U.S. Standing Alone
Against Children
By David Swanson
March 07, 2015 "ICH"
- Lawrence Wittner
points out that the United States will
soon be the only nation on earth that has
not ratified the
Convention on the Rights of the Child.
And why not? Wittner focuses
on general backward stupidness: the treaty
would "override" the Constitution or the
importance of families or the rights of
parents. He points out the treaty's support
for parents and families and the
impossibility of overriding the Constitution
-- which we might note in any case says
nothing on the subject.
Then Wittner mentions some
more substantive reasons for opposition:
"... in fairness to
the critics, it must be acknowledged
that
some current American laws do clash
with the Convention’s child protection
features. For example, in the United
States, children under the age of 18 can
be jailed for life, with no possibility
of parole. Also, as Human Rights Watch
notes, “exemptions in U.S. child labor
laws allow children as young as 12 to be
put to work in agriculture for long
hours and under dangerous conditions.”
Moreover, the treaty prohibits cruel and
degrading punishment of children―a
possible source of challenge to the
one-third of U.S. states that still
allow corporal punishment in their
schools."
That's actually a pretty
major in-fairness-to-the-critics point. The
United States wants to maintain the ability
to lock children in cages for the rest of
their lives or to work them in the fields or
to physically abuse them in school. In fact,
the
child prison industry is a major
presence in the United States.
And there's another
industry that has a dog in this fight. The
U.S. military
openly recruits
children.
And let's not forget that
there are children on the drone kill list
and children who have been killed with drone
strikes.
There are other nations
that engage in some of these same abuses. Is
it better to ratify a basic human rights
treaty and violate it or to refuse to ratify
it because you intend to act against it as a
matter of principle?
I'm inclined to think the
latter suggests the further remove from
decent tendencies.
David blogs at
http://davidswanson.org