Tuesday, October 11, 2011

The Language of Human Rights

           The language of human rights to me is the explanation of what our natural endowments are, as beings/species of the same nature. The corrupt thought that the different colors human beings are brought upon birth are not at all in any way what they are thought to be, which to most people is class. The judgement we all make in each other is only caused by the very corrupt and political analysis the greedy use to make a profit from. Slavery is the first thing we think of when the topic "Human Rights" is brought upon. It was huge in the early years of our ancestors and was again nearly Half a century ago during WWII. Human rights define that we are all equal and not in any amount different. Human rights have become a contradictory piece of literary art that the "Founding Fathers" of the American nation have ,so to say, fought for. Human rights..what are human rights? we may know the definition, we may know the sense, the knowledge, the background, the lining, the structure and the format. But it is still held to question as does it even exist? Human rights only exist to those who to wish it to exist. Other than the majority, human rights are abused, Stripped, demeaned, and restricted by the higher authority. So human rights exist on two perspectives: in the believers and the non-believers. Society today still hasn't changed them or enforced them because of how complex those 2 words put together are. Human rights are vowed or sworn to be given to those who are all born under the "universal father" or the "universal mother" (which whom I'd like to refer to as mother nature) yet they arent. Human rights is a big term that can only go so deep into. That to me is the explanation of human rights.

1 comment:

  1. Hi, Joseph,
    Hope you are enjoying Election Day!
    Have you expanded this project for LIB 110? Do you have your bio and the critical reflection? I'd love to read them if you could post.
    If you have questions, let me know!
    Prof. Jerskey

    ReplyDelete