Saturday, October 2, 2010

On the World

An interesting argument:

Tribal ties—race, ethnicity, and religion—are becoming more important than borders.

For centuries we have used maps to delineate borders that have been defined by politics. But it may be time to chuck many of our notions about how humanity organizes itself. Across the world a resurgence of tribal ties is creating more complex global alliances. Where once diplomacy defined borders, now history, race, ethnicity, religion, and culture are dividing humanity into dynamic new groupings.

Broad concepts—green, socialist, or market-capitalist ideology—may animate cosmopolitan elites, but they generally do not motivate most people. Instead, the “tribe” is valued far more than any universal ideology. As the great Arab historian Ibn Khaldun observed: “Only Tribes held together by a group feeling can survive in a desert.”
An overview of the perceived groupings of nations follows. The authors seem to be predicting some sort of series of regional alliances/federations based off these commonalities, or at the very least, alliances between a series of nations.

No comments:

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...