Frank Furedi Discusses Instability in the Global Sphere at the Geopolitical Summit  

Frank Füredi delivers his keynote speech on the second day of the Danube Institute–Heritage Geopolitical Summit.
Tamás Gyurkovits/Hungarian Conservative
Professor Frank Füredi explained that he is concerned about how cultural issues and conflicts are able to influence geopolitical and military issues in the world in his opening keynote speech at the Danube Institute Geopolitical Summit.

Executive Director of MCC Brussels Frank Furedi opened Day Two of the Fourth Geopolitical Summit in Budapest. He highlighted that the cultural conflicts of the world have gradually filtered from universities into the domain of other institutions, and also into the foreign policy establishment. These cultural conflicts inflict themselves on military as well, he warned.

Frank Furedi added that culture is gradually becoming intertwined with geopolitics and the conduct of war. War, and discussion of war have very important cultural dimensions now, with internal cultural conflicts in the West often inform geopolitical decisions as a result.

PHOTO: Tamás Gyurkovits/Hungarian Conservative

He continued by saying that humanitarianism and human rights gradually became politicized after WWII. Human rights were detached from what their the basic principles once were. He opined that if one gives such importance for cultural conflicts, it can disorient geopolitical affairs entirely. He gave the example of the US, where identity-based NGO’s play a role in influencing politics and politicians.

He also mentioned ‘the queering of foreign policy’ in Canada, where LGBTQ rights are the main focus of foreign policy orientation. Internal cultural conflicts thus get externalized. He recalled that the nuclear administration chief in the Biden administration, Sneha Nair penned an op-ed about ‘queering nuclear weapons’, where she attacked the nuclear committee for consisting only of ‘cis heteronormative’ people.

PHOTO: Tamás Gyurkovits/Hungarian Conservative

Mr Furedi said his concern is that identity politics emphasize the victim status of humanity, its inability to cope with the challenges of life. He opined that this risk-averse culture has become the centre in foreign politics, meaning that the West displays a risk-averse behaviour toward the conduct of war, too. He concluded that if this phenomenon persists, it will result in instability in the global sphere.


More from the event:

Multipolarity in a Changing World Discussed at Danube–Heritage Geopolitical Summit
Danube Institute Geopolitical Summit Kicks Off with Keynote Speech from Balázs Orbán
Day 1 of Danube–Heritage Geopolitical Summit Concludes with Discussions on Energy and Closing Remarks
Professor Frank Füredi explained that he is concerned about how cultural issues and conflicts are able to influence geopolitical and military issues in the world in his opening keynote speech at the Danube Institute Geopolitical Summit.

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