| By citizen - Feb 22nd, 2006 at 11:22 pm EST |
More than 3000 organizations hold consultative status, the only means by which NGO's may take part in discussions on UN policy.
In voting to dismiss the groups' applications, the US was joined by Cameroon, China, Cuba, Iran, Pakistan, the Russian Federation, Senegal, Sudan, and Zimbabwe.
The U.S. stance is particularly appalling in light of the fact that the US State Department has studied the need for global political assistance for LGBT people. According to Joe Solmonese, President of the Human Rights Campaign, "The State Department's 'Country Reports on Human Rights Practices' show severe human rights violations based on gender identity and sexual orientation occur around the world."
In Iran, homosexuality is punishable by death. Zimbabwe's dictator Robert Mugabe has declared gays and lesbians to be "people without rights."
Given that the LGBT rights in the U.S. are better than in many parts of the world, with Massachusetts allowing gay marriages (a right which exists outside the U.S. only in Belgium, the Netherlands, Canada and Spain), and given that a lack of LGBT consultative status at the UN will likely have the effect of countering progress on LGBT rights worldwide, it's entirely possible that the U.S.'s homophobic action at the UN will have the ironic result of increased immigration of LGBT people to the United States. I wonder if the religious conservatives influencing the Bush adminisration considered that.
Information:
"United Nations: U.S. Aligned With Iran in Anti-Gay Vote"
Link

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The funny thing is, the one document I could find that spoke directly about the civil rights record of the administration was "Redefining Rights in America: The Civil Rights Record of the George W. Bush Administration, 2001-2004," written in September 2004.
However, there was a problem: the report, which had previously been made available to the public, had been removed from the web site.
I just got my copy today in the mail, and may I just say, "Damn."
Here's my favorite section:
In other words, he needed to be sure that being gay didn't automatically make you incompetent. The thing is, appeals to the OSC is the only recourse victims of sexual preference discrimination have against the federal government, since the Civil Service Reform Act is the only civil rights or employment law governing federal workers that applies to sexual orientation.