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At Miami International Airport a Somali referee with valid accreditation is denied entry to the World Cup, a single incident that exposes a wider pattern: visas revoked, teams interrogated, and fans barred as superpowers control access and influence outcomes.
The episode critiques the UN and its Security Council—how veto power and geopolitical self-interest render international rules ineffective, even as the organization runs vital humanitarian programs.
The core dilemma: dismantling the corrupt top tier risks collapsing the life-saving agencies below. The takeaway: don’t mistake the UN’s humanitarian work for unchecked global justice—powerful states still control the gates.
By oscarkwifoAt Miami International Airport a Somali referee with valid accreditation is denied entry to the World Cup, a single incident that exposes a wider pattern: visas revoked, teams interrogated, and fans barred as superpowers control access and influence outcomes.
The episode critiques the UN and its Security Council—how veto power and geopolitical self-interest render international rules ineffective, even as the organization runs vital humanitarian programs.
The core dilemma: dismantling the corrupt top tier risks collapsing the life-saving agencies below. The takeaway: don’t mistake the UN’s humanitarian work for unchecked global justice—powerful states still control the gates.