{"id":2493,"date":"2012-06-13T03:00:48","date_gmt":"2012-06-13T07:00:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.dontow.com\/?p=2493"},"modified":"2013-04-05T10:54:37","modified_gmt":"2013-04-05T14:54:37","slug":"on-the-issue-of-human-rights-in-china","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.dontow.com\/2012\/06\/on-the-issue-of-human-rights-in-china\/","title":{"rendered":"On the Issue of Human Rights in China"},"content":{"rendered":"

The question of human rights has always been, and especially in recent months, an issue in discussion about China and the U.S.\u00a0 On the surface, the issue may appear to be pretty straight forward, in the sense that China, in comparison with the U.S., significantly lags behind on the issue of human rights, and it is perfectly reasonable for the U.S. to lecture and pressure China to improve in the area of human rights as part of establishing a more friendly and collaborative effort between the U.S. and China.\u00a0 However, if one analyzes the situation more carefully, this issue is far from being so simple and straight forward.\u00a0 As a matter of fact, it actually leads to the conclusion that the U.S. is purposely and unfairly using this human rights stick to masquerade and justify its constant China bashing and divert the attention of the American people and the world from the U.S.’s own shortcomings, both domestically and internationally.
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I do not want to give the impression that China does not have human rights issues.\u00a0 It does, and it needs significant improvement in many aspects of human rights.\u00a0 So the question is not whether China needs to work on human rights, the question is whether taking into account its historical, economic, social, and political circumstances, is China making reasonable progress on human rights.\u00a0 The People’s Republic of China was established only 62 years ago.\u00a0 Before its establishment in 1949, China emerged from a feudal society that lasted for several thousand years, was under the imperialistic domination of many foreign powers for almost a hundred years, experienced a devastating 14-year (1931-1945) War of Resistance against Japan, and a civil war that on and off lasted for most of the 30 or so years before 1949.<\/p>\n

Let’s take a look at the U.S.\u00a0 When the U.S. Constitution was approved on September 17, 1787 [1], there was still slavery, and each slave was counted as only three fifths of a free person in terms of determining the number of representatives in the House of Representatives.\u00a0 It took 78 years before the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution was approved on December 6, 1865 and abolished slavery.\u00a0 Then it took another 55 years until August 18, 1920, or 133 years from the establishment of the U.S. Constitution, before the Nineteenth Amendment was approved and gave women equal voting rights.\u00a0 This means that just from a legal perspective, it could take a long time to change long-established traditions and prejudices.\u00a0 Furthermore, even after the abolishment of slavery from a legal perspective, for another 90 years black American citizens had to sit in the back of the bus, attend poorer segregated schools, were denied equal employment, ranked always on the bottom of the economic scale, etc.\u00a0 They were far from getting equal treatment.\u00a0 It took the massive civil rights movement that started in the 1950’s and 1960’s and continues to today to gradually move the nation so that black Americans and other minorities are getting closer, but still some distance to go, to achieving\u00a0 equal treatment.<\/p>\n

What about the treatment of the Native Americans?\u00a0 Much of their land was taken away, and many of them were slaughtered.\u00a0 They were segregated in reservations, and relegated to second-class citizens.\u00a0 Similarly, the human rights of Chinese in America were violated, with acts such as the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 that discriminated against a specific group of people based on their race or origin.\u00a0 They were not allowed to enter many professions, they were denied the right to become U.S. citizens, many of them were slaughtered, and they were even denied the right to testify in court.\u00a0 The Chinese Exclusion Act lasted essentially to 1943 when China and the U.S. were allies during WWII, and was not completely repealed until Congress passed the Immigration Act of 1965.\u00a0 Again, it was an extremely long period of several decades of obvious human rights violation.\u00a0 The human rights of Japanese Americans and other Japanese living in the U.S. were also violated during WWII when they were uprooted from their homes and put into internment camps starting in 1942.\u00a0 Most of these were American citizens, and many of their young people served in the U.S. armed forces fighting for the U.S. against Japan.\u00a0 Such obvious violation of human rights was even upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1944.\u00a0 It was1980, 35 years after WWII ended, before Congress passed legislation apologizing on behalf of the U.S. government for the internment.<\/p>\n

Let’s take a look at how the U.S. acted internationally.\u00a0 The U.S. used gunboat diplomacy when Commodore Matthew Perry of the U.S. navy sailed into Tokyo harbor in 1853 with a fleet of navy ships and demanded concessions from Japan, which the U.S. obtained in 1854 that ended Japan’s 200 years of seclusion (or interaction with outside) and opened up Japan.\u00a0 Later the U.S. added to its imperialistic expansion into Asia with the Spanish-American War of 1898.\u00a0 After defeating Spain, the U.S. gained the Philippines from Spain’s colonial possession.\u00a0 After helping the Americans to fight against Spain, the Filipinos wanted to declare independence.\u00a0 But the Americans fought the Filipino nationalists for about 15 years starting from 1899, and finally subdued the Filipino nationalists in 1914.\u00a0 It was a bloody war with thousands of casualties on both sides.\u00a0 It took another 31 years before the U.S. granted independence to Philippines in 1945.<\/p>\n

Starting near the end of the 19th century, the U.S. was also one of the foreign powers who obtained various kinds of concessions from China, making China essentially not a sovereign nation with full control of its own territories.\u00a0 Being a late entry (as compared to countries like Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, and Japan) into getting concessions from China, the U.S. was concerned that it would be left out from the partition of China by various European powers, Russia, and Japan, so the U.S. introduced the so-called “Open Door Policy” whose principle was that if one foreign power got concessions from China, then other foreign powers should also be privileged to similar types of concessions.\u00a0 This policy definitely did not take into account the human rights of China and the Chinese people.\u00a0 It was also the direct interference of the U.S. that kept China from becoming a unifying country in 1949 after the Chinese Communists defeated the Chinese Nationalists in their civil war.<\/p>\n

After the French lost its war in Vietnam in 1954, the U.S. moved in and tried to continue France’s colonial rule over Vietnam.\u00a0 The end result was 20 years of one of the most deadliest wars in history when about 58,000 American soldiers died, and more than a million Vietnamese soldiers died and another million Vietnamese civilians died.\u00a0 More recently in 2003, the U.S. used the pretense of Iraq’s secret possession of weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) to invade and essentially destroy the infrastructure in Iraq.<\/p>\n

Speaking of WMDs, why the U.S. government did not prosecute any of the top Japanese doctors and scientists who led Unit 731, Japan’s huge biological and chemical weapons laboratory and factory in Harbin, China during WWII, where its WMDs were widely used in China killing and maiming millions of Chinese.\u00a0 The Japanese even experimented with live human captives, including cutting them open to see the effects of various germ weapons on the inside of their bodies.\u00a0 Dr. Martin Furmanski, an American doctor and medical historian who has interviewed many of the surviving Chinese victims of these WMDs, wrote “In a disgraceful agreement with the Japanese biological weapons war criminals, the U.S. offered immunity from war crimes prosecution in exchange for the scientific data the Japanese had collected from murdering Chinese citizens, as well as citizens of other countries, both in their laboratories and in field applications.\u00a0 The official U.S. and Japanese policy became one of denying the existence of the Japanese biological weapons program.\u201d<\/p>\n

From the above record, how can the U.S. honestly claim that it has an excellent record of human rights, both domestically and internationally, and that gives it credibility to lecture other countries on the issue of human rights.\u00a0 Perhaps because the U.S. politicians realize that the U.S. also has very serious problems, especially economic problems (e.g., its national debt is about the size of its gross domestic product), and it doesn’t seem to be able to find a way to solve these problems, so it needs to divert the anger and blame of the American public from the American political leaders to someone else. [2]\u00a0 At the same time, China is rising rapidly in economic power and will be the prime competitor to the U.S. as the world’s number one economic power.\u00a0 It is much easier to blame someone else, especially your major competitor, instead of admitting to your own mistakes, genuinely face the consequences, and correct those mistakes.\u00a0 Therefore, using the human rights stick over the head of China is really to masquerade and justify the constant China bashing by the American politicians and its mass media to divert the attention of the American people and the world from the U.S.’s own shortcomings, both domestically and internationally.\u00a0 The U.S. really does not have the moral authority to lecture other countries on this issue.\u00a0 One can seriously question whether the intention of the U.S. lecturing to China on the issue of human rights is really trying to help China to improve the welfare of the Chinese people, or just a new form of American imperialistic aggression.<\/p>\n

We do acknowledge that China needs major improvement in human rights.\u00a0 It needs major improvement in multiple fronts, e.g.,<\/p>\n