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By Brett D. Schaefer
The United Nations was founded to maintain international peace and security, promote self-determination and basic human rights, and protect fundamental freedoms, but member states have piled numerous mandates and responsibilities on the U.N. that are far beyond these original responsibilities and vastly outstrip its resources and capabilities. Due to this accretion of poorly thought-out mandates, insufficient transparency and accountability, and the reluctance of member states to curtail cherished sinecures, the system is bureaucratic, costly, cumbersome, and lacking in oversight. The General Assembly is captured by endless, largely pointless debates covering every conceivable issue. The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) is unfocused and offers little to justify its time and expense. The Secretariat is beset by a bloated staff, micromanagement by member states, and inadequate oversight.|
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