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134 responses | 4 votes

Aug 30, 2006 3:14:44 PM cite

What are the basic dignities that each human being deserves and why do we let so many people go without them?

by clairemack

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Jonathan Meese: What is a basic element? What is dignified? What does every human deserve? What does it mean, if people have to live without something? Aren't we those arrogant ones who claim that people are not able to live without anything? This question is full of question marks, I cannot answer anything, I cannot recognise anything. This question is based on our own haughtiness. People does not deserve anything. Dignity does not need human. Elements obey themselves. The fundaments are to be found in the universe. Life is not the human, human is not the total life. The total revolution lives without humans as well. Is this evil, is this good? Is it possible that the most dignified existence is the total revolution itself and shouldn't we let it live as it wants to? What is the spirit of economic? Those who are able to define existence full of dignity are just followers. Those who specifies the definition life full of dignity are tyrants. Those who define the dignified life is only mean. Nobody knows what human dignity is. Only the human dignity knows itself. Human dignity is defined by itself. It is an inherent principle. The arbitrariness of the beauty and the mood of nature will follow its path as it wishes. This is art.

by Jonathan Meese

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Jonathan Stack: The basic dignities I think are love, liberty, compassion, kindness, generosity, these are the qualities that we -- the ability to educate our children and to feed our children and ourselves. These are the basics. Why do we let so many people go without them and why do we let ourselves go without them? It's part of the human species that we try to figure out how to take care of ourselves. We can take care of ourselves if you are in a position where you have taken control in some dignified way of your own human dignities, and you can spread that to other people, then you need to start doing that. I walk past a homeless person in New York City or making a film in Liberia and I see a starving child, the question is how can I -- what can I do in the microcosm and what can I do in the macrocosm to make a difference. I don’t know the answer to that question. There is a million children sitting from, is there anything I can do, or should I be there, these questions -- this question, why would I have to make a sense of that co-human responsibility is one that I struggle with all the time. It's just the kind of -- I don’t know any abstract. And why people do that and why we don't treat people better is like asking why are humans human. I guess if people really saw each other as their brother and really could imagine that each person out there was their child or their relative, it would be really different like if we could really open our hearts that wide. It's get better. I love that.

by Jonathan Stack

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

José Manuel Prieto: What does man need to live with dignity? To live with dignity , I think that man needs more than anything all that what allows him to develop all his possibilities, his opportunities. I believe, that a dignified life can be a life of richness, a life where we submerge ourselves in our destiny, the way that allows us to put into practice all those opportunities and to [catch] those dreams. I think that this would be the pattern, would be the the way I defined a dignified life. About the issue of allowing or not to allowing other people to live without these values, well, I don’t think that these should be imposed on anybody. I believe that everybody should understand their importance and should fight for them. We can discuss with the people about these values, we can discuss about what a dignified life is, from our point of view, but never strive for imposing our view of what is a dignified life, never strive for imposing our view of how to achieve a dignified life. I think this is something to think about in a public discussion, in public consideration, always having in mind what ought to be a principle: a dignified life is a life that allows to advance all the opportunities, to put into practice all the dreams. I think, that is a dignified life.

by José Manuel Prieto

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Jwan M. Aziz: Miss Clara, the basic dignities are to have the right in education, good health, expressing opinions freely, residence, free moving and others. Egoism and tendency for dominance make people lose their dignities, so let us all try to love the others as we love ourselves, to give the freedom for everyone and to stop the enslavement.

by Jwan M. Aziz

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Kailash Satyarthi: The basic dignity according to me is that all of us should have a very strong belief that we are the same children of one God. So, we enjoy the birth right to be equal, we should -- we have been given equal opportunities by our father. Secondly, we have to ignore that we cannot live without each other because we are born with freedom and independence. But, on the other hand, there is some sort of interdependency. Our survival depends on the nature, our survival depends on our society and our neighborhood. And, that's why the togetherness is one of that value which we have to inculcate and we have to know because it is something which is needed. So, the basic dignity is the dignity of being equal human being with equal opportunities, freedom and justice. And, that has to be translated into action. Without that, it is not possible. And, that brings us respect. If you feel that the whole world is created -- the whole universe is created by one God, then all of us are equal and we have to enjoy that freedom and equality. And, if we are interfering and dismantling that basic dignity of human being, that will go against the nature, that will go against the God.

by Kailash Satyarthi

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Kamal Boullata: Article one of the universal declaration of human rights proclaimes and i quote: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights and of [course], the basic dignities that each human being deserves are to live in freedom and to ensure one's human, political and social rights in equality with all other members of the human family regardless of faith, race, creed or colour. Does one's dignity may begin with selfrespect but its full realization is atteint through commpassion and respect for the lives of others. As for why so many people continue to go without the basic dignities they deserve it is mainly because elected officials who controle the reigns of political power in our world are cursed with greed as much as they are fired up by the need to extend their domination by waging war if need be. To them, all questions of [light] can only be solved and mesured by might. History teaches us however that people everywhere will continue to resist and risk their lives just to retain the basic dignities. Regardless of where we come from each one of us shares the resonsibility to win this battle for all.

by Kamal Boullata

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Kigge Hvid: Hi, Claire. Sorry, I’m just a little late. What are the basic dignities? Basically, I think the dignities that all humans need is the right and possibility to care for themselves, their family, their communities, and their societies. This would mean that they would have the right to education, to a job, to freedom of speech, to cover their basic needs, to food, to a place to sleep, stuff like that. This is basically covered in the Bills of Human Rights, the UN Bills of Human Rights. So, that is one part of it. What are the needs? Basically, it’s the right to provide for yourself and care for yourself, your family, your communities. So -- and why do we let so many people go without them? It’s true that we do. It’s true that so many freedom rights are oppressed many places in the world. But, do we just let them go without it? Now, I think there’s a big emphasis in the world, in the UN, in a lot of governments around the world, in a lot of activist movements, in a lot of NGOs to have this fact changed. I see a lot of people, and you can just look around this table being very deeply engaged in seeing to that all people have the basic rights of living. When we don’t do that, places where the human rights are not obeyed, it would be a question of fear, of egoism, of money, of religion, and of tradition. And, that would mean that somewhere, some places, the work against this will be a very very long walk, but it is a walk that started and it is the walk that would continue.

by Kigge Hvid

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Kurt Weidemann: The basic elements of dignified human existence have to be determined by humans and humans have to uphold them. Communication has to be practiced in a better way. Communication is a difficult process. Konrad Lorenz once said, we have to consider that said is not heard, heard is not understood, understood is not approved, approved is not applied and applied is not maintained. From these six steps of communication, if five are fulfilled but the sixth is not fulfilled, if something is applied but not maintained, then communication is disrupted and isn’t taking place. This means the maintenance of dignity, of respect and all these things has to be mastered by communication and communication has to bring these things into the world.

by Kurt Weidemann

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Lesego Rampolokeng: If we need to even start by defining what basic human dignities are, then I think this world is in a worse state than I thought at the very beginning, because I wouldn't think that any human being on this planet needs to be told that. Respect for that which is life is the ultimate human basic whatever you want to call it. If I’m called upon to define those, to enumerate them, to line them up one after the other, then I think I’m in the wrong place altogether. We said at the beginning that certain sectors of humanity see themselves as being in a position to dictate the lives of others. And if that is indeed so, then it is very simple to let other people slide beyond the life, slope beyond the human plain and be comfortable with watching them rive and wriggle at your feet or in the midst of your own refutes, your own feces, your own body waste, it becomes easy then to want to feed the people atomic waste, to want to feed people that which will see them riving in contortions at the feet of the Bushes of the world, at the feet of the capital monsters of the world, at the feet of the houses of finance. So, this “we” that allows us to let others do that is very comfortable indeed and very happy. But then again, I refuse to see the entire human-scape as being one we all agreed upon, we all exist within, because they are those who stand in positions of power and they are those who die because of what those in positions of power visit upon them. So, I don't belong to any "we" out there.

by Lesego Rampolokeng

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Leung Ping-Kwan: The question as to why do we consider our lives to be worth more than others. I don’t consider this life to be worth more than others. But I do see that in our rosier days, there are all kinds of discrimination. There are people who are prejudiced, particular class, gender, race over others, and there are people who consider to have lives more worthy than the others. Of course, we don’t agree with that. The problem and the reason in all kinds of prejudice is seeing something as more valuable than the other, either because of class, because of race, because of wealth, somebody more wealthy than the other. Somebody are more favored than the others and some of the people would consider some life worth more than others and I think in order to go against that idea, we have to re-examine our values and see the needs of particular society. There are particular value adjustment system. They are frivolous to some people over other and see some people whose life worth more than the others.

by Leung Ping-Kwan

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Lijun Fang: We must consider the diversity of human society. People living in different regions at different times have different definitions of basic dignities. We also need to consider the differences between various groups. People from different groups understand dignity in different ways. Hence, we can hardly give a standarized or quantitated description of basic dignity so as to measure people's dignities.

by Lijun Fang

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Lillian Holt: I suppose I could say this exactly in two words: respect and tolerance. I'm a bit worried about those words because I think tolerance - I mean I as an indigenous Australian, this question is from an Australian. I don’t wish to be tolerated, actually because that says I am actually a problem. But on the other hand, I’d rather be tolerated than trampled upon. I would rather be understood and tolerated and in terms of respected, I would rather be accepted than respected. So, you know, acceptance as supposed to rejection; being understood as opposed to being tolerated. When I say understood that requires communication. And it requires the basic dignity of listening, I believe. So the society has become so hasty and quick that I think we tend to, we have our own agenda and everybody has that. I'm not saying that I'm [inaudible]. I'm talking about myself when I answer these questions. The basic dignities I would like to have are that I'd be part of the community and be accepted and that I'd be understood in one sense, and it's impossible for everybody to understand everybody, even me. I'm not asking for huge deal here. What I'm asking for is we need to know this the [Oracle at Dip Farse] and that the first commandment is know thyself. And then to be true to thyself, but to know thyself, and I think that once we know ourselves we actually don't have to ask these kinds of questions. What are the basic dignities? I mean really I think what we know deeply and truly within our souls what is required and it's the same thing, it's like to do unto others as we would have them do unto us. I’ll tell you what - sometimes that's a big request for some of us. And it means actually overcoming self from time to time in order to respect the dignity of others because when we exclude and reject, we're in great trouble.

by Lillian Holt

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Livingstone Maluleke: To my understanding is that all those things that the basic dignities that each human being deserve include amongst others respect, freedom of actions, the rights and access to resources, and the rights to live. These are some of the aspects which are very important and pertinent to the whole fundamental package of human rights. But then, we also need to say we should not have ignorance. We should not do away with illiteracy. We need not have arrogance. People should have as much as things which are driving forces, which are developmental in nature, which will drive this world forward, so that at the end of the day the ethics and this possibility is taken by all and therefore respect, freedom of actions, the rights and access to resources, and the right to live are the aspects which are very fundamental and being the basic dignities that each human being deserve to have and this is what we should keep in mind and promote all the time.

by Livingstone Maluleke

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Mae-Wan Ho: I have to think about this one, you know. That’s a very good question and I guess I come down to being heard and being recognized, I think these are the basic human dignities. And why do we let so many people go without them, well, people -- many indigenous people for example, are denied a voice, in global forums, in their national forums and they are not heard. And, the political system does not recognize. They see them as a threat to the nation instead of being an asset. And I think that's got to do -- that really is one of the most serious problems of today, it is a violation of the basic human rights. We after all, we have laws protecting animals that are in danger of extinction, but we do not have laws protecting indigenous people from extinction, protecting them from the mining, logging, and other industries that destroy and devastate them and livelihood.

by Mae-Wan Ho

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Mahsa Shekarloo: There are many basic dignities. A couple, a few just to mention here, is the right to not live, for example, under occupation. I think that is a basic dignity that we need to allow, grant, respect for all peoples of the world. Basic human dignity is to have the value of their lives respected, to understand and to acknowledge that every life is equally valuable, whether that be a life in Africa, a life in South Asia, a life in West Asia. All lives have to be considered equal. Sovereignty, I think, is a basic human dignity, to have control over your resources, over your decisions. Self-determination is a basic human dignity. We let so many people go without them so we can let other people do what they do, take lands, drop bombs, take water, control mines, control minerals, get cheap oil. There are very real reasons why we violate other people’s human dignities.

by Mahsa Shekarloo

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Mark Benecke: Basic dignities are based on health, wealth, freedom, of course. All on a certain degree. But we do let go, or we do not take care so much what people in other societies in which we think people don't have that, because we don't want it. We first want to protect our own kin so we take care of that first. And then later maybe, we take care of other people. So, it's a biological principle. If something is wrong somewhere else, I first take care of the core structures; then I take care of the other structures. What we see now in many countries and societies, it is that if we gain a profit of any kind, a monetary profit, social profit, cultural profit from helping people to achieve basic dignities or to implement them in their societies, if we gain something from that, economically, socially, culturally, then we do help them. But first, we all had to develop our own structures, put them on a firm fundament and from that we can start to spread them. And I think this is a process that is currently happening. So, I guess basic dignities are there and basic cultural and social values and we are spreading them and the world is getting better right now. Not worse.

by Mark Benecke

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Martin Almada: Every woman and every man at any place in the world and at any point in time are concerned by the same questions. They need to be sured of possibility to exist, to be, to do and to have: to be somebody in a society, to belong to a society, to be able to express itself in a society and to have something in a society too. The values of life are solidarity, dignity, safety and creation. People need to be sure to survive common deseases, to carry dignity in their breast, to have refuge, education, to be respected, to develop their potentials, above all creativity, to promote their creative imagination. Market, the leader, where everything is being bought and sold introduces communist anti- values: competitiveness and individualism that are of detriment to the social justice. shelter competitiveness

by Martin Almada

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Masami Saionji: I think it is dignity of life, and also freedom and then creation/imagination of human beings. The most important thing is the dignity of life. No one should violate it, and make full use of it. That is what life should be. Also there are lot of people who are suppressed their own dignity of life by themselves. Because if they do not know the meaning of their birth and their life or their mission of life, they are easy to believe that their life is restrained and injured by others. The dignity of life should be protected by others and we must recognize the dignity of our own life by ourselves. One thinks that he is bad, he does not have any ability, or he does not worth to live. It is really wrong that he lives with the denial of himself. All human beings, no matter what kind of people, dwell in brightness live. And inside the life, there is a holy bright mystical wisdom of god. It is the nature of human beings to make full use of each person's life and his freedom.

by Masami Saionji

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Sep 9, 2006 11:30:00 AM cite

Masuma Bibi Russel: Basic dignity is human dignity, their pride. So, they can have their head up, not head down, they don’t have to scared of anything. They’re also -- maybe they are in living in a remote village in some part of developing country, so what? They should be standing straight, they should be looking at you, they should be -- that is something you should never taken away, the human dignity, pride. That’s so, so, so important for someone. That once taken away you’ve taken away everything. I think that is the most important things that, giving them a little bit of confidence that they are part of this world, they can live, even they are poor, they can live with the dignity. They can have a piece of cloth to cover their pride and don’t take it away. That means you are making them completely naked. So, I think human dignity and pride is so important that it shouldn’t be taken away. That is the most important thing. And of course, also the peace. Even the -- everywhere in the world even it’s elite society, poor, middle class, they have their peace. Have their peace, don’t take it away. Don’t make them scare. I mean it’s so important. For me the human dignity and the pride, we should be never taken away from a person. That means you just finish that person. It’s so sad to see that.

by Masuma Bibi Russel

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