Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled Pe

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Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled Pe

Postby styky » 07/ 18/ 12 12:58 pm

:shock:


Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled People

by Karla Dial

As a first step toward ratifying a controversial United Nations resolution, the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing today on how to care for disabled people.

According to the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), the “best interests of the child” is the gold standard for deciding how those with disabilities are educated — and by whom, and in what setting..........http://www.citizenlink.com/2012/07/12/s ... ed-people/
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby styky » 07/ 18/ 12 1:18 pm

[-X

“The changes to American law that will be required to comply with the provisions of this treaty are profound and utterly unacceptable,” he said. “Specifically, the changes regarding the rights of parents who have children with disabilities — which includes thousands of homeschooling families — are absolutely inconsistent with the basic constitutional principles of parental rights.

“The ratification of this treaty would constitute the most dangerous departure from the principles of American sovereignty and personal liberty in the history of the United States Senate.”
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"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby styky » 07/ 18/ 12 2:05 pm

U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

http://www.wnd.com/2012/07/parental-rig ... eye-again/

Farris insists that this treaty has all the trappings of socialism at its finest, as it would seize control from the legal guardians of children and hand it over to the government and an international organization.

“This treaty will give United Nations and government agents, not parents, the authority to decide all educational and treatment issues for disabled children,” Farris continued. “All of the rights that parents have under both traditional American law, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act will be undermined by this treaty.”

Obama’s signature on the plan in 2009 moved it forward. At the time he said it was a civil rights issue, and insisted CRPD must be enforced.
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice; honor; duty; mercy; hope ~ Sir Winston Churchill
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby Alec Bachlow » 07/ 18/ 12 2:49 pm

"Give me control of he woman and I will have control of the child- the man will follow like a confused lonely dog"- I think I have just summed up our family law system. In order to control a populace- or a tribal herd of humans is to attack that, that is most vulnerable- that which is seen as the most weak- That - that is the weakness of the human heart- Go after what they love and cherish most- Go after the CHILD.

When you hear some wanna bee authority say "In the best interest of the child" - beware..The really mean in their best interests on how to maintain and gain more control over people. When you corner these beings of false infantile benevolence - and they are under duress...they run like rats from a burning ship leaving the children to cook or drown.

The UN and their researchers into emotional manipulation of the human animal have been working on this much like the Nazi s warped and utilized Freud's theories to gain control of people through emotion and sexuality. This is not a new game- The UN- had better stop treating the world like a herd of animals Animal husbandry should be kept for animals...Let the UN herd sheep and shut up.
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby styky » 07/ 18/ 12 8:12 pm

When you hear some wanna bee authority say "In the best interest of the child" - beware..


Exactly. Run for the exits
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice; honor; duty; mercy; hope ~ Sir Winston Churchill
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby styky » 07/ 21/ 12 1:25 pm

Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
It's expensive to support the disabled -- suicide kits are $39.95

By: Rhonda Wiebe


Arthur Schafer's portrayal of comments on the merits of physician-assisted suicide need challenging (Assisted-suicide slope not so slippery, July 19). Schafer, like many supporters of physician-assisted suicide (also known as "doctor-prescribed death"), does not seem to have considered the wider issues facing Canadians with disabilities, including the ongoing social prejudice and discouraging lack of living supports that we encounter on a daily basis.

The recent decision in the British Columbia Supreme Court regarding the constitutional right of Gloria Taylor, an ALS patient, to end her own life rather than live with disability only confirms what we with disabilities already know -- that many Canadians believe it is better to be dead than disabled. What also became clear in the decision is that the judge believes it is better to be dead than disabled. The judgment was pronounced without considering the message it sends to all of us who believe that despite profound functional limitations, we want to live.

Gloria Taylor and others who are newly disabled face loss. All of a sudden you can't do what you could easily do before. Every day you face renegotiating the world around you in new and frightening ways. No one wants it, but that's what has to be done if you want to live a vibrant and meaningful life.

Let's look at another very significant loss -- that of the death of a child. The pain, I am told, is absolutely devastating. Every day you are reminded of what you once had that is now gone. Everywhere you turn, you have to reconfigure how you approach things, and you are constantly faced with ways of bracing yourself against this insurmountable absence of what you once had.

But when a parent loses a child, do the majority of Canadians chime in to say, "Your pain must be so horrible. You have no quality of life. Here's a syringe -- why don't you end it all? Better yet, here's a doctor ready to write you a deadly prescription." If you find this notion offensive, then you know how disturbing it is for people with disabilities to hear either from persons who haven't yet adjusted to the losses inherent in acquiring a disability or to hear from able-bodied "experts" that we should have the right to end our own lives. There is no apparent discussion, either in the Taylor decision or amongst persons such as Schafer, that acknowledges the problems might lie in our lack of supports to go on living. Instead, they just want to make possibilities for us killing ourselves that much smoother.

Their argument, of course, is disguised as one of self-autonomy. They want to make sure that we have the right to commit suicide. But do they work hard to ensure that same right to grieving parents, heartbroken adolescents, or anyone else facing devastating social circumstances? It is incomprehensible that suicide-prevention organizations are not more proactive when people with disabilities feel their only option is to kill themselves.

Let's look at another issue -- pain management. If you read the Taylor case, you'll see that it actually has very little to do with physical pain. This fact is consistent with data about who is asking for (and receiving) physician-assisted suicide. Jack Kevorkian killed far more people with newly diagnosed disability than he did those with terminal illness and unremitting pain. Gloria Taylor's submission didn't talk about unretractable pain, but it did spend a lot of time describing how she was worried about not being able to go to the bathroom by herself. I know a lot of vibrant, exemplary citizens who need assistance with incontinency issues. There are products for that. But if someone is really so ashamed of needing this kind of help, able-bodied Canadians have some pretty tough questions they better face about how they judge the merits and worth of other human beings based on the fact that their bodies have leaky places.

The insidious bottom line is this -- last I looked, a take-home euthanasia kit in Oregon cost $39.95. That's a whole lot less expensive than providing someone with the supports they need to cope with the loss resulting from having a disability, and then providing them with the means to get on with the matters of daily living. It's way cheaper to let people suffer, or cut back services so life is untenable, or subtly convince people with disabilities that they have lives that aren't worth living. Imagine being inundated with the message that you have a right to end your miserable, burdensome, devalued life, because, really, it's your choice. Unfortunately, some people with disabilities are starting to drink that Kool-Aid.

I know of what I speak. I live with an incurable medical condition that already diminishes my capacity to live, work and play. My future holds a certainty of further losses, but the hardest thing to face is the tacit agreement on the part of ableist Canadians that the lives of people with disabilities are pitiable, disempowered and, in the end, not worth supporting.

The slope to euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide isn't just slippery, it's growing slicker because Canadians aren't willing to carefully examine their own attitudes towards living with disability, and because, like much else, we're hurtling into a human-rights-devoid world where we do the cheap thing, not the right thing.


Rhonda Wiebe co-chairs the Council of Canadians with Disabilities' ending of life ethics committee.

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition July 21, 2012 A15
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinio ... 72916.html
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice; honor; duty; mercy; hope ~ Sir Winston Churchill
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby Kate Shaw » 07/ 22/ 12 10:25 am

Didn't we fight World War II against the people who designed this system? And didn't we WIN?
"The line separating good and evil passes not through states, not between classes, nor between political parties, either but right through every human heart." Alexander Solzhenitsyn
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby styky » 07/ 22/ 12 6:07 pm

Ask the Religion Experts: Does the renewed debate on Doctor Assisted Suicide say anything about the sanctity of life in modern times?


The Ottawa Citizen July 21, 2012

Rev. KEVIN FLYNN is an Anglican priest and director of the Anglican studies program at Saint Paul University.

If life is sacred, then presumably it is just as sacred in modern times as at any other time. What may be different about contemporary debates is that we, as a society, seem far from a consensus on what such “sanctity” entails. Indeed, the very term“sanctity of life” is rather abstract.

Cases in which there may or may not be doctor-assisted suicide are anything but abstract. This means discussions about this matter need to be undertaken within the wider context of the Canadian health-care system. For that matter, it cannot be addressed through law or medicine alone. We need broad reflection on the experience of death and dying.

Requests for doctor-assisted suicide appear to be signs of the failure of human community. It is difficult, if not impossible, to regard life as sacred if we have no assurance that we will be supported in all circumstances. We need to be certain that we will not be forced to endure dehumanizing medical procedures. We need confidence that we will not be abandoned in our suffering. With all the financial strains that our health-care system is facing, terminally ill people need to know that assisted suicide is not being promoted because it is actually cheaper than good palliative care.

Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/life/Relig ... z21OXPXVZi
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice; honor; duty; mercy; hope ~ Sir Winston Churchill
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Senate Considers Adopting U.N Measure Regarding Disabled

Postby Ogopogo » 12/ 10/ 12 11:15 pm

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/matt-vespa ... -un-treaty

NewsHour Pundits Both Denounce 'Black Helicopter' Republicans on UN Treaty

By Matt Vespa | December 10, 2012 | 13:02
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As Colonel Kurtz said at the end of Apocalypse Now: “the horror, the horror.” That sentiment encapsulated New York Times Republican David Brooks and syndicated columnist Mark Shields’ reactions to the rejection of the UN treaty on the rights of the disabled in the Senate last week. Brooks called it “embarrassment for the country” – while Shields called it “a profile in cowardice.” Regardless, it seems that both men forget that we have a similar bill called The Americans with Disabilities Act, which was passed under George H.W. Bush.

During the segment, which aired on December 7, NewsHour anchor Judy Woodruff decided to end her interview with Brooks and Shields on this point:

JUDY WOODRUFF: We have about only 20 seconds, but one of the moves in the Senate among these conservatives was to deny the U.N. treaty on the rights of persons with disabilities. How does something like that happen?

DAVID BROOKS: It's an embarrassment for the country. This was a treaty that could have given Afghan vets who have lost limbs the greater ability to go abroad and live with dignity. And to do it for black helicopter reasons, to vote against this, it is an embarrassment.

MARK SHIELDS: You have heard of a profile in courage. This was. It really was, I mean, Republicans who are terrified of a primary, of a challenge on their right. And so they come up with this bogus explanation or theory about blue-helmeted U.N. soldiers coming into homeschooling parents and ripping their child away, having disembarked from the black helicopters. It's a total fabrication. And to do it as Bob Dole sat there on the Senate floor asking for their support is a travesty.

In a segment that dealt mostly with the fiscal cliff, it seems odd that one would offer "2o seconds" on such a topic if not to bash Republicans. (Did Woodruff reserve 20 seconds because she knew both would passionately agree?) The NewsHour has failed to spend more than these 20 seconds on this treaty. It has no time for the arguments of conservatives. like former Sen. Rick Santorum, who argued "there is not a clear definition of “disability” in the treaty, which means some committee at the U.N. will decide after ratification who is covered." Instead, it's another opportunity for David Brooks to parade his own progressive instincts around.

In this brief denunciation, PBS did not observe that this isn’t the end of the treaty. It’s probably going to be put up for a vote next year. Nevertheless, to smear conservatives, like Brooks and Shields did, as being fearful of “black helicopters” and “blue helmets” is unmitigated hyperbole, which doesn’t help anyone in this matter. Neither spent a second on the fact that we have a bill, an American bill, which ensures that the disabled are afforded a wide scope of civil rights.

In 2008, George W. Bush expanded the ADA, and Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA) said:

The day, 18 years ago, when President Bush’s father signed the original Americans with Disabilities Act into law was the proudest day of my Senate career. But this day comes close, because this new law overturns Supreme Court decisions that have taken away the rights of people with disabilities, and restores the original promise and protections of the ADA.

“I think of my brother Frank, who was deaf, and who suffered terrible discrimination and exclusion, and I think of millions of other Americans with disabilities who face similar obstacles. As chief Senate sponsor of both the original ADA and this new ADA restoration act, I am deeply gratified that we could work in a bipartisan fashion to ensure that all Americans have the right to equal opportunity, full participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency.”

Since the ADA became law in 1990, a series of court decisions narrowed the category of who qualifies as an “individual with a disability,” contrary to Congressional intent. By raising the threshold for an impairment to qualify as a disability, these court decisions have deprived individuals of the discrimination protections Congress intended to provide. The ADA Amendments Act would remedy this problem and restore workplace protections to every American with a disability.

Independent nations have the right and duty to protect their most vulnerable citizens, which the United States has done with the Americans with Disabilities Act since 1990. To omit this piece of legislation within the broader confines of this discussion is egregious in the extreme.

Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/matt-vespa ... z2EhjTVaBd
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