Last month, Joseph A. Klein wrote an
article for the Canada Free Press criticizing the Obama administration for joining the UN Human Rights Council. The council had met and found fault with a number of human rights
violations by America.
For this, Klein verbally bashed the council.
Klein is author of the book Global Deception: The UN’s Stealth Assault on America’s Freedom.
Having "studied the United Nations for many years" Klein says he
"watched it degenerate into an anti-Western echo chamber that does more
harm than good."
"Arrogance diminishes wisdom” – Arabic proverb
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...we righteously oppose aggression while invading and
simultaneously occupying numerous countries, while threatening to attack
still more, and arming countries like Israel to the teeth to wage still
other attacks..."
Glenn Greenwald, attorney, commentator and author | |
The point of Klein's writing is that the UN is wrong because of its criticism of the US and Israel.
The US and Israel share two shameful traits: both abhor criticism, and
both divert attention from their own faults when criticized by levelling
the same criticism at others.
"In my new book, Lethal Engagement," says Klein, "I focus on
the perfect storm revolving around the increasing Islamicization of key
UN bodies – particularly the ones that produce influential international
norms."
In short, criticize Israel for any of its misdeeds –destruction of
Lebanon's infrastructure, imprisoning thousands of Palestinians,
starving and slaughtering Gazans – and Klein will shift to an unrelated
issue.
Klein complains that "Obama wants to engage with our enemies like Iran
and Syria while coming down hard on one of our closest allies, Israel".
Thus, Klein (and others) will criticize Obama, but to find fault with
America or Israelis is to be dubbed unpatriotic, Islamic extremist or
anti-Semitic.
While most people's ire is aroused by criticism from outsiders (aliens,
expatriates, foreigners) there are often good reasons for outsiders to
be critical.
Attorney, commentator and author of How would a Patriot Act, Glenn Greenwald pointed to several understandable reasons for external criticism in his books and articles.
"We systematically torture Muslims and then cover it up and protect our
torturers while preaching accountability and the rule of law; we
condemn deprivations of due process while maintaining and expanding
lawless prison systems for Muslims..."
That being factually accurate, it's understandable why those who have
suffered under our double standards denigrate their abusers.
Greenwald notes how our critics react predictably to our hypocrisy: "We
demand adherence to UN dictates and international law while blocking
investigations into UN reports of war crimes and possible 'crimes
against humanity' by our allies..."
If that weren't enough, Greenwald reminds us that "we righteously
oppose aggression while invading and simultaneously occupying numerous
countries, while threatening to attack still more, and arming countries
like Israel to the teeth to wage still other attacks..."
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“Americans think that any criticism of America is unjustified,
primarily because much of the evidence fails to make it to the media and
because they rebel at criticism.” | |
Americans think that any criticism of America is unjustified, primarily
because much of the evidence fails to make it to the media and because
they rebel at criticism.
To resist criticism and denigrate honest critics is a sign of impending downfall from the pollution of conceit.
English actress Ellen Terry appropriately observed that "conceit is an insuperable obstacle to all progress".
To return to Joseph A. Klein's gripe, he bemoaned the members of the
Human Rights Council including, "among its own proud roster of members,
such countries as China, Cuba, Libya and Saudi Arabia".
Then, to shift the focus from American abuses, Klein groaned that
"These serial human rights abusers exploit the UPR process to heap
praise on each other and whitewash their own abysmal records, while
scoring propaganda points against Western democracies for falling short
of perfection."
In making that comment, he just did what he complained that members of
the Human Rights Council do. Heaping praise on America, he attempts to
score propaganda points by denigrating others.