May 24, 2012 - Issue 473 |
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What is Good in
the World?
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Constant criticism and pessimism is crazy-making. Any honest review of human histories or our own experiences will reveal this basic understanding. All too often, justice activists and revolutionaries lose credibility because they disappear into a deeply imbalanced swamp of hopelessness that is immediately recognized by the folks activists they seek to convince and these too pessimistic activists are not listened to any longer. Who wants to spend much time around someone who finds no “sunshine” anywhere? That behavior verges on clinical depression. Admittedly, relatively
speaking, one can truthfully say that for us, the 99% in the Competent organizers and motivators shine the “light” of hope into our dungeons by pointing out and recognizing real positive trends and clear, concrete steps that can lead toward better outcomes, rather than smothering hope through frenetic criticism and calls for disconnected, acting-out protests. Some vision of success, even though incremental, is necessary to sustain the struggle. It is extremely important to delineate what we are FOR…along with pointing to what we are AGAINST. It is extremely important to lay out a reasonable action path forward. Both critique and hope for the future are views necessary to motivating, steering, and sustaining us on the path to empowerment and justice. That is why, at the world level, I would like to turn to consideration of the International Criminal Court (ICC). The ICC is an
organization of nations that conducts a permanent tribunal to prosecute
individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the
crime of aggression (although it cannot, until at least 2017, exercise
jurisdiction over the crime of aggression). By this April 2012, there
were 121 countries that are state parties to the Statute of Rome that
established the Court. This includes every nation in South America, nearly
all of Europe and roughly half the countries in Wikipedia states that
“The establishment of an international tribunal to judge political leaders
accused of war crimes was first made during the Paris Peace Conference
in 1919 by the Commission of Responsibilities. The issue was addressed
again at a conference held in Court conviction does not include the exercise of the barbarity of capital punishment. It requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt, provides for competent defense counsel, allows for appeal, and - in the estimation of most - complies with the rights provided by the US Constitution and the constitutions of most other countries. Because the Court supplements the actions or the lack of action from national courts and is established by international treaty, it does not violate the US Constitutional requirement for the supremacy of the Federal Supreme Court. Acknowledging that
the current use of the Court has fallen more on “weak” states and African
perpetrators does not cancel the hopeful potential of this world mechanism.
There is active opposition in some of the more powerful countries: The ICC is not a panacea. The current Statutes of the ICC do not allow for consideration of rights violations that happened prior to July 1 2002; whether on-going effects of prior violations can be remedied through actions by the ICC has not yet been dealt with. There are twists and turns yet to be encountered on this path. Those challenges, however, should not be discouraging since reality presents no perfect path. Again, criticism and hope are both required. From the wisdom philosophies of the East we learn about the efficacy of balance. A deeper, wiser social psychological stance necessary to sustain the struggle is the understanding and recognition that it is “walking” the PATH along the edge of dualities and not the DESTINATION that is most important. BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Wilson Riles, is a former |
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