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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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28
September 2008
The
March of Human Rights
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Last
week's designation of a Select Committee room of Parliament as the
"Rainbow Room" shows just how far the human
rights movement in New Zealand has marched over the last sixty
years. Standing alongside other Select Committee rooms
dedicated to Maori, Pacific Islanders, Asians and women, the
Rainbow Room was dedicated by the Speaker to recognise gay, lesbian and trans-gender New Zealanders
"and the paths they have taken to full
citizenship with equal rights."[1]
On December 10, 1948 the United Nations General Assembly
adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
foundation document of the human rights movement.[2]
Originally designed to protect citizens from the abuse of
power by the state, human rights legislation has now become a
vehicle used by activists to harness the power of the state to
promote and mainstream their cause, often
overturning centuries of history and tradition in the process.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) came into
being after the Second World War, reflecting the world’s
abhorrence of atrocities such as the Holocaust. The
fundamental idea behind the declaration was that if a set of
basic safeguards for citizens was developed that would protect
them from mistreatment by the state – safeguards such as the
protection of life, liberty, and dignity - then all
governments would agree to sign up.
The process of developing the UDHR was carried out by a
multinational committee of the United Nations under the
chairmanship of Eleanor Roosevelt. Their challenge was to
devise a binding code of conduct for governments that would be
universally accepted. At the heart of the Committee’s
deliberations was the merging of the Anglo-American view of
rights as limitations on government with the Continental concept of rights as claims
on government.
The Anglo-American approach to human rights is based on the
concept of protecting citizens from
the Government. It recognises the considerable power held by
the state, which, if used in the wrong way, can lead to death
and destruction. With history being littered with tragic tales
of genocide, torture, and persecution this approach to human
rights attempts to prevent such atrocities by limiting the
state's power. Its focus is on the need to protect the freedom
of individuals from state control, and to restrict the way
that the government deals with them: from safeguarding the
freedom of expression, to protecting private property rights
and enforcing the rule of law.
The Continental approach on the other hand is concerned with
utilising the power of the state to provide services -
education, welfare, pensions, health care, public housing and
the like – and to ensure that individuals have the right of
access. This approach, however, is open to socialist capture
as rather than restricting the power of the state, it leads to
an expansion of the state as individuals and groups call for
the government – in the name of “rights” - to do more.
It is this marriage of ideologically opposed approaches to
human rights that can cause confusion and create distortions.
On the one hand are constraints to limit government and
protect the rights and freedoms of individuals, while on the
other hand are demands for more government interventions,
which by their very nature erode the rights and freedoms of
individuals. And when governments are faced with a choice
between the two approaches, unsurprisingly, it is the one that
expands their power and control which usually wins. In other
words, the human rights movement, which was originally created
in order to restrain government has instead become a movement
to expand government.
Who
could have imagined, for example, that those early calls for
an end to discrimination against women would have resulted in
feminists successfully undermining marriage and the family,
not to mention marginalising boys and men. Such is the
insidious way that the rights movement works - whereby
activists gain powerful positions in the government, the
public service, academia and non-government organisations
(NGOs) from which to drive their agenda - that mainstream
society is often largely unaware of any threat to accepted
traditions and values until it is too late.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator Bruce Logan, writer and
founder of the Maxim Institute, describes the growth of the
rights movement in his opinion piece "Is the United
Nations a Threat to National Sovereignty". He explains
how tensions have arisen between
the United Nations and individual governments, which are
increasingly uncomfortable about accepting a human rights
agenda that is driven by the UN’s desire for a "new
world order" rather than by the demands of their own
citizens:
"A subtle shift in authority and propaganda is taking
place between the New Zealand government and some conventions
of the United Nations. For
example, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
Child has, in the domestic setting since it was ratified in
1993, developed its own special kind of authority (especially
in the eyes of public intellectuals appointed to implement
it), and, as a consequence, trumped the sensitivities and
beliefs of ordinary New Zealand citizens.
"We have seen this in the last couple of years with the
removal of Section 59 of the 1961 Crimes Act.
There were no hordes of parents or children
demonstrating on the streets.
The call for change came from public intellectuals and
noisy NGOs, well placed in relation to the levers of control
and media influence. They
won the day because the clear, common sense distinction
between parental discipline in the context of the family, was
usurped by an ideological confusion of parental correction
with violence. And Human Rights’ Commissions are partners in
seduction. In New
Zealand the Human Rights Commission supported the removal of
section 59 from the Crimes Act". To read the article
click the sidebar link>>>
In fact, the removal of section 59 of the Crimes Act is part
of the "Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children",
an international human rights campaign
driven by the United Nations.[3] While it is promoted as a way
of safeguarding children’s rights, the more sinister outcome
is the undermining of parental rights.
Thanks to MMP and the Green Party, New Zealand has now signed
up to the global agenda and outlawed traditional child
correction methods. This follows on from the Labour
Government’s abolition of corporal punishment in schools in
1989, similarly carried out for ideological reasons, rather
than through public demand. This change has seen an
unprecedented escalation of violence in schools, seriously
undermining the authority of teachers.[4]
Another United Nations driven rights campaign that has fueled
the actions of a minority group in New Zealand to progress a
radical agenda is the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. This
campaign, which blames colonisation for the oppression of
indigenous people, demands self rule. In particular Article 4
states: "Indigenous peoples, in exercising their right to
self determination have the right to autonomy or self
government in matters relating to their internal and local
affairs, as well as ways and means for financing their
autonomous functions".[5]
This right to self government is a key demand of the Maori
sovereignty movement and, according to a recent speech given
by the President of the Maori Party, the Maori Party itself:
"Our
four members of Parliament … are the foundations blocks for
the Tikanga Māori House that has emerged. This is the
House that our tūpuna tried to fashion a century ago. It
is now a reality. Every vote for the Māori Party is a
vote for the Tikanga Māori House".[6]
While the New Zealand Government joined Australia, Canada and
the United States in voting against this UN Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous People, it is likely that, with
the
support of the United Nations, the call by activists for self
government will continue to grow.
During
its 9 years in power, the Labour Government has been a
champion of the rights movement. However, the Minister of
Education, Chris Carter has now been accused of taking his
commitment to gay rights a step too far. By publicly endorsing
a scholarship for gay, lesbian, bi-sexual or transgender
students only on a flyer to schools, the Minister could be
seen as putting the rights of gay students ahead of others.[7]
It is when the rights agenda crosses the line into the area of
positive discrimination – using the power of the state to
promote the cause, rather than minimizing barriers to
advancement – that it goes too far. The Minister appears to
have crossed that line.
This
week’s poll asks:
Do you think that the United Nations has too much influence on
New Zealand’s domestic law? Go
to Poll >>>
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
>>>
FOOTNOTES
1. Speaker, Rainbow
Room formally dedicated at Parliament
2.UN,
Declaration
of Human Rights
3.UN, Global
Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children
4.Muriel Newman, Reasonable
Force in Schools
5.Muriel Newman, Crossing
the Line
6.Whatarangi Winiata, Speech
to the Maori Party AGM
7.Listener, Gay
Wrongs?
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