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Thread: International Critics Turn Tables and Wag Finger at US Over Ferguson Crisis

  1. #1

    International Critics Turn Tables and Wag Finger at US Over Ferguson Crisis

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    International Critics Turn Tables and Wag Finger at US Over Ferguson Crisis

    Aug 19, 2014, 3:27 PM ET
    By KIRIT RADIA Kirit Radia More from Kirit »
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    via World News





    Men walk away from a cloud of tear gas during a protest, Aug. 18, 2014, in Ferguson, Mo.


    Charlie Riedel/AP Photo








    The images of conflict coming out of Ferguson, Missouri, often look more like a restless Middle East capital than a Midwest town.
    Police aggression. Detention of journalists. A call for respect for minority populations. They’re the type of issues the United States is usually scolding other countries about.

    This time, however, the criticism is coming the other direction.



    Iran’s Grand Ayatollah tweeted about the “brutal treatment” of black people in the United States using the #Ferguson hashtag, China’s official mouthpiece wrote about America’s “human rights flaw,” and the Egyptian government called for “restraint and respect for the right of assembly and peaceful expression of opinion.”

    The condemnation is not only limited to countries who may be gloating about the chance to slam the United States about its internal affairs for a change.


    On Monday, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, through a spokesman, called on authorities “to ensure that the rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression are protected.”


    “He calls on all to exercise restraint, for law enforcement officials to abide by U.S. and international standards in dealing with demonstrators," Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman said.


    Amnesty International, the global human rights organization, said it had sent observers to Ferguson. It’s the first time the group has deployed such a team within the United States.


    The killing of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, by a white police officer, and the police response to the protests that followed have raised tough, and for many Americans often uncomfortable, questions about the militarization of police, the treatment of press, and brought simmering racial tensions to the front burner.


    Yet they have also afforded America’s foes the opportunity to point their fingers at the country that holds itself up as the beacon of freedom, justice and equality.


    The United States has frequently denounced Iran’s suppression of dissent, including violent responses to political protests in recent years. But Iran’s Supreme Leader said the Ferguson violence was an example of American hypocrisy about human rights.


    “Today like previous years, African-Americans are still under pressure, oppressed and subjected to discrimination. #Ferguson,” a Twitter account attributed to Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei, wrote on Sunday.


    “Racial discrimination is still a dilemma in the U.S. #Ferguson,” he added. “Look at how US govt treats black community! It's not about 50-100 years ago but it's about today!”
    Egypt, a country that has been criticized by the U.S. and others for its brutal police response to the Arab Spring uprising and persecution of minority sects, also weighed in.

    The Foreign Ministry reportedly said it was “closely following the escalation of protests” in Ferguson and called on authorities to show “restraint.”


    China’s official Xinhua news agency published a commentary saying that Ferguson is an example of how “racial divide still remains a deeply-rooted chronic disease that keeps tearing U.S. society apart.”


    “The Ferguson incident once again demonstrates that even if in a country that has for years tried to play the role of an international human rights judge and defender, there is still much room for improvement at home,” the commentary said.


    The Russian government, which rarely misses an opportunity to criticize the United States these days, has not said anything official about the Ferguson unrest, but RT, the Kremlin-funded network, has covered the protests closely.


    Some opposition figures in Russia have lamented that the police response in Ferguson will give President Vladimir Putin, who often uses Western precedents to justify his own actions, an excuse the next time he wants to crack down.


    “Dear American gvrnmnt [sic],you can't imagine how those who fight for freedom in Russia hate you these days. Putin saw this,” Maria Baronova, an activist who was arrested and jailed during an anti-Putin protest in 2012, wrote on Twitter.





    U.S. State Department spokesperson Marie Harf responded to criticism from countries with mixed human rights records over the heavy-handed tactics of police in response to the Ferguson protests.


    "When we have problems and issues in this country, we deal with them openly and honestly. We think that’s important, and I would encourage the countries you named particularly to do the same thing," Harf said, responding to a reporter who asked about reactions coming from countries including Egypt, China, Russia and Iran.


    She rejected "any sort of comparison" between the U.S. urging Egypt not to jail journalists and opposition protesters and U.S. authorities’ handling of the protests in Ferguson.
    ABC News' Ali Weinberg contributed to this report.

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/internation...ry?id=25039992

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  3. #2
    This is an interesting phenomenon. I had considered sharing a few papers from various foreign sources to demonstrate what is going on or how these other nations are placing what is happening in Ferguson with the way that the US operates abroad. Seems to me that a lot of people are happy to see it happening and this really does reflect the overall opinion of us from these nations. Or the commoners of these nations I should say.

    If you think about it, the way that Obama should handle it that would conform to his foreign policy would be to arm the protestors. Right?
    Last edited by Natural Citizen; 08-19-2014 at 08:26 PM.

  4. #3
    This should being just an lesson for Obama but for the Republicans if they were in Charge by now they would call in more national guard as a response.

  5. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Natural Citizen View Post
    This is an interesting phenomenon. I had considered sharing a few papers from various foreign sources to demonstrate what is going on or how these other nations are placing what is happening in Ferguson with the way that the US operates abroad. Seems to me that a lot of people are happy to see it happening and this really does reflect the overall opinion of us from these nations. Or the commoners of these nations I should say.

    If you think about it, the way that Obama should handle it that would conform to his foreign policy would be to arm the protestors. Right?
    Arming the protestors would be the best way to solve this situation. They could get it done before sundown without a shot fired!

  6. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by twomp View Post
    Arming the protestors would be the best way to solve this situation. They could get it done before sundown without a shot fired!
    The people of Ferguson should be asking the government of Israel for foreign aid. Israel needs to be a good ally and send arms to the oppressed people of MO.
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  7. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by twomp View Post
    Arming the protestors would be the best way to solve this situation. They could get it done before sundown without a shot fired!
    Where's John McCain when you really need him????
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    So would Ferguson justify the Chinese Air Force calling in a military airstrike over the entire State of Missouri so to settle our own domestic squabble?

  9. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by KEEF View Post
    So would Ferguson justify the Chinese Air Force calling in a military airstrike over the entire State of Missouri so to settle our own domestic squabble?
    We are lucky that the intelligence agency of some other nation is not sending in agent provocateurs to escalate the situation...
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  11. #9
    If some country would say it is considering kinetic strikes or a humanitarian convoy to help the children now that would be trolling.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Brian4Liberty View Post
    We are lucky that the intelligence agency of some other nation is not sending in agent provocateurs to escalate the situation...
    No, we just have our own intelligence agencies escalating the issues.

  14. #12
    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-0...ments-ferguson

    You know you’ve lost the plot when Egypt, Iran, China and the United Nations all feel so comfortable they have the moral high ground that they publicly chastise the U.S. about events in Ferguson.

    Indeed, this has been a theme at Liberty Blitzkrieg all year. I have repeatedly discussed the ridiculousness of our political leaders talking about absurd “humanitarian wars” (which coincidentally tend to aggregate in regions with gigantic oil reserves), while strongly supporting some of the most authoritarian and fascist regimes on earth such as Saudi Arabia.

    Whether or not the U.S. ever deserved the moral high ground it possessed just after World War II, this position has been clearly lost in the eyes of the world, and increasingly domestically as well. Politicians can continue to repeat catch phrases from the 1950′s all they want. It’s not going to make a shred of difference.

    In case you have any doubt what a embarrassment of a Banana Republic the U.S. has become in the eyes of the world, check out these excerpts from a BBC article:
    [...]
    ‘Merica.

    Based on the idea of natural rights, government secures those rights to the individual by strictly negative intervention, making justice costless and easy of access; and beyond that it does not go. The State, on the other hand, both in its genesis and by its primary intention, is purely anti-social. It is not based on the idea of natural rights, but on the idea that the individual has no rights except those that the State may provisionally grant him. It has always made justice costly and difficult of access, and has invariably held itself above justice and common morality whenever it could advantage itself by so doing.
    --Albert J. Nock

  15. #13
    What's sad is that international opinion should not be what drives policy in this country that's supposed to be "of the people by the people for the people."

    It just makes me more and more cynical.

  16. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    Where's John McCain when you really need him????




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