The Geopolitics of Morality - Good Times Bad Times (The 20s Report)
Morality plays a central role in shaping international relations, with values such as freedom, human rights, and self-determination driving geopolitical outcomes.
- Geopolitical Shifts Since the 1990s: The liberal international order, once led by the U.S., has eroded due to internal U.S. social decay, Chinas rise fueled by globalized manufacturing, and Europes failure to unify strategically culminating in todays fragmented, competitive global landscape.
- Germanys Role in Europes Decline: Germany, alongside France, failed to build a truly cooperative EU, instead pursuing narrow national interests (e.g., Nord Stream, offshoring tech to China, energy policy failures), undermining trust and turning Europe into a geopolitical pushover.
- Moral Progress vs. Technological Advance: Human morality has advanced empirically (e.g., abolition of slavery, womens rights), but it lags far behind economic and technological growth creating dangerous imbalances, as seen in nuclear weapons and modern warfare.
- Values as Geopolitical Force: Ukraines resilience proves that shared values (freedom, self-determination) can outweigh military hardware and that systems like Chinas, which prioritize control over liberty, pose a long-term threat by seeking to export authoritarianism.
- Collective Moral Responsibility: Societies, not just leaders, shape geopolitics moral decay enables aggression (e.g., WWII, current tensions). Western hesitation to fully support Ukraine reflects a failure of collective moral will, not just policy.
- Hope Through Institutional Morality: Norway exemplifies how nations can channel wealth ethically building sovereign funds, social equity, and global solidarity proving that moral restraint and smart institutions can create durable, prosperous, and principled societies.