The UN is a Laughing Matter

U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Halley, is so tired of laughing at the stupidity of the U.N. and many of the foreign governments’ representatives and policies there, that she is quitting. She is tired of busting a gut laughing!

When President Trump spoke to the General Assembly last month and boasted about his administration’s accomplishments, we heard the world leaders gathered chuckle and laugh. The UN is a laughing matter.

I devoted a whole chapter to the UN and why it is an irrelevant global organization for the 21st-century in my 2007 book Custom Maid Knowledge for New World Disorder.

I respectfully disagree with the opinion piece Susan E. Rice, the national security adviser from 2013-2017 and a former U.S. ambassador to the UN, wrote in The New York Times.

Reckless, ridiculed and alone, is the title of her piece and claims “Americans suffered the added humiliation of watching the world burst out laughing at their president, whose false bravado no longer induces shock but invites derision.”

Wrong! Many Americans, world leaders and public at large agree it is time to revisit and restructure global bodies of the 20th-century to make them relevant to our wired 21st-century.

Trump is taking the lead. He started with NAFTA and is now moving on with the U.N. by correctly labelling it as an “unelected, unaccountable, global bureaucracy.”

It is the UN that invites derision and is a laughing matter! The 2018 Nobel Peace Prize co-winner Nadia Murad, a Yazidi ISIS rape victim, and UN ambassador to end rape as a tool of war, highlights how laughable the UN is. She deservedly wins the peace prize for speaking out against rape — while UN blue helmeted peacekeepers rape and traffic sex slaves in the name of peace? That is laughable!

I went into great detail about the criminal and sexual behavior of the UN so-called peacekeepers in my book, highlighted by the following quote:

The very public charge of rape, pedophilia and prostitution
involving U.N. peacekeepers in Burundi, Bosnia, Cambodia,
Haiti, East Timor, Ethiopia, Liberia, Kosovo and Sierra Leone
pale in comparison to those made in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo that highlight the arrogance of U.N. criminal
bureaucrats. The 41-page report detailed 150 allegations
of sexual misconduct by peacekeepers against women and
girls, some as young as 12. That did not include the Congolese
women working for the U.N. who were afraid to report
supervisors’ demands for sex for fear of losing their jobs. More
than a year after the shocking disclosures, nothing was done to
end the culture of impunity, exploitation and sexual chauvinism.
When U.N. peacekeepers who are sent to help restore stability,
guarantee public security and instill the rule of law in countries
ravaged by war instead rape the people they were sent to protect
and coerce women and girls to trade sex for food, they defeat the
purpose of their mission and exploit some of the world’s most
vulnerable people.

Now that is a sad laughing matter!

To make matters worse, these same — mostly men — laughers, are Deadbeat Freeloaders, a sub-chapter heading in my book, where I went on to say:

The U.N. is so self-serving that its bureaucratic employees
protect each other even when it comes to deadbeat dads.
Mothers and grandmothers from Africa, Europe, Asia and
the United States, now scattered throughout New York,
meet every month in a first-floor conference room across
from the United Nations. They call themselves the U.N. Family
Rights Committee, but one woman said “the dumped wives
club is more accurate.

These are the estranged or divorced spouses of U.N. employees,
women who followed their husbands to postings around the
world and are chasing after them once again. The agenda at
their meetings rarely changes. Some cannot collect unpaid
support orders from U.S. and foreign courts because the United
Nations blocks them from doing so. Most are not entitled to
share in their husbands’ pensions because of U.N. policy.

One woman from the Middle East who lives in a Manhattan
rooming house said her husband, a U.N. diplomat, left her
after 40 years of marriage. She won a support order, but knows
she may never collect.

Divorce is rarely simple, and is not always fair, but these women
have discovered it can be uniquely devastating for the spouse of
a U.N. staff member. Had her former husband not worked at the
United Nations, a court could have garnished his wages. But the
organization is exempt from legal process and refuses to execute
family court orders.

Come on. Why is this? If Pinochet’s immunity can be removed,
why can’t that of U.N. bureaucrats? The U.N. is a failure globally
even when it comes to its own wives and children. If the U.N.
can’t practice what it preaches on an individual basis, why is it allowed
to continue its dysfunctional global existence?

This is not a laughing matter. It is a criminal-crying matter!

The U.S was right in withdrawing from the UN Human Rights Council and other steps it has taken to disengage from the U.N.

Time the unemployable former government officials representing their countries at the UN — thanks to U.S. taxpayer dollars — realize they and the UN are a bad joke.

Good reason for Ambassador Nikki Haley to resign. She’s in pain from laughing so hard at…