Friday, April 18, 2025

Chapter 5: The Seven Bridges to Peace

 

What follow is one undated chapter of Rotary's 1959 book "Seven Paths to Peace".  Knowing how much modern living floods us with reading and most people are too impatient to read long essays, each chapter update will begin with five-word wisdoms to capture the chapter's essence.  

Chapter 5  The Path of Justice now The Bridge of Global Justice

(cw started editing 5-16-25.

 

  • Think Globally and Act Justly
  • Global sustainability through Local Justice
  • Goodwill begins with global fairness
  • Local justice ripples through nations.
  • Justice can sustain peace worldwide.
  • We cannot afford to fail.

In 1959 The Path of Justice was rightly framed in terms of legal fairness and human rights.  In 2025 a Bridge of Planetary Justice is needed by connecting nature’s rights to human Justice. Like connecting climate protection/restoration with corporate accountability and AI ethics.   New threats linking AI bias with environmental destruction, corporate legal loopholes, plus tax evasion in offshore accounts by billionaires, crime cartels, violent extremists, oligarchs, kleptocrats, and arms suppliers will be essential for funding and achieving the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.  Rotary opportunities include international climate courts (e.g., lawsuits against fossil fuel companies), ethical AI standards (e.g., EU AI Act), and new human rights frameworks (e.g., Universal Declaration of Digital Rights) including the direct purchasing of most unalienable human rights.

“At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice he is the worst.” Aristotle

 

"If we do not maintain Justice, Justice will not maintain us.": Francis Bacon

 

We will uphold the principles of justice for mankind, recognizing that these are fundamental and must be worldwide.  (From the Outline of Policy in International Service.)

 

More than 700 years ago, the Magna Carta, or Great Charter, established the concept that kings must answer to the law. King John of England and a group of rebel barons agreed to terms in the document on June 15, 1215.  The king had raised taxes and the barons rebelled insisting he was violating established custom. The barons armed themselves.  Then two armed groups met at Runnymede, where the King’s negotiators and the barons created a document with 63 clauses, primarily relating to feudal customs and the way the justice system would operate.  It put into writing: “No free man shall be seized, imprisoned, dispossessed, outlawed, exiled or ruined in any way, nor in any way proceeded against, except by the lawful judgement of his peers and the law of the land.” It also specified that “To no one will we sell, to no one will we deny or delay right or justice.”

 

“...the truth is that men's ambition and their desire to make money are among the most frequent causes of deliberate acts of injustice.” - ― Aristotle, Politics

 

But both the King and the barons were unaware of the costly and inevitable consequences of injustices to follow.  But justice is hardwired into genes.  Likely a group of genes for justice in most animal DNA.  Without this would the species would have gone extinct long ago.  There are multiple examples with different species in the animal kingdom uniting and risking their own life to protect another species.   While competition within animal species is certainly present, it’s rarely deadly.  In fact, animal species uniting and using cooperation and coordination to survive and thrive on this amazing planet dominate earth in shear body mass.

 

With humans the need for justice is increasingly essential for our own survival.  Any nation or group now has the capacity to make, purchase, or trade multiple forms of weapons of mass destruction.  And only nuclear weapons offer the best chance of detection given they ‘radiate’ a presence.  But even that can be shielded from detection. And identifying a reliable source of origin and speed of delivery makes the concept of deterrence, except for Mutually Assured Destruction (WMD) basically irrelevant. 

 

So far, at least two Popes have suggested ‘no justice, no peace’.   And this wisdom is ancient.

 

"Iniquity [gross injustice], committed in this world, produces not fruit immediately, but, like the earth, in due season, and advancing by little and little, it eradicates the man who committed it. ...justice, being destroyed, will destroy; being preserved, will preserve; it must never therefore be violated." Manu 1200 bc.

 

But humans are yet practice it globally.  And the most powerful nations don’t want to.  Even those holding the principle of Justice as a self-evident Truth.

 

“Justice is the great interest of man on earth.   Wherever her temple stands, there is a foundation for social security, general happiness and the improvement and progress of our race.“ Engraved above the entrance to the US Dept. of Justice in Washington DC.

 

In business, international relations, personal relationships, or any segment of life in which children or adults must interact, there is a great reason to refer to ‘justice’ as the “lesser evil”.   The greater evil being vengeful violence.  And violence is often justified in the absence of effective Justice. But violence is rarely just.  Thus, the predictable escalation of violence that is often very hard to stop will persist.  And lacking a wise Justice system to end or remedy injustices - more are inevitable.  This provides obvious job security and justification for sustaining governments, militaries, and the best weapons systems possible in most nations.  And this expense will be unyielding...and ultimately unsustainable.  

 

This passionate sense of justice is truly fundamental in human nature. Voltaire said: “The sentiment of justice is so natural and so universally acquired by all mankind, that it seems to be independent of all law, all party, all religion.” Here then there is something universal.   Reasonably and rationally all humankind should be able to agree to engineer a global institutional framework to administer Justice.   Some efforts have been made.  But the superiority of national sovereignty over the unalienable rights of people and protecting nature remains the greatest barrier. 

 

Under existing circumstances, universal principles still exist.  These are known as fundamental principles, first principles, self-evident Truths, or common sense. But it is far more common for humanity’s creative minds to make up principles. Principles that too often have short term value to an individual, group, or nation.   

 

What are these principles of justice that the Rotary Outline of Policy calls upon the Rotarian to uphold?  To be recognized as fundamental and as demanding application worldwide, these principles must cover every territory, an infinite variety of values, and a great many opposing points of view which are passionately held.  In a world where many disputes are settled by robbing Peter to pay Paul, this is not justice.  And sometimes justice occupies the mourner’s bench at peace conferences.  Fundamental principles must have a superior logic to be capable of raising justice from the level of partisanship to the level of principle.

 

Can nations be so persuaded?  Not without a massive number of citizens persuading their leader without violence.  Can the personal relations that Rotary fosters between people of different nations help in the establishment of this universal principle of justice?  Absolutely.  With non-violent means a massive number of citizens and persuade their leader that justice is a “self-evident” “Truth” as offered about 250 years ago in a 1776 premised on “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God”.    A premise President Abraham Lincoln claimed was "liberty, not alone to the people of this country, but hope to the world for all future time." And he called it "a rebuke and a stumbling block to tyranny and oppression" everywhere.

He recognized the Declaration of Independence contained this universal Truth that ‘Nature’s God” is basically the Gold Rule – the foundation of every religion and indigenous cultures that existed even before religions.  Why is it so hard for the common person or powerful leader to comprehend humanity’s need to take care of nature and each other - via the Golden Rule?  

 

What nations of the world need most is to try to look at every situation from the direction of other citizens’ view.

 

A proverb from the American Indian suggests: “Do not condemn the other man until you have worn his moccasins.” The challenge is to “get into the shoes” of the other person.  There are many ways to do this, but fundamental one needs compassion for others.  With this anyone can find the need for justice by the normal processes of reading, correspondence, discussions, hearing lectures, and travel.  Other steps can involve action.  Like putting knowledge to work “role-playing” – pretending to be someone else or a representative of an organization or nation which embraces a point of view different from your won.

Many Rotary clubs have used this as a program technique. Done well thorough preparation by the participants and just as important preparation of the audience for an open discussion. This technique might involve the club president or program chairman saying, “If you were an American, Abdu, how would you feel about the recognition of Israel by the Palestinians?” It may be a struggle of one’s imagination for an Arab Rotarian to put themself into the shoes of an American or Israeli – and vice versa – but such an effort helps them to escape from regional limitations in their thinking.  Most importantly it reveals that justice has at least two sides.


Going one step further, several communities have organized ‘into-their shoes conferences’, with local citizens organized into groups of five to eight, each group to “represent” a nation in an international conference. These events debated a major world problem. Sometimes in a series of public meetings in a series over several weeks.

 

Can someone engaged in such intensive study – writing to Rotarians in other lands to get firsthand information and defending “his country’s” policy in public debate – really put themselves “into the shoes” of another person thousands of miles away? Evidence suggests they can.  And that it can build a new concept of justice and fair play.

*Below this not yet finished with last edit as of 5-17-25)

 

One American representing Bolivia in such a project went into his grocery store one morning and learned that the price of coffee had gone down. “My first reaction,” he reported, “was – how terrible! South Americans can’t afford to reduce their coffee price!”

 

Rotary’s genius technique, developed by Rotarians – and sometimes used by non-Rotarians, too – works well as a “yardstick” for justice.  It is “The Four-Way Test of things we think, say, or do”:

 

Is it the TRUTH?

Is it FAIR to all concerned?

Will it build GOOD WILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?

Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?

 

Although this test was devised originally for use in a business faced with crisis and has been developed in Rotary initially as an adjunct to vocational service, it actually has a global application in wrestling with Truth decay.  Experience has shown time and again that when someone earnestly uses The Four-Way Test in his business or profession, the results are also evident in his conduct with others as a friend and citizen. This simple yardstick of human relations can be useful in international service.   As with the conviction of one Rotarian in The Philippines:

 

In the promotion of Rotary’s fourth avenue of service, the exemplification of The Four Way Test in the diplomatic relations between nations will certainly exert a tremendous influence. The world is flooded with so much propaganda that confuses our minds and distorts our views. There is so much distortion of the Truth that leads to misunderstanding and mutual animosities. I believe that a challenge is hurled at Rotary to diffuse the genius of The Four-Way Test through its fourth avenue of service.

 

Might not these four simple questions likewise prove helpful in the quest for universal principles of justice?  Evidence of the usefulness of The Four-Way Test for this purpose is the fact that it has been accepted and adopted in most countries where there are Rotary clubs.  It is not a code of ethics. No one can object to it because it merely reminds him to use his own best judgment. It does not tell him what to do. It merely asks him to look at what he thinks, says, or does in light of his own standards. A principle of justice which is upheld by The Four Way Test should, accordingly, be acceptable to all peoples.

 

The Rotarian who is exploring the path of justice may wish to undertake the testing for himself. A critical examination of his own principles of justice is one way of upholding them, of proving that they are more than high-sounding slogans. It may also reveal opportunities for him to help in making them world-wide.

 

To illustrate: Consider the much-discussed principle of self-determination? How does it meet The Four-Way Test? The Truth is that this principle has carved for itself a formidable place in the history of our times. The greatest fact in world politics for generations has not been the wars which claimed the headlines, but the achievement of self-rule by nearly half humanity.  Fair to all concerned, surely, is the freedom of all peoples to pursue their own destinies, to make their own mistakes and their distinctive contributions to mankind.

 

The principle of self-determination would seem to meet The Four-Way Test. But to uphold a principle calls for more than passive approval. Disraeli, once the prime minister of England said, “Justice is truth in action.” Justice must surmount the real problems which are involved in making things work world-wide. And there are many problems. One consequence of self-determination is the multiplication of nations, a “balkanization” such as occurred in Europe after the first world war – and held in part responsible for the second.

 

Today, there’s a growing gap between how irreversibly interdependent nations are economically and how much their leaders want to keep separate politically and govern themselves.  This highlights another insurmountable problem.  The monstrous challenge of whether people are ready to run their own governments.  It should be a self-evident Truth that a certain level of education and wisdom is necessary for a country to work well in today’s rapidly moving world of events and challenges.  Changes driven by the exponential advancement of technology with its unprecedent power to save and protect life or kill it.  In the context of Thomas Paine’s 1776 pamphlet — this is just plain common sense.

 

For the individual Rotarian, many opportunities leading to the path of global justice arise in efforts to overcome both problems. Globally these efforts must be made much sooner.   But given the varying conditions now in many nations the solutions will be as varied as each nation’s particular situation.  Still, within some Asian nations, Rotarians wrestle with the problems of achieving responsible external relations along new frontiers. Individual Rotarians in Europe, understanding the reality of their economic interdependence, supported unification of their nations by actively supporting the creation of the European Union.  They were empowered by the possibility that a completely united Europe would greatly reduce the chances of another war on their soil.

 

In South Africa, Rotary club committees were active in assisting people there in developing more effectiveness in self-government without sacrificing the cultural integrity of citizen there.  And in places like Australia or New Zealand when individuals showed a desire for self-determination and immigrated to South Africa - they received a Rotary welcome when arriving there. It was a Rotary club that invented the description of being “New Australians” and pledged to welcome them with open arms.

 

Other principles of justice can be explored in similar fashion when discovering opportunities for service in upholding others who often make the same decision to move world-wide.

 

Throughout this singular vital topic is woven the urgent need to further develop international law.  For it to remain now as it is in the UN Charter is a great injustice for any society where ‘might makes right’.   As Pascal put it, “Justice and power must be brought together, so that whatever is just may be powerful, and whatever is powerful may be just”. The course of civilization has been the search for a global rule of law to replace the creed of the caveman.

 

“Where law ends, tyranny begins.”  John Locke

 

The World Justice Project  https://worldjusticeproject.org/rule-of-law-index/global/2024/  WJP is an independent, multidisciplinary organization working to create knowledge, build awareness, and stimulate action to advance the rule of law worldwide.  The effective rule of law reduces corruption, combats poverty and disease, and protects people from injustices large and small. It is the foundation for communities of justice, opportunity, and peace—underpinning development, accountable government, and respect for fundamental rights.

 

Citizens for Global Solutions www.globalsolutions.org is  working for a Peaceful, Free, Just and Sustainable World Community. 

 

The global rule of law  requires that there be just laws, fair systems of adjudication, a separate legal profession, robust civil society, and a dynamic system for revising, challenging and remaking international law to better serve the needs of the world today by establishing a reliable means of enforcing the unalienable rights referenced in the 1776 Declaration of Independence and the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

 

www.cigionline.org/articles/introducing-global-rule-law/   12-1-2014

 

In a mid-1990s C-Span interview with an international audience U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy offered a clear definition of the “Rule of Law”.  When asked ‘What makes the “rule of law” most effective?’  he answered, ‘it requires three essentials’.  ‘First, the laws must be made and enforced by a democratic process.  People want to participate in the rules they live under.’  But warned ‘that’s not enough! Hitler had that.’   Second, he asserted that the ‘laws must be applied equally to everyone’.  This principle of justice is universal.  But even that isn’t enough.  People can still be mistreated.   Last he said ‘laws must be protective of a certain set of inalienable rights.  Rights we have just because we’re born.  Not because of immutable characteristics we are born with, like skin color, sexual variations.  Or the group identity we were born into (ethnic, economic, religious, nationality...).  These are mental identities that each person can freely change.

 

Most of humankind that understands this knows what we must do. The validity of Benjamin Franklin’s argument is now clearer than ever: “Justice is as strictly due between neighbor nations as between neighbor citizens. A highwayman is as much a robber when he plunders in a gang as when single; and a nation that makes an unjust war is only a great gang of robbers.”

 

Laws can be made to apply to our nuclear, biological, space, and AI era. Unfortunately, some nations in the world persist in prioritizing outdated concepts that circumvent the global rule of law. According to one historian, “the only way to make the mass of mankind see the beauty of justice is by showing them, in pretty plain terms, the consequence of injustice …” 

 

But this is easily witnessed now every day by those with mini screens the carry with them, if they have free access to reliable sources.   Still the most powerful nations and their leaders don’t agree.  And the deadly consequences have never been clearer.  The massive loss of life and freedom from each pandemic, invasion, genocide, extreme weather condition, or violent extremist mass murder- has been preventable.  And just accountability for most of these catastrophic failures is still lacking.    

 

As far back as the 1950s a president of the American Bar Association said, “The atomic and hydrogen bombs have attuned the people of the world to an overwhelming desire for peace, stronger than any such desire in all history. Here a great opportunity will be won or lost. We lawyers must write the necessary legal machinery to maintain essential national sovereignty, yet provide for the peaceful settlement of disputes between nations under the rule of law …”

 

Even before this urgency the late U.S. Senator Taft saw with almost prophetic insight of what was coming.  “I believe that in the long run the only way to establish peace is to write a law, agreed to by each of the nations, to govern the relations of such nations with each other and to obtain the covenant of all such nations that they will abide by that law and by decisions made thereunder.”

 

December 14, 1787, "Government is instituted for the common good; for the protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness of the people; and not for profit, honor, or private interest of any one man, family, or class of men; therefore, the people alone have an incontestable, unalienable, and indefeasible right to institute government; and to reform, alter, or totally change the same, when their protection, safety, prosperity, and happiness require it."   -- Alexander Hamilton   (1757-1804)   Source: Federalist No. 22.

 

In 1873 “As commerce, education and the rapid transition of thought and matter by telegraph and steam have changed everything, I rather believe that the great Maker is preparing the world to become one nation, speaking one language, a consummation which will render armies and navies no longer necessary.”  General of the Armies/President Ulysses S. Grant (born in Ohio, buried in New York City)

 

In 1945 "We believe that peace and security can be established and assured only if we, the sovereign people, who, for our own safety and well-being have delegated parts of our sovereignty to cities to handle our municipal affairs, to departments, counties, provinces, cantons or states to take care of departmental, county, provincial, cantonal or state issues, [and] to our national governments to attend to national problems -- [in order] to protect ourselves against the danger of inter-national wars, now delegate part of our respective sovereignty to bodies capable of creating and applying Law in inter-national relations."--Emery Reves, The Anatomy of Peace

 

“World federation is an idea that will not die.  More and more people are coming to realize that peace must be more than an interlude if we are to survive.  That peace is a product of law and order;  that law is essential if the force of arms is not to rule the world. “   Justice William O. Douglas (died 1980)

 

In 1949 the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate in the House Concurrent Resolution 64 stated:  Resolved by the House of Representatives, the Senate concurring, that it is the sense of the Congress that is should be a fundamental objective of the foreign policy of the United States to support and strengthen the United Nations and to seek its development into a world federation, open to all nations, with defined and limited powers adequate to preserve peace and prevent aggression through the enactment, interpretation, and enforcement of world law.  And four Republican US Presidents have endorsed “world peace through law” proposals: Ulysses S. Grant, Teddy Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Dwight David Eisenhower.

 

And on September 11, 1990 (11 years before the 9-11 ‘terrorist’ attack on the US) President George Bush Senior called for a new world order.  Imagine where the world would be today if those in power transitioned to this ‘rule of law instead of the law of force’ global legal system decades earlier. 

 

Sacred belief systems we still keep today will cause still more mass murder responses that will persist in threatening global security.  Armageddon is a good example wherein Evangelical Christians side with Israeli Nationalists in current conflicts in the Middle East.  Sometimes with the hope it will lead to a world war -- so their profit can return to them.   Ironically, these folks aren't really opposed to world government. They are opposed to a just and democratic world government.  What they really seek is a theocracy -- where their view of God rules everyone’s world.

 

The world community may now be witnessing the wisdom of this fundamental necessity for global justice through the global rule of laws, specifically “the Laws of Nature and Nature’s God” referenced in 1776, nearly 250 years ago.

 

February 6, 1788, James Madison, a signer of America’s 1776 Declaration of Independence intended for all mankind, wrote in Federalist No. 51 (the most widely cited of the Federalist Papers) “If men were angels no government would be necessary.”  He was explaining the need for checks and balances in government because people are fallible and self-interested.  And government must be structured in a way that controls both the governed and the governors.

 

If there is a problem which should engage the attention of every man, woman, and child in this generation, it is the need for development and application of just and enforceable international law.  Given the difficulty of this goal and the urgency of our era it is not just about the prevention of wars.   Nations, extremist groups, and even individuals can now acquire the means of mass murder, destruction, and/or disruption creating economic and environmental global chaos, as well as derailing civilization as we now know it. 

 

Human advancements in all fields can also now contribute to the establishment of a sound system of the global rule of law capable of addressing the root causes of most threats.  

Unfortunately, for most people, international law is a remote subject, with too little reference to their own survival, prosperity, and the prospects for their children thriving in this generation.  And too many people have understandably given up on the United Nations with the persistent escalating global problems and the lack of collective progress in stopping or reducing them. 

 

Once more, the Rotary’s Outline of Policy challenges the individual Rotarian to practical endeavor. To uphold the principles of justice and to make them world-wide.  

 

But without achieving legal enforcement of international laws to protect human rights and the environment, the next best thing to do is purchasing them.  At least most of them.  This can be achieved by sufficiently investing in and achieving the United Nation’s 17 SDGs as soon as possible. 

 

And Rotary’s connections to businesses and Chambers of Commerce globally offer Rotarians a unique opportunity considering the comments made by Brian Moynihan, Bank of America’s chair and CEO on C-span June 2023.  In an interview on the state of the economy, the U.S. financial system, and capitalism hosted by the City Club of Cleveland.

 

Program ID: 529044-1 https://www.c-span.org/video/?529044-1/bank-america-ceo-remarks-city-club-cleveland 

 

Moynihan said, ‘the Sustainable Development Goals will cost approximately’ “$6 trillion annually”.  But “governments are too debt burdened” and “charity is insufficient”. “Business leaders” “like the oil companies” and others must step up and prioritize a balancing of ‘short-term gains’ with ‘long term interests’.  ‘Profits must be good for business and society all the way down to the community level’.  “Capitalism...requires a greater purpose than making more profit.”  ‘Neither capitalism or profit making are sustainable without these goals being achieved.' 

 

Rotarians must inform ourselves and others about this need.  Not only about the present unsustainable status of international law and the inevitable catastrophic costs in blood and treasure,  but on the need for its development and the expenses that the establishment of the global rule of law and/or generating the resource it will require. 

 

How can we best motivate nations to resist using the law of force and to accept the global force of law?   Or directly purchasing the global protection of the environment and most human rights.  Either carry a hefty price tag.  But failure of either is price that is ultimately unacceptable by any life and/or God loving soul.

 

Clearly, many now in power benefit by maintaining the status quo, by keeping their citizens fearful, misinformed, and convinced that more walls, a bigger military, and better weapons will keep them safe.  But this ‘Peace through strength’ mentality is the greatest delusion these leaders and their followers have.  And is maintained with the illusion of their independence and overlooking their total and irreversible interdependence and vulnerability.

 

Does this situation not suggest a specific and increasingly urgent task which is within the competence of any Rotary club to act on?  An intensive study under the guidance of members in the legal classification. Or in home or community meetings, club programs, public forums, zoom meetings, YouTube videos, blog posts, Facebook/ LinkedIn communications, or the old ‘into-their-shoes conferences’, or community events every 4th of July?   How can more public interest be created?  It is worth the struggle and sacrifice!  For our conscience, legacy, and our species posterity demands it. Everyone has the freedom to obtain or disagree.  But no one will avoid the totally unacceptable costly consequences.

 

Historian Toynbee, after examining the history, development, and fall of various civilizations which have flowered, concludes:  “As a rule the demand for codification (of law) reaches its climax in the penultimate age before a social catastrophe, long after the peak of achievement in jurisprudence has been passed, and when the legislators of the day are irretrievable on the run in a losing battle with ungovernable forces of destruction …”

 

Nearly 250 years ago near the end of the second profound paragraph of the 1776 Declaration of Independence is another profound warning, “all Experience hath shewn, that Mankind are more disposed to suffer, while Evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the Forms to which they are accustomed.”  

 

Abraham Lincoln wrote that this document is our “Apple of Gold”.  And the U.S. ‘Constitution its Silver frame’.   What is now urgently needed is exposing the silver frame’s failure shine light on the enlightenment of “self-evident” “Truths”.  This is now the job before Rotary, Rotarians, and the rest of humanity if any intend to achieve the seven intentions within the Preamble of the US Constitution.   And the seven paths and bridges to Positive Peace can be both and inspiration and study guide for the wisdom humanity now needs, instead of more intelligence.

 

And combining humanities existing global communications capacity, with Artificial Intelligence united with human wisdom and existing resource heaven on this earth can be achieved, with maximum security, liberty and justice for all. 

 

We must take these into the backward villages, rural communities, the largest cities, and through the halls of governments.  Hopefully culminating in a world summit and not more persistent violence and destruction.  Daniel Webster called a “summit”... “the ligament which holds civilized beings and civilized nations together.”   And Justinian, is the great lawgiver, called justice “the constant desire and effort to render to every man his due.”

 

SUMMARY Chapter 5: 

 

“Justice is the great interest of man on earth. It is the ligament which holds civilized nations together.”   Daniel Webster

 

Chapter five Planetary Justice, is a charter that recognizes justice must now extend beyond national borders, human generations, and even species. As our home planet faces overlapping crises—climate disruption, biodiversity loss, global inequality, more wars, new pandemics, and technological upheaval—traditional notions of justice are no longer sufficient. This chapter argues that justice must be redefined to account for intergenerational equity, global fairmindedness, and our responsibilities to the non-human world.

Humanity’s current system privileges short-term, local interests at the expense of long-term planetary well-being. Wealthy nations and elites disproportionately benefit from resource use while poorer populations, future generations, and ecosystems bear the brunt of the consequences. Climate change, for instance, is not only a technical or environmental issue—it is a moral one, rooted in deep imbalances of power, consumption, and voice.

The lack of justice within and between existing governance systems, which remain fragmented and anthropocentric, are ill-equipped to ensure justice across boundaries of time, geography, and species. It calls for a bold reimagining of legal, political, and ethical frameworks to support a more inclusive vision of justice that aligns with Earth’s limits and humankind’s shared fate.

 

Planetary justice demands systemic changes. From redefining rights and responsibilities to reshaping economies and laws it urges a shift from domination to stewardship, from extraction to regeneration, and from individualism to collective interdependence. Achieving the SDGs, particularly those tied to climate, violence, equality, and strong institutions, is presented not just as policy targets but as moral imperatives in the pursuit of global justice.

 

"I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever."  - Thomas Jefferson

 

Truth decay and untruths remain the ultimate source of accelerating political polarization (both locally and globally).  This disrupt force is at the heart of the growing chaos and injustices that we must urgently adjust to or continue suffering the killer consequences.  We are not now on that path.  We still have a choice.  And Rotary is well placed to globally advocate for the sustainably of our species, and most others (except Polio, and other pathogens like it).

 


No comments:

Post a Comment