The Trump administration rejects human rights principles at home and abroad | Trudy Rubin
Last week,
You might think the Secretary of State’s timing strange, as
But Pompeo told his audience, “The timing couldn’t be better.”
I agree.
This is a moment in time when Americans should be having a national dialogue led by the
Trump attack on legal immigration undermines American values I Trudy RubinBut those vital debates aren’t happening. And that is not, as Pompeo charged at the Constitution Center, because “too many leading voices promulgate hatred of our founding principles.” They aren’t happening because the president openly assaults the values Pompeo claims to be defending and stokes racial hatred, while blaming his critics for the chaos he creates.
It is still useful, however, to pay attention to the report of the State Department’s
The commission was originally tasked with reexamining the role of human rights in
The secretary distinguishes between the “inalienable rights” promised in our founding documents – the report stresses property rights and religious liberty as the most essential - and “contrived rights” created by politicians. The implication is that the latter include reproductive rights and LGBTQ+ rights, which are undeserving of protection (especially when you need evangelical votes).
Equally egregious, the secretary uses the report to claim that “never before have America’s founding principles have been under such assault.” He denounces “outrageous efforts to erase American history by tearing down statues of our nation’s founders.”
In other words, a report on the nation’s founding principles is used as a vehicle to misrepresent the struggle to implement those principles with demonstrations that have been overwhelmingly peaceful. No mention of Trump’s sending military-clad federal agents uninvited into
And when it comes to statues of our nation’s founders – in the few instances where they have been threatened – the Trump administration’s behavior makes it harder to defend them.
I believe that statues of the founders should be honored, not defaced, because those men embraced universal principles unique to the times they lived in, principles that we are still struggling to live up to. Trump could be making that argument in an effort to bring the country together. Instead, he and Pompeo choose to stir ugly divisions that undercut the very principles they claim to endorse.
And that fake Pompeo piety is equally egregious when it comes to promoting human rights abroad at a time when American leverage is waning. He uses the report to argue that Trump’s critics “have lost sight of the fundamental difference between autocracies … and liberal democracies.”
“That is the most appalling part of the report,” notes
Until recently, when attacks on
Yet, Pompeo’s sycophantic defense of his rights report is still useful, because it reminds us of the debates that will be necessary if the administration changes in November. The country will need to revisit the issue of how to restore human rights advocacy as a serious element of
Far from disqualifying America as a rights promoter, our internal struggles over race are a sign that most Americans care about the founding principles that Trump and Pompeo keep insulting.
“I think the civil rights struggle is an opportunity,” Posner told me. “We are an open society and that hard debate over our failings makes the world recognize we take these things seriously.”
More seriously than the current administration’s pretend concern for values it dishonors every day.
___
(c)2020 The Philadelphia Inquirer
Visit The Philadelphia Inquirer at www.inquirer.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Baystate Health announces Kindred Behavioral Health as partner in 120-bed, $43 million behavioral health hospital
Dana Point man indicted in healthcare fraud now faces tax-evasion charge
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News