和谐英语

VOA常速英语:不可剥夺的权利及其重要性

2020-09-11来源:和谐英语

Next, an editorial reflecting the views of the United States government. In the Declaration of Independence, America’s founders defined unalienable rights as including “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” These rights are considered “inherent in all persons and roughly what we mean today when we say human rights,” said Peter Berkowitz, director of the State Department Policy Planning Staff. These rights don’t just protect Americans at home but form the basis for a moral foreign policy abroad, said Mr. Berkowitz: “We took obligations to champion them in 1948. Presidents from both political parties who have championed human rights. And America’s founding commitments involved respect for the dignity that inheres in all human beings.”

A year ago, U.S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo convened the Commission on Unalienable Rights with a specific mandate, said Director Berkowitz: “Secretary Pompeo asked the members of the Commission to investigate, to reground America’s undoubted commitment to human rights in foreign policy, in America’s founding documents - the Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution of the United States - in the American Constitutional tradition and also to help us understand America’s undoubted commitment to human rights in light of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which we signed onto in 1948.” Unalienable rights directly affect U.S. relations with individual countries, said Director Berkowitz: “We saw it in the 1980s when Ronald Reagan championed the human rights of the dissidents that the Soviet Union had cruelly imprisoned in their gulags. We hear it when the administration takes on the Islamic Republic of Iran, which also represses its own citizens.” While “human rights are certainly not the totality of American foreign policy,” noted Director Berkowitz, they are “one essential component, one key part of the mix of American foreign policy.” That was an editorial reflecting the views of the United States government.