The plan to give all of the children of the world the same "rights", is known as the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC, or CRC). It is important to understand that this plan is actually part of a much larger United Nations plan called "Agenda 21." I have previously written on Agenda 21, and found the document to be a plan by the United Nations to gain more decision making power, or sovereignty, from countries, and create a world in which every resource, water, animals, food, etc., even human resources, and population size, is tracked, and controlled, by a group of non-elected bureaucrats at the UN, working in conjunction with big corporations, and non-governmental organizations (NGO's). In Article 25, Section 14 of Agenda 21, governments are required to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
In this analysis, I will detail a brief history of "child rights", explore the actual text of this document, the effect this convention has had on countries that have ratified it, and trace its attempted ratification in the United States, down to our own Connecticut state legislature.
History of the CRC
Decades before the UN held a convention on the rights of the child, there were various declarations made, in regards to giving children special rights, even dating back as far as 1924, adopted by the predecessor of the United Nations, the League of Nations. In 1989, The UN General Assembly adopted the Convention and opened it for signature. It came into force in 1990, after it was ratified by the required number of nations.
In the United States, under the administration of Bill Clinton, the CRC was signed, but the treaty was never submitted for Senate approval, due to opposition from some members of the Senate. More recently, in 2009, the Obama administration revived efforts to have the United States sign onto the CRC, according to former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice. The following year, thirty-one Republican senators cosponsored a resolution opposing the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. The United States is only one of a few countries yet to ratify the treaty.Decades before the UN held a convention on the rights of the child, there were various declarations made, in regards to giving children special rights, even dating back as far as 1924, adopted by the predecessor of the United Nations, the League of Nations. In 1989, The UN General Assembly adopted the Convention and opened it for signature. It came into force in 1990, after it was ratified by the required number of nations.
In Their Own Words
Let us examine the actual text of the treaty. This "Convention on the Rights of the Child" treaty is 15 pages, consisting of 54 Articles, detailing the assertion that children have special rights, and the ways to implement the bureaucracy that is needed to insure that governments are "protecting" these children's rights.
When dealing with the United Nations, as with any government organization, it is important to critically examine the grammar used, see past the happy, positive sounding rhetoric, and be able to understand the actual details of a plan. The CRC opens with a preamble that emphasizes the importance of "the protection and harmonious development of the child". Again, this sounds nice, but we must remember, this could mean anything, and is coming from an organization that calls their violent military army, "peace keeping" troops.