Daily Kos

U.S. Race Record Demands Action

Fri Mar 21, 2008 at 03:17:05 PM PDT

By Jamil Dakwar, Advocacy Director, and Jennifer Turner, Human Rights Researcher, for the ACLU’s Human Rights Program.

Today is the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, annually observed since 1966 to commemorate the Sharpeville massacre  of young South African students peacefully protesting apartheid laws. It's a fitting occasion to examine recent international attention to racism in the U.S.

On Tuesday, the same day as Senator Obama’s speech on race in America in which he proclaimed that "race is an issue that…this nation cannot afford to ignore right now," U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour said before a high-level panel convened in Geneva, "48 years after the Sharpeville shootings, no country can claim to be free of racism’s destructive influence."  And earlier this month, in an event that received far less coverage in U.S. media than Obama's speech, a U.N. human rights body reviewed the United States’ record on racial justice, and found that we are in breach of our human rights obligations to end racial discrimination. After these recent pronouncements from Geneva, it's clear that we, as a nation, can no longer deny the problems of racial discrimination, from racial profiling to unequal access to educational opportunities, that persist here.

On March 7, the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination issued a searing indictment of racism in this country.  The Committee is charged with monitoring the U.S.’s compliance with a binding international treaty to end racial discrimination, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, ratified by the U.S. in 1994.  In its "concluding observations," the U.N. body enumerated a long list of areas in which the U.S. is violating its treaty obligations at the federal, state, and local level, and is perpetuating racial discrimination through laws, practices, and failures to remedy systemic racism. In formulating its findings, the Committee reviewed submissions by the U.S. government and non-governmental organizations like the ACLU and held a hearing to question U.S. government officials about issues raised in the NGOs’ reports to the Committee.

 The Committee declared that racial profiling is widespread in the U.S., and expressed concern about the increase in racial profiling against Arabs, Muslims, and South Asians since 9/11.  The Committee also noted that de facto racial segregation persists in American public schools while racial disparities in suspension, expulsion and arrest rates in schools funnel students of color into prison.  The U.N. body strongly criticized the "persistent racial disparities in the criminal justice system," pointing to the disproportionate number of African-Americans and Latinos in the prison population, the disproportionate sentencing of youth of color to life imprisonment without parole, the persistent systemic inadequacies of criminal indigent defense programs, and the persistent and significant racial disparities in the imposition of the death penalty.

 The Committee also declared that the U.S. government response to Hurricane Katrina has had a disparate impact on low-income African-Americans.  In illustrating the U.S.’s breach of the international treaty, the U.N. body also pointed to the pervasiveness of police brutality, violence against Native American women and domestic workers, the disparate impact of felon disenfranchisement laws, and the erosion of legal protection and redress for women workers and undocumented workers.

On issue after issue, the U.N. body slammed the U.S. government, noting numerous examples of racial discrimination and demonstrating that the U.S. government simply is not doing enough to address widespread racial discrimination.  The Committee’s findings unambiguously showed that to retain (or regain) any legitimacy as a proponent of human rights, the U.S. must address racial discrimination with real reforms.

Of course, all this begs the question, what does the U.N.’s view from the Alps mean for Washington, or for that matter, displaced residents of the Lower Ninth Ward, or the millions of Americans barred from the polls because of a felony conviction? The U.N. body issued clear and detailed recommendations to the U.S. government, creating a blueprint for the government to follow in order to stem the widespread human rights violations the Committee documented.

While these recommendations are not legally binding, they serve as goals for which concerned Americans can push our government, and are a set of benchmarks for us to assess our government’s record on human rights.

For example, Congress can implement the Committee’s recommendations to pass two pending pieces of legislation, the Civil Rights Act of 2008, which would restore basic civil rights protections that have been weakened over the years by the courts, and the End Racial Profiling Act, which would combat racial bias in police enforcement.

Moreover, these recommendations carry a heavy moral weight, and if the U.S. is to assert leadership on human rights issues, it must take the findings of these U.N. bodies seriously.  Now that these international bodies have called on the U.S. to act, the world will be watching any new administration to determine whether the government is serious about combating violations of the human rights of racial and ethnic minorities and immigrants.

Tags: aclu, human rights, racial discrimination, hurricane katrina, barack obama, united nations, civil rights, Rescued (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 9 comments

  •  Drug laws (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Mas Gaviota, Neon Vincent, SciVo

    Call me a Tommy Chong wannabe, but it all starts with drug laws.

    When was the last time a Budweiser route driver shot up a Walmart because he saw a Coors driver make a delivery there?

    Prohibition didn't work the first time and it's not working now.

    And yet African American congressmen keep voting for and our most recent Democratic president kept signing stupider and stupider drug laws every year.

    But if our drug laws weren't so stupid, a whole bunch of government employees would have to be laid off.

    We hate Asians, too.  I wonder how they escaped our drug law tragedy/farce?

  •  The US needs to recognize (4+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Mas Gaviota, catchaz, Neon Vincent, SciVo

    the legitimacy of international bodies and even of international opinion; it used to pay attention to them when those things could be manipulated as part of the 'Cold War.'

  •  Thanks for a well written and documented diary. (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    catchaz, Neon Vincent
  •  great diary - racial profiling (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    immigradvocate, Neon Vincent, SciVo

    thanks for the great and substantive diary.

    another area of concern is the racial profiling directed at people of Hispanic origin due to the furor around and demonization of illegal immigrants.

    we should work to defeat any candidate who steals the Democratic nomination.

    by catchaz on Fri Mar 21, 2008 at 04:19:01 PM PDT

  •  U.S. Civil Rights commissioner: investigate media (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Neon Vincent

    The day before yesterday, Michael Yaki called for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights (of which he is a commissioner) to hold its first hearing on the media, specifically its coverage of race:

    In its 50 year history the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has never questioned the role of the news media on the journalistic equivalent of the who, what, where, why, when, and how in terms of choosing to report on race. We have questioned, sometimes under subpoena, officials partaking in corrupt voter schemes; officials out of compliance with the mandates of Brown and federal civil rights laws. But never, in our 50 years, have we asked the media what they believe their role has been and continues to be in shaping the entire question of race in this country for their audience, the American people.

    Make no mistake; race was always the elephant in the room in American politics. And in this election, it is a mega-elephant. Until Obama's candidacy became viable, it was easy to ignore, pretend that it wasn't there, a non-factor until he became a factor. Then slowly, inexorably, perhaps even spurred on by parodies on "SNL", the media began to rise up and chip away at him on issues or race. News media began worrying about the "racial divide," exit polls tracked black-brown-white voting patterns, and experts were brought in to analyze what it all meant.

    Now how the media covers race is the 45-foot long raptor sitting next to the elephant in the room. Will the raptor simply slash away at the elephant for the political equivalent of a cage match? Will there be thoughtful discussion, or will You Tube tapes of Pastor Wright available to serve as "video wallpaper" simply be used to re-fuel the issue on slow news days?

    He was, of course, immediately threatened in vaguely ominous (and ominously vague) terms by a radicalized conservative employing their new "liberal fascism" meme:

    You call any hearing to discuss the content of the media, and I assure you, you will see a backlash like none you have ever seen.

    Mussolini would have been so proud of you.

    Now, I don't pretend to speak for Mr. Yaki. I can only tell you that recently, my dad has wondered aloud -- and without a trace of facetiousness -- if the cable news channels are trying to incite a race war. It sounds bizarre (who would benefit?), and yet I couldn't really make an evidence-based argument to the contrary, due to the equally bizarre behavior of our punditocracy.

    So, my take: Hells yeah! It's about damn time!

    (I posted this in an open thread yesterday, to no apparent interest. Figured it actually fit here, so I updated it a little and reposted it here.)

    McCain '08: because a magical money fairy will keep us from having to tax rich people! And if you believe that, I have a country to sell out from under you.

    by SciVo on Fri Mar 21, 2008 at 07:26:08 PM PDT

  •  Wonderful diary (0+ / 0-)

    Thank you for this. I wish I could make everyone I know read this. The last few months have been embarrassing for me as an American citizen. From the UN calling my country out for its practice of slavery down in Florida, to the BBC providing more coverage of Americans losing their homes than our own media, and now this; I feel terrible. I feel the eyes of the entire world, and I am ashamed.

    The worst part is that I know that most Americans either don't know or don't care. I sometimes feel like the backlash from so many Americans who read these UN reports is do to embarrassment more than anything. We have been the moral leaders for so long, that it is hard to swallow that the entire world is calling us out. It is far easier to think that the rest of the world is just jealous.

    I think that I need to spend more time educating the people around me.

    "how many times do we have to learn that tough talk is not a substitute for sound judgment?" - Senator Obama

    by moviemeister76 on Sun Mar 23, 2008 at 12:35:49 AM PDT

  •  question (0+ / 0-)

    ACLU can you tell me why this outstanding and critically important diary has so few hits?  Ditto the interesting diary a few days ago titled something like: let's talk about race

    chant: leftists are PATRIOTS

    by fernan47 on Sun Mar 23, 2008 at 02:36:23 AM PDT

  •  This sounds like a joke... (0+ / 0-)

    If they can write that much on the US and racial discrimination how many paper feet are the reports on:

    • Singapore
    • Malaysia
    • China
    • Fiji
    • Sudan
    • Zimbabwe
    • Serbia
    • Russia
    • India
    • Mexico
    • France
    • Indonesia
    • Cuba

    I would never claim that the US has a perfect record on race, but if you exclude monoracial countries (ie. Iceland) I think we're in the top 1% on equality of treatment.

Permalink | 9 comments