A stock way
of dismissing objections to what someone is doing is for that person to defiantly
assert that s/he has a right to do it. This often works.
The
term ‘right’ has an authoritative legal ring to it, although it is often not a
legal right that is being alluded to – ‘right’ in common parlance tends to be
used in a normative sense, which is to say that which ought to be (in the speaker’s view) rather than that which is. This can create apparent paradoxes,
such as a man barred by a court from contacting his children adamantly
insisting that he nonetheless has a right to do so.
Rights have
been on a roll for the past few decades. The pattern that has emerged with the
wave of social-transformative causes they have been associated with is: claim
it as a right, silence opposition by making opponents look as though they’re
depriving people of their rights, turn up the heat on MPs and eventually the
law-makers will concede. The first of these steps often comes down to creating
a right where there isn’t actually one to begin with. Legal academician Philip
Alston complained way back in 1984 that rights were being “conjured up” left,
right and centre “as though by magic”. The formula has worked well. As
examples, abortion on demand was turned into an issue about a woman’s right to
control her own body (thereby effectively creating a right to abortion), and
same-sex marriage became an issue about people’s right to marry whom they
wished (thereby creating a right to marry someone of the same sex). (No, I’m
not ‘anti-abortion’, I’m just illustrating how the bunny-out-of-a-hat rights-creation
process works.) Of late, some interesting noises have been coming out of Europe
about it being a ‘right’ for illegal migrants to enter and stay in Europe – one
to watch.
At the
national level, actionable rights are created by parliaments, defined by statute,
and enforced by the courts (in Common Law jurisdictions, rights are
occasionally also created by courts). But in order to claim the moral high
ground, the rights movement has increasingly shifted the focus onto so-called ‘universal’
or ‘basic’ human rights. This begs the question that there is a universal consensus
about what basic human rights are, which there isn’t – there are cultural and
ideological aspects to the ‘rights’ mindset. I recall a debate between The Times of India and Beijing Review about 30 years ago in
which each claimed to have the better human rights record. The Indians said
they had the better record because people could vote. The Chinese said they had
the better record because everyone had enough to eat. Alright, so I’m oversimplifying
the arguments put, but it is clearly the case that different conceptions of
human rights are being invoked. And it is not only regimes of dubious ethical
credentials who have quibbles with the Western European conception of human
rights – Lee Kwan Yu was a prominent dissenter in this regard. Africans too
tend to adopt a more ‘collective’ approach to rights, as is inherent in the
title of the African Charter of People’s and Human Rights.
At a
pragmatic level, unless ‘universal’ rights are incorporated into domestic law,
delineating them – let alone enforcing them – is fraught with difficulties
owing to the weak-as-water legal basis of most of those rights.The Universal
Declaration of Human Rights is often cited as an ultimate authority, but the
UDHR, being a UN General Assembly resolution, has no legal force – only
Security Council resolutions do. The UDHR underpins two treaties of 1966,
namely the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The former has
legal effect, but the Western powers saw to it that the latter did not – it is
non-judiciable. There are numerous other human rights treaties of the ‘toothless
tiger’ variety, such as the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women.
The human
rights field is awash with platitudes that are too nebulous to translate into
enforcement action. A right has no legal effect unless boundaries are drawn
around it. The ‘right to education’, for instance, does not specify what kind
of education, or its duration. The UNESCO position on this right is that all
young people should have access to a basic school education, which is to say
primary plus lower secondary schooling – in practice, 9 or 10 years. However,
this is a recommendation and is not justiciable.
International
human rights law moreover allows for a ‘margin of appreciation’, which is to
say the leeway afforded to nation-states with regard to incorporating international
treaty rights into their domestic legal systems. The most shining example of
this principle would have to be the ‘right to life’ in the European Convention
on Human Rights, which is followed in the same sentence by the exception of
capital punishment where that remains on the books. The ‘right to life’ is
referred to as an ‘absolute right’, but all that means in legal jargon is that
a signatory cannot enter reservations against that provision and cannot
‘derogate’ that right (i.e. trump it with a competing right). There is nothing
‘absolute’ about this or any other human right, whatever the absolutism of
human rights zealots suggests to the contrary.
Human
rights crusaders overlook these inconvenient niceties as they aggressively
pursue their global social engineering agenda. They read into international
human rights conventions and declarations whatever they like, which sometimes
amounts to sheer fabrication, such as reading a right to same-sex marriage into
the UDHR (see http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/issues/lgbt-rights/marriage-equality). They have got their hooks into
education and disseminate their propaganda in schools with the authorities’
blessing – the ‘global human rights education project’. One of the big players
is Amnesty International. Turn to their UK website (http://www.amnesty.org.uk) and from there to the ‘Teaching Resources’
page, where you’ll find a ‘game’ for 5- to 8-year-olds to teach them that a
family can have two Mummies or two Daddies, the recruitment of 7- to 11-year-olds
as ‘activists’, and plenty more along similar lines. This ‘human rights education’
isn’t actually ‘education’ at all, but an integral part of a global social-transformative agenda in which it plays the roles of
indoctrinator and recruiter. You’ll find that agenda embedded in many a ‘social
studies’ curriculum and being shoved down kids’ throats by many an
ideologically committed teacher.
Parental
rights to transmit their values to their children are being sidelined, and as
for teachers who don’t like being forced into the role of transmitter of values
that they find objectionable or even abhorrent, they can go find another job.This
is not what State education in a democratic society should be about. It’s time
for concerned citizens to take on the hijackers and their moles in government ministries
and departments. For when zealotry meets apathy, zealotry wins.
Parts of this article are based on my recently
published paper ‘The Shaky Legal Foundations of the Global Human Rights
Education Project’ with the Journal of International Social Studies. This may
be accessed through http://www.iajiss.org/index.php/iajiss/article/view/187. If this link does not work for you, email
me at bv00@aub.edu.lb and I will send you a pdf file containing
the paper.
6 comments:
“When is right not a right”? When it is wrong!!!?
In my Youth...Yes! Oh Dear here we go again...back to the distant past. Nevertheless in my Youth one’s parents were always right even when wrong (which was not very often).
Rights, as Barend states, it covers everything one wants and cannot achieve due to a majority opposition decision against. So what is more natural as to use this ready weapon in our social mores, humanitarian, sympathetic, over concern society conscience in gaining one’s way?
The Greens are past masters at Rights, and the Treaty advocates not far behind, both in demanding our MMP Politically restrained Masters whose very life style depends on pleasing everyone to remain in government, accede to their “Rights”.
The United Nations thrives for its very existence on “Rights”, framed as they are in the sanctified corridors of that white carbuncle of bureaucracy, which passes for World Government in New York.
As Barend point out so clearly “Rights” enter into our very existence, every claim no matter from what organisation demands the right to this, and that, for their people. It seems that the only people left out are those of us who are either too busy to care, too old to be concerned, and the rest who live in hope that their “Rights” might some day gain attention and recognition.
Oh Boy luckily for us “Dreams” so far, have not been issued with any “Rights” yet. Perhaps they have to be taxed first!
Great article Barend, Would have been interested on any comments from say Thomas Paine, or Edmund Burke; pity they are gone. Or are they!!!
Brian
I take the view that "rights" should be more correctly termed "privileges". Privileges that we have gained from living in a civilised society.
If people recognise them as privileges then, perhaps, they will be valued and it will be better understood that the only thing that will preserve them is maintaining society's standards of fairness and justice. And there is not a lot of that around the world at the moment.
A woman living under Isis has no rights, no privileges and no access to justice.
Irrespective of some lovely words in one of the USA's founding documents (" ... inalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness ... "). ('Inalienable' - is something which CANNOT be taken away for ANY reason) This from a country which has ALWAYS alienated the first two (death sentence, and gaol) whenever it felt it appropriate to so do.
The ONLY rights anyone has are those granted by the society in which they live.
Also
1. Every 'right' infers a corresponding 'obligation'
2. Freedom of Speech does NOT give the right to shout "FIRE" in a crowded theatre
........... UNLESS, Geoffrey, there IS a fire!
Even more interesting is when the alarm-raiser sincerely believes there to be a fire starting even though there isn't.
Prisoners have all been convicted and found in the eyes of the law to be guilty of a crime worthy of the penalty of a term of imprisonment. During that time many misguided individuals expound on their rights to an unbelievable range of benefits most would have assumed would have been extinguished, at least by the time of sentencing. No. Not at all. Our mechanisms to apply penalty have been so eroded that the benefits of conviction far outweigh any disadvantage. End result. Even the most poorly parented or uneducated amongst them would identify the facts. The benefits of breaches include rewards most unfamiliar to those who keep their noses to the grindstone and pay the toll of life.
SOLUTION is so basic you'd think the most dim witted politician would have tripped over it by now. Convicts have a right to Food, Water and Shelter for the duration of their sentence. NO MORE! No harm in dreaming. B
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