Holte
Active member
After the vote, the US representative said he was unable to support the text because he believed "the attainment of the right to adequate food was a goal that should be realized progressively." He said that the draft contained "inaccurate textual descriptions of underlying rights."
I'm don't see why he didn't bring this up before the vote, but I can at least see where he's coming from. Basically, his vote was a statement saying, "Since we're the country that will be donating the most food, let's at least be realistic about this and not expect to end hunger immediately."
The fact of the matter is that everybody agrees that starvation is bad, but countries like Uganda simply cannot afford to feed all their citizens. The burden then falls to other countries to stop this "rights violation," and suddenly Uganda's right to food becomes primarily the US's problem to supply food.
There are a lot of countries like Uganda that would need a lot of money from the US. The US is already the vast leader in relief work and donations (regardless of quality vs quantity), so I think it's unreasonable to demand more taxpayer money if there are indeed major inaccuracy issues in the bill.
I feel like inaccuracies in the bill should've been brought up before the vote, but I suppose the UN's power is so limited that none of this really matters anyway.
I'm don't see why he didn't bring this up before the vote, but I can at least see where he's coming from. Basically, his vote was a statement saying, "Since we're the country that will be donating the most food, let's at least be realistic about this and not expect to end hunger immediately."
The fact of the matter is that everybody agrees that starvation is bad, but countries like Uganda simply cannot afford to feed all their citizens. The burden then falls to other countries to stop this "rights violation," and suddenly Uganda's right to food becomes primarily the US's problem to supply food.
There are a lot of countries like Uganda that would need a lot of money from the US. The US is already the vast leader in relief work and donations (regardless of quality vs quantity), so I think it's unreasonable to demand more taxpayer money if there are indeed major inaccuracy issues in the bill.
I feel like inaccuracies in the bill should've been brought up before the vote, but I suppose the UN's power is so limited that none of this really matters anyway.