All these are but passing incidents; but they show clearly that a discrimination practiced in the United States against her own citizens and to a large extent a contravention of her own laws, cannot be persisted in, without infringing upon the rights of the peoples of the world and especially upon the ideals and the work of the United Nations. This question then, which is without doubt primarily an internal and national question, becomes inevitably an international question and will in the future become more and more international, as the · nations draw together, In this great attempt to find common ground and to maintain peace, it is therefore, fitting and proper that the thirteen million American citizens of Negro descent should appeal to the United Nat ions and ask that organization in the proper way to take cognizance of a situation which deprives this group of their rights as men and citizens, and by so doing makes the functioning of the United Nations more difficult, if not in many cases impossible.
I found this section to be particularly intriguing and a confusing place to end his argument. While I can understand the rhetorical choice in terms of his audience, it seems at best a loose and half-hearted appeal to UN member countries based in the notion of self-interest instead of solidarity and justice, which seemed to be the more prevalent themes underlying Du Bois' argument.