more falktard and HRC madness

Michael C. Moynihan has a great article up at Reason about Richard Falk and the UN’s HRC.  It is a must read.

The nomination of Richard Falk is further evidence of UN backsliding in its commitment to fairly scrutinizing human rights. Not only has Falk served in a similar role in the past—he was on a 2001 special panel investigating Israeli human rights violations, suggesting that UN-HRC is recruiting from the old UNCHR pool—but his record is considerably worse than the recent news reports would suggest. [emphasis mine and something noted in my earlier post]

For instance, in 1979, not long after the inauguration of Iran’s totalitarian and theocratic “revolution,” Falk, then chairman of something called U.S. Citizens Concerned about Freedom in Iran, was granted space on The New York Times opinion page to shill for the incoming government of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. A month prior, Falk had flown to Paris with his comrade Ramsey Clark, the former U.S. attorney general and inveterate friend of dictators, to discuss “social justice” (Clark’s phrase) with the then-exiled religious leader. Upon returning, Clark told The Washington Post that he was “deeply impressed by the nature and depth and purpose of the movement in Iran that has established the opportunity for a new freedom.”

By the time Falk published his impressions of the Paris pilgrimage, the Ayatollah’s gang of fundamentalist squadristi—officially known as “secret revolutionary tribunals”—was already meting out executions with little concern for due process. Nevertheless, in his Times opinion piece, Falk upbraided President Jimmy Carter for “associating [Khomeini] with religious fanaticism,” and declared that “the depiction of him as fanatical, reactionary, and the bearer of crude religious prejudices seems certainly and happily false.” Indeed, “his entourage of close advisers is uniformly composed of moderate, progressive individuals.” [emphasis mine (after my jaw hit the floor) -ed.]

This was too much for the Times’ preeminent liberal columnist, Anthony Lewis, who ripped Falk’s column as “outstandingly silly.” It was clear to those not blinded by ideology, Lewis wrote, that the “Ayatollah has set out, without equivocation or disguise, to turn the clock back and give Iran a theocratic regime.” With hindsight, it is perhaps tempting to see Lewis’s column as prescient, and Falk as merely a naïve, anti-Shah activist duped by the regime’s unsophisticated propaganda apparatus. But as contemporaneous news accounts make clear, the theocratic and dictatorial character of the Khomeini clique was widely acknowledged by Middle East observers well before the hostage crisis. [emphasis mine -ed.]

That’s right.  It’s not that Falk is just incredibly naive.  He’s evil… and a Troofer, too.  Unfortunately, as Moynihan rightly notes, the circus around Falk is drawing attention away from other foul deeds by the HRC.

As media coverage of Falk’s nomination has metastasized, it has unfortunately obscured news of UN-HRC’s nomination of the Swiss socialist Jean Ziegler to the UN Human Rights Council Advisory Committee. A brief recapitulation of Ziegler’s qualifications: In 1996, he defended Holocaust denier Roger Garaudy not only on free speech grounds—an admirable position, after all—but further celebrated his supposed scholarship. “All your work as a writer and philosopher,” Ziegler wrote, “attests to the rigor of your analysis and the unwavering honesty of your intentions. It makes you one of the leading thinkers of our time.” He lauded the Zimbabwean tyrant Robert Mugabe, a leader who “has history and morality with him.” He offered his “total support for the Cuban revolution.” He recently told a Lebanese newspaper the he “refuse[d] to describe Hezbollah as a terrorist organization. It is a national movement of resistance.”

Apparently, the UN just slapped a new label on the rotting flesh of the old Commission on Human Rights.  Tell me again why we still participate in this outdated, bloated, corrupt, evil farce?

4 Responses

  1. “Tell me again why we still participate in this outdated, bloated, corrupt, evil farce?”

    I often wonder this. For me, there is only one reason to stay in — veto power. The UN will remain only SYMBOLICALLY anti-US and anti-Israel as long as we have a permanent seat on the Security Council. They might cause real mischief if we weren’t there to kibosh it.

  2. Point taken… and have a good weekend.

  3. The only reason I can think of to stay in the UN is something G. Gordon Liddy said about them : “Keep your friends close, and your enemies even closer”

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