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Who wrote the rules, for the rules based order ?

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Nations and their voters, mostly after WWII, in order to prevent the return of fascism. See the universal declaration of human rights of the UN.
See Americans kill all civility to prevent peace
See the ecosystem itself targeted to prevent that rules based socialism. See everyone deny and hate me for a distraction.
Enjoy fascism and shhhhhh. Or be targeted.
Sorry your question trigggers the Big American Blackball of indifference! The low numbers of responses should tell you that you are making sense.
@Roundandroundwego
...rules based socialism...
The vast majority of us actually don't want that.
@Bel6EQUJ5 was there a vote? The UN was founded with those rules. People don't want peace,? I'm sorry you think that, but wars aren't even legal. And votes should be taken.
@Roundandroundwego Well, during the late 1980's and into the early 90's, the people of East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Rumania, Bulgaria, Albania, Yugoslavia, Mongolia and the USSR effectively rejected socialism, which is why the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics no longer exists. Socialism is now not working in places like Venezuela and North Korea, but the people in those countries are effectively hostages, and they can't break free.
@Bel6EQUJ5 I'm sure you understand that's a lie, you know that Ukraine and Americans were involved when eighty percent of all soviets rejected the break up, but USA and Ukraine got their way. Yes you did know about it and nobody thinks you would ever have enough brains or honesty to discuss history. But Americans like that are dangerous. We probably won't survive you and your lies.
@Roundandroundwego A lie. Right. The East German government had to build a great, big beautiful wall right through the city of Berlin in order to keep all those nasty and poor West Germans from flooding the glorious Worker's Paradise that was the DDR.
And yes, I know about the referendum that was held in 1990 asking the Soviet people if they wanted to preserve the USSR. The majority (approx. 70%) voted 'Yes', but then it was Yeltsin (not the Ukrainians) who pushed hardest for the dissolution of the USSR, and Gorbachev and his "reforms" that ultimately allowed him to do that. It was one of the (very few, perhaps only) time people actually voted to keep the socialist system they had, but if you were to ask the average person today if they want socialism, they'll clearly say 'No'.
It appears to be the case that only the young and college "educated", who are supported by their rich parents, like the idea of socialism, and no one else. Well, maybe old hippies too.
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