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Genocide Forum Omits U.S. Violations

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  • Genocide Forum Omits U.S. Violations

    GENOCIDE FORUM OMITS U.S. VIOLATIONS

    University Wire
    February 11, 2008 Monday

    The three-day human rights forum kicking off today at Cal State Long
    Beach is welcomed, needed and long overdue. While the event will
    inform and address atrocities perpetuated on a global level, a focus
    on U.S. human rights violations should be built into the program.

    Certainly, California's own history of allowing and condoning genocide
    and human dignity violations should be offered as visible components.

    With no doubt in mind, the Holocaust in 1930s and 40s Germany is a
    crucial topic that will always be locked in human memory. Genocides
    in Africa, Europe, Asia and the Middle East will surely be repeated
    if knowledge of their existences is not continuously shared.

    Existing evidence of humanity's inhumanity to other humans on an
    international scale is more than enough to have presentations on
    Darfur, Rwanda, Armenia and practically every corner of the globe where
    one group attempts - and often succeeds - in eradicating another group.

    The reasons one race, ethnicity, class regime, political power,
    religion or other symbolic brute-of-the-month employ to justify
    wiping other humans out of existence might seem inconsequential to
    the average college student, but genocide is learned behavior.

    Human rights horrors are not just phenomena that happen someplace
    else; it's not only "others" who are victimized, raped, tortured and
    murdered, who are stripped of family, language, culture, identity
    and property. It happens on a cyclical basis on our own turf.

    Enslaving blacks who were dragged here on ships was an act of
    genocide. The European "discovery" of the "Land of the Free," and
    consequential planned extermination and decimation of Native American
    populations, was genocide.

    The U.S. genocides wer recognized by the United Nations in the 2007
    Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples, a document the U.S.,
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada blatantly refused to accept.

    Our historically male-dominated country incorporated women's rights
    violations into its social doctrine and continues the practice.

    California's mistreatment of Latinas/os, Native Americans, Chinese
    and many others seems as if it's on a generational rotation. Yet
    we continue to marginalize by depriving fellow humans of access to
    education and critical economic resources.

    People who come to our country seeking a better way of life are met
    with hostility and violence.

    In California, we've seen a constant and continuous trend of wanting
    people from Mexico to do our grunt work, only to be criminalized and
    deported when deemed a burden on the economy.

    We as a nation are equally to blame on an international level for
    practicing patterns of racism, hegemony and ethnocentricity toward
    any human group unlucky enough to be in a minor capacity.

    Many of these issues are either overlooked, underrepresented or
    absent in the planned presentations during the President's Forum on
    International Human Rights.

    When a society refuses to acknowledge its complicity in perpetuating
    assaults on human life and dignity, it essentially condones the
    actions.

    The current events at CSULB are vital in keeping the social conscience
    alert. Finger-pointing needs also to be directed inward to include
    the U.S. and our own state's responsibility and complicity.

    Too many wounds are still open to infection.

    Hopefully, this forum is merely the beginning.
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