THAT BEING SAID, if you want to know my personal opinion, I
am more in line with this article. It's time to move away from the concept of
"nation" and that includes national borders. Giving the sweeping
movements of refugees all over the world, and the coming catastrophes in terms of
climate refugees,, borders are just going to be an inconvenience at best and a
death trap at worst.
In all actuality, I'm not contradicting the official church
position. We don't have to eradicate all borders right now today, but they can
be fairly open and fluid. We have a great deal of choice in how we establish,
maintain and enforce those borders.
For example, I can go from Ohio to Pennsylvania without much
hassle. People long ago made the choice to make it so. We can make those choices again today in
regards to other borders. It's that simple. Other borders can simply be a
rubber stamp just keeping track of the comings and going of people but they do
not function as a harsh, militant operation. Borders can be anything from a
literal line in the sand to the Berlin Wall and everything in between. People
who want to justify the concept of borders need to remember there is a huge
variety in how borders are maintained in the world.
Some folks may find that to be a radical idea, but honestly
it's important to look at the whole historical span here. Nations have only
existed in human history for a few hundred years. Our species began as nomadic
bands of families and neighbors in hunter/gatherer societies. We spent probably
over 100,000-300,000 years like this, depending on when you date the origin of
our species (and longer if you include early forms of humans). Most eventually
settled into small villages, especially as farming and animal herding became
more of the norm 10,000 years ago. Those
villages turned into cities. Those
cities morphed into city-states. Those
states banded together to form nations... that's where we are now... and those
nations sometimes band together to form regional alliances. NATO, the UN, and the European Union are
examples of this evolution. All of these evolutions have come with tradeoffs
and growing pains. Many nations today look unified on the map but they are
anything but unified on the inside. Old
rivalries and turf wars still plague many European nations, for example. But the important thing is that this
trajectory is inevitable. The EU is probably the most evolved such alliance to
date but more will come.
So we should look ahead and see the writing on the
wall. This is the direction human
society is going. We can get ahead of
the curve and plan for it, especially when human and ecological needs require
it.
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