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Ros-Lehtinen's Gauntlet
As posted on the Huffington Post
U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), the new Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has thrown down her gauntlet. In her first briefing as chairwoman, she had the opportunity to focus on any number of timely issues like the referendum in Sudan, human rights in China or reconstruction in Haiti. Instead she chose "The United Nations: Urgent Problems that Need Congressional Action," to launch an attack against the U.N. She plans to introduce legislation that conditions U.S. contributions to the U.N. "on real, sweeping reform, including moving the U.N. regular budget to a voluntary funding basis."
This is a very bad idea. Didn't the U.S. suffer though enough loss of prestige and influence during the bad old days of massive U.N. arrears in the 1990's? Unfortunately, powerful House members are once again going after the U.N. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) declared that the "U.N. should be a prime target" for deficit reduction efforts. Ridiculous! Fiscally this would have the same impact as withholding my daughter's allowance to pay down our family's mortgage. The U.S. deficit and contributions to the U.N. are not in the same league. But for Rohrabacher and too many of his colleagues, the U.N. is a convenient target they can try to bully while scoring political points.
I anticipate attempts to dramatically slash funding for the U.N. and international affairs in Congress, despite the reality that the world needs the U.S. to play a key role in meeting some of the most important global problems we all face. The total international affairs budget, which accounts for only 1.4 percent of total government spending, supports programs to meet challenges like the HIV/AIDS pandemic, genocide prevention, fragile states, extreme hunger and poverty, and environmental degradation, among many others. Our nation cannot afford to shortchange these vital programs.
In fact, the international affairs budget is a great bargain. Our investments in peacekeeping, poverty eradication, disease prevention and international organizations help boost international security, reduce the need for U.S. military intervention and make America safer in the long run.
However, too many Americans continue to vastly overestimate the amount that we pay for these benefits. According to a new WorldPublicOpinion.org poll, Americans believe that 25% of the federal budget is spent on foreign aid. When asked what would be a reasonable amount to spend, the median response is 10%. In fact only a little over 1% of our budget goes to foreign assistance.
So how do we turn the coming tide of anti-U.N. sentiments? The answer is in your hands. This is the moment when we must pull together to send a clear message to lawmakers that the U.S. must stay constructively engage in the U.N. and the world. You can help by taking three simple steps:
1. Help us build a solid network of global citizens by connecting us with friends and family, particularly those who live in parts of our nation where there lawmakers are educationally challenged regarding the U.N. Just send their contact information to outreach@globalsolutions.org.
2. Join our Citizens for Global Solutions' Partners for Global Change program. This is an engaging, easy way for you to make a difference on the global issues that matter to you. By becoming a Partner, you will join a network of activists (of all ages and all levels of experience) who take action in their communities. The goal is to build national political will for positive U.S. global engagement. Join at
3. Come to Washington, D.C. on March 17 and 18 and join me at Citizens for Global Solutions' Annual Conference and lobby day, Global Challenges: Global Solutions. Get engaged and learn more.
Together, we can pick up Rep. Ros-Lehtinen's gauntlet and let her know that this challenge will be answered by engaged global citizens. I look forward to working with you.
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Don Kraus
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Comments
Thanks for getting the word
Thanks for getting the word out so clearly!
Another anti-Castro Miami
Another anti-Castro Miami fanatic. This POS does what Jeb Bush tells her to do. One of the movers and shakers behind the Teabaggers and the Republic CorpoFascist Party. There are a lot of these dingbats down here in Florida, and unfortunately they've taken over the state. This broad just wants her big Havana hacienda and her gold dinnerware back!
This is so typical of the
This is so typical of the regressive Republican right -- we mustn't tax the wealthiest Americans; rather we must cut the funding to programs vital to both national interests (infrastructure, education and our tattered social safety net) and to global interests (the UN, USAID). This is not the America in which I was raised; it is not an America that I would wish to leave to my grandchildren.
The shame of it is that the
The shame of it is that the UN has real actual disasterous problems that the US should indeed press for reform.
It does have problems that
It does have problems that need to be addressed. However, Congressional use of the "power of the purse" ends up hurting us and the UN, rather than moving along a process of improving the institution. There have in fact been serious improvements within the UN system over the last decade, accomplished with the help of constructive US engagement. We need more of this. But withholding dues is not the answer.
Get the US out of the UN, so
Get the US out of the UN, so the UN can get on with business. Or else start a new global organization with new criteria for membership, to slowly replace UN functions.
Withdrawing the U.S. from the
Withdrawing the U.S. from the U.N. will only slow down change in the U.N., and it will also delegitimize the U.S. as a global actor. The U.S. through engagement with the U.N. and its allies can create a more effective and empowered U.N.
Thank you for this info. The
Thank you for this info. The UN is absolutely necessary for the amount of peace that we have in our world. So many "small fires" are extinguished by their good work and so much human good is done by their agencies i.e., UNICEF and UNCOR that we (the USA) could not accomplish alone-- and with such leaders as the Rep. from Florida (Ros-Lehtinen) in her position, we are again side-stepping real solutions to deal with silly games of politcal favortism.
"In God we trust". This
"In God we trust". This statement is on every $ bill the US makes. The first prophets were the voice of Jesus in his absence, spreading the word of forgiveness and compassion. Currently, the world is still full of slavers, monarchs, and killers and the human debaser, and most of this is happening outside of the US. Americans are now the voice of the Lord, Jesus Christ. We need to keep the voice of the downtrodden alive and to have the ability to make their plight known to a force that can help. We need watchdogs for this kind of problem, to me, the UN is the hope of the unfortunates.
The UN 'Human Rights' Council
The UN 'Human Rights' Council has countries such as China, and Libya judging democratic countries such as America. They mostly ignore human rights violations in Iran, Lebanon, North Korea, etc, but never fail to condemn the US and Israel.