For this blog post, I originally intended to write only about COP28, the international meeting dealing with the ever-growing environmental crisis. Then, I read powerful opinion pieces by Robert Kagan and became alarmed at the expanding political crisis in the U.S.
But
how can we neglect to consider the crises in Gaza, Ukraine, and other countries
where warfare continues, such as in Myanmar and Sudan that get far less press
coverage? In addition, there are millions of individuals in our world who are facing
personal crises of various sorts.
Indeed, there are crises within crises that threaten the well-being and even the survival of individuals, nations, and the world civilization as a whole. Please think with me about these crises, beginning with the outer circle that includes the whole world and moving down to the inner circle of individuals.
The
ever-growing environmental crisis was the central concern of COP28, which
met in Dubai, the largest city in the United Arab Emirates, from Nov. 30 to
Dec. 12.*1 The first COP meeting, convened in Berlin, was in
1995 and there have been yearly meetings since then.
As I
have repeatedly pointed out over the last two years, the current ecological
predicament is a crisis that threatens the very existence of the world as we
know it (TWAWKI). Some progress was made toward alleviating the global
environmental crisis at COP28, but it’s probably too little too late.*2
There
will be dire consequences for most of the world’s population if drastic changes
are not made soon, which is highly unlikely. This is the existential crisis in
which all the other crises exist.
The
wars in Ukraine and Israel/Gaza are crises for people living in those areas
of the world. But there is an ongoing possibility that they will expand into
larger wars. In the worst-case scenario, either of these wars could conceivably
escalate into World War III.
These
crises are rather localized now, but they might conceivably enlarge to rival
the ecological crisis as an existential threat to TWAWKI.
Within
these two larger crises is the political crisis in the United States. While
this crisis is only brewing at present, there is a real and present danger of
democracy being replaced in the U.S. with a form of fascism.
I had
not been aware of scholar and journalist Robert Kagan until this month, but he
is an editor at large for The Washington Post (WaPo) and has been a
foreign policy adviser to U.S. Republican presidential candidates as well as to
Democratic administrations via the Foreign Affairs Policy Board.
During
the 2016 U.S. presidential election campaign, Kagan (b. 1958) left the Republican
Party due to the party's nomination of Donald Trump and endorsed Hillary
Clinton for president.
Kagan’s
Nov. 30 and Dec. 7 WaPo articles were titled “A
Trump dictatorship is increasingly inevitable. We should stop pretending,”
and “The
Trump dictator-ship: How to stop it.” (These are long pieces, but well worth
reading and reflecting on.)
Some
Republican politicians are sounding the same warning. For example, former
Congresswoman Liz Cheney's new book (released Dec. 5) is titled Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning. (Hear her talk about
that in this Dec. 4 interview on NPR.)
On Dec. 10, Sen. Mitt Romney, the Republican
presidential candidate in 2012, expressed the same sentiment, although more
mildly, on “Meet the Press.”*3
There
is a lot that can happen between now and Election Day next November, but USAmericans
must be aware of the danger of losing their democracy—and minorities, the poor,
and the underprivileged are the ones who would suffer most under a non-democratic
government.
We common
people may not be able to do much about the ecological crisis or the crisis in
Ukraine or Gaza, but we do have the power to vote and to encourage our friends
and neighbors to be informed and to vote accordingly.
The
inner circle is the crisis of individuals who are suffering from
illness, poverty, discrimination, or personal tragedies. We pray that
many of these people will experience new hope during this Christmas season. Who
is one such person you can help between now and December 25?
_____
*1 COP stands for the Conference of
the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. (Click
here to access the
UNFCCC website.)
*2
Here
is the link to a helpful summary of the mixed results of COP28 on The Guardian’s
Dec. 14 website.
*3 See here;
Romney’s discussion of this matter begins at about 7 min. 45 sec. into the
program.