Posted on 08/25/2016 7:11:32 AM PDT by artichokegrower
Its not every day that a senior United Nations official reprimands the U.S. for its race relations, saying the country is struggling to live up to its ideals on equality, that blunt discrimination by police against black Americans has reached crisis levels, and that Congress is dysfunctional in how it responds to problems.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
Yeah it is.
I would ask this fat SOB Maina Kiai Kenya exactly what percentage of his homeland people have indoor plumbing and porcelain toilets?
Frigging pontificating politicos.
Get the USA out of the UN and the UN out of the USA!
Its not every day that a senior United Nations official reprimands the U.S. for its race relations
Yeah it is.
Betcha the writer is of the Pauline Kael set that “lives in a rather special world”, but unlike Kael, is unaware of it.
I’d like to hear his thoughts on the discrimination against Christians in muslim countries? Also his thoughts on the subjugation of women inmuslim countries? Or how about the treatment of homosexuals in muslim countries?
How are we supposed to tell this Kenyan from the other one in the White House?
Ethnic cleansing comes up when I google Kenya.
It’s a Kenyan thing; you wouldn’t understand.
I wonder how much his third-world paradise gets in aid from the evil racistt taxpayers in the US.? If he feels so strongly, he should end that subsidy ASAP.
Get out of the UN, now.
Word!
Actually, that’s really all they do, aside from not paying parking tickets. I challenge anyone to come up with something constructive that the UN has EVER done!
It seems ironic that a Kenyan lawyer would be criticizing the results of America having a Kenyan president
Two or three shades darker and that guy could be Idi Amin DaDa - emperor for life.
Hell the Kenyan paternal birth family of the president of the us still,doesn’t have indoor plumbing - and you expect the rest of the country to ?
Throw the jerk out
Considering what Muslim countries do to people, I don’t need no stinking lecture
Kenyas efforts to tackle its escalating security crisis have been marred by serious human rights violations by Kenyan security forces, including extrajudicial killings, arbitrary detentions, and torture. The government rarely investigates or prosecutes security officers for such abuse. The government has been slow in implementing key reforms identified as crucial to addressing Kenyas political crisis, including land reform and stronger accountability mechanisms, and security sector reforms. Kenya has tried to restrict civil society and independent media. There has been no tangible progress on accountability for crimes committed during the post-elections violence of 2007-8, which left at least 1,100 dead and 650,000 displaced.
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