The United Nations has become a polished global theater where oppressive regimes lecture free nations about morality while American taxpayers foot the bill. Rogue countries like Iran gets influence, Israel gets condemned, and America keeps paying for a machine that often works against its own interests. In fact, if hypocrisy were gasoline, the UN headquarters could power Manhattan for 50 years.
I am angry. Not the fake kind of anger politicians
perform for television cameras before they sneak into cocktail parties with
lobbyists. I mean real anger. The kind that sits in your chest like a burning
coal. The kind that makes you stare at the television and mutter, “What exactly
are we paying for?”
America keeps pouring mountains of money into the United
Nations like a gambler feeding a broken slot machine in Las Vegas, hoping this
time it will finally spit out something useful. Yet every few months, the same
circus returns to town. Countries with terrible human rights records suddenly
become guardians of “human rights.” Dictators lecture democracies about
justice. Regimes that jail women for showing their hair sit comfortably inside
committees discussing women’s freedom. When the fox starts teaching chickens
about security, somebody has lost his mind.
The United States remains the largest financial
contributor to the UN system. In 2025, America was responsible for about 22
percent of the UN regular budget and roughly 26 percent of peacekeeping costs.
That is more than $820 million toward the regular budget alone. Meanwhile, many
countries that scream the loudest against America contribute only a fraction of
that amount. America pays premium price for front-row seats at its own
humiliation.
And what does Washington often get in return?
Condemnation. Lectures. Sneering anti-American rhetoric wrapped inside polished
diplomatic language.
Then comes the part that really turns my stomach. Iran.
Yes, Iran. A regime accused for years of suppressing and executing protesters,
arresting dissidents, crushing women’s rights demonstrations, and funding
militant groups across the Middle East somehow keeps finding itself inside
major UN structures connected to human rights and policy influence. In 2022,
Iran was kicked out of the UN Commission on the Status of Women after the death
of Mahsa Amini and the brutal crackdown that followed. But like a bad horror
movie villain, the regime keeps crawling back into the building through another
door.
In April 2026, Iran was nominated to the UN Committee for
Programme and Coordination, a body connected to policy discussions involving
human rights, women’s rights, and counterterrorism matters. The United States
reportedly stood alone in openly objecting during the ECOSOC session (the
United Nations Economic and Social Council session). Just pause there for a
second and let the absurdity sink in.
America pays the lion’s share of the bills. Iran gets the
microphone. That is not diplomacy. That
is political insanity dressed in a suit and tie.
The defenders of the UN always say the same thing. “Well,
engagement matters.” “Dialogue matters.” “International cooperation matters.”
Fine. I understand diplomacy. I understand alliances. I understand that the
world is messy. But there is a difference between diplomacy and moral
surrender. There is a difference between cooperation and self-humiliation.
The UN has spent decades building a reputation that often
feels openly hostile toward both America and Israel. Many critics have pointed
to the overwhelming number of resolutions targeting Israel compared to
countries with far worse human rights records. In 2024, the UN Human Rights
Council again pushed resolutions demanding actions against Israel during the
Gaza conflict while countries like China, Cuba, and others continued
maintaining influence within UN systems. The imbalance is so obvious that even
people who are not strongly pro-Israel can see it from space.
And let us stop pretending anti-Semitism at the UN is
merely an invention of political talk shows. Former UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon himself admitted in 2016 that there has been a “disproportionate
volume” of resolutions criticizing Israel. That statement did not come from a
conservative podcast host sitting in a basement. It came from the top of the UN
itself.
The problem is deeper than one resolution or one
committee seat. The problem is structural. The UN was born in 1945 from the
ashes of World War II. At the time, the mission sounded noble: prevent another
global catastrophe. Fine. But over the decades, the institution grew bloated,
political, ideological, and addicted to symbolism instead of solutions. It
became a massive diplomatic theater where countries often posture for cameras
while real problems keep exploding outside the building.
Look at the record. Russia sat on the UN Human Rights
Council before eventually being suspended after the invasion of Ukraine. China,
despite accusations regarding Uyghur Muslims and crackdowns in Hong Kong,
continues holding major influence internationally. Iran still maneuvers through
UN systems despite its record on political dissent. Saudi Arabia has previously
held positions connected to women’s rights discussions despite global criticism
over its own restrictions on women. If hypocrisy were gasoline, the UN
headquarters could power Manhattan for 50 years.
The defenders will quickly point to humanitarian work.
Yes, some UN agencies do valuable work involving refugees, disease control,
food aid, and disaster response. I am not blind to that reality. But that does
not erase the larger political rot inside the institution. A restaurant may
serve one good meal, but if the kitchen is full of rats, customers still have
the right to complain.
The uncomfortable truth is this: many authoritarian
governments love the UN because it gives them legitimacy they do not deserve. A
dictator can crush protests at home on Monday, then fly to New York on
Wednesday wearing an expensive suit while talking about “international norms.”
Cameras flash. Diplomats clap politely. Press releases are issued. The
performance continues.
Meanwhile, ordinary Americans are struggling with
inflation, debt, housing costs, medical bills, and taxes. Yet Washington keeps
writing checks to organizations that often treat America like the villain of
the planet. That is why many citizens are losing patience. Not because they
hate international cooperation, but because they are tired of financing
institutions that appear deeply allergic to moral consistency.
I also believe many globalist organizations have
developed a dangerous habit of treating national sovereignty like an outdated
inconvenience. They speak as if borders are primitive ideas and patriotism is
some embarrassing disease. But here is the reality: when disaster strikes,
people still run to nations for protection, not abstract speeches from
conference halls.
The UN today often feels less like a guardian of peace
and more like a diplomatic nightclub where bad actors buy moral respectability
with political alliances. America keeps paying the cover charge while getting
insulted at the bar.
At some point, somebody has to say enough is enough. I
am not saying America should isolate itself from the world. That would be
foolish. But I am saying blind loyalty to failing institutions is not wisdom.
It is weakness. Institutions are supposed to serve people, not the other way
around. And when an organization repeatedly rewards hypocrisy, protects
political theater, and allows serial abusers to posture as guardians of
justice, criticism becomes necessary.
The UN may still have pockets of usefulness. I will grant
that. But its moral authority has been bleeding for years, and much of the
world can now see the stain spreading across the carpet. The institution that
once promised moral leadership increasingly looks like a tired empire of
bureaucracy, contradictions, and selective outrage.
And honestly, I am tired of pretending otherwise.
Separate from today’s
article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for
readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on
Google Play: Brief Book Series.






