The Borders We Share: A New Way to Fix a Broken World
Section 4: Forests and Lands
Post 21: Gor’s Jungle, Borneo’s Line: Wild Claims Tamed
Overture in the Mist
Beneath a canopy where sunlight fractures into emerald shards, the jungle hums with a primal symphony—ancient chants drift from hidden groves, vines sway with the weight of forgotten tales, and the air carries the scent of damp earth and wild orchids. This is Gor, a counter-earth realm where the wild heart beats fiercely, its rhythm disrupted by clashing claims that echo like distant thunder, a stage for Tarl Cabot, the Earthman guide seeking balance, and Marlenus, the Ubar of Ar, whose scepter enforces order. In The Borders We Share, I, Dr Jorge, have long sought to transform discord into harmony, joined by Sherlock Holmes, the deductive master from London’s fog, Dr. John Watson, his ever-observant companion, and King Arthur, the legendary ruler wielding Excalibur for justice, alongside Tun Mustapha, Sabah’s wise chief minister, and Tom Harrisson, the anthropologist who united Borneo’s tribes. On this Tuesday, August 12, 2025, as mist clings to the dawn and the world awakens, we step into this tale, where wild claims might yield to a shared song.
The narrative of borders is not new to me; it’s a thread I’ve followed through fictional realms and real-world fractures, each a mirror to the other. From Sherwood’s oaks with Robin Hood to Atlantis’s sunken reefs, I’ve paired these tales with the Congo’s timber wars, Vietnam’s Paracel puzzles, and beyond, seeking a pattern of peace amid strife. This post, the third in Section 4: Forests and Lands, builds on that legacy, weaving Gor’s jungle saga with Borneo’s border dispute between Malaysia and Indonesia, where Tarl’s mediation, Marlenus’s rule, Mustapha’s statesmanship, Harrisson’s insight, Holmes’s logic, Watson’s notes, Arthur’s honor, and my scholarly vision converge to explore a path forward. The mist today feels like a veil lifting, revealing not just land but the cultures, histories, and hopes entwined within it—a call to tame wild claims with understanding rather than force.
As I pen this, the jungle’s pulse resonates with my own heartbeat, a reminder of why this series matters. It’s not just about lines on a map but about the people and spirits they enclose—hunters, planters, tribes, and rulers—all seeking a place in the sun. Gor and Borneo offer a canvas where the wild and the civilized collide, where the past whispers through the trees, urging us to find a way forward. This overture is my invitation to you, dear reader, to join Tarl, Marlenus, Mustapha, Harrisson, Holmes, Watson, Arthur, and me on this path, where every step uncovers a story of resilience and the potential for a harmonious chorus to rise above the clamor.
A Journey Through Vines and Villages
My fascination with jungles began in childhood, sparked by tales of lost worlds where every rustle hid a narrative waiting to be unraveled. Gor, inspired by John Norman’s Gor series, became a personal obsession—not for its warrior bravado, but for its portrayal of a counter-earth wilderness where Tarl Cabot, an Earthman turned guide, navigates a delicate balance among diverse inhabitants. This love of wild spaces has shaped The Borders We Share, a series that roams from Ruritania’s crowns to Oz’s emeralds, pairing these with real disputes like the Falklands’ winds or the Gulf’s oil. Now, in this post, we venture into Gor’s jungle alongside Borneo’s contested frontier, a journey that promises to blend myth with the gritty reality of cultural survival.
In Gor, the landscape is a living tapestry—kapok trees stretch skyward, their roots cradling thatched villages where Kael, a hunter, tracks game with reverence passed down through generations, and Sira, a planter, tends taro fields with the care of a mother nurturing her child. Marlenus, the Ubar of Ar, rules with a scepter that symbolizes authority, his decrees intended to unify but often dividing as Kael’s hunts encroach on Sira’s crops, and poachers strip rare woods for profit. The rivers silt from overuse, displacing 8,000 villagers to the jungle’s ragged edges, a loss that echoes at $15 million annually (Gor Ledger). This is a land where the wild spirit fights to breathe, its harmony threatened by unchecked ambition and the weight of tradition clashing with progress.
Borneo, by contrast, is a real-world jungle of 743,330 square kilometers, split among Malaysia’s Sabah and Sarawak, Indonesia’s Kalimantan, and Brunei, its borders drawn by the 1891 Anglo-Dutch Treaty with little regard for the Dayak, Iban, or Punan tribes who call it home. The dispute over 1.6 million hectares, fueled by a $10 billion palm oil industry (Malaysian Palm Oil Board, 2024) and timber, sees 1,500 km² deforested yearly (World Resources Institute, 2024), displacing 20,000 Indigenous people (UNHCR, 2024). The ICJ’s 2002 ruling on Sipadan and Ligitan favored Malaysia, yet Indonesia’s claims linger, rooted in colonial scars and the cultural bonds that defy artificial lines. This journey through vines and villages is a pilgrimage to hear the land’s voice, to find where wild claims can be tamed by mutual respect.
The Cultural Tapestry Unraveled
These disputes transcend mere territorial tugs—they are rich tapestries woven from the threads of identity, history, and the land’s own heartbeat. My Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025, Chapter 7) offers a lens, framing this as a border dispute with deep cultural undertones, where Malaysia and Indonesia wield similar bargaining power, unlike cases dominated by the United States or United Kingdom. In Gor, Kael’s hunts honor ancestral rites, Sira’s fields sustain communal life, and Marlenus asserts a ruler’s claim, each a strand in the cultural fabric. In Borneo, Dayak weavers craft baskets, Iban singers preserve epics, and governments draw lines, their actions a discordant note against Indigenous harmony. Chapter 7’s typology highlights these cultural components, noting how Indigenous rejection of mono-ethnic states mirrors Gor’s tribal ethos and Borneo’s multi-ethnic villages.
The historical roots run deep, a legacy of colonial indifference that still shapes the present. The 1891 Anglo-Dutch Treaty, drawn with scant regard for Borneo’s terrain or tribes, parallels Chapter 7’s observation of imprecise demarcations in the Americas, treating Indigenous lands as terra nullius. Post-independence, Malaysia’s 1963 formation and Indonesia’s Konfrontasi (1963–1966) reflect leaders’ prestige disputes, where national pride overrides tribal unity, much like Marlenus’s rule in Gor. My Sovereignty Conflicts (2017, Chapter 7) uncovers the drivers: Marlenus seeks glory to cement his reign, Malaysia’s leaders push palm oil for 4% GDP growth (IMF, 2024), and cultural erosion fuels resistance from both Gor’s villagers and Borneo’s tribes. These forces weave a complex web, where the past’s shadows lengthen into today’s struggles.
The challenge demands a multidimensional view, as Chapter 7 suggests. The domestic context—pride in Gor’s traditions, Borneo’s tribal resilience—intertwines with regional ties, where Malaysia and Indonesia negotiate under ASEAN’s gaze, and international law, where the ICJ’s 2002 ruling hints at peace. Yet, cultural loss looms large—Dayak dances fade, Iban lore silences—threatening more than land, a loss echoed in Gor’s displaced 8,000. My Cosmopolitanism (2023, Chapter 6) calls for preserving these voices, not just dividing resources, aligning with Chapter 7’s emphasis on Indigenous rights and the potential of external guarantors, like the 1998 Brasilia Agreement, to foster harmony. This tapestry unravels to reveal a path where culture, not conquest, might heal the jungle.
A Song of Preservation
Conquest silences the jungle’s song; preservation lets it rise anew, a melody of life over the din of ownership. In Gor, I envision a cultural covenant where Tarl Cabot maps sacred groves, preserving their spiritual essence as havens for tribal rites, while Kael hunts sustainably, honoring the balance his ancestors knew. Sira plants taro with rituals that bind the community, and Marlenus shifts his scepter’s focus from control to heritage protection, ensuring the jungle’s wild soul endures. Timber trade profits, carefully regulated, fund rewilding projects, bringing 8,000 displaced villagers back to restored homes, saving the $15 million lost to conflict (Gor Ledger) and replanting the land’s memory.
In Borneo, this vision scales to the island’s vast expanse. Dayak elders guide forest stewardship, their wisdom charting paths to protect 1.6 million hectares from further loss, while Iban hunters patrol borders, their songs a shield against encroachment. Governments, inspired by this cultural lead, redirect $10 billion from the palm oil industry (Malaysian Palm Oil Board, 2024) to fund cultural centers and reforest 1,500 km² lost yearly (World Resources Institute, 2024), easing the displacement of 20,000 (UNHCR, 2024). My 2017 concept of egalitarian shared sovereignty adapts here—equal cultural voices shape decisions, roles reflect tradition (elders guide, hunters guard), rewards honor stewardship (timber for rewilding), and the strong uplift the weak (governments support tribes). This approach, rooted in Chapter 7’s multidimensional framework, prioritizes preservation over division.
The success of this song hinges on collaboration, a theme tested across my work. The 1998 Brasilia Agreement between Ecuador and Peru, backed by guarantors (Chapter 7), shows how third-party support can stabilize cultural accords. In Gor, Tarl’s mediation and in Borneo, Indigenous leadership, bolstered by regional bodies like ASEAN, could ensure trust. This isn’t just about land—it’s about reviving the jungle’s voice, letting Dayak chants and Iban epics rise alongside Gor’s tribal hymns. By preserving cultural heritage, we plant seeds for a future where the wild claims of today become the harmonious roots of tomorrow, a legacy worth singing for.
A Council of Minds
In a clearing where Gor’s vines part and Borneo’s rainforest meets the imagination, a council assembles under a canopy of ancient trees, their leaves filtering the morning light of August 12, 2025. Tarl Cabot, spear-staff in hand, stands as mediator, his gaze steady from years navigating Gor’s wilds. Beside him, Marlenus, Ubar of Ar, grips his scepter, his presence commanding yet tinged with pride. From Borneo, Tun Mustapha, Sabah’s first chief minister, brings a statesman’s calm, his experience shaping Malaysia’s 1963 unity, while Tom Harrisson, the anthropologist who rallied Dayak tribes in 1945, offers a scholar’s depth. Dr. Jorge, the series’ guide, steps forward with a scholar’s vision, notebook in hand, joined by Sherlock Holmes, deerstalker tilted, Dr. John Watson scribbling notes, and King Arthur, Excalibur sheathed, his regal aura bridging past and present.
Tarl opens with a proposal, his voice resonant: “Let’s map Gor’s sacred groves as neutral zones, where Kael hunts sustainably, Sira plants with rites, and timber funds rewilding for the 8,000 displaced.” Marlenus interrupts, his tone firm: “My law must hold—timber strengthens Ar, and I’ll not yield to chaos!” Mustapha counters with a regional vision: “In 1963, we balanced tribes and state—let Malaysia and Indonesia form a Borneo Council, funding cultural hubs with palm oil profits.” Harrisson nods, adding, “1945 taught me Dayak unity—train elders as stewards, preserving their songs and forests.” Dr. Jorge interjects, “My 2017 shared sovereignty fits—equal cultural voices, tradition-led roles, rewards for stewardship, as Chapter 7’s guarantors suggest. ASEAN could oversee.”
Holmes adjusts his deerstalker, his mind racing: “A deductive approach—map all disputed zones with precision, mediate with evidence, and establish a compliance mechanism.” Watson, pen poised, suggests, “Practical—add health clinics for the displaced 20,000 in Borneo, monitoring their well-being.” Arthur raises Excalibur slightly, his voice steady: “Honor binds us—knights guarded lands; let leaders protect culture, not conquer it. A round table of tribes and states could pledge this.” Marlenus scoffs, “Honor fades under might—Konfrontasi proved strength, not tables!” Mustapha replies, “Strength with unity—1963 worked because we listened to the land.”
The debate deepens as Tarl refines his idea: “Groves as sanctuaries, hunters and planters sharing rites—timber trades fund restoration, not ruin.” Harrisson expands, “Elders training youth could revive Dayak dances, Iban epics—culture as a shield.” Dr. Jorge synthesizes, “Multidimensional—cultural preservation, ecological recovery, legal enforcement—third parties like the ICJ could ensure fairness.” Holmes deduces, “Test it in a pilot zone, scale with data—disputes solved case by case.” Watson notes, “Clinics could track health, build trust.” Arthur concludes, “A pact sealed by honor—let’s draft it, with guarantors to hold us true.” Marlenus relents, “If glory shines through peace, I’ll bend—show me the plan.”
The council lingers, voices blending like the jungle’s chorus. Tarl sketches a map, Mustapha outlines a council structure, Harrisson lists cultural priorities, Dr. Jorge cites Chapter 7’s success with guarantors, Holmes plots a strategy, Watson records details, and Arthur blesses the effort with a knight’s vow. The air thickens with possibility—Gor’s groves and Borneo’s trails could heal, not divide. Marlenus, softening, adds, “If my people thrive, I’ll support this—prove it works.” The council disperses, seeds of peace sown, ready to grow from this dialogue into a living accord.
The Echoes of Doubt
Skeptics cast shadows over this song, their voices sharp as a hunter’s arrow: “Culture bends to power—preservation is a dreamer’s tale.” In Gor’s grove, Marlenus thunders, “My scepter rules—sacred sites bow to order, or chaos reigns!” Kael retorts, “Your rule kills my hunt—trust died with your decrees!” Sira sighs, “Your hunts ruin my fields—harmony’s a lost echo!” The weight of doubt presses, as Marlenus’s prestige and the displaced 8,000’s plight fuel resistance. In Borneo, Malaysia defends logging leases (Sabah Land Ordinance, 2024), clearing 1,500 km² despite protests, backed by 60% rural support (2023 election), a testament to state might over cultural pleas.
The skepticism deepens with practical fears. Indigenous claims falter—the UN’s 2007 Declaration lacks binding force, and the ICJ’s 2002 ruling leaned toward Malaysia, sidelining tribal voices (Chapter 7). Outsiders—British colonial firms, Chinese investors—muddy the waters, their economic pull clashing with cultural preservation. Marlenus’s rule mirrors Malaysia’s growth agenda, where leaders thrive on strife, and the 1891 Treaty’s colonial legacy looms large, suggesting power, not harmony, dictates the jungle’s fate. This doubt is fair—my 2017 vision of shared sovereignty hinges on trust, a rare commodity amid historical grudges and modern greed.
Yet, hope flickers in the mist. Tom Harrisson’s 1945 unity of Dayak tribes and Tun Mustapha’s 1963 balance in Sabah hint at cultural strength. My Territorial Disputes (2020) recalls ASEAN’s South China Sea diplomacy, and Chapter 7 notes Latin America’s 92% border peace, suggesting cooperation’s edge. Borneo’s tribes (68% favor rights, 2024 IPA) and Gor’s villagers crave harmony—preservation isn’t naive, but a root deeper than power’s blade. The echoes of doubt challenge us to prove this song, tested by dialogue and guarantors, can grow into a forest of trust.
Why This Grows in You
Gor’s jungle chants and Borneo’s epic songs aren’t distant echoes—they’re woven into your spirit, a heritage under threat. A child in Gor loses tribal tales to silence as groves fall, while a Dayak elder in Borneo watches his forest vanish under palm oil’s shadow, their breaths heavy with smoke. *The Borders We Share* offers a chance to sing with the land, to preserve its voice—its dances, its stories—rather than let it be drowned by the fight for control. This is your journey too, a call to nurture what binds us to the wild.
Next Tuesday, Post 22 will venture into new frontiers, continuing this exploration. I’m Dr. Jorge, crafting these tales into a book you’ll hold, a testament to our shared world. Visit https://drjorge.world or X (https://x.com/DrJorge_World )—join me, from Gor’s groves to Borneo’s lines, to plant seeds where borders honor culture and jungles thrive for all. Together, we can turn wild claims into a symphony of life, echoing through generations.
References
• Núñez, J.E. (2017). Sovereignty Conflicts (Ch. 6, 7).
• Núñez, J.E. (2020). Territorial Disputes (Ch. 9).
• Núñez, J.E. (2023). Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (Ch. 6).
• Núñez, J.E. (2025). Territorial Disputes in the Americas (Ch. 7).
NOTE:
New posts every Tuesday.
PREVIOUS POSTS:
Post 20: Utopia’s Woods, Guyana’s Gold: Dreams vs. Dirt
NEXT POSTS:
Section 4: Forests and Lands
Post 22: Oz’s Forests, Tasmania’s Edge: Emerald Meets Pine
Post 23: Narnia’s Trees, Amazon’s Breath: Roots of Peace
Post 24: Sherwood’s Pact, Part II: The Multiverse Grows
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State Sovereignty: Concept and Conceptions (OPEN ACCESS) (IJSL 2024)
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Tuesday 12th August 2025
Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez
X (formerly, Twitter): https://x.com/DrJorge_World
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