Friday, 28 October 2022

Pistis ponders points of no return (weekending October 29th 2022)

 

‽istis ponders points of no return and a common agenda (weekending October 29th 2022)

In a week when a former UK Prime Minister[i] realised that a point of at least ‘not yet return’ had been reached; when a former sacked (and what might have been a once-disgraced) Home Secretary forged a way back[ii]; when the Russian war-waging against Ukraine reached the level of rumours of a ‘dirty bomb’[iii] alongside the appalling loss of lives and homes and livelihoods and every type of well-being…  the UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ addressed the UN General Assembly’s fifth consultation on Our Common Agenda[iv] - from the introduction:

‘We face a fraught and complex world; a five-alarm fire in which geopolitical, technological, environmental and other pressures are driving us apart when we most urgently need to come together.  I am acutely aware that we are discussing these major challenges against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine.  Peace is the most important global public good the United Nations was created to deliver.  War brings death, human suffering and unimaginable destruction, at a time when we cannot afford to add to the major global challenges we face.

This conflict also calls on us to come together in cooperation and solidarity to support everyone affected, and to overcome this clear violation of international law.  If we are to bequeath to future generations a world free from want and fear, and full of opportunities to fulfil their potential, we must focus urgently on building and strengthening the foundations of the multilateral system.  We must rise to this enormous historical responsibility.’

And here are some of the points that jumped out for ‽istis – from a speech that perhaps needs to be broadcast via every TV and radio channel and via every social media across the world, to be on the agenda of every Cabinet meeting of every government, to be studied in every school, to be discussed in every home…

‽ accelerating and scaling Up the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals), leaving no-one behind

support for an intergovernmental World Social Summit

support for greater engagement with young people, including through a proposed Youth Office

One goal… would be to reform our morally bankrupt global financial system and reduce systemic inequality between North and South

We need a New Global Deal to rebalance power and financial resources

we need to articulate a new Agenda for Peace that takes account of the many ways in which our concept of security has changed since the United Nations was founded

the fundamental importance of international law, including the United Nations Charter, international humanitarian and human rights law, and the need to work towards consistent implementation.

The climate emergency and unchecked environmental degradation represent an existential threat to the world as we know it.

We need urgent, transformative efforts to reduce and eliminate emissions, keep warming to 1.5°C, and build resilience against the impacts that are already happening through effective adaptation.  G20 countries account for 80 per cent of global emissions and have a special responsibility to lead.  We need a massive boost in technical and financial support to accelerate the phase-out of coal and create a just transition to renewable energy and green jobs.  Wealthier countries must make good on their $100 billion climate finance commitment; adaptation finance must be doubled; and we must reform the eligibility system so the most vulnerable communities can access it.

We also considered the lessons of the COVID-19 pandemic for our global health architecture, and for the response to future large-scale crises.  It is well past time to embed long-term thinking into our systems, to improve global risk anticipation and foresight, and to take the interests of future generations seriously.

We have been brought back to the foundational promise of the United Nations Charter — to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.  Many people around the world are asking how this could happen in the twenty-first century.  How are we still staring into the nuclear abyss, as millions of people flee across borders and the most fundamental tenets of international law are trampled?

there is renewed pressure to consider whether global governance systems are fit for purpose, and how they could be improved.

‽ The climate crisis has passed the point of no return — even though we had plenty of warning and could have acted earlier.  Much of the impact of the COVID19 pandemic could have been prevented or mitigated.  Instead, millions of people have died, hunger and poverty are rising, and the economic impact of the pandemic is still playing out.

A multifaceted war is raging in the heart of Europe, in violation of the United Nations Charter.  We need a serious effort to improve global governance, manage risks and safeguard the global commons and global public goods.  This is not only about the United Nations, or any other institution.  It is about working together to solve our biggest problems, through existing structures if they are fit for purpose, and new or reinvigorated frameworks where needed.

‽ Ultimately, our efforts are aimed not only at averting catastrophe, but improving the lives and prospects of billions of people who are left behind: children who have missed years of schooling; women whose precarious livelihoods have disappeared; refugees and migrants forced on dangerous journeys.

Yet meanwhile, the so-called ‘psychodrama’[v] of the Tory party in the UK, the ambitions and egos of some, the manoeuvrings of many, the degree of floridity and pretention of a resignation letter[vi], the focus-narrowing dread of the rising cost of living - and all the other sheer daily stuff that preoccupies and distracts, and the utter rubbish that squashes and quashes and excludes and oppresses - carries on…  

Existential threat that the climate emergency and unchecked environmental degradation represents? Staring in to a nuclear abyss? Oh António, don’t be so dramatic – now what position can I gain in the Cabinet? which Strictly[vii] ‘celeb’ will be out this week? who has flown to Australia potentially to wear a 'phone number and eat kangaroo testicles[viii]; how can I pay for this week’s food and heating…  

A point of no return or the point of no return - for if this is really the point of no return, then...

The End.

© ‽istis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  



[i] Boris Johnson – flying home from the Dominican Republic to try to refill the vacuum at the top of the Tory party‽

[ii] Suella Braverman

[iii] https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/10/23/false-flag-russia-says-ukraine-plans-to-detonate-a-dirty-bomb

[v] https://www.irishtimes.com/world/uk/2022/10/24/at-the-second-time-of-asking-the-tory-party-rishi-sunak-becomes-prime-minister/


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