Friday, December 07, 2012

Why the right wing killed the Disabled Treaty

You'll hear many specious excuses from conservatives about why the Disabled Treaty was voted against by members of their party. These folks love to throw out nonsense reasons for their idiotic actions. However, there really are no excuses for their ignorance and willful refusal to grant protection to the disabled in our world. Bob Dole and John McCain urged their colleagues to support the ratification of the global treaty that bans discrimination against the disabled.  But, true to form, the right wingers turned a deaf ear to the pleas of even members of their own party to do the right and honorable thing.  Because of such idiocy, the death knell is ringing for the Republican Party, which has been taken over by Tea Party types. GOP now stands for "Goofy Old Party" that is fast going down the tubes. 

http://consortiumnews.com/2012/12/07/why-the-right-killed-the-disabled-treaty/

Why the Right Killed the Disabled Treaty

December 7, 2012

Besides rejecting many aspects of science, the American Right despises the idea of international agreements as well, considering them infringements on U.S. “sovereignty.” That attitude among GOP senators turned back a global agreement on protecting the disabled, notes ex-CIA analyst Paul R. Pillar.

By Paul R. Pillar 
Paul R. Pillar, in his 28 years at the Central Intelligence Agency, rose to be one of the agency’s top analysts. He is now a visiting professor at Georgetown University for security studies.

Former Senator Bob Dole, 89 years old, returned this week to the floor of the chamber where he was for many years one of the leading Republicans. He also, of course, had twice represented his party on a national ticket as the nominee for vice president and then for president.

Infirm of late and just recently checked out of Walter Reed hospital, Dole was in a wheelchair pushed by his wife Elizabeth, also a former senator. He came back to the Senate to show his support for ratification of a multilateral treaty banning discrimination against people with disabilities.

Dole demonstrated in his own career what a talented person with a disability can do. He lacked one of the common tools of a politician: a handshake with the right arm — an arm that in Dole’s case had been rendered useless by a severe injury sustained in combat in World War II.

Sen. John Kerry, as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, was the principal advocate of the treaty in the Senate debate. In his speech he appealed to his colleagues, “Don’t let Senator Bob Dole down.” It wasn’t enough.

One of those who lobbied against ratification was another former senator, one whose career has been far less accomplished and distinguished than Dole’s. Rick Santorum argued that somehow the treaty would not let American parents home-school their kids. The vote on ratification was 61 in favor and 38 against, falling short of the two-thirds needed for ratification.

The opposition to this treaty reflected a generic opposition on the right that extends as well to other broadly-adopted international conventions, to anything having to do with the United Nations, often to treaties in general, and even to most international cooperation in general.

Those with this mindset often speak about not wanting to compromise U.S. “sovereignty.” Suspicions were voiced that the disabilities treaty would mean U.N. bureaucrats making decisions about the needs of American children. One could almost hear the black helicopters hovering overhead.

Some of the treaty’s opponents also argued that because countries we don’t like — and which we like to assume are insincere and hypocritical regarding their international obligations — such as Iran and Syria have signed the treaty, for the United States to adhere to the treaty might imply that we approve of how those countries treat their disabled citizens.

That’s a strange approach — one that would appear to give the disliked countries a veto over which international agreements the United States does and does not sign on to itself. Moreover, if we regard the United States as sincere in what it says and it what it signs up to internationally, then the message being sent by rejecting a treaty is that the United States rejects the principles embodied in the document.

Sovereignty does not mean handcuffing one’s own diplomacy or eschewing international commitments. It instead means a nation acting freely and not being told by another country what to do. Signing and ratifying a treaty are themselves acts of sovereignty. And as John Ikenberry has argued, undertaking commitments through international institutions is one of the best ways through which even a superpower can extend and perpetuate its global influence.

Advocates of ratification patiently explained that the convention on disabilities merely applies to other nations what are already legal obligations in the United States under the Americans With Disabilities Act. Rejection therefore has little practical effect on the United States — unlike with, say, the Law of the Sea Convention, which 163 other states have already signed and ratified but the United States has not.

The Senate, however, has missed a chance — which neoconservatives in particular ought to have welcomed — to say something positive about the rest of the world accepting values that Americans have already expressed in their own laws.

(This article first appeared as a blog post  at The National Interest’s Web site. Reprinted with author’s permission.)

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1 comments:

ceresmary said...

Thanks love for posting this, many of 'us' (disabled people were in on calling all congress members for this bill, wasting valuable time. I have a poem for you on this about those who have directly suffered by this not passing, one woman had her wheelchair locked up at Air France for 'evidence' of possible bomb for 5 weeks. No wheelchair for 5 weeks. Another gentleman was escorted off an airplane in Europe because he was 'disabled' and didn't have an able bodied companion, he couldn't get home. Another was stopped in Largardia was hauled off the plane for like reasons, not allowing him to travel to Australia where he had family (and round trip tickets) not reimbursed...just hauled off. Raymond and I could not get Visas: we wanted to go to Canada, UK last year, NOPE because we didn't have a third party traveler 'just in case' because we both have Cerebral Palsy...sick, hmmm. The stories keep going, and all the Goons of Rick Santorum were concerned about was sitting across from the UN. Honestly, I think it was in retaliation for not electing him as VP. That's my take. Too damn bad we can't sue him for impeding with human rights voting.