Trump Has a New Definition of Human Rights
From the Atlantic.
State Department reports portray Germany as more oppressive than El Salvador.
By Anne Applebaum
For nearly half a century, the State Department has reported annually on human-rights conditions in countries around the world. The purpose of this exercise is not to cast aspersions, but to collect and disseminate reliable information. Congress mandated the reports back in 1977, and since then, legislators and diplomats have used them to shape decisions about sanctions, foreign aid, immigration, and political asylum.
Because the reports were perceived as relatively impartial, because they tried to reflect well-articulated standardsinternationally recognized individual, civil, political, and worker rights, as set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rightsand because they were composed by professionals reporting from the ground, the annual documents became a gold standard, widely used by people around the world, cited in court cases and political campaigns. Year in and year out, one former official told me, they have been the most downloaded items on the State Department website.
Quite a few people will also read the 2024 reports, published yesterday. But they will do so for very different reasons. The original drafts were ready in January, before the Biden administration left office, following the usual practice. In past years, the reports were published in March or April. But this year they were delayed for several months while President Donald Trumps political appointees, including Michael Anton, the MAGA intellectual who is now the State Departments director of policy planning, rewrote the drafts.
Some of the changes affect the whole collection of documents, as entire categories of interest were removed. The Obama administration had previously put a strong focus on corruption, on the grounds that kleptocracy and autocracy are deeply linked, and it started collecting information on the persecution of sexual minorities. Over the past few weeks, as the new reports were being prepared, I spoke with former officials who had seen early versions, or who had worked on the reports in the past. As many of them expected, the latest reports do not address systemic discrimination against gay or trans people, and they remove observations about rape and violence against women."
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/08/trump-state-department-human-rights-report/683852/?utm_source=feed
So much for another gold standard. All to appease the worst of the worst.