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United States Government Medicine

President Biden Will Rejoin the World Health Organization on His First Day (futurism.com) 281

"Another of Biden's promises will have particular significance during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic," reports Futurism: Back in July, he promised to reverse the incumbent Donald Trump's controversial April decision to leave the World Health Organization — the United Nations' agency that oversees and coordinates global public health efforts. "Americans are safer when America is engaged in strengthening global health," Biden said at the time.

"On my first day as President, I will rejoin the WHO and restore our leadership on the world stage."

The move wouldn't just be a rebuke to his predecessor. Experts called Trump's move a "dangerous gamble" and "unequivocally dangerous," and entrepreneur and philanthropist Bill Gates slammed the move as being "as dangerous as it sounds." Leaving the WHO seemed particularly reckless in the United States, where the pandemic had already spiraled out of control, surpassing the toll even in China, where it originated. COVID deaths in the US have now surged past 235,000, and daily infections are now hitting daily record highs — harbingers of what could be a brutal period of weeks or months during the waning days of the Trump administration.

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President Biden Will Rejoin the World Health Organization on His First Day

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  • A good move (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @09:36AM (#60699098)
    Even if not agreeing with everything WHO does, it's not a bad idea to be cooperative in a world that has more people than just the USA
    • Re:A good move (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gtall ( 79522 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @11:12AM (#60699374)

      More to the point, if the U.S. wants to make WHO more effective and not be poodles to the CCP, then there's no way to do it from the outside.

      • there's no way to do it from the outside.

        Cutting off their major funding isn't effective?

        • When funding is the only real influence one has, no. It's the opposite of effective.
        • "Cutting off their major funding isn't effective?"

          Nope. Threatening to cut back their major funding might be effective, but just cutting all off cold turkey is going to produce the reaction, "Well, you don't give us any money, so we're not really interested in anything you have to say."

  • by nicolaiplum ( 169077 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @09:49AM (#60699132)

    This is obviously a good idea - better to cooperate on global health in a connected world than stand apart and hurl abuse.

    Yet much damage has been done: the rest of the world will not trust the USA so much again, for a long time. It has not escaped our notice, off in the rest of the world, than 40-something% of the US vote, a solid 70+ million people, was for Trump. Those people are still there, and the US politicians who want to isolate the US and cause international conflict are waiting for a chance to make that 50-something% and repeat their previous actions - like leaving the WHO, the Paris Agreement, and so on.

    The rest of the world (yes, even China) is ready to welcome the USA back to international engagement, but we won't trust the USA nearly as much as we used to. The US used to be selfish, fractious, occasionally manipulative - and engaged in international diplomacy and multilateral international organisations - much like many other countries. Since 2016, the USA has been selfish, belligerent, aggressive, entirely uncooperative, and attempting to destroy any international organisation in can and leave those it can't. We will not quickly forget this, especially with 70 million American voters and a US Senate led by Mitch McConnell, a man devoted only to retaining power for his small elite.

    Sorry USA: you just can't be trusted right now. We welcome you back, cautiously, but we won't rely on you or let you take the leading role in anything for a while yet. We need to know you've recovered your sanity for some years before we do that. You've got a lot to make up for, and we look forward to joining you as you do that.

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @09:56AM (#60699158) Journal

      The world has seen the US go through these fits before. Woodrow Wilson was instrumental in founding the League of Nations after WWI, and yet Congress refused to countenance the US entering this international body. What the world doesn't trust in the Trump Administration, not the US entire, and Biden's Secretary of State will be pretty darned busy rebuilding relations, but so be it.

      • by evil_aaronm ( 671521 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @10:16AM (#60699214)
        No, the world doesn't trust the 70 million Americans - a significant portion of the voting population - that supported Trump. The 70 million just waiting to restore some other demagogue to the "throne." It was bad enough that we ended up with Trump in the first place; it's horrifying to think that so many wanted four more years of that. The rest of the world is rightly concerned.
        • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @10:39AM (#60699276)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by vlad30 ( 44644 )
          you might consider there are many in the world just like those 70 Million that supported trump otherwise the polls would have predicted for example Brexit. The problem we have at the moment is on a train of wheels where they are all doing there job harmoniously except the one that is misaligned and screeches so loudly it drowns out all the rest and demands attention what is worse is media that then places the microphone next to the screeching wheel to amplify the noise rather than going to the mechanic to
      • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @11:08AM (#60699356)

        What the world doesn't trust in the Trump Administration, not the US entire

        No. What the world doesn't trust is that the USA won't elect another "Trump" administration in 2024. What happened in the past week was a display that common sense only narrowly defeated hate and vitriol. *Narrowly*. Not overwhelmingly. Not conclusively. But rather in a way that demonstrated there's a very real risk that a large portion of a democratic voting force would prefer a repeat of what happened in the last 4 years.

        The world laughed at the USA for voting in Trump in 2016. Sure have your Trump experiment.
        This week that laughter disappeared and was replaced with "WTF is half the country hell bent on self destruction!?"

        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          "WTF is half the country hell bent on self destruction!?"

          Why yes, half the country is hell bent on self destruction. As long as they can claim victory over the "libs", they'll be happy. It's all they've ever wanted.

    • It has to be clear to the world especially anybody 30 or older that the USA is bipolar and can not be trusted to even stick to their own professed ideals.

      The mood swings get worse over time like a collapsing government. The only things that you can do is to avoid depending upon the USA AND to greatly weaken the power of the multinational corporations which continue to destabilize and undermine functioning governments around the world.

    • Yet much damage has been done: the rest of the world will not trust the USA so much again, for a long time.

      That's a good thing. The US will spy on you and take advantage of you. Don't trust the US government, we don't.

  • "There's this organization that goes against our (my) interests... Let's leave them and not keep any influence in there so they can do what they like without caring about out interests."

    Uuum, wouldn't the opposite be more effective, Mr. Trump? :D

  • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @10:13AM (#60699210)

    How can one person, be it Trump or Biden, decide something so important?
    I thought America was a democracy, with rule of law and an effective parliament. Shouldn't congress make such decisions?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      How can one person, be it Trump or Biden, decide something so important? I thought America was a democracy, with rule of law and an effective parliament. Shouldn't congress make such decisions?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Uh, no. We are a Republic with a Congress - not a parliament like advanced countries have.

      Our constitution was written by wealthy slave owning land owners who despised the everyday person; hence why we have this retarded Electoral College that gives more power to a small white rural majority. It is why we ended up with Trump to begin with.

      • Re:Democracy (Score:5, Informative)

        by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @11:31AM (#60699454) Journal

        I think that's a little unfair on the Framers. The chief problem for the Framers was that they had only one extant model of a democracy; and that was Great Britain. Britain's parliamentary system, as it stood in the 1770s and 1780s, still gave the King very broad powers. He had far greater powers to name his Ministers and use his prerogatives outside the strict confines of Government. The Framers basically modeled the office of the President on that of the King of Great Britain, and modeled the powers of the bicameral Congress on those of the House of Commons and the House of Lords. That's why removal of a president requires impeachment and trial, as that was how impeachment worked in Britain; the House of Commons would impeach a Crown official, and the Lords would try him (it wrapped into the House of Lords essentially being the court of final appeal through the Law Lords).

        However, even by the 1780s, Britain's parliamentary system was changing in subtle ways. Impeachment was no longer a necessary remedy, as the notion of Confidence had arisen. In fact, one of the first Prime Ministers to ever get kicked out of office by Parliament was Lord North, precisely because the House of Commons blamed him for losing the Thirteen Colonies. Along with Confidence was a steady evolution of governments formed out of Parliament. The custom was become fully entrenched that Ministers must be members of Parliament, either MPs or Lords, rather than the King picking a Premier or PM (the usage began to change in the late 18th century) from the leading bloc (party) of MPs and then would appoint the Cabinet based on the advice of the PM.

        If the US had split even twenty years later, it probably would have had a parliamentary form of government, and the President would be like the President of Ireland or India; a nominal figurehead who christened ships, and pretty much did what the head of government told him. The problem is the President really is a King, with powers pretty darned similar to the powers King George III had at the time the US won the War of Independence. To my mind, for all the Framers' political brilliance, they lacked imagination, and built a governing system based on the British system, even as the British system was taking the final steps to remove most the King's ability to actually govern.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Your Congress is a type of Parliament, it uses Parliamentary procedures. Think of it as a fork.

    • You thought wrong. America is an oligarchy [washingtontimes.com] that plays election-theater to convince its population that it is a democracy.

    • I thought America was a democracy

      The last 4 years America was governed by someone whom the majority of the voters specifically did not vote for.

    • Democracies all eventually fall into despotism. Cycle of life. They don't die quickly unless conquered, it's a gradual decent which is why they go out with a whimper (sources: Ben Franklin, other historians.)

      The USA has some time left and they might partially recover; maybe it takes them 300 years like Rome did... or maybe it happens within 70 years and began with Nixon. Experts will squabble over the exact threshold.

      Congress:
      1) has been corrupted to the point of dysfunction. Huge majority popular issues o

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Be realistic, the reason the U.S. and other countries have executive branches is there are way too many decisions that must be made, usually too quickly, for every damn issue to be voted upon.

  • to squeeze-out the chinese?

  • Not a bad idea (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Sunday November 08, 2020 @11:19AM (#60699418)

    Whether or not it's critical, more cooperation with other countries is better than less. Saying "America First" doesn't make sense in a word where (a) practically all non-food consumer goods are made in other countries, and (b) there's not enough subsidies and tax breaks in the world that will bring domestic manufacturing back. We saw with the pandemic how quickly those just-in-time supply chains the MBAs love fall apart when you have a public health emergency. Even for that reason alone, let alone the humanitarian reasons, it makes sense to cooperate on public health problems.

    China's dominance may be an issue -- it is true that they're economically colonizing big chunks of the developing world (Africa, South America, etc.) But turning inward doesn't solve that problem either. Hopefully the next election cycle will see some concrete ideas on how to correct imbalances instead of jus doing knee-jerk things you think the Twitter Army likes to hear.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Sunday November 08, 2020 @11:41AM (#60699486) Journal

    ... that the USA cannot be relied upon to adhere to any agreements or decisions that are made under another administration. Any time the administration changes, suddenly everything that was done previously can be discarded at little more than a whim. Not that I'm saying Biden's decision here is a bad one, but I'm looking at the bigger picture here.

    Trump has done enough damage to the USA's reputation with most of the rest of the world to last a good 10 to 20 years, at least. If the USA doesn't start sticking to some principles, through entire administrations, the USA's partners in the future are going to be bleak unless the country can start showing some consistency.

    I mean, who wants an unreliable ally?

    • ... that the USA cannot be relied upon to adhere to any agreements or decisions that are made under another administration. Any time the administration changes, suddenly everything that was done previously can be discarded at little more than a whim. Not that I'm saying Biden's decision here is a bad one, but I'm looking at the bigger picture here.

      Trump has done enough damage to the USA's reputation with most of the rest of the world to last a good 10 to 20 years, at least. If the USA doesn't start sticking to some principles, through entire administrations, the USA's partners in the future are going to be bleak unless the country can start showing some consistency.

      I mean, who wants an unreliable ally?

      So, you want past democratic polities to bind future ones? How far back should we go?

      I mean it was only in 2012 that Obama was saying that marriage should be a man and a woman ...

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        I think you have spectacularly missed my point.. As I said, I am looking at the bigger picture. Same sex marriages in the USA are an internal affair that does not really impact anyone outside of the USA.

        What Biden does in his time in office is probably irrelevant to the bigger picture anyways The damage has already been done. With the USA withdrawing from international organizations, treaties, or instituting tariffs on allied countries on grounds that have no legally sustainable merit... these are t

  • but I guess someone has to pay their bills may as well be the American taxpayer in their minds.

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