by JonGowerDavies (Author)
In 2010 the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) produced a 750-page report entitled How Fair is Britain? It examined disparities in such things as life expectancy, wealth, education and employment between the white majority population and minorities. The minorities receiving special attention were defined by race, colour, ethnicity, religion, gender and sexual orientation. Because there are differences in outcome on various measures between the minorities and the majority population, the EHRC suggested that Britain is not fair. In Small Corroding Words, Jon Gower Davies argues that the refusal to make comparisons with other countries - in particular the countries that many members of minority groups come from - robs the report of any claim to non-partisan status, and undermines its moral authority. 'No one who comes to the UK from countries like Somalia or the Sudan, or having come here stays and gives birth, is worse off than where they come from.' The EHRC believes that rights can be claimed against and enforced by the state. Davies compares the EHRC's concept of the state to Rousseau's General Will, 'forcing recalcitrant citizens to realise that they must be free - or else'. However, a world in which rights are derived from or demanded of the state will eventually become intrusive, fractious and subtly oppressive. Duties and obligations are seldom mentioned. Rights remove gratitude: they are a licence to gatecrash the state. Rights demanded by people who haven't earned them and who may not deserve them are diminished by the demanding: and rights demanded of the state will soon enough become obligations and vexatious burdens imposed by the state. 'How fair are our prospects when post-modern subsidised oracles like the EHRC preach and praise rights but not duties, when we are invited by such prophets down an endless series of false and petty claims, demands, loud clamorous and paltry mutterings about injustice and the pursuit of hedonism, all with an official face? The EHRC should be abolished.'
Format: Paperback
Pages: 155
Publisher: Civitas
Published: 31 Jul 2011
ISBN 10: 1906837228
ISBN 13: 9781906837228