Tell Congress to Respect Human Rights!
Congress could soon vote on the Global
Respect Act, a bill that would enshrine "special LGBT rights" into American
foreign policy at the expense of protecting against real human rights abuses. The bill
is ideologically driven, unnecessary, diverts attention from international
crises, and could harm our relationships with allies by targeting them with
sanctions for having pro-family and pro-religious liberty policies.
Will you take a moment right now to contact your
representative and ask them to oppose the Global Respect Act?
This bill would enable
visa bans against foreign individuals accused of violating human rights;
however, the Global Magnitsky Act is stronger and already enables the U.S.
government to issue such bans. The Global Magnitsky Act allows sanctions
against foreign persons responsible for human rights violations against anyone,
yet H.R. 3485 only targets those accused of violating “LGBT rights.”
This bill could be construed to infringe upon the freedom of speech and
religion for those who maintain sincerely-held religious beliefs about marriage
or sexuality. Religious freedom is not
only foundational to America, but it is also foundational to U.S. human rights
advocacy abroad. The bipartisan International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 was
passed to elevate the status of religious freedom in our foreign policy. We
should not be doing anything to jeopardize America’s tradition of advocating
for religious freedom around the world. “LGBT rights” are simply not in the
text of foundational human rights treaties or other proper sources of
international human rights law, and the United States has no business in
pressuring other countries to adopt a leftist social agenda.
The bill could further be
used to go after foreign actors that promote pro-life policies. The United Nations
Human Rights Council has already determined that criminalizing abortion can be
viewed as “degrading” treatment.
Please reach out to your
representative today to let them know you oppose the Global Respect Act.