Why, my friends ask, why do I keep on making a spectacle of myself, antagonising people left, right and centre? Why can’t I just sit back and enjoy spring, friendships, books, music, films? In short, why can’t I just enjoy life till it ends (i.e. till the war starts)? All my screaming from barricades won’t change anything, they say.
They are probably right about that last bit. I can’t change a thing. Even the late Pope Francis wasn’t able to change much, bless him. (I am not being ironic: I think he was a good and brave man. He is rumoured to not have been very brave during the Videla dictatorship, but he made up for it.) So if even the pope, … how can I presume to imagine that my barricades will make a difference?
Well, for one thing, I am not alone. There are others. Many others in fact. All over the world. Don’t forget: numbers matter. True, you have powerful people like Santa Ursula, Sir Keir Rodney and the not-yet-chancellor Merz, not to mention Macron le Beau – all fabulously unpopular. How do they propose to continue staying in power without introducing autocracy?
True, most people have few sources of information other than the corporate press, in which Norwegians have such bizarre faith. (I still blame Stoltenberg for my compatriots’ tragic ingenuousness.) But if people were aware of all the lies we have been served over the years, not to mention all the news that was deliberately withheld from us, they would not be pleased. So I write and make a spectacle of myself, and others – all over the world – write or run podcasts and youtube channels. More and more and more dissenting blogs and podcasts and youtube channels pop up every day.
If you think that these people are all disgruntled socialists, take a look at Cyrus Janssen’s youtube channel, for instance. He is anything but.
Most people who know that Zelensky is a consummate liar are, it is true, silent. At least here in Norway where criticising Zelensky is simply not done and ridiculing him is tantamount to sacrilege. Here we say that Zelensky was “badly mistreated” in the Oval Office. Zelensky did not misbehave. Trump did. Of course, hearing such statements I regularly walk straight into the trap, defending Trump, which is simply not done here either. Ever.
Now I don’t often defend Trump, but honestly, Zelensky was being rude and as obstreperous ( I can’t resist using the word) as a biker on a cocaine high. And as far as Trump is concerned, I will say this for him: The root causes of the growing problems that await him and US voters are not of his making, though the medicine he is proposing will not work.
My compatriots will not be tearing down the walls of any Bastille, for the simple reason that the walls around us here are made not of stone nor of hardship, but of silence. But elsewhere there is loud rumbling. And since even the EU still consists of nominally Democratic independent states, we can hope that voters will demand change. In the US, likewise. Big change.
The most important change of all, though, concerns the United Nations, where to this day the former colonial powers, UK and France and the biggest bully of all, the USA, hold not only permanent seats but powers of veto. This must NOT GO ON.
As things stand, the most powerful killer apes act with total impunity. The UN charter is all but forgotten, and the world – at least the West – is degenerating into anarchy. Possibly no state should hold veto power.
I leave it to you to design a new Security Council.
Personally, I shall just sit back and enjoy, as my friends recommend. I shall enjoy the thought of a world where the UN Charter and the Declaration of Human Rights are once again universally revered. You may find these documents outdated, but that is what we agreed upon back then, and that is what we shall have to work from.
I shall enjoy the thought of a Security Council that has almost unanimously voted to impose a global boycott on trade with Israel, and a whole raft of economic sanctions on Israeli war criminals. I shall enjoy the thought of a Security Council that sends UN peacekeeping troupes to protect the people of Gaza and the West Bank. Then and only then can talks begin – and they will probably require much patience – as to how Israelis and Palestinians can settle their ancient differences. Will they cohabit as equals (this would require compensations for land stolen from the Palestinians) between the river and the sea? Or will they occupy separate lands after the eviction of all the illegal settlers on the West Bank?
When all this is settled, the boycott will end and sanctions will be lifted.
I shall enjoy the thought of a world where we have, once more, international law, not chaos. There will still be wars. There will be bullies. But there will be a common understanding of International Law, a yardstick, as it were, by which to asses adherence to international rule of law.
There will once more be a global organisation with authority to chastise future bullies.