Human Rights:
universal rights held to belong to individuals by virtue of their being human,
encompassing civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights and freedoms,
and based on the notion of personal human dignity and worth.
(http://www.reference.com/search?q=human%20rights )
When determining what I felt to be the most important issue in world politics, I first took a look at the topic of world politics as a whole. How all of the issues weave in and out of one another, where they connect, what their roots are, what part each of them plays in the “bigger picture”. The conclusion I came to was simple: all issues in world politics can be traced back to human rights.
Turn on the television or log onto the internet and you can instantly view the latest information on current “hot-button” political issues such as the war in Iraq, global warming, terrorism, human trafficking, global poverty, and the genocide in Sudan, among others. Resolving these conflicts would require us to delve deeper into the question of human rights; basic respect for the dignity of our fellow man. Any conflict in world politics today can find its roots in human rights in some way shape or form. It all comes down to what we, as human beings deserve (or think we deserve), and whether or not we are willing to set aside our own personal pride as individuals and as nations in order to make these rights available to all of our fellow human beings.
Some of the previously listed examples obviously lend themselves to the issue of human rights, others are slightly more complex. Global warming, for example, can be looped around to simply having enough respect for our future generations to leave a clean world for them to live in. Terrorism stems from an inability to accept the ideas, culture, and religions of other men (regardless of which side initiates this narrow-minded behavior). The war in Iraq becomes one big question of whether or not we are obligated to help the Iraqi people, if the even want our help, and if either of these questions has even the slightest bearing on why we’re there in the first place.
In a perfect world every man would have respect for ever other man, every human would have all of the rights that they so deserve, and our world would be in peace because of it.
Unfortunately, as long as the denial of basic human rights is running ramped in our world these dreams cannot become reality.
(http://www.reference.com/search?q=human%20rights )
When determining what I felt to be the most important issue in world politics, I first took a look at the topic of world politics as a whole. How all of the issues weave in and out of one another, where they connect, what their roots are, what part each of them plays in the “bigger picture”. The conclusion I came to was simple: all issues in world politics can be traced back to human rights.
Turn on the television or log onto the internet and you can instantly view the latest information on current “hot-button” political issues such as the war in Iraq, global warming, terrorism, human trafficking, global poverty, and the genocide in Sudan, among others. Resolving these conflicts would require us to delve deeper into the question of human rights; basic respect for the dignity of our fellow man. Any conflict in world politics today can find its roots in human rights in some way shape or form. It all comes down to what we, as human beings deserve (or think we deserve), and whether or not we are willing to set aside our own personal pride as individuals and as nations in order to make these rights available to all of our fellow human beings.
Some of the previously listed examples obviously lend themselves to the issue of human rights, others are slightly more complex. Global warming, for example, can be looped around to simply having enough respect for our future generations to leave a clean world for them to live in. Terrorism stems from an inability to accept the ideas, culture, and religions of other men (regardless of which side initiates this narrow-minded behavior). The war in Iraq becomes one big question of whether or not we are obligated to help the Iraqi people, if the even want our help, and if either of these questions has even the slightest bearing on why we’re there in the first place.
In a perfect world every man would have respect for ever other man, every human would have all of the rights that they so deserve, and our world would be in peace because of it.
Unfortunately, as long as the denial of basic human rights is running ramped in our world these dreams cannot become reality.