Seven Building Blocks To Fairness and Equity

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

There’s an article in the latest issue of Science magazine, called “Strengthening the UN Agencies In Order To Protect The Authors’ Paychecks” … just kidding, that would be the title if they enforced the “Truth in Advertising” laws for pseudoscientific papers.

In fact it is called Navigating the Anthropocene: Improving Earth System Governance(paywalled), apparently named specifically so we won’t be forewarned what it’s about. It is a two page article produced by an entire alphabet of no less than 33 listed authors, from Abbott to Zondervan, supporting my theorem that V ≈ 1 / A^2.  (Restated in English, my theorem says that the value V of a scientific article is inversely proportional to the square of the number of authors A … but I digress.)

Figure 1. Are these the kind of men you want to run your global economy and make binding rules governing your everyday actions? Would you buy a used car from either of them? 33 authors say yes …

So what is the huge problem they claim to be curing? First sentence of the article sez:

Science assessments indicate that human activities are moving several of Earth’s sub-systems outside the range of natural variability typical for the previous 500,000 years (1, 2).

Gosh … really? “Science assessments”, that sounds impressive. You mean some scientists have actually falsified the null hypothesis, someone has actually shown that current climate is “outside the range of natural variability” for the last half million years?

Intrigued by claims that someone has completed the daunting task of figuring out how to measure the “variability typical for the previous 500,000 years”, and always willing to learn something new, I turned to references 1 and 2, expecting to find some irrefutable hard-hitting peer-reviewed scientific studies. After all, this is their excuse, the reason for their brilliant plan to redesign the world’s entire economy and governance systems, so it must rest on solid, verifiable science, no?

Well … no. Turns out the references are:

1. W. Steffen et al., Global Change and the Earth System (Springer, New York, 2004).

2. H. J. Schellnhuber et al., Eds., Earth System Analysis for Sustainability (MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2004).

That’s it? Two books? From 2004? Steffen has a doctorate in Chemical Engineering and is a strong advocate of carbon taxes. Schellnhuber has a doctorate in Theoretical Physics and his advocacy revolves around the fabled climate “tipping points” that are not visible in the past, that never actually seem to materialize in the present, but are gonna happen real soon, any day now, honest they are.

Both are climate activists first, and second, and climate scientists third. This is the rock on which the 33 authors are building the First Church of Ecological Redemption?

Saying we need to rebuild the world based on that kind of “evidence” is a joke. They claim we need to totally reorganize the planet, install trans-national agencies, restructure the economy, and create a global system of UN governance, based on a couple of books by two climate alarmists that when published, sank like stones, and deservedly so.

I must confess, the arrogance and hubris of these charming folks seems to know no bounds.

But let me set aside that hubris, let me ignore the total lack of support for their underlying claim, and look at what they propose to do based on a couple of books that maybe three people have ever read. To spare them further embarrassment, I won’t expose the equally ludicrous “citations” for their individual claims. Here’s what they say we should do, their seven “building blocks” for our glorious future:

First, the environmental agencies and programs of the United Nations must be reformed and/or upgraded.

Upgraded? Because they’ve been so successful to date? For example they say they want to develop the United Nations Environmental Programme into a “strong environmental organization with a sizable role in agenda-setting, norm-development, compliance management, science assessment, and capacity-building.” 

Look, 33 author-folk, I do not want the UN to have ANY role in “compliance management”. That’s just another name for UN eco-cops. I don’t want the UN involved in “science assessment”, that’s a recipe for guaranteed disaster, even scientists struggle with that one. I don’t want the UN involved in any way in “Agenda-setting”, or “Norm-development”, no matter who Norm is. I don’t want them in any of this. These are the same folks who brought us the Kyoto Protocol, soaring energy prices, Agenda 21, pensioners shivering through the winter, tropical forests clear-cut for oil plantations, failed carbon cap-and-trade schemes, and the IPCC … and building on that stunning lack of success, they now want to restructure the world? Thanks, I’ll pass.

Second, it is crucial to strengthen the integration of the social, economic, and environmental pillars of sustainable development, from local to global levels.

What does this mean, “strengthen the integration of the pillars”? How do you “integrate” pillars? This is meaningless bureaucratic bafflegab. I discuss their so-called “pillars of sustainable development” nonsense in my post “Rio+20 meets Agenda 21“.

Third, better integration of sustainability governance requires governments to close remaining regulatory gaps at the global level. One such area is the development and deployment of emerging technologies, such as nanotechnology, synthetic biology, and geo-engineering. Such emerging technologies promise significant benefits, but also pose major risks for sustainable development. They need an international institutional arrangement—such as one or several multilateral framework conventions—to support forecasting, transparency, and information sharing; further develop technical standards; help clarify the applicability of existing treaties; promote public discussion and input; engage multiple stakeholders in policy dialogues, and ensure that environmental considerations are fully respected.

In other words, they say we need some kind of UN global laws to cover just a few things like nanotech, synthetic biology, and geo-engineering … but don’t be concerned that they are only proposing to regulate so little. They will soon extend the regulations to cover other crucial issues like transparency, ensuring that cropland is used to grow fuel instead of food for the hungry, technical standards, cow flatulence, windmill numbers, and “ensuring that environmental considerations are fully respected”. Gotta get that respect …

Does anyone (other than rent-seekers) actually think that having the UN make global laws, or even global recommendations for laws, is a good idea? Has it worked well in the past? Heck, has it ever worked in the past? Nothing springs to mind … but these 33 authors want to build a world economy and governing system based on a UN system that is riddled with waste, corruption, and theft, has only succeeded fitfully if at all in these realms, has absolutely no checks and balances, and these days is known mostly for three things—corruption, meaningless resolutions, and lifelong sinecures with obscenely bloated salaries for the proponents of “sustainability governance” and the like. Spare me.

Fourth, integration of sustainability policies requires that governments place a stronger emphasis on planetary concerns in economic governance. Environmental goals must be mainstreamed into global trade, investment, and finance regimes so that the activities of global economic institutions do not undermine environmental treaties because of poor policy coherence.

This is more lime-green flavored Koolaid. Nothing is sustainable. Sustainability is a chimera, a will of the wisp, with no agreed-on definition. It is a meaningless feel-good word used to justify whatever projects the authors are pushing this week.

Fifth, we argue for a stronger reliance on qualified majority voting to speed up international norm-setting. Political science research shows that governance systems that rely on majority-based rule are quicker to arrive at far-reaching decisions and that consensus-based systems limit decisions to the preferences of the least ambitious country. Yet at the international level, majority-based decision-making is still rare and needs to be further extended especially when Earth system concerns are at stake. Weighted voting mechanisms can ensure that decisions take all major interests among governments into account without granting veto power to any country.

Oh, yeah, “qualified majority voting”, that sounds like a winner in an organization like the UN, where five years ago or so Libya chaired the UN Human Rights Commission, and then it was Iran as Chair, they’re such experts on Human Rights … care to guess in which direction the “weighting” of the “weighted voting mechanisms” is likely to go? Not in your favor, would be my guess …

Sixth, stronger intergovernmental institutions as outlined here raise important questions of legitimacy and accountability.

Yes, they certainly do raise important questions. Unfortunately, these important questions have never been successfully answered. The first question is, why do we need a given UN-based “intergovernmental institution” at all? Second question is, does it do anything but provide a fat salary to pluted bloatocrats? Third question is, how will we kill it when it goes off the rails, as all of these organizations have done in the past? Fourth question, are any of these institutions either legitimate or accountable in the slightest? You know … important questions … but don’t worry, the 33 authors don’t answer them, or even attempt to answer them. For that they’d need maybe 66 authors. They just assume that the very real issues of illegitimacy and un-accountability and widespread corruption and lack of checks and balances, problems that have proven insoluble in the past, don’t really need anything but a few discussions, meetings, and resolutions to fix them right up.

Seventh, equity and fairness must be at the heart of a durable international framework for sustainable development.

I particularly love the seventh “building block” in their seven-point plan. It’s the reason for the whole paper. At the end of the list comes lucky number seven, the real issue, which is “equity and fairness”.

Now, you may not have have guessed this, but “equity and fairness” is the UN secret code for … money.

More money.

Lots of money.

Your money.

Some of which will no doubt eventually flow into the pockets of some of the 33 authors. Some of which will flow to third world despots. And most of which will assuredly line the pockets of unelected bureaucrats.

Perhaps you think I’m wrong about what “equity and fairness” means to the UN? Here’s the rest of the paragraph describing the seventh step, the text that immediately follows the quote above:

Strong financial support of poorer countries remains essential. More substantial financial resources could be made available through novel financial mechanisms, such as global emissions markets or air transportation levies for sustainability purposes.

You see, “equity and fairness” means that the countries like say South Korea or Thailand, that have worked and sweated and sacrificed and saved and built up their economies, need to give their hard-earned money to the other countries that haven’t done that … because that’s fair. And equitable.

Because if we turned off the money tap and said “No thanks, we have all the UN bodies we need, in fact we’re desperately trying to kill some, not make new ones”, the game would be over and the 33 authors of this appeal for money would be out of luck and likely out of a job.

And how fair and equitable would that be, after the authors each worked so hard to provide us with … hang on, let me check … OK, on average each of the 33 authors contributed some 41 words of deathless prose to the document. We certainly wouldn’t want that herculean effort to go unrewarded.

I mean, how fair and equitable would that be, not to mention sustainable, for their checking accounts? How can they integrate the pillars without further funding?

w.

PS—I do love the claim that what we need is “novel financial mechanisms, such as global emissions markets.” I’m not sure where these guys have been living during the past decade. But they must have their heads a long ways up their … ivory towers for them not to have noticed how almost every one of these not-at-all-novel carbon emissions markets has burst into flames and imploded recently. I mean seriously, these 33 author-folk are so out of touch with the real world that they think emissions markets are “novel”. Tragic.

But then failure, even repeated failure, has never been an obstacle to this kind of unsuccessful serial doomcasters. They’ve seen their predictions of catastrophe fail time after time and ignored those failures completely, so why should they not do the same regarding the proven failure of carbon markets?

PPS—Don’t get me wrong. I was green before the color was taken over and corrupted by the “green” organizations. I’m still a conservamentalist. Here’s the truth. The countries of the world need sensible, enforceable environmental regulations, or people just dispose of their industrial waste in the nearest stream or in the atmosphere. We’ve proven that over and over. Basically we’re pigs, and we need to regulate accordingly.

My problem is that the UN is entirely the wrong body to be dealing with these kinds of issues. We’ve also proven that over and over. For evidence regarding the current topic, see inter lots of alia the IPCC, the UNFCCC, Agenda 21, and the unending series of annual extravagant climate parties in sunny tourist destinations thrown at great expense and with little or no return.

The UN has done a few things right in fifty years, but overall it has been an abject failure in most things except for what it was originally set up to do (provide a place for countries to talk about disputes rather than going to war). We need environmental regulations, but we definitely don’t need the UN to point us in the wrong direction.

FURTHER READING: A Miasma of Corruption: The United Nations at 50

The climate data they don't want you to find — free, to your inbox.
Join readers who get 5–8 new articles daily — no algorithms, no shadow bans.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
105 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Robert of Ottawa
March 16, 2012 4:19 am

First Church of Ecological Redemption
Very good 🙂

Hilary Ostrov (aka hro001)
March 16, 2012 4:22 am

Well, even though this multi-authored paper is very brief, from what I’ve read, it is definitely consistent with the output of High Level, Low Level – and all levels in between – papers and positions being promulgated by the UN en route to Rio+20:
A profusion of panels and pronouncements en route to Rio+20
Here are some highlights from the High Level:

sustainable development is fundamentally a question of people’s opportunities to influence their future, claim their rights and voice their concerns
peoples of the world will simply not tolerate continued environmental devastation or the persistent inequality which offends deeply held universal principles of social justice
governance across the world must fully embrace the requirements of a sustainable development future, as must civil society and the private sector
Achieving sustainability requires us to transform the global economy. Tinkering on the margins will not do the job. The current global economic crisis, which has led many to question the performance of existing global economic governance, offers an opportunity for significant reforms. It gives us a chance to shift more decisively towards green growth
Governments should establish price signals that value sustainability to guide the consumption and investment decisions of households, businesses and the public sector
To achieve sustainable development, we need to build an effective framework of institutions and decision-making processes at the local, national, regional and global levels. We must overcome the legacy of fragmented institutions established around single-issue “silos”
As international sustainable development policy is fragmented and, in particular, the environmental pillar is weak, UNEP should be strengthened

For those who may not be familiar with UN-speak, “civil society” = NGOs, the “accreditation” of which within the UN sphere has increased phenomenally within the last 20 years. In fact, the numbers are such that they yield a … wait for it … hockey stick:
Introducing … the UN’s jolly green sustainable hockey stick
Not to mention that Pachauri’s July 2009 “vision” for AR5 – which, if he has his way, will result in “sustainable development” pervading the reports of all three WGs – and of course his recent designation as one of “three of the world’s most prominent sustainability leaders”::
Sustainia mania … it’s the latest and greatest from the UN’s PR factory.

Robert of Ottawa
March 16, 2012 4:23 am

sustainability governance
That’s rationing for you proles.

Robert of Ottawa
March 16, 2012 4:24 am

defUNd

Robert of Ottawa
March 16, 2012 4:29 am

We used to call people who wanted to rule the world lunatics, megalomaniacs, Bonapartists, now we call them “scientists”.

Oatley
March 16, 2012 5:03 am

Methinks 1984 should be re-read by everyone.
Your leader loves you…

March 16, 2012 5:07 am

Ode to the IPCC:
“The thing to remember when traveling is that the trail is the thing, not the end of the trail. The Dutchman was hard…he was stone. His brain was eroded granite where the few ideas he had carved their deep ruts of opinion. There was no way for another idea to seep in, no place for imagination, no place for dreams, none for compassion or mercy or even fear.”
Louis L’Amour in ‘Ride the Dark Trail’

March 16, 2012 5:12 am

“You know … important questions … but don’t worry, the 33 authors don’t answer them, or even attempt to answer them. For that they’d need maybe 66 authors.”
The answer is always to double it. Regardless of whether it’s money or authors. We need to take heed and be mindful of who has the next opportunity to solve our problems for us.

March 16, 2012 5:34 am

Reblogged this on gottadobetterthanthis and commented:
Willis, writing at Anthony’s, worth reading, as always.

garymount
March 16, 2012 5:34 am

I am reminded of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a UN created document I have never read, that for the most part no one I know ever mentions, at least in the company I keep, nor even by my own country men/women, except perhaps on rare occasions when someone mentions that if you read the document in Cuba, you could get thrown in jail.
Throw a bunch of bureaucrats together one day, scramble to jumble a bunch of UN parables together in the allotted amount of time, and sign off on it. Voila, Declaration of Human Rights, Copenhagen accord, Kyoto, Sustainable drivel…
Sorry, reading UN created content scrambles my brain cells. I had better read my Quantum Mechanics book for a while.

Pull My Finger
March 16, 2012 5:46 am

I will vote for any president, Communist, Fascist, even Democrat, that promises to pull the US out of the UN and kick it’s nasty, whoreish edifice out of the US of A.
The people that run the UN are inevitably from countires that can’t even run themselves.. or a even a villiage.. much less the world.
Ghana, Egypt, Peru, Burma… one Nazi.
Kofi Annan was no more than an African Warlord with a nice smile and an expensive suit.
At least the current fellow is from a modern democracy.. by the good graces of the USA/UK/ANZAC I might note.

March 16, 2012 5:50 am

A good and timely essay, Willis, of the kind that needs to appear on frequent basis here. Gives me the opportunity to repeat my rant that attacking the pseudoscience of warmism is only one part (the smaller one too) of the battle, dealing with the endgame bit, the money and power-grabs, the other. We need the reminder, ad nauseum, that the IPCC is a UN organization and that there are thousands of shadowy and unrepresentative NGOs and environmental groups who are intimately involved with it. This is the under-exploited and highly vulknerable Warmies’ Achilles’ Heel; their involvement in and profit from that creeping fascism with the green smiley face. It needs to be exposed and underlined in every climate debate, as bamboozling and scaring the public with what to most people is technical gobledeygook is easier than scrambling to explain why they need to take over our governments, economies and private lives. End of mini-rant.
Incidentally, twenty years ago such an article would have raised a storm of indignant protestations and accusations of paranoia and conspiracy mongering by normal, smart people jumping to the defense of the UN. Not no more. Now many would say you’re going too easy on the buggers.
Pedantry time:
“…tropical forests clear-cut for oil plantations,(bio-fuel plantations?)
“Second question is, does it do anything but provide a fat salary to pluted bloatocrats?” (“pluted” is not in the Urban Dictionary, therefore it cannot exist. I like it, though, and think it should be a word.)

March 16, 2012 5:57 am

The UN is well on its way to making itself into the global Unaccountable Nomenklatura. The Oil for Food scandal was just a blip compared to the systemic misdirection of resources and monies which has become the UN raison d’etre (along with maximizing and permanently embedding its authority).
It can’t be reformed. Once the process is this far along, it’s impossible to go back to being just half pregnant.

Dave
March 16, 2012 6:08 am

Two pages or two hundred… it doesn’t matter. Every one of the 33 (32?) authors have by now updates their CVs/resumes and in a few years will receive widespread accolades for the groundbreaking tripe, ah, I mean “research” that they described in their paper.
Publish or perish baby!

Wade
March 16, 2012 6:19 am

Great rant Willis.
I may be paranoid, but I foresee a global communism coming with the UN as our leader. Look at the language:

Seventh, equity and fairness must be at the heart of a durable international framework for sustainable development. Strong financial support of poorer countries remains essential. More substantial financial resources could be made available through novel financial mechanisms, such as global emissions markets or air transportation levies for sustainability purposes.

The words “international” and “financial” are in the seventh building block. That means a global economy. How well has combined economies worked out for the EU? Also in the seventh building block is this sentence that stands out to me: “Strong financial support of poorer countries remains essential.” I seriously doubt the authors mean that richer countries will build factories and schools in poorer countries. Nor do I believe the authors mean that richer countries should improve the infrastructure of poorer countries so they have plenty of potable water and food. I believe they mean redistribution of wealth, with some of the wealth going to the UN of course. Redistribution of wealth is communism.

David A
March 16, 2012 6:32 am

Murray Grainger says:
March 16, 2012 at 3:51 am
Blade says:
March 16, 2012 at 3:32 am
Glasshouses and stones, Blade!
Check how much the US Embassy owes London in Congestion Charges. It was over £5m a year ago and is increasing with penalty interest every day. Why should I subsidise the US to clog up the roads I want to use???
==============================
What is a “congestion charge???
[a sum of money paid daily by drivers of vehicles wishing to enter London central. It is called a congestion charge as it discourages vehicles from congesting central London . . kbmod]

More Soylent Green!
March 16, 2012 6:33 am

Would it be interesting to trace how scientists have become so heavily invested in socialist, Marxist, communist, Fascist, Stalinist, Marxist and other left-wing ideas? Would the topic of the evolution of left-wing ideas in contemporary Western scientists be a good topic for a Master’s thesis?
In the not-too-distant past, scientists and college professors were classical-liberals. They championed individual rights, personal freedom and limited, non-intrusive government. In WW2, our war efforts were widely supported by scientists and academics, but even then, pacifism, socialism and communism had strong support in the same community.

Tony Mach
March 16, 2012 8:00 am

So you need [snip – sorry this comment will take the discussion into territory off limits by policy here and many other blogs. Most comments that begin with “So, ” are generally snark. – Anthony]

Pull My Finger
March 16, 2012 9:00 am

The UN was the brain child of FDR and Churchill to fight the Axis, originally called the Atlantic Charter of nations pledged to defeat them. Originally it was simply an organization to promote collective security since the “balance of power” method of peace… when it goes wrong or is left in the hands of incompetents, leads to catastrophies like World War I, and weak Collective Security, like the League of Nations is useless when staffed with feckless leaders like the Western Europeans of the 20s and 30s. Of course the UN was bound to fail simply because the Soviet Union was given veto power (and intially 3 votes as I recall to equal the strength of the Western Allies – GB, US, France) and effecively killed every attempt at collective securiy except the Korean War which only passed because the USSR was boycotting the UN for not recognizing Communist China rather than Nationalist China (Taiwan) as the fifth security council member (ironically the Korean War was started basically at the bidding and support of the USSR and of course later intevention by China).
China was an ally against the Japanese, whom they had been invaded by in 1931 and 1937 and fought a brutal war against,,, as bad if not worse in the level of carnage and barbarity of the Nazi-Soviet War. The Nationalist Chineese led by Chaing Kai Shiek actively fought the Japanese while the Communist under Mao, quite frankly did very little to combat the Japanese and were basically reserving their strength for the post WWII Civil War which they won in 1947-49. That’s the simple version… much disputed by lefitist Communist sympathizers, but true. Anyhow Taiwan was replaced by “Red China’ on the Security Council in 1971 and the UN has been even more evil, not worthless, flat out evil in it’s refusal to intervene where most desparately needed.

gnomish
March 16, 2012 9:05 am

dayam! you’re in top form today, Willis!
that one slid down smooooth.
arafat and mandela are nobel prize winners like gore and obama.
awards like that are reserved for the most destructive parasites on earth.
if it’s got the Nobel label, think of a big bowl of clostridium.

Blade
March 16, 2012 9:28 am

Murray Grainger [March 16, 2012 at 3:51 am] says:
“Glasshouses and stones, Blade! Check how much the US Embassy owes London in Congestion Charges. It was over £5m a year ago and is increasing with penalty interest every day. Why should I subsidise the US to clog up the roads I want to use???”

Well, for that comparison to be true I would need to have been complaining about outstanding fines from a British embassy in NYC, right?
Honestly. I never heard of this issue in London at all, but it shouldn’t surprise you that I probably agree with you instead of our professional bureaucrats. Surely they can simply relocate the thing, err, after a study is commissioned and another hundred bureaucrats process the red tape. 🙂
To be sure, we are still talking about apples and oranges a bit, as an embassy is by tradition considered soil of the nations’ representatives it houses [ummm, I see that Wikipedia disputes this, says it’s merely immunity. Whatever.]. But most importantly it is obviously a reciprocating agreement with equal numbers of embassies located in the opposite nation. This distinction is significant because I believe the UN Headquarters is singularly unique with it’s presence here in the colonies. If the UN Plaza were demolished with the occupiers perhaps sent to Switzerland it still wouldn’t affect the worldwide embassy system as they are 100% mutually exclusive with and predate the UN.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
March 16, 2012 9:36 am

From Murray Grainger on March 16, 2012 at 3:51 am:

Check how much the US Embassy owes London in Congestion Charges. It was over £5m a year ago and is increasing with penalty interest every day. Why should I subsidise the US to clog up the roads I want to use???

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_congestion_charge

Drivers of foreign-registered vehicles are not exempt from the charge but the current lack of an international legal framework for the assessment and collection of traffic fines makes enforcement and recovery difficult. In 2005, The Guardian obtained documentation under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 which showed that out of 65,534 penalty tickets issued to non UK registered vehicles, only 1,993 had been paid.[13]
In October 2005, it was reported that two London embassies, those of the United States and Germany, were not paying the charge as they considered it to be a tax, which they are protected from paying under the Vienna Convention. Some other embassies do pay the charge.[14] By May 2006, it was reported, the US embassy owed £270,000 in fines for non-payment. By May 2011, this had risen to £5.5 million.[15] A TfL spokesperson stated that US embassies do pay tolls in Oslo and Singapore. TfL argues that the charge is a toll, not a tax.[16] In April 2006, after not paying it since its introduction in February 2003, the embassy of the United Arab Emirates decided that its diplomats would now pay the charge.[17] As of May 2011, £51m was claimed to be owed to Transport for London by at least ten foreign embassies.[18]

That’s the crux of the disagreement, tax or toll. We Americans are disagreeing with our own federal government as they arbitrarily try to raise revenues with “fees” as opposed to taxes which are approved by Congress. So I’m not sympathetic towards the London “toll”.
The whining about the “current lack of an international legal framework for the assessment and collection of traffic fines” is humorous. Who among us wishes to be harassed by a debt collector insisting we settle with them for a traffic fine issued by the Nigerian Ministry of Transportation, which has been ordered to be paid by their Ministry of Justice, and we have no recourse for disputing it as we missed the deadlines for challenging the ticket and appealing the subsequent conviction, which we would have had to do in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja? And you had better pay it now before a court in your own country, due to the UN treaty, orders your vehicle to be seized and auctioned to settle your internationally-binding legal obligation.

Keitho
Editor
March 16, 2012 10:01 am

It would be useful to see a list of those things the UN has got right.
As UK Skeptic says, the EU is a colossal disaster at every level and the EU is the UN’s mini-me.
The kind of “Rorsach” writing they use is very familiar. Here in Africa it is used a lot and so can mean whatever one subjectively wants it to mean.
The UN and almost all of its NGO’s are bad things. Very bad things.

March 16, 2012 10:06 am

Heck, has it ever worked in the past?

I think you could argue that preserving South Korea was a success. There are seeds to future failure in the solution; calling it a “Police Action” instead of a war, arriving at a truce with no formal end to the war. Yeah, not a perfect solution. But I think we can agree that at least South Korea has been a net positive contributor to the world.