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The UN Near Financial Collapse (Yawn)

&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">United Nations Secretary‑General António Guterres recently warned member states that the organization is facing an &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;imminent financial collapse&period;” To which many people around the world—particularly Americans who have been footing a disproportionate share of the bill—responded appropriately with a collective yawn&period; The UN going broke is like a career politician announcing retirement &&num;8212&semi; dramatic headline with zero real‑world consequences&comma; and most folks wondering why it did not happen sooner&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">After all&comma; the UN has been teetering on the edge of irrelevance for decades&period; Guterres’ announcement simply gives the bureaucracy a new storyline&period; The organization was founded to &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;save succeeding generations from the scourge of war&period;” Instead&comma; it has spent most of its existence providing a very expensive stage for diplomats to deliver speeches no one remembers and pass resolutions no one enforces&period; If the UN were a business&comma; it would have been liquidated shortly after the Korean War&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The idea that the UN is suddenly in trouble is adorable&period; This is an institution that has been in trouble since the Eisenhower administration&period; Back in the 1960s&comma; critics were already chanting&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Get the U&period;S&period; out of the UN and the UN out of the U&period;S&period;” That was six decades ago&period; The only thing that has changed since then is the size of the UN’s budget and the number of bureaucracy-laden agencies it has created to justify its existence&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Meanwhile&comma; the world has continued to be plagued by regional conflicts&comma; proxy wars&comma; and humanitarian crises—many of which the UN has observed with the enthusiasm of a bored security guard at a shopping mall&period; Syria burned&period; Yemen starved&period; Ukraine was invaded&period; The UN held meetings&period; Lots of meetings&period; If talking could stop wars&comma; the UN would be the most powerful force on Earth&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">And then there’s the uncomfortable fact that major diplomatic breakthroughs in recent years have happened outside the UN entirely&period; President Donald Trump&comma; for example&comma; brokered several peace agreements without any meaningful involvement from the UN&period; The Abraham Accords—normalizing relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates&comma; Bahrain&comma; Sudan&comma; and Morocco—were negotiated directly between the parties&comma; with U&period;S&period; mediation&comma; not UN intervention&period; Whatever one thinks of Trump&comma; the accords demonstrated something the UN has spent decades trying to avoid admitting &&num;8212&semi; peace can be negotiated without a blue‑helmeted chaperone&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The UN’s defenders insist that the organization is essential for global stability&period; But if the UN is essential&comma; why does the world look the way it does&quest; Why do conflicts persist&quest; Why do rogue states sit on human‑rights councils&quest; Why does the Security Council spend half its time deadlocked by vetoes&quest; The UN is like a fire department that shows up after the building has burned down&comma; hoses in hand&comma; ready to &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;condemn” the flames&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Now we are told the UN is facing a liquidity crisis&period; The irony is rich&period; The organization that has spent decades lecturing the world about sustainability cannot sustain its own finances&period; The same institution that demands accountability from member states cannot balance its own books&period; And the same UN that insists it is indispensable is now rattling a tin cup&comma; hoping someone will refill it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The United States&comma; of course&comma; has historically been the UN’s biggest donor—paying far more than its proportional share&period; American taxpayers have been underwriting this global debating society for generations&period; And what has the U&period;S&period; received in return&quest; A lot of criticism&comma; a lot of finger‑wagging&comma; and the privilege of hosting an organization that cannot even pay its own electric bill&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">If the UN were to actually collapse financially&comma; the world would not descend into chaos&period; Diplomats would simply have to find another place to talk&period; Regional alliances would continue to function&period; Nations would still negotiate treaties&period; Conflicts would still be resolved—or not—based on the same geopolitical realities that have always shaped them&period; The UN’s financial crisis is only a crisis for the UN – not the world&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">The truth is that the organization has long been too costly for the results it produces&period; Its bureaucracy is bloated&comma; its mission unfocused&comma; and its track record unimpressive&period; If the UN wants to survive&comma; it will need more than another round of emergency funding&period; It will need to prove that it can actually accomplish something meaningful in the 21st century&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">Until then&comma; the world will keep spinning&comma; wars will keep ending or continuing based on real diplomacy&comma; and the UN will keep doing what it does best &&num;8212&semi; talk&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p class&equals;"wp-block-paragraph">So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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