America’s Shame / This Nation No Longer Shines on Human Rights

Sunday, May 28th, 2006 by RLR

From The PGH Post-Gazette
Editorial

libertyThe United States being hauled up before the U.N. Committee Against Torture in Geneva earlier this month was a sharp reminder of how America’s reputation as a beacon of human rights has sagged in recent years.

There was a time when the United States could go on the offensive in international forums against countries that were human rights violators. It could do that since its position was solidly based on a strong record of respect of civil rights and deeply entrenched rule of law at home.

That base now no longer exists, and American professions of indignation at other countries’ violations of human rights have a tinny ring in the light of what has happened to the United States in that regard. It isn’t so much that the United States has taken strong measures at home and abroad in response to the 9/11 attacks and to seek to preclude other such events. That was normal. It is rather the degree to which the United States has violated its own previous standards of justice, in the name of 9/11, in the name of what is sold to the American public as defense of U.S. national security.

What it appears took place at U.S. military detention facilities that include Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay in Cuba and in the CIA’s secret prisons in Europe, plus the practice of U.S. captors turning prisoners over to countries where torture is openly practiced, are a shame to America.

Read more Shame

Posted in Civil Liberties, News, Opinion, Terror | 3 Comments

  • If Human Rights were an Olympic Event, since 9/11 the USA would be banned from competion.

    Comment by FuzzFlash | May 28, 2006

  • That’s competition.

    Comment by FuzzFlash | May 28, 2006

  • Only terrorists love human rights…haven’t you heard the president? we’re at war and besides, we weren’t using those rights, anyway

    Comment by bill | May 29, 2006

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