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For starters, the treaty doesn’t even define disabilities, but says that “disability is an evolving concept.”

Disabilities Treaty Just Another U.N. Power Grab


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By Amy Payne —— Bio and Archives November 28, 2012

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International treaties sound like a good idea, especially when they claim to protect vulnerable people. The problem is, America already does more than any other country to ensure equal rights for its people—and the United Nations just wants the power to interfere in American law.
The Senate is now considering the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). President Obama signed this treaty in 2009, but the Senate has yet to agree to it. It needs a two-thirds majority of Senators to ratify it. In September, 36 Republican Senators signed a letter stating that they would oppose any treaties that came up for a vote during the lame-duck session of Congress. We will see now whether that promise holds. Steven Groves, Heritage’s Bernard and Barbara Lomas Senior Research Fellow, has explained that despite its name, the treaty will not help Americans with disabilities: More...



Heritage Foundation Amy Payne -- Bio and Archives | Comments

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