Politicians Can Ignore Our Concerns

but they can’t deny their complicity.

It was a slippery slope from this…

https://americanprofile.com/articles/john-d-rockefeller-jr-donated-land-for-united-nations-headquarters/

To this…

https://www.ohchr.org/en/about-us/high-commissioner/volker-turk

Through this…

https://www.un.org/esa/socdev/enable/comp509.htm

9.1 United Nations Provisions on the Migrant Worker

The International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, in force since July 2003, contains a comprehensive set of rules with regard to the particular situation of migrant workers. The main thrust of this Convention is that persons who qualify as migrant workers under its provisions are entitled to enjoy rights regardless of their legal status. The Convention does not directly refer to the disabled people, but some articles are worth mentioning…

and this …

https://www.un.org/en/chronicle/article/protection-migrants-rights-and-state-sovereignty

The question of protection and of guaranteeing rights of migrant workers (regular as well as irregular) is not just a migration governance question. It encompasses labour legislation, labour inspection, health and general human rights. Traditional practices of managing migration exacerbate the vulnerability of migrants. Take the selective application of labour laws in certain sectors, such as agriculture, construction, or domestic service. Migrant workers run a gauntlet in crossing borders to work in labour intensive sectors for wages well below legal or industry minimum standards often to be denied even these by unscrupulous employers who, instead, conspire to arrange their deportation when they are no longer needed. This is a problem of exploitation, and yet the victims of these scenarios, the migrants, are generally more likely to be penalized for their minor role than are employers who profit from illegal cheap or even free labour.

Protecting migrants from such exploitation and abuse is not only a question of protecting the individual for the individual’s sake, or of taking the moral high ground. It is an international legal obligation. Having sectors of the labour market that deny employers’ labour rights or violate labour codes (at times even criminal codes) encourages criminal behavior by employers, undermines the rule of law and creates unfair competition for the national labour force. Developing effective laws that manage migration in such a way that upholds the rights of migrants benefits both the migrant and society as a whole. Respect for the international legal framework thus leads to enhanced respect for the individual as well as for national legislation and institutions…

(Pardon this interruption from the voice of experience but I gotta pass on this encounter I had in the Yuma AZ border sector with a BP agent. It was almost twenty years ago, I had just arrived and set up my tent close to the Colorado River when the agent pulled up, said howdy and the what are you doing down here conversation started. He was of a friendly attitude as were all of the few (except one) I had dealings with were, as I remember. I told him I was with some folks he might have already had this discussion with but I had only arrived in Yuma the night before.

In the course of the conversation he made it clear I was to understand I was not to interfere with any body I might see doing any agricultural work just north of where I pitched the tent and then went on with his saga. He said he used to work in Florida and one day he intercepted a bus load of illegals heading to an orange grove. They none of them had any documentation and he took them in custody where they remained for about an hour when his supervisor got a call from his supervisor who got a call from a Congressman or Senator, I do forget, who got a call from the orange grower.

So if anyone believes or even thinks, the UN with all the corruption it has participated in and been reported in the media has any intention to protect the migrants or US, you gotta meet the new boss, bigger than the old boss

here…

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/24/world/europe/dublin-riots-police.html?smid=url-share

Mr. Varadkar, the Irish prime minister, said that the country would “modernize” its laws regarding incitement to hatred to cover social media platforms and pass legislation in the coming weeks allowing the police to better use the CCTV footage they collected on Thursday. Ireland’s justice minister, Helen McEntee, told RTE that those charged with assault of a Garda officer could face up to 12 years in prison.

The police said that the motive for the knife assault was unclear and that they were keeping “an open mind” in the investigation. Commissioner Harris said that the force would review its tactics on policing public disorder but pushed back at assertions that officers had failed to contain the unrest, saying they could not have anticipated its intensity.

Researchers said the country needed to tackle far-right extremism more seriously and address the underlying issues of inequality and social exclusion…

If you ever wondered how it happened that the illegals got more rights at the border, in your city or at your voting place it’s because they aren’t illegal and the democrat and republican pahtays have quietly changed their role from defending our Constitutional brace to forcing US into the middle of the road to nowhere good.

I hope you had a pleasant ride; but I think it’s about to turn bumpy soon.

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