Seek to reveal and understand little known documents, #RequiredStudies, #Understanding #GlobalTrends, #SocialMedia, #GeoPolitical #Governance, #WarringFactions, #Military Alliances, Energy Strategy, Displacement of Communities, The Islamic Alliance, Spirituality, Role of religions. and #population #Europe...
Soon to include #AI and #6G and #7G #technologies and finally the populations response. A movement is afoot.
Suffice to say: All are seen hearing, and the listeners... you finish the phrase.
Health Risk: 5G Ultra-High Frequency Radiation Is Coming
Home News Health Risk: 5G Ultra-High Frequency Radiation Is Coming
The 5G revolution is rushing toward us and it will bring a whole new era of harm from ultra-high microwave frequency radiation.
And those who raise their voices against the danger to our health and
our human rights to safety have been the subject of harassment,
intimidation and attempts to silence them.
“Stay out of the way of technological development.” – Tom Wheeler, FCC Chairman.
Doesn’t it sound like a threat?
On July 14, the FCC voted to unleash 5G
in the United States, approving sweeping Spectrum Frontiers rules to
make spectrum bands above 24 GHz available for 5G. Even though serious health risks are associated with the proliferation of cell phone technology, the attitude of the FCC seems to be ‘full speed ahead and damn the torpedoes.’
“And we are not done.” – Tom Wheeler, the insane.
The July 14 vote was preceded, a month
earlier, by a June 20th announcement by FCC chairman Tom Wheeler, in
which he enthusiastically heralded the coming rollout of 5g applications
and networks as a “game-changer” and a “national priority” that will
generate “tens of billions of dollars.”
Warning for humanity: The FCC automatically approves the use of untested frequencies.
The 5G network will use higher frequency
bands than previously thought possible – which are untested frequencies
of 24 to 100 GHz or more. Wheeler said that implementing the new
frequencies would necessitate new antennas – intended to aim and amplify
the signals – new infrastructure and a massive deployment of towers
throughout the United States.
The FCC is moving quickly to adapt 5G
technology. Wheeler said that Verizon and ATT will start 5g trials in
2017, with the first commercial deployments scheduled for 2020.
Specifically rejecting the notion of 5G being only for urban use,
Wheeler noted that all areas, including rural communities, will be
saturated.
In other words: No part of the country will be safe from ultra-high frequency signals.
With obvious relish, Wheeler spoke of
“turning innovators loose” to develop and adapt 5G and related networks.
And, as for those ‘annoying regulators’ – who could presumably stand
between us and harm from electromagnetic radiation – Wheeler rejects the
idea that these cautious people should be allowed to define our future.
Gestapo tactics are being used to silence criticism of 5G technology.
At the July 14th press conference,
Bloomberg News reporter Todd Shields had his press credentials
confiscated by members of the FCC security force. His offense? He was in
the act of speaking with safety advocates concerned about radiation,
who wanted to show him a tee shirt symbolizing their concerns.
Shields openly confronted Wheeler during
the press conference, relating how his credentials had been seized and
asking for comment. Wheeler told Shields he could have his credentials
back, but went on, unbelievably, to remind him that everyone who came to
the press conference had a duty to “behave responsibly.” (in other
words, follow orders or get out)
Who is behaving “responsibly” here – the
FCC chair who is shamelessly pushing 5G, or the activists who are
trying to hold him accountable? This video (below) says it all – judge
for yourself:
Bloggers note: And Extract from Speech: If you want to understand the role of the Church TOP Diplomat..read on .and of special interest to me:
a) Defending the right to life and physical integrity also means
safeguarding the right to health on the part of individuals and their
families.
b) it is painful to see how many fundamental rights continue to be violated
today. First among all of these is the right of every human person to
life, liberty and personal security.[9] It is not only war or violence
that infringes these rights. In our day, there are more subtle means: I
think primarily of innocent children discarded even before they are
born, unwanted at times simply because they are ill or malformed, or as a
result of the selfishness of adults.
C) I think of the elderly, who are often cast aside, especially when infirm
and viewed as a burden. I think of women who repeatedly suffer from
violence and oppression, even within their own families. I think too of
the victims of human trafficking, which violates the prohibition of
every form of slavery. How many persons, especially those fleeing from
poverty and war, have fallen prey to such commerce perpetrated by
unscrupulous individuals?
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis
to the Members of the Diplomatic Corps Accredited to the Holy See
Regia Hall, Vatican City
Monday, 8 January 2018
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen, Our meeting today is a welcome tradition that allows me, in the
enduring joy of the Christmas season, to offer you my personal best
wishes for the New Year just begun, and to express my closeness and
affection to the peoples you represent.
I thank the Dean of the
Diplomatic Corps, His Excellency Armindo Fernandes do Espírito Santo
Vieira, Ambassador of Angola, for his respectful greeting on behalf of
the entire Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See. I offer a
particular welcome to the non-resident Ambassadors, whose numbers have
increased following the establishment last May of diplomatic relations
with the Republic of the Union of Myanmar.
I likewise greet the growing
number of Ambassadors resident in Rome, which now includes the
Ambassador of the Republic of South Africa. I would like in a special
way to remember the late Ambassador of Colombia, Guillermo León
Escobar-Herrán, who passed away just a few days before Christmas.
I
thank all of you for your continuing helpful contacts with the
Secretariat of State and the other Dicasteries of the Roman Curia, which
testify to the interest of the international community in the Holy
See’s mission and the work of the Catholic Church in your respective
countries. This is also the context for the Holy See’s pactional
activities, which last year saw the signing, in February, of the
Framework Agreement with the Republic of the Congo, and, in August, of
the Agreement between the Secretariat of State and the Government of the
Russian Federation enabling the holders of diplomatic passports to
travel without a visa.
In its relations with civil authorities, the Holy See seeks only to
promote the spiritual and material well-being of the human person and to
pursue the common good. The Apostolic Journeys that I made during the
course of the past year to Egypt, Portugal, Colombia, Myanmar and
Bangladesh were expressions of this concern. I travelled as a pilgrim
to Portugal on the centenary of the apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima,
to celebrate the canonization of the shepherd children Jacinta and
Francisco Marto.
There I witnessed the enthusiastic and joyful faith
that the Virgin Mary roused in the many pilgrims assembled for the
occasion. In Egypt, Myanmar and Bangladesh too, I was able to meet the
local Christian communities that, though small in number, are
appreciated for their contribution to development and fraternal
coexistence in those countries.
Naturally, I also had meetings with
representatives of other religions, as a sign that our differences are
not an obstacle to dialogue, but rather a vital source of encouragement
in our common desire to know the truth and to practise justice.
Finally, in Colombia I wished to bless the efforts and the courage of
that beloved people, marked by a lively desire for peace after more than
half a century of internal conflict.
Dear Ambassadors,
This year marks the centenary of the end of the First World War, a
conflict that reconfigured the face of Europe and the entire world with
the emergence of new states in place of ancient empires. From the ashes
of the Great War, we can learn two lessons that, sad to say, humanity
did not immediately grasp, leading within the space of twenty years to a
new and even more devastating conflict.
The first lesson is that
victory never means humiliating a defeated foe. Peace is not built by
vaunting the power of the victor over the vanquished. Future acts of
aggression are not deterred by the law of fear, but rather by the power
of calm reason that encourages dialogue and mutual understanding as a
means of resolving differences.[1]
This leads to a second lesson: peace
is consolidated when nations can discuss matters on equal terms. This
was grasped a hundred years ago – on this very date – by the then
President of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, who proposed the
establishment of a general league of nations with the aim of promoting
for all states, great and small alike, mutual guarantees of independence
and territorial integrity. This laid the theoretical basis for that
multilateral diplomacy, which has gradually acquired over time an
increased role and influence in the international community as a whole.
Relations between nations, like all human relationships, “must
likewise be harmonized in accordance with the dictates of truth,
justice, willing cooperation, and freedom”.[2]
This entails “the
principle that all states are by nature equal in dignity”,[3]
as well as
the acknowledgment of one another’s rights and the fulfilment of their
respective duties.[4]
The basic premise of this approach is the
recognition of the dignity of the human person, since disregard and
contempt for that dignity resulted in barbarous acts that have outraged
the conscience of mankind.[5]
Indeed, as the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights affirms, “recognition of the inherent dignity and of the
equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the
foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world”.[6]
I would like to devote our meeting today to this important document,
seventy years after its adoption on 10 December 1948 by the General
Assembly of the United Nations. For the Holy See, to speak of human
rights means above all to restate the centrality of the human person,
willed and created by God in his image and likeness.
The Lord Jesus
himself, by healing the leper, restoring sight to the blind man,
speaking with the publican, saving the life of the woman caught in
adultery and demanding that the injured wayfarer be cared for, makes us
understand that every human being,
independent of his or her physical,
spiritual or social condition, is worthy of respect and consideration.
From a Christian perspective, there is a significant relation between
the Gospel message and the recognition of human rights in the spirit of
those who drafted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Those rights are premised on the nature objectively shared by the
human race. They were proclaimed in order to remove the barriers that
divide the human family and to favour what the Church’s social doctrine
calls integral human development, since it entails fostering “the
development of each man and of the whole man… and humanity as a
whole”.[7] A reductive vision of the human person, on the other hand,
opens the way to the growth of injustice, social inequality and
corruption.
It should be noted, however, that over the years, particularly in the
wake of the social upheaval of the 1960’s, the interpretation of some
rights has progressively changed, with the inclusion of a number of “new
rights” that not infrequently conflict with one another.
This has not
always helped the promotion of friendly relations between nations,[8]
since debatable notions of human rights have been advanced that are at
odds with the culture of many countries; the latter feel that they are
not respected in their social and cultural traditions, and instead
neglected with regard to the real needs they have to face.
Somewhat
paradoxically, there is a risk that, in the very name of human rights,
we will see the rise of modern forms of ideological colonization by the
stronger and the wealthier, to the detriment of the poorer and the most
vulnerable.
At the same time, it should be recalled that the traditions
of individual peoples cannot be invoked as a pretext for disregarding
the due respect for the fundamental rights proclaimed by the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights.
At a distance of seventy years, it is painful to see how many
fundamental rights continue to be violated today. First among all of
these is the right of every human person to life, liberty and personal
security.[9] It is not only war or violence that infringes these
rights.
In our day, there are more subtle means: I think primarily of
innocent children discarded even before they are born, unwanted at times
simply because they are ill or malformed, or as a result of the
selfishness of adults. I think of the elderly, who are often cast
aside, especially when infirm and viewed as a burden.
I think of women
who repeatedly suffer from violence and oppression, even within their
own families. I think too of the victims of human trafficking, which
violates the prohibition of every form of slavery.
How many persons,
especially those fleeing from poverty and war, have fallen prey to such
commerce perpetrated by unscrupulous individuals?
Defending the right to life and physical integrity also means
safeguarding the right to health on the part of individuals and their
families. Today this right has assumed implications beyond the original
intentions of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which sought
to affirm the right of every individual to receive medical care and
necessary social services.[10]
In this regard, it is my hope that
efforts will be made within the appropriate international forums to
facilitate, in the first place, ready access to medical care and
treatment on the part of all. It is important to join forces in order
to implement policies that ensure, at affordable costs, the provision of
medicines essential for the survival of those in need, without
neglecting the area of research and the development of treatments that,
albeit not financially profitable, are essential for saving human
lives.
Defending the right to life also entails actively striving for peace,
universally recognized as one of the supreme values to be sought and
defended. Yet serious local conflicts continue to flare up in various
parts of the world.
The collective efforts of the international
community, the humanitarian activities of international organizations
and the constant pleas for peace rising from lands rent by violence seem
to be less and less effective in the face of war’s perverse logic.
This scenario cannot be allowed to diminish our desire and our efforts
for peace. For without peace, integral human development becomes
unattainable.
Integral disarmament and integral development are intertwined.
Indeed, the quest for peace as a precondition for development requires
battling injustice and eliminating, in a non-violent way, the causes of
discord that lead to wars.
The proliferation of weapons clearly
aggravates situations of conflict and entails enormous human and
material costs that undermine development and the search for lasting
peace. The historic result achieved last year with the adoption of the
Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons at the conclusion of the
United Nations Conference for negotiating a legally binding instrument
to ban nuclear arms, shows how lively the desire for peace continues to
be. The promotion of a culture of peace for integral development calls
for unremitting efforts in favour of disarmament and the reduction of
recourse to the use of armed force in the handling of international
affairs. I would therefore like to encourage a serene and wide-ranging
debate on the subject, one that avoids polarizing the international
community on such a sensitive issue. Every effort in this direction,
however modest, represents an important step for mankind.
For its part, the Holy See signed and ratified, also in the name of
and on behalf of Vatican City State, the Treaty on the Prohibition of
Nuclear Weapons. It did so in the belief, expressed by Saint John XXIII
in Pacem in Terris, that “justice, right reason, and the recognition of
man’s dignity cry out insistently for a cessation to the arms race.
The stockpiles of armaments which have been built up in various
countries must be reduced all round and simultaneously by the parties
concerned. Nuclear weapons must be banned”.[11] Indeed, even if “it is
difficult to believe that anyone would dare to assume responsibility
for initiating the appalling slaughter and destruction that war would
bring in its wake, there is no denying that the conflagration could be
started by some chance and unforeseen circumstance”.[12]
The Holy See therefore reiterates the firm conviction “that any
disputes which may arise between nations must be resolved by negotiation
and agreement, not by recourse to arms”.[13] The constant production
of ever more advanced and “refined” weaponry, and dragging on of
numerous conflicts – what I have referred to as “a third world war
fought piecemeal” – lead us to reaffirm Pope John’s statement that “in
this age which boasts of its atomic power, it no longer makes sense to
maintain that war is a fit instrument with which to repair the violation
of justice…
Nevertheless, we are hopeful that, by establishing contact
with one another and by a policy of negotiation, nations will come to a
better recognition of the natural ties that bind them together as men.
We are hopeful, too, that they will come to a fairer realization of one
of the cardinal duties deriving from our common nature: namely, that
love, not fear, must dominate the relationships between individuals and
between nations. It is principally characteristic of love that it draws
men together in all sorts of ways, sincerely united in the bonds of
mind and matter; and this is a union from which countless blessings can
flow”.[14]
In this regard, it is of paramount importance to support every effort
at dialogue on the Korean peninsula, in order to find new ways of
overcoming the current disputes, increasing mutual trust and ensuring a
peaceful future for the Korean people and the entire world.
It is also important for the various peace initiatives aimed at
helping Syria to continue, in a constructive climate of growing trust
between the parties, so that the lengthy conflict that has caused such
immense suffering can finally come to an end. Our shared hope is that,
after so much destruction, the time for rebuilding has now come.
Yet
even more than rebuilding material structures, it is necessary to
rebuild hearts, to re-establish the fabric of mutual trust, which is the
essential prerequisite for the flourishing of any society.
There is a
need, then, to promote the legal, political and security conditions that
restore a social life where every citizen, regardless of ethnic and
religious affiliation, can take part in the development of the country.
In this regard, it is vital that religious minorities be protected,
including Christians, who for centuries have made an active contribution
to Syria’s history.
It is likewise important that the many refugees who have found
shelter and refuge in neighbouring countries, especially in Jordan,
Lebanon and Turkey, be able to return home. The commitment and efforts
made by these countries in this difficult situation deserve the
appreciation and support of the entire international community, which is
also called upon to create the conditions for the repatriation of
Syrian refugees.
This effort must concretely start with Lebanon, so
that that beloved country can continue to be a “message” of respect and
coexistence, and a model to imitate, for the whole region and for the
entire world.
The desire for dialogue is also necessary in beloved Iraq, to enable
its various ethnic and religious groups to rediscover the path of
reconciliation and peaceful coexistence and cooperation. Such is the
case too in Yemen and other parts of the region, and in Afghanistan.
I think in particular of Israelis and Palestinians, in the wake of
the tensions of recent weeks. The Holy See, while expressing sorrow for
the loss of life in recent clashes, renews its pressing appeal that
every initiative be carefully weighed so as to avoid exacerbating
hostilities, and calls for a common commitment to respect, in conformity
with the relevant United Nations Resolutions, the status quo of
Jerusalem, a city sacred to Christians, Jews and Muslims.
Seventy years
of confrontation make more urgent than ever the need for a political
solution that allows the presence in the region of two independent
states within internationally recognized borders. Despite the
difficulties, a willingness to engage in dialogue and to resume
negotiations remains the clearest way to achieving at last a peaceful
coexistence between the two peoples. In national contexts, too, openness and availability to encounter are
essential.
I think especially of Venezuela, which is experiencing an
increasingly dramatic and unprecedented political and humanitarian
crisis. The Holy See, while urging an immediate response to the primary
needs of the population, expresses the hope that conditions will be
created so that the elections scheduled for this year can resolve the
existing conflicts, and enable people to look to the future with
newfound serenity.
Nor can the international community overlook the suffering of many
parts of the African continent, especially in South Sudan, the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia, Nigeria and the Central
African Republic, where the right to life is threatened by the
indiscriminate exploitation of resources, terrorism, the proliferation
of armed groups and protracted conflicts.
It is not enough to be
appalled at such violence. Rather, everyone, in his or her own
situation, should work actively to eliminate the causes of misery and
build bridges of fraternity, the fundamental premise for authentic human
development.
A shared commitment to rebuilding bridges is also urgent in Ukraine.
The year just ended reaped new victims in the conflict that afflicts
the country, continuing to bring great suffering to the population,
particularly to families who live in areas affected by the war and have
lost their loved ones, not infrequently the elderly and children.
I would like to devote a special thought to families. The right to
form a family, as a “natural and fundamental group unit of society… is
entitled to protection by society and the state”,[15] and is recognized
by the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Unfortunately, it is
a fact that, especially in the West, the family is considered an
obsolete institution. Today fleeting relationships are preferred to the
stability of a definitive life project. But a house built on the sand
of frail and fickle relationships cannot stand. What is needed instead
is a rock on which to build solid foundations.
And this rock is
precisely that faithful and indissoluble communion of love that joins
man and woman, a communion that has an austere and simple beauty, a
sacred and inviolable character and a natural role in the social
order.[16] I consider it urgent, then, that genuine policies be adopted
to support the family, on which the future and the development of
states depend. Without this, it is not possible to create societies
capable of meeting the challenges of the future. Disregard for families
has another dramatic effect – particularly present in some parts of the
world – namely, a decline in the birth rate.
We are experiencing a
true demographic winter! This is a sign of societies that struggle to
face the challenges of the present, and thus become ever more fearful of
the future, with the result that they close in on themselves.
At the same time, we cannot forget the situation of families torn
apart by poverty, war and migration. All too often, we see with our own
eyes the tragedy of children who, unaccompanied, cross the borders
between the south and the north of our world, and often fall victim to
human trafficking.
Today there is much talk about migrants and migration, at times only
for the sake of stirring up primal fears. It must not be forgotten that
migration has always existed. In the Judeo-Christian tradition, the
history of salvation is essentially a history of migration.
Nor should
we forget that freedom of movement, for example, the ability to leave
one’s own country and to return there, is a fundamental human
right.[17]There is a need, then, to abandon the familiar rhetoric and
start from the essential consideration that we are dealing, above all,
with persons.
This is what I sought to reiterate in my Message for the World Day of
Peace celebrated on 1 January last, whose theme this year is: “Migrants
and Refugees: Men and Women in Search of Peace”. While acknowledging
that not everyone is always guided by the best of intentions, we must
not forget that the majority of migrants would prefer to remain in their
homeland. Instead, they find themselves “forced by discrimination,
persecution, poverty and environmental degradation” to leave it behind…
“Welcoming others requires concrete commitment, a network of assistance
and good will, vigilant and sympathetic attention, the responsible
management of new and complex situations that at times compound numerous
existing problems, to say nothing of resources, which are always
limited.
By practising the virtue of prudence, government leaders
should take practical measures to welcome, promote, protect, integrate
and, ‘within the limits allowed by a correct understanding of the common
good, to permit [them] to become part of a new society’ (Pacem in
Terris, 57). Leaders have a clear responsibility towards their own
communities, whose legitimate rights and harmonious development they
must ensure, lest they become like the rash builder who miscalculated
and failed to complete the tower he had begun to construct” (cf. Lk
14:28-30).[18]
I would like once more to thank the authorities of those states who
have spared no effort in recent years to assist the many migrants
arriving at their borders. I think above all of the efforts made by
more than a few countries in Asia, Africa and the Americas that welcome
and assist numerous persons. I cherish vivid memories of my meeting in
Dhaka with some members of the Rohingya people, and I renew my
sentiments of gratitude to the Bangladeshi authorities for the
assistance provided to them on their own territory.
I would also like to express particular gratitude to Italy, which in
these years has shown an open and generous heart and offered positive
examples of integration. It is my hope that the difficulties that the
country has experienced in these years, and whose effects are still
felt, will not lead to forms of refusal and obstruction, but instead to a
rediscovery of those roots and traditions that have nourished the rich
history of the nation and constitute a priceless treasure offered to the
whole world.
I likewise express my appreciation for the efforts made
by other European states, particularly Greece and Germany. Nor must it
be forgotten that many refugees and migrants seek to reach Europe
because they know that there they will find peace and security, which
for that matter are the fruit of a lengthy process born of the ideals of
the Founding Fathers of the European project in the aftermath of the
Second World War. Europe should be proud of this legacy, grounded on
certain principles and a vision of man rooted in its millenary history,
inspired by the Christian conception of the human person.
The arrival
of migrants should spur Europe to recover its cultural and religious
heritage, so that, with a renewed consciousness of the values on which
the continent was built, it can keep alive her own tradition while
continuing to be a place of welcome, a herald of peace and of
development.
In the past year, governments, international organizations and civil
society have engaged in discussions about the basic principles,
priorities and most suitable means for responding to movements of
migration and the enduring situations involving refugees. The United
Nations, following the 2016 New York Declaration for Refugees and
Migrants, has initiated important preparations for the adoption of the
two Global Compacts for refugees and for safe, orderly and regular
migration respectively.
The Holy See trusts that these efforts, with the negotiations soon to
begin, will lead to results worthy of a world community growing ever
more independent and grounded in the principles of solidarity and mutual
assistance. In the current international situation, ways and means are
not lacking to ensure that every man and every woman on earth can enjoy
living conditions worthy of the human person.
In the Message for this year’s World Day of Peace, I suggested four
“mileposts” for action: welcoming, protecting, promoting and
integrating.[19] I would like to dwell particularly on the last of
these, which has given rise to various opposed positions in the light of
varying evaluations, experiences, concerns and convictions.
Integration is a “two-way process”, entailing reciprocal rights and
duties.
Those who welcome are called to promote integral human
development, while those who are welcomed must necessarily conform to
the rules of the country offering them hospitality, with respect for its
identity and values.
Processes of integration must always keep the
protection and advancement of persons, especially those in situations of
vulnerability, at the centre of the rules governing various aspects of
political and social life.
The Holy See has no intention of interfering in decisions that fall
to states, which, in the light of their respective political, social and
economic situations, and their capacities and possibilities for
receiving and integrating, have the primary responsibility for accepting
newcomers.
Nonetheless, the Holy See does consider it its role to
appeal to the principles of humanity and fraternity at the basis of
every cohesive and harmonious society. In this regard, its interaction
with religious communities, on the level of institutions and
associations, should not be forgotten, since these can play a valuable
supportive role in assisting and protecting, in social and cultural
mediation, and in pacification and integration.
Among the human rights that I would also like to mention today is the
right to freedom of thought, conscience and of religion, including the
freedom to change religion.[20] Sad to say, it is well-known that the
right to religious freedom is often disregarded, and not infrequently
religion becomes either an occasion for the ideological justification of
new forms of extremism or a pretext for the social marginalization of
believers, if not their downright persecution.
The condition for
building inclusive societies is the integral comprehension of the human
person, who can feel himself or herself truly accepted when recognized
and accepted in all the dimensions that constitute his or her identity,
including the religious dimension.
Finally, I wish to recall the importance of the right to employment.
There can be no peace or development if individuals are not given the
chance to contribute personally by their own labour to the growth of the
common good. Regrettably, in many parts of the world, employment is
scarcely available.
At times, few opportunities exist, especially for
young people, to find work. Often it is easily lost not only due to the
effects of alternating economic cycles, but to the increasing use of
ever more perfect and precise technologies and tools that can replace
human beings. On the one hand, we note an inequitable distribution of
the work opportunities, while on the other, a tendency to demand of
labourers an ever more pressing pace.
The demands of profit, dictated
by globalization, have led to a progressive reduction of times and days
of rest, with the result that a fundamental dimension of life has been
lost – that of rest – which serves to regenerate persons not only
physically but also spiritually. God himself rested on the seventh day;
he blessed and consecrated that day “because on it he rested from all
the work that he had done in creation” (Gen 2:3). In the alternation of
exertion and repose, human beings share in the “sanctification of time”
laid down by God and ennoble their work, saving it from constant
repetition and dull daily routine.
A cause for particular concern are the data recently published by the
International Labour Organization regarding the increase of child
labourers and victims of the new forms of slavery.
The scourge of
juvenile employment continues to compromise gravely the physical and
psychological development of young people, depriving them of the joys of
childhood and reaping innocent victims. We cannot think of planning a
better future, or hope to build more inclusive societies, if we continue
to maintain economic models directed to profit alone and the
exploitation of those who are most vulnerable, such as children.
Eliminating the structural causes of this scourge should be a priority
of governments and international organizations, which are called to
intensify efforts to adopt integrated strategies and coordinated
policies aimed at putting an end to child labour in all its forms.
Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
In recalling some of the rights contained in the 1948 Universal
Declaration, I do not mean to overlook one of its important aspects,
namely, the recognition that every individual also has duties towards
the community, for the sake of “meeting the just requirements of
morality, public order and the general welfare in a democratic
society”.[21]
The just appeal to the rights of each human being must
take into account the fact that every individual is part of a greater
body. Our societies too, like every human body, enjoy good health if
each member makes his or her own contribution in the awareness that it
is at the service of the common good.
Among today’s particularly pressing duties is that of caring for our
earth. We know that nature can itself be cruel, even apart from human
responsibility. We saw this in the past year with the earthquakes that
struck different parts of our world, especially those of recent months
in Mexico and in Iran, with their high toll of victims, and with the
powerful hurricanes that struck different countries of the Caribbean,
also reaching the coast of the United States, and, more recently, the
Philippines.
Even so, one must not downplay the importance of our own
responsibility in interaction with nature. Climate changes, with the
global rise in temperatures and their devastating effects, are also a
consequence of human activity. Hence there is a need to take up, in a
united effort, the responsibility of leaving to coming generations a
more beautiful and livable world, and to work, in the light of the
commitments agreed upon in Paris in 2015, for the reduction of gas
emissions that harm the atmosphere and human health.
The spirit that must guide individuals and nations in this effort can
be compared to that of the builders of the medieval cathedrals that dot
the landscape of Europe. These impressive buildings show the
importance of each individual taking part in a work that transcends the
limits of time. The builders of the cathedrals knew that they would not
see the completion of their work.
Yet they worked diligently, in the
knowledge that they were part of a project that would be left to their
children to enjoy. These, in turn, would embellish and expand it for
their own children. Each man and woman in this world – particularly
those with governmental responsibilities – is called to cultivate the
same spirit of service and intergenerational solidarity, and in this way
to be a sign of hope for our troubled world.
With these thoughts, I renew to each of you, to your families and to
your peoples, my prayerful good wishes for a year filled with joy, hope
and peace. Thank you.
[1] Cf. JOHN XXIII, Encyclical Letter Pacem in Terris, 11 April 1963, 90.
[2] Ibid., 80.
[3] Ibid., 86.
[4] Ibid., 91.
[5]Cf. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 10 December 1948.
[6] Ibid. Preamble.
[7] PAUL VI, Encyclical Letter Populorum Progressio, 26 March 1967, 14.
[8] Cf. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Preamble.
[9] Cf. ibid., Art.3.
[10] Cf. ibid., Art. 25.
[11] Pacem in Terris, 112.
[12] Ibid., 111.
[13] Ibid., 126.
[14] Ibid., 127 and 129.
[15] Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Art. 16.
[16] Cf. PAUL VI, Address in the Basilica of the Annunciation in Nazareth, 5 January 1964.
[17] Cf. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Art. 13.
[18] FRANCIS, Message for the 2018 World Day of Peace, 13 November 2017, 1.
[19] Ibid., 4.
[20] Cf. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Art. 18.
[21]Ibid., Art. 29.