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The U.N.'s financial crisis proves America was bankrolling a broken system that couldn't function without constant bailouts. Within three weeks of the withdrawal, the organization announced it was near bankruptcy, exposing decades of dependency on U.S. taxpayers' funding and an ineffective bureaucracy. Building alternative diplomatic frameworks makes more sense than propping up a paralyzed institution stuck running on outdated World War II power structures.
Refusing to pay legally obligated dues while other 192 nations meet their financial commitments threatens global humanitarian operations and peacekeeping missions that prevent wider conflicts. The U.N. faces collapse not from institutional failure but from one country owing over $4 billion in mandatory contributions. Slashing humanitarian aid creates cascading crises of displacement and death that destabilize entire regions and undermine collective global security.
The U.N.'s paralysis stems less from American absence than from overwhelming interference. Across parties, Washington has sabotaged peace, rights, climate action and self-determination. If other states fill funding gaps and collectively resist U.S. coercion and hegemony, multilateralism could revive. This moment is an opportunity, not a collapse, for global justice and shared security. History suggests that collective courage, not compliance, determines the futures of international institutions.