"There is no defense or security for any of us except in the highest intelligence and development of all.” Booker T. Washington
“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life, and you will call it fate.”— Carl Jung
Not having the IQ or wisdom of Albert Einstein, nor the spiritual genius of Mother Theresa, I've heard they both put Health as their highest priority. I try. As a biologist, one who studies life, certain fundamental principles to maintain for any life form to survive and thrive. Human evolution has succeeded too well by using our mind as a problem-solving tool.
Unfortunately, humankind hit a potentially
suicidal cliff around 1945 when our smartest minds developed nuclear weapons. Then used two as a weapon of mass destruction (WMD). Now with
many forms of WMD (bio, chem, nano, cyber...with AI now accelerating their creation, manufacturing, an sometimes anonymous delivery methods ) a change in our mind's priority is vital.
Without this we put many species on Earth, especially our own, at increasing
risk. Without rapidly transforming our thinking to prioritize our flourishing by protecting the life
support systems that all life depends on, we will continue killing and dying by
the billions in defense of our mind’s favorite nationality, religion, economic
system, or grievance.
Our species is now wrestling with this trilemma. We are as free as all species - to do what we were created to do. Survive and thrive. Unfortunately, modern minds invented the illusion of independence and used it to engineer two clever yet unsustainable governance systems (on both national and global level). A delusional foundation for individual, family, community, national and global security. Indigenous cultures had a sustainable perspective on life. They learned after thousands of years that everything is connected, interdependent, and vulnerable. Humans will always free to do what we want. But no one will ever be free of the consequences. A few of America’s founding fathers understood this. They repeatedly warned that only a virtuous people can live together sustainably.
Quickly, our conflicted minds need to recognize and act on this most fundamental Truth. We cannot have freedom, security, and independence at the same time. We can only have two. And we need to wise up quickly and pick the right two. Most minds now don't understand this. And our flawed government systems are unlikely to change anytime soon. Fortunately, we do have the 17 Sustainable Development Goals with 169 subgoals within them. They are measurable, affordable, and achievable if (and this a huge if) they are achieved comprehensively, wholistically, and synergistically - given their irreversible global interdependence.
In life we are either getting better or getting worse. Just maintaining isn’t a rational option. We are all going to die because our body is always aging. But technically, no one has ever died of old age. Death always comes with a breakdown in one or more of our body’s 11 systems - or any one of the millions structures within these. Currently, the greatest possibility of an early death is our mind’s cognitive resistance to change and adapt quickly - to our reality.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) might change this. But don’t bet your life on it. Current analysis of global competitiveness between nations, economic systems, and religious beliefs suggests that AI is more likely to spark a minor conflict or major war. If/when this happens - your age or the stage of your body’s health and mind won’t matter. And you will finally rest in peace. A lasting one.
For the past 120+ years Rotary International has pursued peace as its foundation. But Peace is a concept like independence. In Truth, our immune systems are always at war with viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites. These remain the greatest cause of preventable human suffering and deaths. The economic toll and this persistent burden is the best evidence of the political, economic, and religious insanity of humanity. This is unlikely to change but there is sanity in uniting to achieve the 17 SDGs
Health is a universal desire while Peace is a polarizing word. Especially now with the number of conflicts increasing since the turn of this century. This rise may be related to the increase in partisan political polarization - within the last decade. It's uncertain to be causation or correlation, but our minds are certainly divided into multiple tribal camps due to Truth decay. And this is unlikely to diminish any time soon.
The undisputed champion of this divisive peace over the last 400 years has been the human principle ‘Peace through Strength’. This remains firmly planted in the minds of most leaders with nuclear weapons, powerful militaries, united powerful allies, and a population unable to demand the need for this to change.
On the flip side of this dilemma the progressive peace movement is betting on “Peace
through disarmament”. But this road to
peace washed out many times. And now almost anything can be weaponized by
cleaver minds defending concepts that are highly motivating (nationalism, religion, economics....) in our minds, but not our DNA.
What can be done by a leader when her people or nation is being attacked without clear cause? Willingly surrender some or all areas of their land? What if treaties are broken while starvation and/or genocides are in process? A leader’s claim that he/she is defending the homeland by attacking suspected drug cartels in other nations? Or, suspected terrorists, or close ally’s of the enemy they don’t like? Disarmament would be foolish. Believing ‘might makes right’ is worse.
But protecting one’s family and one’s own life is a fundamental biological right.
The peace most folks desire/imagine rarely comes - or is sustained after - the outcome of a war or genocide. There are at least five root causes of
violent conflicts. The first four are
not an effective or sustainable arena for Rotary involvement.
1. 1. Flawed political
systems that cannot resolve differences peacefully.
2. 2. Different
religious, economic, or political beliefs.
3. 3. Unresolved border
disputes, legitimate grievances, or changing water/food needs.
4. 4. Flawed or ignored
elections - or lack of freedom or human rights
5. 5. Inadequate basic needs/rights of a population not being met – driving up the Infant Mortality Rates (IMR) This is where Rotary’s power - dollar for dollar/person to person -already makes the biggest difference connected to its other pillars of service.
The human mind offers a useful metaphor. Think of it as a powerful machine—relentless, tireless, literal. It follows instructions precisely, whether those instructions are wise or careless. Most people mistake that machine (the voice in their head) for who they really are (a body and sovereign soul). The mind is just their tool. A powerful tool for quietly shaping thoughts, good behavior, natural stress, calming fear, building resilience, and preserving hope. Empowering a mind, body and spirit capable of building and sustaining a garden of Edan on our blue planet lightyears from another star.
Societies function the same way. When individuals are chronically unhealthy—physically, mentally, socially, their internal systems default to survival mode. Stress hormones rise. Short-term thinking dominates. Cooperation erodes. In that state, peace is not sustainable; it is fragile at best, illusory at worst. Health is not separate from peace. Health is the precondition for it.
Our subconscious mind teaches us several rules of
life. These apply just as powerfully to
communities and nations:
- Literal Truth: Systems respond to conditions as they are, not
as we wish them to be. A population living with untreated disease,
malnutrition, trauma, or toxic stress experiences those conditions as
emergencies. Conflict thrives where bodies and minds are under constant
threat.
- The present moment: Stability is built now, not “someday.” When
people can say, “I am safe. I am nourished. I am learning. I am valued,”
their systems begin to organize toward cooperation rather than competition
and fear.
- Habit and pathways: Just as repeated thoughts form neural roads,
repeated investments form social infrastructure. Clinics, clean water,
maternal care, vaccinations, mental-health access—these become the
well-paved roads societies travel daily. Health systems create habits of
trust, measurable results, and great economic savings.
- Images and
imagination: Peace agreements
are abstract. Health is visible. A vaccinated child, a mother surviving
childbirth, a community with clean water—these are images the human mind
understands and rallies around, and most people want to do.
- Emotion and
motivation: Fear fuels division.
Well-being fuels participation. Healthy people have the emotional
bandwidth to care about others.
- Safety: The primary job of any system—biological or
social—is survival. When survival is constantly threatened, change feels
dangerous and conflict feels inevitable. Health restores the sense of
safety that allows societies to evolve rather than explode.
- Persistence: Health improvements compound. They are
sustainable. They can outlast political cycles and ceasefires.
This is precisely why the United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals place health—SDG 3: Good Health and Well-Being—at the center
of sustainable development. Without health, progress in education, equality,
economic growth, and peace cannot endure. Sustainability is not an
environmental slogan alone; it is the ability of human systems to function over
time without collapse.
If Rotary or other peace groups truly seeks to make the world better not just today, but generationally, then health is the most strategic foundation we/they can choose. Peace emerges naturally when people are healthy enough to unite, imagine a future, trust institutions, and then invest sufficiently in one another.
Rotary has always believed in service above self. By grounding our mission in health—physical, mental, family, social, community, environmental, government, economic- we need not abandon peace. We will make it possible, durable, and sustainable.
The machine is waiting for instructions. It’s time to give it the right ones. Not the
ones it dreamed up hundreds if not thousands of years ago. We must operate our machinery with the right context. Not it- operating us.
"A universal peace, it is to be feared, is in the
catalogue of events, which will never exist but in the imaginations of
visionary philosophers, or in the breasts of benevolent enthusiasts."
-- James Madison (1751-1836),
Father of the Constitution for the USA, 4th US President
Source: essay in the National Gazette, February 2, 1792
“If success or failure of this planet and of human
beings depended on how I am and what I do...How would I be? And what would I do?” R. Buckminster
Fuller