UN Treaty on Child’s Rights Legally Binding, and Absurd
User:
aewhale
Date: 5/2/2009 9:49 am
Views: 490
Rating: 0
UN Treaty on Child’s Rights Legally Binding, and Absurd
By Michael Farris, J.D.
May 1, 2009 -- Child-rights
advocates seeking to convince the U.S. Senate and the American public
to ratify the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
(CRC) are pursuing a curious line of reasoning. They say we can ratify
the treaty, which preempts parents’ fundamental rights to direct the
upbringing and education of their children, without incurring binding
legal obligations. They argue that American legislators will choose how
much, if any, of the treaty to implement.
Jonathan Todres, a professor at Georgia State, told the Associated
Press that American parental rights would be safe because UN treaties
contain “no enforcement mechanisms or penalties.” Meg Gardinier, who
chairs a coalition of groups supporting the U.S. ratification of the
treaty, told the AP, “No UN treaty will ever usurp the national
sovereignty of this country.”
This smacks of the kind of American diplomacy the left demonizes
whenever conservatives suggest that America “can go its own way.”
Ratify the treaty, they say. It’s not legally binding. We can choose
what to obey and what not to.
This argument is not only patently hypocritical, it is legally wrong.
The
most important principle of international law is: pacta sunt servanda
(agreements must be kept). In other words, keep your promises.
Make no mistake, whenever the United States ratifies a treaty it
enters into a binding legal obligation to comply with its terms.
Arguing that a treaty is a mere philosophical statement of intent with
no binding legal consequences is blatant error. Besides, what message
does this send to the international community the Obama administration
seems desperate to please?
Arguing that America can enter into treaties and then comply on
piecemeal basis undermines our international reputation. Worse, it
suggests that America cannot be trusted to keep its promises.
It
is not difficult to discern the legal impact of a ratified treaty on
our domestic law. It’s spelled out plainly in the text of the U.S.
Constitution. Article VI states that, along with the U.S. Constitution
and federal law, ratified treaties “shall be the supreme Law of the
Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing
in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary
notwithstanding.” Treaties trump state law.
The CRC is a comprehensive treaty covering economic, social,
political, civil, and cultural rights of children. No area of our law
regarding children lies outside of its scope. And virtually all
American law on children comes from the laws of our 50 states. Yet our
Constitution says treaties override state laws.
How would this work in practice?
The law in every American
state allows parents to administer reasonable spankings to discipline
their children. The UN’s official body on children’s rights has
repeatedly ruled that any parental spanking violates the treaty’s
requirements. The CRC will trump state laws permitting spanking.
Many school districts allow parents to allow their children to “opt
out” from certain controversial courses such as sex education. The UN
body holds that such parental involvement violates the treaty. The CRC
will trump all state “opt out” laws.
So when Professor Todres says that the UN has no enforcement
mechanism, he is telling a half-truth. The UN treaty establishes the
law; American courts and child welfare agencies can, will, and must
enforce the UN standards by virtue of Article VI of our Constitution.
One federal judge in New York has already held that the CRC is
binding on the United States, by deeming a New York “state” policy on
child abuse investigations to be in violation of the treaty’s
guarantees.
An Ohio state judge bizarrely assumed that the
Senate had already ratified the treaty and ordered parents to stop
smoking because it harmed children’s health. While badly mistaken about
the status of the CRC, his decision foreshadows what to expect if the
Senate ratifies this treaty.
Under this treaty, every decision made about children —whether by
government or parents— is subject to governmental review. Armed with
the CRC, any social worker can second-guess any parent based on an
opinion that the parents’ choice was not in the “best interest” of the
child. Under this subjective standard, no family is safe from
governmental intrusion.
The scope of this treaty reaches to the absurd. The UN Committee on
the Rights of the Child held that both Indonesia and Egypt violated the
CRC because they spent more on their military than on programs for
children.
Thankfully, the treaty’s mandates on government spending, unlike
the ban on spanking -- which would be immediately enforceable in
American courts—would certainly be viewed by our current Supreme Court
as matters left to the discretion of Congress. But given the exalted
views of international law held by key Obama nominees for the Justice
Department, even something this radical may one day become “judicially
enforceable.”
The ultimate question is: Who should make our public policy on
parents and children? Our elected state legislators? Or, an
international treaty regime headed by a committee of 18 international
“experts” sitting in Geneva.
Unless we fully intend to comply with UN treaty’s radical dictates,
our Senate must reject the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Dr.
Michael Farris is Chancellor of Patrick Henry College, President of
ParentalRights.org, and holds advanced Postgraduate Certificate in
Public International Law.
Press Contact:
Rebekah Pizana
National Coalition Director
ParentalRights.org
rebekah@parentalrights.org
540.751.1200
Parentalrights.org is a 501c4 non-profit organization existing
solely for the purpose of passing a parental rights amendment to the US
Constitution.