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593: Is the United Nations Still Relevant?

P&C drink and review Manor Hill Brewing’s Dunkel, then wonder if the U.N. still matters.

The United Nations was founded after World War II with an ambitious mission: prevent global war, promote peace, and help nations cooperate on the world’s biggest problems.

But nearly eighty years later, a fair question arises: does it do anything useful?

The boys take a practical look at what the U.N. actually does today. It clearly hasn’t stopped major conflicts — from Ukraine to the Middle East — and it hasn’t been the engine that lifted countries out of poverty. So what role does it really play?

We dig into the less glamorous side of the organization: peacekeeping missions that try to keep fragile countries from sliding back into civil war, humanitarian programs that feed millions of people, refugee operations, disease control, and the quiet international standards that keep things like aviation and shipping functioning smoothly.

But that leads to deeper questions:

  • Is the U.N. a meaningful institution — or mostly a talking shop?
  • Does it solve problems, or just manage them?
  • Would the world look any different if it didn’t exist?
  • And if it’s not preventing wars or creating prosperity, what exactly is its purpose?

It’s a conversation about global institutions, unintended consequences, and the difference between what an organization was created to do and what it actually does.

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