RSS Feed for This PostCurrent Article

Human Rights Day

 

udhrpage1“Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.” ~UDHR Article II                                                                                                                                                                                            

Today is Human Rights Day, marking the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  Though not all its articles are fulfilled by the governments of the world, it is a document that stands for what all of us are fighting for today.  Many have suffered.  Many have died.  Women, men, and children around the world in large and small ways have stood up to defend that which they are born with: the indefeasible right to live free from discrimination, oppression, violence, slavery, and war.  Be inspired.  Take action.  Start with yourself.

 You are member of the human race.  You are endowed with rights that no one has the right to take away.  Defend your rights.  Defend the rights of others.  There are small things, and big things you can do.

 Now, more than ever, this is the work that matters.  We cannot depend on our leaders.  We must depend on ourselves.  We must stand together.  The struggle for women’s rights is no different than the struggle for gay rights is no different than the struggle for indigenous rights is no different than the struggle to end slavery, genocide, poverty, torture, or war.  All want equality.  All want respect.  All want life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  When you stand up for one, you stand for all.

Start with yourself.  Embrace the UDHR and uphold its principles.  Fight for your rights, and defend the rights of others.

 

Eleanor Roosevelt, President and Chair of the Commission on Human RIghts, holds a Spanish copy of the UDHC.

Eleanor Roosevelt, President and Chair of the Commission on Human RIghts, holds a Spanish copy of the UDHC.

 

The following statement is from the UDHR website.

 It was the UDHR, 60 years ago, that first recognized what have become nowadays universal values: human rights are inherent to all and the concern of the whole of the international community. Drafted by representatives of all regions and legal traditions, the UDHR has stood the test of time and resisted attacks based on “relativism”. The Declaration and its core values, including non-discrimination, equality, fairness and universality, apply to everyone, everywhere and always. The UDHR belongs to all of us.

 More than ever, in a world threatened by racial, economic and religious divides, we must defend and proclaim the universal principles –first enshrined in the UDHR– of justice, fairness and equality that people across all boundaries hold so deeply.

 Human rights are not only a common inheritance of universal values that transcend cultures and traditions, but are quintessentially local values and nationally-owned commitments grounded in international treaties and national constitutions and laws.

 The Declaration represents a contract between governments and their peoples, who have a right to demand that this document be respected. Not all governments have become parties to all human rights treaties. All countries, however, have accepted the UDHR. The Declaration continues to affirm the inherent human dignity and worth of every person in the world, without distinction of any kind.

 The UDHR protects all of us, and it also enshrines the gamut of human rights. The drafters of the UDHR saw a future of freedom from fear, but also of freedom from want. They put all human rights on an equal footing and confirmed human rights are essential to a life of dignity.

 

The UDHR drafters’ vision has inspired many human rights defenders who have struggled over the last six decades to make that vision a reality. The contemporary international human rights edifice that originates in the UDHR is to be celebrated. But it has yet to benefit all of humanity equally. 

The struggle is far from over. As the Declaration’s custodians and beneficiaries, all of us must reclaim the UDHR, make it our own. While we are entitled to our human rights, we should also respect the human rights of others and help make universal human rights a reality for all of us. In our efforts lies the power of the UHDR: it is a living document that will continue to inspire generations to come.

 

cross-posted at Oh…My Valve!

  • rw

    “Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration, without distinction of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status.” ~UDHR Article II

    Would like to see this updated to include: …property, birth, species or other status.

    Let’s not forget our animal community.

  • wodiej

    I second that….

  • benny

    Its HUMAN rights day. not animal rights.

  • rw

    But we are all animals aren’t we, so why the distinction.

  • benny

    ask the U.N

  • http://www.wewillnotbesilenced2008.com OBAMA IS A FRAUD

    Everyone better use these guaranteed rights up right away before the Fraud gets his hands on them. I would say that when the Fraud (I mean IF) takes office, that at least 1/2 of these so called “human rights” will be a thing of the past…just like our Constitution and Declaration of Independence. We’ll all be sharecropping the Fraudbama Plantation. “Justice, Fairness, and Equality?” ROFLMAO. Those are already gone, as we have seen for the last two years.

  • margarita

    The reality of achieving human rights (living free from discrimination, oppression, violence, slavery, and war) is now further away than it has been in many years…thanks to our so-called leaders…who do not lead in this area at all.

  • Galt’s Psychoanalysis

    Regarding the question of human versus animal rights: This issue is like the abortion debate. There will never be a clear cut answer acceptable to all. This is not directed against any other comments on this thread necessarily: One major problem with combining human and animal rights is the omnivorous nature of some animal species.

    Trying to combine human animal and non-human animal rights and getting agreement on who has the right to eat another is problematic at best. Those who do not eat animal flesh will be in one corner and those who are omnivores will be in the other. There are other problems with the idea of one standard of rights, but this seemed a good example.

    Another is work non-human animals: how do we ask a dog if they want to be a guide animal for a blind human animal? Should we not allow this because it is exploitation? And finally, some people do not even think of human beings as animals and never will.

    What do I think? As usual, my centrist values of principled compromise leading to solutions. :mrgreen:

  • rw

    The institution that since 1945 has had 8 secretary generals and NOT one has been a woman (over 50% of world population). No person should assume the UN is so forward thinking as to include the rest of the animal kingdom in its tenets of rights…..any time soon.

  • Galt’s Psychoanalysis

    I will never get over my fundamental right being taken away that my vote not be made meaningless.

  • ipotter

    … gender… not that THAT will ever happen

  • Brian

    Be nice to get some of those rights back after the last 8 years.

  • http://uppitywoman08.wordpress.com Uppity Woman

    In honor of this day, Pakistan promises to delay setting any women aflame till tomorrow and Afghanistan has declared a moratorium on shooting women in the head. They will be very busy tomorrow catching up though.

  • Galt’s Psychoanalysis

    Hey Uppity. I hear ya. :(

  • wodiej

    well the way women are treated in this country we aren’t too far above animals anyway.

  • wodiej

    no shit

  • Karma

    Which right do you think will be at the top of Obama’s list to restore?

    Because I don’t see Obama concerned with anyone’s rights but his own.

  • Galt’s Psychoanalysis

    Ugh. :(

  • Brian

    The right not to be taken to a foreign country and tortured, for one.

  • rw

    “This issue is like the abortion debate. There will never be a clear cut answer acceptable to all”

    But that is all the abortion issue is, a debate. The law IS clear cut. No consensus needs to be reached on the animal rights issue among the public, but the law needs to make it clear what their rights are and legal consequences the law carries.

  • http://bill-clinton.bestpoliticalblogs.co.uk/2008/12/09/human-rights-day-no-quarter/ Human Rights Day : NO QUARTER

    [...] Human Rights Day : NO QUARTER Bill Ayers, Bill Clinton, Bill Moyers Journal, Bill of Rights, Bill Richardson, Birth Certificate (Barack Obama), Birth Mystery, Black Agenda… [...]

  • benny

    This is the Human Rights Day. So lets stick to that. Animal rights is another discussion altogether. lol

    Lots of humans across the world still dont have basic rights. Thats sad.

blog comments powered by Disqus