
affirmed in the UD, and are not a matter of "the common
good" but are "personal rights" that the U.S.
rejects. Again, the reasoning is straightforward enough, once
the guiding ideas are internalized. As
an outgrowth of the popular movements of the 1960s, Congress imposed
human rights conditions on military aid and trade privileges,
compelling the White House to find various modes of evasion.
These became farcical during the Reagan years, with regular solemn
pronouncements about the "improvements" in the behavior of
client murderers and torturers that elicited much derision from
human rights organizations, but no policy change. The most extreme
examples, hardly worth discussing, involved U.S. clients in Central
America. There are other less egregious cases, beginning with the
top recipient of U.S. aid (Israel) and running down the list.
Israel's "systematic torture and ill-treatment of Palestinians
under interrogation" has repeatedly been condemned by Human
Rights Watch and Amnesty International (along with apparent
extrajudicial execution; legalization of torture; imprisonment
without charge, for as long as nine years for some of those
kidnapped in Lebanon; and other abuses). U.S. aid to Israel is
therefore illegal under U.S. law, HRW and AI have insistently
pointed out (as is aid to Egypt, Turkey, Colombia and other
high-ranking recipients). In the most recent of its annual
reports on U.S. military aid and human rights, AI observes -- once
again -- that "Throughout the world, on any given day, a man,
woman or child is likely to be displaced, tortured, killed or
`disappeared,' at the hands of governments or armed political
groups. More often than not, the United States shares the
blame," a "practice that "makes a mockery of
[congressional legislation] linking the granting of US security
assistance to a country's human rights record." Such
contentions elicit no interest or response in view of the
"general tacit agreement" that laws are binding only when
power interests so dictate. The
strongest popular support for sanctions was with regard to South
Africa. After much delay and evasion, sanctions were finally
imposed in 1985 and (over Reagan's veto) in 1986, but the
Administration "created glaring loopholes" that permitted
U.S. exports to increase by 40% between 1985 and 1988 while U.S.
imports increased 14% in 1988 after an initial decline. "The
major economic impact was reduced investment capital and fewer
foreign firms." The
role of sanctions is perhaps most dramatically illustrated in the
case of the voice of the "dirty dozen," Indonesia.
After the failure of a CIA operation to foment a rebellion in 1958,
the U.S. turned to other methods of overthrowing the Sukarno
government. Aid was cut off, apart from military aid and
training. That is standard operating procedure for instigating
a military coup, which took place in 1965, with mounting U.S.
assistance as the new Suharto regime slaughtered perhaps 1/2 million
or more people in a few months, mostly landless peasants. There was
no condemnation on the floor of Congress, and no aid to the victims
from any major U.S. relief agency. On the contrary, the
slaughter (which the CIA compared to those of Stalin, Hitler, and
Mao) aroused undisguised euphoria in a very revealing episode, best
forgotten.The World Bank quickly made Indonesia its third largest
borrower. The U.S. and other Western governments and
corporations followed along. There
was no thought of sanctions as the new government proceeded to
compile one of the worst human rights records in the world, or in
the course of its near-genocidal aggression in East Timor, which,
incidentally, has somehow not entered the growing literature on
"humanitarian intervention" -- rightly, because there is
no need for intervention to terminate the decisive diplomatic and
military contribution of the U.S. and its allies. Congress did
however ban U.S. military training after the Dili massacre in 1991.
The aftermath followed the familiar pattern. Delicately selecting
the anniversary of the Indonesian invasion, Clinton's State
Department announced that "Congress's action did not ban
Indonesia's purchase of training with its own funds," so it can
proceed despite the ban, with Washington perhaps paying from some
other pocket. The announcement received scant notice, though
Congress did express its "outrage," reiterating that
"it was and is the intent of Congress to prohibit U.S. military
training for Indonesia" (House Appropriations Committee):
"we don't want employees of the US Government training
Indonesians," a staff member reiterated forcefully, but without
effect. Rather than impose sanctions, or even limit military aid,
the U.S., U.K., and other powers have sought to enrich themselves by
participating in Indonesia's crimes. Indonesian
terror and aggression continue unhampered, along with harsh
repression of labor in a country with wages half those of China.
With the support of Senate Democrats, Clinton was able to block
labor and other human rights conditions on aid to Indonesia.
Announcing the suspension of review of Indonesian labor practices,
Trade Representative Mickey Kantor commended Indonesia for
"bringing its labor law and practice into closer conformity
with international standards," a witticism that is in
particularly poor taste. Also
revealing is the record of sanctions against Haiti after the
military coup of September 1991 that ended the seven-month period of
democracy. The U.S. had reacted to Aristide's election with
alarm, having confidently expected the election of its own
candidate, World Bank official Mark Bazin, who received 14% of the
vote. Washington's reaction was to shift aid to anti-Aristide
elements, and as noted, to honor asylum claims for the first time,
restoring the norm after the military junta let loose a reign of
terror, killing thousands. The OAS declared an embargo, which
the Bush Administration at once violated by exempting U.S. firms --
"fine tuning" the sanctions, the press explained, in its
"latest move" to find "more effective ways to hasten
the collapse of what the Administration calls an illegal Government
in Haiti." Trade with Haiti remained high in 1992, increasing
by almost half as Clinton extended the violations of the embargo,
including purchases by the U.S. government, which maintained close
connections with the coup regime; just how close we do not know,
since the Clinton Administration refuses to turn over to Haiti
160,000 pages of documents seized by U.S. military forces --
"to avoid embarrassing revelations" about U.S. government
involvement with the terrorist regime, according to Human Rights
Watch. President Aristide was allowed to return after the
popular organizations had been subjected to three years of terror
and he had pledged to accept the extreme neoliberal program of
Washington's defeated candidate. The
U.S. Justice Department revealed that the Bush and Clinton
Administrations had rendered the embargo virtually meaningless by
authorizing illegal shipments of oil to the military junta and its
wealthy supporters, informing Texaco Oil Company that it would not
be penalized for violating the Presidential directive of October
1991 banning such shipments. The information, prominently
released the day before U.S. troops landed to "restore
democracy" in 1994, has yet to reach the general public, and is
an unlikely candidate for the historical record. These were
among the many devices adopted to ensure that the popular forces
that swept President Aristide to power would have no voice in any
future "democracy." None of this should surprise people
who have failed to immunize themselves from "inconvenient
facts." With general agreement, the Clinton
Administration advertises this as a grand exercise in
"restoring democracy," the prize example of the Clinton
Doctrine. The
operative significance of sanctions is articulated honestly by the Wall
Street Journal Furthermore,
lethal weapons. U.S. economic warfare against Cuba for 35
years is a striking illustration. The unilateral U.S. embargo
against Cuba, the longest in history, is also unique in barring food
and medicine. When the collapse of the USSR removed the
traditional security pretext and eliminated aid from the Soviet
bloc, the U.S. responded by making the embargo far harsher, under
new pretexts that would have made Orwell wince: The 1992 Cuban
Democracy Act, initiated by liberal Democrats, and strongly backed
by President Clinton at the same time he was undermining the
sanctions against the mass murderers in Haiti. A year-long
investigation by the American Association of World Health found that
this escalation of U.S. economic warfare had taken a "tragic
human toll," causing "serious nutritional deficits"
and "a devastating outbreak of neuropathy numbering in the tens
of thousands." It also brought about a sharp reduction in
medicines, medical supplies and medical information, leaving
children to suffer "in excruciating pain" because of lack
of medicines. The embargo reversed Cuba's progress in bringing
water services to the population and undermined its advanced
biotechnology industry, among other consequences. These
effects became far worse after the imposition of the Cuban Democracy
Act, which cut back licensed sales and donations of food and medical
supplies by 90% within a year. A "humanitarian
catastrophe has been averted only because the Cuban government has
maintained" a health system that "is uniformly considered
the preeminent model in the Third World." The
embargo has repeatedly been condemned by the United Nations. The
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of
American States condemned U.S. restrictions on shipments of food and
medicine to Cuba as a violation of international law. Recent
extensions of the embargo (the Helms-Burton Act) were unanimously
condemned by the OAS. In August 1996, its judicial body ruled
unanimously that the Act violated international law. The
Clinton Administration's response is that shipments of medicine are
not literally barred, only prevented by conditions so onerous and
threatening that even the largest corporations are unwilling to face
the prospects (huge financial penalties and imprisonment for what
Washington determines to be violations of "proper
distribution," banning of ships and aircraft, mobilization of
media campaigns, etc.). And while food shipments are indeed
barred, the Administration argues that there are "ample
suppliers" elsewhere (at far higher cost), so that the direct
violation of international law is not a violation. Supply of
medicines to Cuba would be "detrimental to U.S. foreign policy
interests," the Administration declared. When the
European Union complained to the World Trade Organization that the
Helms-Burton Act, with its wide-ranging punishment of third parties,
violates the WTO agreements, the Clinton Administration rejected WTO
jurisdiction, as its predecessors had done when the World Court
addressed Nicaragua's complaint about U.S. international terrorism
and illegal economic warfare (upheld by the Court, irrelevantly).
In a reaction that surpasses cynicism, Clinton condemned Cuba for
ingratitude "in return for the Cuban Democracy Act," a
forthcoming gesture to improve U.S.-Cuba relations. The
U.S. officially recognizes that "deliberate impeding of the
delivery of food and medical supplies" to civilian populations
constitutes "violations of international humanitarian
law," and "reaffirms that those who commit or order the
commission of such acts will be held individually responsible in
respect of such acts." The reference is to Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The President of the United States is plainly "individually
responsible" for such "violations of international
humanitarian law." Or would be, were it not for the
"general tacit agreements" about selective enforcement,
which reign with such absolute power among Western relativists that
the simple facts are virtually unmentionable. Unlike
such crimes as these, the regular contortions on human rights in
China are a topic of debate. It is worth noting, however, that
many critical issues are scarcely even raised: crucially, the
horrifying conditions of working people, with hundreds, mostly
women, burned to death locked into factories, over 18,000 deaths
from industrial accidents in 1995 according to Chinese government
figures, and other gross violations of international conventions.
China's labor practices have been condemned, but narrowly: the use
of prison labor for exports to the U.S. At the peak of the
U.S.-China confrontation over human rights, front-page stories
reported that Washington's human rights campaign had met with some
success: China had "agreed to a demand to allow more visits by
American customs inspectors to Chinese prison factories to make sure
they are not producing goods for export to the United States,"
and also accepted U.S. demands for "liberalization" and
laws that are "critical elements of a market economy," all
welcome steps towards a "virtuous circle." The
conditions of "free labor" do not arise in this context.
They are, however, causing other problems: "Chinese officials
and analysts" say that the doubling of industrial deaths in
1992 and "abysmal working conditions," "combined with
long hours, inadequate pay, and even physical beatings, are stirring
unprecedented labor unrest among China's booming foreign joint
ventures." These "tensions reveal the great gap between
competitive foreign capitalists lured by cheap Chinese labor and
workers weaned on socialist job security and the safety net of
cradle-to-grave benefits." Workers do not yet understand that
as they enter the free world, they are to be "beaten for
producing poor quality goods, fired for dozing on the job during
long work hours" and other such misdeeds, and locked into their
factories to be burned to death. But apparently the West
understands, so China is not called to account for violations of
labor rights; only for exporting prison products to the United
States. The
distinction is easy to explain. Prison factories are
state-owned industry, and exports to the U.S. interfere with
profits, unlike beating and murder of working people and other means
to improve the balance sheet. The operative principles are
clarified by the fact that the rules allow the United States to
export prison goods. As China was submitting to U.S.
discipline on export of prison-made goods to the U.S., California
and Oregon were exporting prison-made clothing to Asia, including
specialty jeans, shirts, and a line of shorts quaintly called
"Prison Blues." The prisoners earn far less than the
minimum wage, and work under "slave labor" conditions,
prison rights activists allege. But their production does not
interfere with the rights that count (in fact, enhances them in many
ways, as noted). So it passes unnoticed. As
the most powerful state, the U.S. makes its own laws, using force
and conducting economic warfare at will. It also threatens
sanctions against countries that do not abide by its conveniently
flexible notions of "free trade." In one important case,
Washington has employed such threats with great effectiveness (and
GATT approval) to force open Asian markets for U.S. tobacco exports
and advertising, aimed primarily at the growing markets of women and
children. The U.S. Agriculture Department has provided grants
to tobacco firms to promote smoking overseas. Asian countries have
attempted to conduct educational anti-smoking campaigns, but they
are overwhelmed by the miracles of the market, reinforced by U.S.
state power through the sanctions threat. Philip Morris, with
an advertising and promotion budget of close to $9 billion in 1992,
became China's largest advertiser. The effect of Reaganite
sanction threats was to increase advertising and promotion of
cigarette smoking (particularly U.S. brands) quite sharply in Japan,
Taiwan, and South Korea, along with the use of these lethal
substances. In South Korea, for example, the rate of growth in
smoking more than tripled when markets for U.S. lethal drugs were
opened in 1988. The Bush Administration extended the threats to
Thailand, at exactly the same time that the "war on drugs"
was declared; the media were kind enough to overlook the
coincidence, even suppressing the outraged denunciations by the very
conservative Surgeon-General. Oxford University epidemiologist
Richard Peto estimates that among Chinese children under 20 today,
50 million will die of cigarette-related diseases, an achievement
that ranks high even by 20th century standards. While
state power energetically promotes the most lethal known form of
substance abuse in the interests of agribusiness, it adopts highly
selective measures in other cases. On the pretext of the war
against drugs, the U.S. has been able to play an active role in the
vast atrocities conducted by the security forces and their
paramilitary associates in Colombia, the leading human rights
violator in Latin America, and the leading recipient of U.S. aid and
training, increasing under Clinton, consistent with traditional
practice, noted earlier. The war against drugs is "a
myth," Amnesty International reports, agreeing with other
investigators. Security forces work closely with
narcotraffickers and landlords while targeting the usual victims,
including community leaders, human rights and health workers, union
activists, students, the political opposition, but primarily
peasants, in a country where protest has been criminalized.
Military support for the killers is rising to "a record
level," HRW reports, up 50% over the 1996 high. AI
reports that "almost every Colombian military unit that Amnesty
implicated in murdering civilians two years ago was doing so with
U.S.-supplied weapons," which they continue to receive, along
with training. The
UD calls on all states to promote the rights and freedoms proclaimed
and to act "to secure their universal and effective recognition
and observance" by various means, including ratification of
treaties and enabling legislation. There are several such
International Covenants, respected in much the manner of the UD.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted by the U.N. in
Dec. 1989, has been ratified (as of September 1996) "by all
countries except the Cook Islands, Oman, Somalia, Switzerland, the
United Arab Emirates, and the United States," UNICEF reports.
After long delay, the U.S. did endorse the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, "the leading treaty for the
protection" of the subcategory of rights that the West claims
to uphold, Human Rights Watch and the American Civil Liberties Union
observe in their report on continued U.S. noncompliance with its
provisions. The Bush Administration ensured that the treaty
would be inoperative, first, "through a series of reservations,
declarations and understandings" to eliminate provisions that
might expand rights, and second, by declaring the U.S. in full
compliance with the remaining provisions. The treaty is
"non self-executing" and accompanied by no enabling
legislation, so it cannot be invoked in U.S. courts.
Ratification was "an empty act for Americans," the
HRW/ACLU report concludes. The
exceptions are crucial, because the U.S. violates the treaty
"in important respects," the report observes. To
cite one example, the U.S. entered a specific reservation to Article
7 of the ICCPR, which states that "No one shall be subjected to
torture or to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or
punishment." The reason is that conditions in U.S. prisons
violate these conditions as generally understood, just as they
seriously violate the provisions of Article 10 on humane treatment
of prisoners and on the right to "reformation and social
rehabilitation," which the U.S. flatly rejects. Another
U.S. reservation concerns the death penalty, which is not only
employed far more freely than the norm but also "applied in a
manner that is racially discriminatory," the HRW/ACLU report
concludes, as have other studies. Furthermore, "more
juvenile offenders sit on death row in the United States than in any
other country in the world," HRW reports. In the case of
the U.N. Convention Against Torture and Other Forms of Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, the Senate imposed
restrictions, in part to protect a Supreme Court ruling allowing
corporal punishment in schools. HRW
also regards "disproportionate" and "cruelly
excessive" sentencing procedures as a violation of Article 5 of
the UD, which proscribes "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment." The specific reference is to laws that treat
"possession of an ounce of cocaine or a $20 `street sale' [as]
a more dangerous or serious offense than the rape of a ten-year-old,
the burning of a building occupied by people, or the killing of
another human being while intending to cause him serious
injury" (quoting a federal judge). From the onset of
Reaganite "neoliberalism," the rate of incarceration,
which had been fairly stable through the postwar period, has
skyrocketed, almost tripling during the Reagan years and continuing
the sharp rise since, long ago leaving other industrial societies
far behind. 84% of the increase of admissions is for
nonviolent offenders, mostly drug-related (including possession).
Drug offenders constituted 22% of admissions in federal prisons in
1980, 42% in 1990, 58% in 1992. The U.S. apparently leads the
world in imprisoning its population (perhaps sharing the distinction
with Russia or China, where data are uncertain). By the end of
1996, the prison population had reached a record 1.2 million,
increasing 5% over the preceding year, with the federal prison
system 25% over capacity and state prisons almost the same.
Meanwhile crime rates continued to decline. U.S.
crime rates, while high, are not out of the range of industrial
societies, apart from homicides with guns, a reflection of U.S. gun
laws. Fear of crime, however, is very high and increasing, in
large part a "product of a variety of factors that have little
or nothing to do with crime itself," the National Criminal
Justice Commission concludes (as do other studies). The
factors include media practices and "the role of government and
private industry in stoking citizen fear." The focus is very
specific: for example, drug users in the ghetto but not criminals in
executive suites, though the Justice Department estimates the cost
of corporate crime as 7 to 25 times as high as street crime.
Work-related deaths are six times has high as homicides, and
pollution also takes a far higher toll than homicide. High-level
studies have regularly concluded that "there is no direct
relation between the level of crime and the number of
imprisonments" (European Council expert commission). Many
criminologists have pointed out further that while "crime
control" has limited relation to crime, it has a great deal to
do with control of the "dangerous classes;" today, those
cast aside by the socioeconomic model designed to globalize the
sharply two-tiered structural model of third world societies.
As noted at once, the "war on drugs" was timed and
designed to target mostly Black males. By adopting these
measures, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan observed, "we are
choosing to have an intense crime problem concentrated among
minorities." "The war's planners knew exactly what they
were doing," criminologist Michael Tonry comments, spelling out
the details, including the racist procedures that run through the
system from arrest to sentencing, in part attributable to the close
race-class correlation, but not completely. As
widely recognized, the largely fraudulent "war on drugs"
has no significant effect on use of drugs or street price, and is
far less effective than educational and remedial programs. But
it does not follow that it serves no purpose. It is a
counterpart to the "social cleansing" -- the removal or
elimination of "disposable people" -- conducted by the
state terrorist forces in Colombia and other terror states. It
also frightens the rest of the population, the standard device to
induce obedience. Such policies make good sense as part of a
program that has radically concentrated wealth while for the
majority of the population, living conditions and income stagnate or
decline. On similar assumptions, Congress required that
sentencing guidelines and policy reject as "inappropriate"
any consideration of such factors as poverty and deprivation, social
ties, etc. These requirements are precisely counter to
European crime policy, criminologist Nils Christie observes, but
sensible on the assumption that "under the rhetoric of
equality," Congress "envisions the criminal process as a
vast engine of social control" (quoting former Chief Judge
Bazelon). The
vast scale of the expanding "crime control industry" has
attracted the attention of finance and industry, who welcome it as
another form of state intervention in the economy, a Keynesian
stimulus that may soon approach the Pentagon system in scale, some
estimate. "Businesses Cash In," the Wall Street Journal
reports, including the construction industry, law firms, the booming
private prison complex, and "the loftiest names in
finance" such as Goldman Sachs, Prudential, and others,
"competing to underwrite prison construction with private,
tax-exempt bonds." Also standing in line is the "defense
establishment,... scenting a new line of business" in high-tech
surveillance and control systems of a sort that Big Brother would
have admired. The industry also offers new opportunities for
corporate use of prison labor, as discussed earlier. Other
International Covenants submitted to Congress have also been
restricted as "non self-executing," meaning that they are
of largely symbolic significance. The fact that Covenants, if
even ratified, are declared non-enforceable in U.S. courts has been
a "major concern" of the U.N. Human Rights Committee,
along with the Human Rights organizations. The Committee also
expressed concern that "poverty and lack of access to education
adversely affect persons belonging to these groups in their ability
to enjoy rights under the Covenant on the basis of equality,"
even the Civil and Political Rights that the U.S. professes to
uphold. And while (rightly) praising the U.S. commitment to freedom
of speech, the Committee also questioned Washington's announced
principle that "money is a form of speech," as the courts
had upheld, with wide-ranging effects. The
U.S. is a world leader in defense of freedom of speech, perhaps
uniquely so since the 1960s. With regard to civil-political rights,
the U.S. record at home ranks quite well by comparative standards,
though a serious evaluation would have to take into account the
capacity to uphold such rights, and also the "accelerated
erosion of basic due process and human rights protections in the
United States" as "U.S. authorities at federal and state
levels undermined the rights of vulnerable groups, making the year
[1996] a disturbing one for human rights," with the President
not only failing to "preserve rights under attack" but
sometimes taking "the lead in eliminating human rights
protections." The social and economic provisions of the UD and
other conventions are operative only insofar as popular struggle
over many years has given them substance. The earlier record
within the national territory is shameful, and the human rights
record abroad is a scandal. The charge of
"relativism" levelled against others, while fully
accurate, reeks of hypocrisy. But the realities are for the most part "kept dark, without any need for any official ban." |
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