U.S. Congress to Vote on Another Extreme U.N. Measure: CEDAW

Lame Duck Congress Wants to Rush Before New Legislators Get There

Sheryl Young
The United States Congress is set to vote on a United Nations bill called CEDAW in an upcoming session - possibly even this week - to get this extreme form of legislation pushed through before newly elected legislators take office. Three former U.S. presidents might have approved CEDAW, but couldn't raise enough congressional or citizen support. Why?

WHAT IS CEDAW?

The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) was adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in 1979. But it didn't gain notoriety until being introduced to a panel of American and foreign women by Hillary Clinton at the Fourth United Nations World Conference on Women in Beijing, 1995.

Sounds good:

CEDAW vows to eliminate any form of differentiation between the sexes in order to avoid discrimination against women. (see the U.N. introduction here and the full text here).

On the basis of this elegant surface language, CEDAW is lauded and pushed forward by Amnesty International and high-profile feminists as the greatest document to come along for the rights of women. Many countries, including democracies, have accepted CEDAW.

Sounds bad:

Some of these countries now realize that "any form of differentiation between men and women" isn't such a good thing. However, they're stuck with it.

The document's broad wording is ironically a tool against women in tyrannical and empirical countries, and in bullying small countries with little to no power, to accomplish things like this:

-Belarus' government was told to abolish Mother's Day because mothers typified by Mother's Day are stay-at-home moms. CEDAW dictates the working business woman as the ideal mother.

-China was told to decriminalize prostitution. Observe this wording: "The Committee is concerned that prostitution, which is often a result of poverty and economic deprivation, is illegal in China. The Committee recommends decriminalization of prostitution" (U.N. 25th Session). I.e. CEDAW advises that poor women become legal prostitutes. Since there are so many more Chinese men than women, rape and human trafficking have risen. If prostitution is legal, human trafficking will no longer be a crime.

-The U.N. began a campaign in Mexico to force easier access to state-funded abortion, while Mexico was a predominantly Catholic country.

-Slovenia was ordered to limit - not expand - women's choices of academic fields (i.e. no home economics, women must study things like technology and business).

-Italy was ordered to revise schoolbooks to stop showing mothers as role models.

-CEDAW recommends that 50 percent employment and elected positions be given to women, whether or not women qualify or even want the jobs.

CEDAW violates U.N. Charter, U.S. domestic policy, society and sovereignty:

The U.N. Charter states: "Nothing contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within domestic jurisdiction"(Chapter 1, Article 51 in U.N. Charter).

Yet, Article 2 of CEDAW requires nations to embody the principle of the equality of men and women in their national constitutions or other legislation (bolding mine).

Article 5 of CEDAW says that nations shall take appropriate measures to modify social and cultural patterns of conduct of men and women, with a view to achieving the elimination of prejudices ... based on stereotyped roles for men and women.

This may be advantageous for women in countries employing extreme Islamic tactics against them, but those countries have only given lip service to the document. Things haven't improved.

U.S. citizens with an opinion on CEDAW should contact their congressional representatives immediately.

Sources:

U.N. Introduction to CEDAW

Full Text of CEDAW

The Official U.N. Charter, Chapter 1

"US Pro-Life/Pro-Family NGOs Flood White House Switchboard Against CEDAW," Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, 6/7/02.

Save Mother's Day.com, a Campaign to Education America about the Dangers of CEDAW.

Published by Sheryl Young - Featured Contributor in Politics

Freelance writer since 1997; Featured Political Contributor for Yahoo!; Tampa Tribune Community Columnist/Blogger; Chicken Soup for the Soul; Amy Foundation National Writing Award; happy wife, proud step-mom...  View profile

46 Comments

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  • Anthony Ventre3/12/2011

    ditto, whiplash.

  • LarrWayne1/2/2011

    Why do so many crazy people want to continuously make laws?

  • Robert Lee Alford12/21/2010

    Nice job covering this and I agree.

  • Theresa Wiza12/21/2010

    I feel like bashing my head against a brick wall. Even people who come up with solutions to problems find others who will pick their solutions apart, distort them so they're unrecognizable, then promote the obscenities as new solutions which end up creating new problems. UGH! Creative solutions have become destructive forces. Very frustrating!

  • J P Whickson12/19/2010

    Wow. Great job.

  • Sheryl Young12/3/2010

    You got it, Carol. The wording of CEDAW allows for abuses by opportunistic human rights violators..

  • Carol Bengle Gilbert11/28/2010

    LOL at Sheri's comment. I'm sure she means you have a "nose for news." I wonder if the problem here is the law or the application- in any case, something is wrong.

  • Sheri Fresonke Harper11/27/2010

    Sigh, you do find the most annoying things going on in the world, Sheryl, excellent report:)

  • Robert O. Adair11/24/2010

    All these UN legislation things are a wonderful way of destroying U.S. sovereignty and placing us at the mercy of our enemies! Why bother to pass this measure? If we want to commit national suicide, we can take poison! This will eliminate the danger of over population the Liberals are so concerned about and put an end to to our polluting the atmosphere! A win, win situation from their point of view!

  • Sonya11/23/2010

    It is very unfortunate how the negative framing of such issues around CEDAW are used to turn a great tool for empowering women into a negative tool for generating negative feedback.

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