AMERICA HAS NO MORAL
RIGHT TO LECTURE THE REST OF THE WORLD ON HUMAN RIGHTS
United
States of America On 4th July 1776 gained its independence from the
British. On that day a declaration of independence was signed by 12 states and
later the state of New York on 19th
July. The declaration of independence contained
among many arguably the most memorable declaration in the history of the human rights agenda and I quote, “We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they
are edwoed by their creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these
are life, Liberty and pursuit of happiness”. For many, America is a perfect example of a
state that has championed the human rights agenda both in practice and advocacy.
Hence a belief that America has earned the moral right to spearhead the human
rights agenda. An argument that is in my opinion is unfounded, and marred with hypocrisy,
misguided and egocentric traits. If there is any country in the world today
that should “lecture” the rest about
human rights, that country is not to be America.
It has no moral right to do so.
Even
after independence and the signing of the declaration of Independence USA changed nothing about racial segregation,
women’s rights and recognition of the black race. In particular the question of
equality, the notion that all are created equal. Until 1967, marriage between different
races was prohibited by law, supported by anti-miscegenation laws, or miscegenation laws, which laws enforced segregation. They
prohibited marriage and intimate relationships between different
race and criminalized interracial
marriages. These laws had been introduced in 17th century
and remained in force even after independence. These were later reinforced by the Racial Integrity Act of 1924,
which prohibited marriage between people classified as "white" and people classified as "colored”. It was not until
1967, in the supreme court case of Loving v. Virginia, that anti-miscegenation laws were held to be
unconstitutional. This was exactly 191 years after independence, approximately
2 centuries after the signing of the declaration of independence.
Blacks in America were denied
the right to vote even after the signing of the declaration of independence, it was not until 1869 that an effort was made
by congress where congress banned restrictions on the basis of race and color
when it came to voting rights, an amendment that was adopted on March 30, 1870.
Note that this was 94 years after the declaration of independence. However
these amendments were never effected as states incorporated laws that acted as obstacles
for the realization of this right, that included poll taxes and discriminatory
literacy tests from which whites were exempted from what they termed as “grandfather
clauses”. These laws effectively disenfranchised the black people in America.
So in reality blacks in America were not accorded the right to vote. After close to two centuries in 1965, “The
Voting Rights Act, was signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson on August 6,
1965, that overcame legal barriers at the
state and local levels that prevented African Americans from exercising their
right to vote under the 15th Amendment (1870) to the Constitution of the United
States”. This was the actual amiable move that empowered blacks to vote in America. It took America 189 years to grant
black people a right to vote that had been protected by the declaration of
human rights signed approximately two centuries ago.
Women in America were never accorded same
rights with men, when it came to voting even after the declaration of independence
. Attempts by women movements to participate in
the 1872 elections with the hope that
the Supreme court would enforce their “unalienable Rights” hit a dead end when the “Supreme Court”
ruled against the suffragists. In 1890
a the National
American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was formed to further the
fight for women’s voting rights. In
1916 Alice Paul started
the National Woman's Party (NWP), a militant pressure group with
the mission of having the passage of a national suffrage amendment. It had over
200 of its supports arrested with many others going on hunger strike. “After a
hard-fought series of votes in the U.S. Congress and in state legislatures, the Nineteenth Amendment became
part of the U.S. Constitution on August 20, 1920 which in effect accorded women
the right to vote. It states that;
"The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or
abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex."
That was exactly 144 years after the declaration of independence
that stated “ that all men are created equal”.
So why should America not learn from its own history and let countries
go through the metamorphosis of the realization of human rights. If it took
America close to two centuries to provide for what I would call basic rights as
argued above, America should give the world breathing space, allow countries to
develop internal desires for change of laws, give chance to nations to debate their
futures and draw compromises based on their own considerations.
The whole notion of “America is Angelic ” is unfounded, unqualified and marred
with hypocrisy, and misguided by egocentric traits. Nations should be left to
craft their destinies and not to be compelled to copy a paste from a “world
leader with dirty hands”.
Article Written by
Mweisgwa Onesmus
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