What’s holding humanity back from moving forward?
A new day, a new conflict… or so it seems. Why?
Hello there! I’m Jorge Emilio Núñez, and I’m eager to explore what’s holding humanity back from moving forward, drawing on the insights I’ve developed in my three books—Sovereignty Conflicts and International Law and Relations: A Distributive Justice Issue (2017), Territorial Disputes and State Sovereignty: International Law and Politics (2020), and Cosmopolitanism, State Sovereignty and International Law and Politics: A Theory (2023). As I look at the world on 5th March 2025, I see a tangle of challenges—conflicts, divisions, and rigid thinking—that my work has long grappled with.
One big roadblock is our obsession with zero-sum justice—who gets what, and why isn’t it fair? In my 2017 book, I framed sovereignty disputes as distributive justice dilemmas, and that lens fits humanity’s broader stall. Take Russia and Ukraine: three years into war, Russia clings to 20% of Ukraine, while Kyiv fights for every inch—neither side bends because both see total control as their due. Or look at Israel and Palestine: Israel’s settlers push past 600,000 in the West Bank, Palestine demands 1967 borders, and both feel cheated by compromise. This isn’t just about land—it’s climate talks where rich nations hoard resources, or vaccine rollouts where poorer countries lag. We’re trapped by a mindset that fairness means winning, not sharing. I’ve suggested splitting the pie—co-governance, joint stakes—but fear of losing keeps us rigid.
Then there’s the sheer messiness of our disputes, something I dug into in 2020. Humanity’s problems—war, migration, inequality—aren’t simple; they’re layered across law, reality, and values. Russia’s against NATO not just legally (expansion’s allowed) but practically (bases near Kaliningrad) and culturally (West versus East). The South China Sea bristles with China’s 90-ship drills, defying legal rulings like 2016’s UNCLOS, because power trumps paper. Climate’s the same: science says cut emissions, but coal plants rise in Asia—facts clash with economic survival and national pride. We can’t move forward because we treat these as one-note issues—send troops, file a case—when they demand a broader view. My work nudges us to see all angles, but we cling to quick fixes that falter.
By 2023, I was thinking about how sovereignty and global connection collide, and that’s another snag. Humanity’s got too many players—states, communities, individuals—pulling in different directions. Trump’s America First in 2025—slashing Ukraine aid, pressuring NATO—shrinks U.S. leadership, while Europe scrambles (Germany’s Merz eyes autonomy). China’s rise—$240 billion trade with Russia, Taiwan drills—challenges a U.S.-led order, yet its people push for rights too. Latin America’s cartel wars (Mexico’s violence up 10%) and refugee flows (5 million from Ukraine) show local woes rippling out. I’ve imagined a pluralist way—shared power, rights for all—but we’re stuck in silos: nations hoard sovereignty, ignoring the web tying us together. Cosmopolitanism could lift us, but fear of losing control holds us back.
What else? Our tools are rusty. The UN’s veto gridlock—Russia blocks Ukraine action, U.S. shields Israel—freezes progress. Sanctions hurt (Russia’s GDP down 3%) but don’t stop wars; ICC probes (Israel’s settlers) lack teeth. Climate pacts like COP falter—2024’s talks in Baku yielded vague promises. I’ve argued these old structures can’t handle today’s complexity—too state-centric, too slow. Humanity needs new frames—think a global council for plural governance—but we’re wedded to a 1945 playbook, scared to rethink power.
Fear itself is the thread—fear of loss, change, the other. Russia fears NATO’s encirclement, so it fights. Israel fears insecurity, so it builds. The U.S. fears decline, so Trump retreats. My 2017 justice lens says we’re paralyzed by unfairness; 2020’s layers show we misread our crises; 2023’s pluralism warns we’re blind to our interdependence. We’re not moving forward because we can’t let go—nations grip sovereignty like a lifeline, people cling to old identities, and leaders dodge bold leaps. Climate’s at 1.5°C warming, wars bleed on (500,000 dead in Ukraine), inequality festers (1% hold 50% of wealth)—yet we bicker, not build.
What’s stopping us? A failure to share fairly, see deeply, and connect broadly—ideas I’ve wrestled with across my books. Humanity’s got the tools—tech, knowledge—but not the will. We need a shift: justice that bends, solutions that weave, structures that embrace all voices. Until we face that fear, we’re treading water.
Yesterday, 4th March 2025, I launched a series on my website called The Border We Share, blending real case studies—like Russia-Ukraine, Israel-Palestine, the South China Sea—with fictional lands we know: Oz’s emerald disputes, Narnia’s border wars, Tintin’s treasure hunts, Sherlock Holmes’s London intrigues. Why? To show what’s at stake if we don’t change our mindset. These stories—real and imagined—reveal the cost of clinging to old divides: conflict, loss, stagnation. I mix them to spark a rethink—unless we share borders, see their depth, and connect across them, humanity risks a future as trapped as Narnia under endless winter. Check it out; it’s my nudge to shift how we see our world. What do you think—can we break free?
NOTE:
There will be new posts every Tuesday.
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Section 1: Foundations of the Multiverse (Posts 1–6)
- [YESTERDAY 04/03/2025] Entangled Worlds, Shared Futures: A New Border Blueprint
- Intro post; Borduria-Syldavia-Khemed meets Ukraine-Crimea.
- [NEXT WEEK 04/03/2025] Khemed’s Oil, Crimea’s Shadow: Splitting the Stakes
- Hergé’s oil feud; Russia-Ukraine echoes.
- Sherlock’s Docks, Ireland’s Edge: Clues to Equal Ground
- Holmes solves a turf war; Brexit’s Irish border.
- Sherwood’s Green, Amazon’s Roots: Forests for All
- Robin Hood vs. Sheriff; Brazil-Indigenous clash.
- Atlantis Rising, Antarctic Thaw: Deep Claims, Shared Wins
- Atlantis rivals; Antarctic resource race.
- Narnia’s Ice, Cyprus Split: Thrones in Balance
- Narnian kings divide; Cyprus partition.
AUTHOR’S SAMPLE PEER-REVIEWED ACADEMIC RESEARCH (FREE OPEN ACCESS):
State Sovereignty: Concept and Conceptions (OPEN ACCESS) (IJSL 2024)
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Wednesday 05th March 2025
Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez
X (formerly, Twitter): https://x.com/DrJorge_World