CCHR

Worldview Commentary No. 260 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Chavez’ Vision for Venezuela: Adios to Human Rights”

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What to say about democracy and human rights in the Venezuela of President Hugo Chavez?
The short answer is, “Adios.”

The most prominent news on Venezuela this week is that the government has raised its ownership
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Worldview Commentary No. 257 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Dueling Human Rights Reports: China and the United States”

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The United States and China this month celebrated their annual ritual of issuing public reports on each other’s human rights performance. Once again, their mutual critiques read like ships passing in the night: each country stresses issues where it looks good and the other looks bad. Once again, in denouncing each other’s human rights shortcomings, they are both mostly right. Read More

Worldview Commentary No. 256 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Genocide by Proxy – The World Court Weighs In”

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When is a nation legally responsible for atrocities carried out by armed groups it supports in another nation? And what are the consequences?

These questions are not merely theoretical. In 1986 the International Court of Justice (also known as the World Court) ruled that the United States was not generally liable for human rights violations committed by the Contras in Nicaragua. Even though the US created, funded and trained the Contras, the Court ruled that the US was not responsible for most of their actions, because Washington did not have “effective control of the military or paramilitary operations in the course of which the alleged violations were committed.” Read More

Worldview Commentary No. 252 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Saddam: How Not to Try a Tyrant”

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Few people outside Saddam Hussein’s base among Iraqi Sunnis will mourn the bloody
dictator’s passing. But Americans may come to regret our government’s complicity in
putting him to death after a patently unfair trial. For some observers, we will have
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Worldview Commentary No. 244 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Offending Islam ”

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On the morning of August 10, as news broke that British police were arresting suspects in
a plot to bomb flights to the US, I was in a New York airport, stuck in the longest
security line I have seen since 9/11, under strict orders to jettison my tooth paste and
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Worldview Commentary No. 243 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“The American Society of International Law: A Rare Rebuke”

No one could accuse the American Society of International Law of being an activist organization. Founded a century ago, its first President was Secretary of State Elihu Root. Its Centennial meeting in Washington this month was addressed by Root’s successor, Condoleeza Rice, and by Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. Read More

Worldview Commentary No. 242 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Prosecuting Charles Taylor: The Hague as Safety Valve”

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If more evidence were needed to make the case for the International Criminal Court in The Hague, it can be found in current efforts to prosecute former Liberian leader Charles Taylor, accused of fomenting a bloody guerrilla war in the neighboring country of Sierra Leone. Read More

Worldview Commentary No. 240 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Women’s Rights: First Case Under New UN Treaty”

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Some 182 nations – the United States is among only ten hold-outs — have now joined the United Nations Convention on Elimination of Discrimination against Women. In the quarter century since its adoption this treaty – infelicitously known as “CEDAW” – has proved useful in stimulating governments to reform discriminatory laws and to focus official attention on moving toward equality for women. Read More

Worldview Commentary No. 238 on Chicago Public Radio, 91.5 FM WBEZ

“Eavesdropping on Americans: Implausible Deniability”

Professors David Cole of Georgetown and Curtis Bradley of Duke agree on little in the
law. Cole, an ardent defender of immigrants and civil liberties, is a darling of the left.
Bradley, a skeptic about international law and champion of national sovereignty, is a
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