This Media Outlet Just Sued the Pentagon Over its New Policy
Tim Walz Can Dish It Out, but He Can't Take It
Guess How Many Democrats Voted Against Protecting Our Schools From Chinese Influence
Pope Leo Tells Europeans Worried About Islam to Be Less Fearful
Occam's Bazooka
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 297: Biblical Time Keeping – BC and AD...
Democratic Lawmakers Big Mad That Trump Admin is Fighting NarcoTerrorists
Trump Admin Sweeping Minneapolis For Illegals After Somali Fraud Exposed
Maryland Man Sentenced for Scheme Helping Foreign IT Workers Pose as U.S. Citizens
Arizona Father-Son Duo Sentenced for Massive Cross-Border Narcotics and Money Laundering S...
Two Miami Men Get 57 Months for Nationwide Sale of Diverted HIV and...
Federal Jury Finds Texas Resident Guilty in $150K PEMEX Bribery Plot
Another Person Stabbed on Charlotte Light Rail; Illegal Alien Arrested
The Dangerous Joy of Christmas: Standing With Persecuted Christians This Season
America First, Christian Nationalism, and Antisemitism
Tipsheet

Biden Wants UN to Investigate US for 'Systemic Racism,' UN Nowhere To Be Found When Real Crimes Committed

AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

The Biden administration recently announced it wants the United Nations to investigate the United States' supposed "systemic racism," as Townhall reported earlier. 

Advertisement

In his statement released last week, Secretary of State Blinken formally invited UN envoys to investigate the United States and praised the UN's Human Rights Council's recent desire to "address systemic racism against Africans and people of African descent."

The Human Rights Council has 47 seats, with countries rotating every three years that are elected by the UN General Assembly. The most recent batch of countries added to this body is a group of fifteen nations, the vast majority of which have glaring human rights violations and other serious crimes committed that garner little to no attention from the Biden administration or the UN. The new member countries tasked with policing human rights around the globe include China, Russia, Pakistan, Senegal, Malawi, and Côte d’Ivoire.

Keep in mind that these additions to the council happened last fall, less than six months after George Floyd's death, which has been used to justify the UN's new focus on what it calls systemic racism, and following riots which further encouraged grandstanding elites to project the left's narrative of America, with "racism" at the center of every plot point.

Advertisement

Of the recently added countries, China tops the list for most out of place on the UN's Human Rights Council. The CCP's six-week coverup of the Covid outbreak from the Wuhan lab is itself enough to question the UN's lack of reprimand and decision to let China onto the Human Rights Council. Never mind the political crackdowns in Hong Kong, the silencing of political opponents throughout mainland China, and the concentration camps for Uyghur Muslims.

Russia also has issues with human rights violations. Human Rights Watch, a non-governmental organization that evaluates human rights, posits that Russia is "more repressive than it has ever been in the post-Soviet era. The authorities crack down on critical media, harass peaceful protesters, engage in smear campaigns against independent groups, and stifle them with fines." 

Aside from the UK and France, all the new member countries on the Human Rights Council have at best a questionable record on human rights. Common trends include restrictions on freedom of expression, extrajudicial punishments and killings, general government corruption, and the imprisonment of political pariahs.

Advertisement

Pakistan silences oppositional non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and cable networks. "A climate of fear continues to impede media coverage of abuses both by government security forces and militant groups," again according to Human Rights Watch. "Journalists increasingly practiced self-censorship in 2018, after threats and attacks from militant groups."

Senegal practices "unlawful or arbitrary killings including extrajudicial killings by or on behalf of the government," according to the State Department. Homosexuality is criminalized in Malawi with harsh punishments for offenders. The government of Côte d’Ivoire has enforced "temporary disappearances" of its citizens.

The list goes on for these countries, and yet the Biden administration chooses to invite UN authorities to spend time investigating America.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement