Slidey
But pieces of what?
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2004
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- HSC
- 2005
Since so many people bring up issues in America as some sort of justification either for those of another country, such as China or Iran, or to make a point that such issues are unavoidable, here's a thread where they can be discussed without diluting a thread focused on another country or issue.
Discuss questions of morality; whether less human rights abuses is more acceptable even if they are as bad. Or discuss any recent human rights news you care to dig up. But keep the comparisons to America in this thread, because America is not the leader of the world, and America is not representative of 'the West'.
Or you can discuss America's appaling notion that schools are allowed to decide whether they teach contraception or the ludicrous "abstinence only" sex education, and the human rights problems the subsequent STD blooms cause. America has the highest STD rate of all the well-recognised developed Western countries, at more than 3 times that of the UK, and 6 times that of Australia and most other Western entities, and 1/40th of the world's HIV-suffering population, close to Russia.
Discuss questions of morality; whether less human rights abuses is more acceptable even if they are as bad. Or discuss any recent human rights news you care to dig up. But keep the comparisons to America in this thread, because America is not the leader of the world, and America is not representative of 'the West'.
Or you can discuss America's appaling notion that schools are allowed to decide whether they teach contraception or the ludicrous "abstinence only" sex education, and the human rights problems the subsequent STD blooms cause. America has the highest STD rate of all the well-recognised developed Western countries, at more than 3 times that of the UK, and 6 times that of Australia and most other Western entities, and 1/40th of the world's HIV-suffering population, close to Russia.
Slidey said:Re moral absolutism: I don't contend American human rights abuses are any better than China's, but I do contend they are far less numerous. To me, and many people in this world, this matters. While I love idealism, in reality concessions must be made. China's abuses are more numerous per capita with no institutions in place to actively question them (which is actually one of its human rights abuses - supression). To me, this makes them the priority.
Further, plenty of people are at work (both in America and worldwide) to fix and criticise America's human rights issues, and this doesn't concern me because as a liberal democracy, America has constructs with which its people can hold their government accountable (which is currently being done on many fronts, one of which is the war with Iraq, as judges request the FBI hand over back-up records of emails sent about the Iraw war, a request they can't refuse, as a small example).
Another interesting point is planned revision of the government's ability to claim something beyond the law by stating documents are matters of national security and thus can't be used as evidence.
Any government whose people can hold her accountable without concern for their safety is not a huge concern of mine (unless said accountability isn't being enforced), regardless of how favourably you might view the processes of democracy.