I’m curious about why Paraguay, Malawi, and Papua New Guinea voted against.
These small island countries that consistently echo Washington’s unpopular votes in the UN are essentially unofficial US colonies, and mostly use the US dollar or Australian dollar as their currencies. Together, the six have a combined population of just over 1 million people, making them some of the smallest nations on Earth.
(I should note that Malawi is actually pretty close to the median size of a UN member nation — driving from one end of the country to the other could take you a whole day.)
(Another thing to note, for the heck of it, is that the combined populations of Paraguay, Malawi, and Papua New Guinea is about 39 million people. Just over half of these would live in Malawi, and about two-thirds of the remainder would live in Papua New Guinea.)
Fair enough, clearly I don’t know enough about the nations of Malawi and Paraguay haha
Off the top of my head all I can say about Paraguay is 1) Basically everybody speaks an Indigenous language there 2) Their first leader banned white people from marrying each other 3) The flag has a different design on the front and back, and also the national anthem is pretty neat IMO 4) A huge but unknown percentage of the country’s population died when they were invaded by Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay in the 19th century; when Rutherford B. Hayes arbitrated a boundary dispute in Paraguay’s favor after the war, the country named one of its administrative divisions after him.
Off the top of my head all I can say about Malawi is 1) formerly known as Nyasaland, the country gets its current name from the Chichewa word for “Flames”, because when the sun rises over Lake Malawi, which dominates the country’s eastern border and has some border weirdness, the waters supposedly look red like flames. 2) Malawi’s flag represents this fact, being essentially a stylized representation of a view of Lake Malawi at sunrise from Malawi’s side of the coast, coupled with pan-African symbolism. 3) Malawi was led by Bingu wa Mutharika from 2004 to 2012, and he changed the flag to have a full sun instead of a rising sun, in order to represent the country’s progress since independence. The flag was changed back to the original rising sun version shortly after Mutharika died of a heart attack.
i love that you took the effort to make a table for this
I wouldn’t settle for anything less.
Wow, and even THEY aren’t voting for the cuban embargo lmfao, thats so embarrassing
cheap to buy out tiny nations, kind of like how corporations buy out the senators from tiny states like Delaware or Montana cause it’s cheap
nothing will be done unless the UN kicks out the UK/US/Israel and declares war
its always a landslide vote, look at the cuban embargo votes
the UN is a figurehead, a mechanical canary in a coalmine
On the one hand, fuck yeah. On the other hand, a “demand” from the UN is toothless as long as keeps supplying and endorsing the genocide.
Wow now they have no choice, I’m sure this will stop them.
Its nice some countries are finally on record as against genocide and occupation, but it is decades late. Also this doesn’t change shit, this is just nations “virtue signaling” (idk if this term is too chud-coded, but it fits) to their populaces.
Sorry if this is super pessimistic.
Liberals live in a world of pure aesthetics. They want to harvest all the power and consent an idea or cause can buy them without expensing any of the actual political capital (and regular capital) required to actually achieve the cause.
Terms like virtue signaling and concern trolling describe liberals perfectly. It’s just that chuds would have you throw out the virtue with the bath water.
They should end it now