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United States Science

US To Withdraw From UNESCO Again (nature.com) 110

The United States will withdraw from UNESCO for the second time in eight years, with the departure taking effect December 31, 2026. The State Department announced the decision yesterday, ending the country's brief two-year return to the Paris-based United Nations science and cultural organization. The US previously withdrew from UNESCO in 2017, cutting off more than 22% of the agency's funding. The American contribution now represents 8% of UNESCO's current $900 million annual budget, making the financial impact less severe than the earlier withdrawal.

US To Withdraw From UNESCO Again

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  • by Moryath ( 553296 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @10:13PM (#65541148)
    These White-Supremacist Inbred Klan Losers are determined to isolate the USA from the world. Sigh.
  • Meanwhile (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @10:32PM (#65541180)

    https://www.independent.co.uk/... [independent.co.uk]

    $75 Billion allocated for ICE over the next four years.

    Cheeto claimed he was going after criminals but it turns that 75% of this group who were kidnapped to El Salvador had criminal records. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/w... [cbsnews.com]

    Remind me how arresting the guy doing kitchen prep work makes the country great again?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      The current administration is trying to free-up non-AI impacted jobs for Americans, and trying to force Americans to work those jobs by cutting Medicare and curtailing opportunities for women and minorities (certain Americans are more American than others). They think we can return a society and economy like the 1950s and 60s because they think AI and a cruchy-fascist oligarchy could give us a similar relative advantages vis-a-vis the rest of the world.

      But even if they fail or are just wrong, they see fewer

      • What if UNESCO used US funding for a hedge fund that profits more from investing in the US asset markets that Trump is boosting, thsn from relying on the US government for help?

      • by Targon ( 17348 )

        What jobs won't be AI impacted? Robotics will eliminate the vast majority of factory jobs, so what will the under-educated "I shouldn't need to go to college to find work" people do when there just aren't jobs they are educated enough to do? When you need to be worried about "unskilled people who don't speak our language" taking your job, that just shows that YOU don't have skills, so you compete with other "unskilled" people. These are the people who are against having the majority of people go a col

        • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

          "What jobs won't be AI impacted?"

          picking cotton

          • by Targon ( 17348 )

            That's a little further down the road, but those jobs will be done by robotics in the next 20 years as well.

        • What jobs won't be AI impacted?

          Most restaurant work would be one....

          • by Targon ( 17348 )

            Robotics as a field is about to surge, and food prep will be one of those things that many people will have a robot in their home for.

            • Robotics as a field is about to surge, and food prep will be one of those things that many people will have a robot in their home for.

              I doubt that in many cases....for instance, I happed to really ENJOY cooking....and prep work is part of it. I learned my knife skills for a good reason.

              And for restaurants that are at least a level or two above fast food...they're not going to want everything to be non-human perfect, etc....otherwise why go to any particular restaurant when the full experience would be j

            • by wed128 ( 722152 )
              How will people who don't have a job afford a food prep robot?
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        They think we can return a society and economy like the 1950s and 60s

        Worked for North Korea.

    • Re: Meanwhile (Score:1, Insightful)

      by subie ( 1062756 )

      If you geniuses weren't blocking access to prisons then ICE wouldn't be on the streets as much where other illegal immigrants get caught.

    • ArchieBunker> $75 Billion allocated for ICE over the next four years.

      One can't trust what they read, but I read that ICE is projected to outgrow the US Marines soon.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

      $75 Billion allocated for ICE over the next four years.

      Cheeto claimed he was going after criminals but it turns that 75% of this group who were kidnapped to El Salvador had criminal records

      Well....while it is best to clear out the REALLY bad guys first, anyone here in the US illegally....is a criminal and should be deported according to the laws on the books.

      And yes it IS a criminal offense under 8 US code 1325.

      And illegal re-entry after deportation is a more serious felony.

      I will agree that some sent

    • Your second link contradicts your description of the link. Minimal correction is "no criminal records", based on the content of the link. Was that your intention?

      However, I'm not sure how much of a legal defense that really is. Since ICE is acting outside of the law, they can just create crimes and criminal records as needed. They don't want to bother on a wholesale level, but if a particular case becomes too problematic, then they'll do it. Of course I'm thinking of the Garcia case, where he was deported,

    • Remind me how arresting the guy doing kitchen prep work makes the country great again?

      it disincentivizes people entering illegally, and creates more demand for those willing to come legally.
      allowing people to skip the line, enter and stay illegally is a disservice to those doing things by the rules.

      if the US needs more cheap labor, the US can allow more legal immigration--the US is the #1 immigration destination after all.
      and naturalizing illegal immigrants is not popular and always fails to pass.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @10:33PM (#65541182)
    ... that it's unreliable. Not just the UNESCO defunding, but also with playing chicken with tarrifs, pulling out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, and many more ..
    • by shm ( 235766 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @11:02PM (#65541234)

      Unreliable is not the word I would use.

      Transactional is more like it. Once you understand this, it becomes easier to work with them.

      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        Not sure about that. My friends who deal with abusive ex spouses with borderline personality disorder beg to differ with you. There is no satisfying people like that, and one person particular has managed to project his own propensities on an entire nation's relationships with other nations. The only way to deal with a person like that is to not deal with them at all.

        • If you don't play politics, will you end up ruled by your inferiors?

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          That isn't the same at all.

          What you have to understand is the scope of the transactions are quite narrow. Trump's policy is actually very Washingtonian, it does not embrace entanglement and relationships at all.

          Its you give me this, I'll give you that, and none of this speaks to whatever we may be haggling over a week from now. It is more like you walk into the hardware store, the guy is asking $0.30 a fascener and you say tell you what I need a bunch of these I'll give you $50 for all of them right now. H

          • I like your analogy, but it's a bit flawed, because politics and trade relationships are never one and done. When the US buys stuff from Canada or Mexico or whatever, it's not a single transaction. It's more you walk into the store, and you commit to buying 1000 fasteners each week, for as long as you live. The store has a sticker that says $0.30, but on a whim the guy changes it to $1, and after 10 min of talking you both agree to $0.50. After 3 weeks you come in to pick up your fasteners, and the store gu
      • Not really. If one partly unilaterally breaks agreements, there is no sense in negotiating new agreements. Some level of trust is required.

      • Unreliable is not the word I would use.

        Transactional is more like it. Once you understand this, it becomes easier to work with them.

        Almost every international relationship has been transactional. Aside from "oh, your tiny nation just suffered a massive natural disaster... we're going to send some folks and supplies to help you out", virtually everything has been.

        What's happened with the Trump administration is "every last drop of blood from the stone" transactional. It's sort of "with the old deal the US would gain 5 units of benefit and its partner would gain 5 units of benefit" is replaced by "with the new deal the US will gain 6

      • Transactional is more like it. Once you understand this, it becomes easier to work with them.

        American politicians will make decisions that make no sense from a transactional perspective because it gets them more votes. Also, they may be bribed to make bad decisions.

        Best to understand American policy as, "America always does that right thing, after all alternatives have been exhausted."

      • Unreliable is not the word I would use.

        Transactional is more like it. Once you understand this, it becomes easier to work with them.

        Nah. Transactional implies a level of coherence and planning that is clearly absent in the current administration.

    • by nickovs ( 115935 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @11:08PM (#65541250)
      Indeed. Not only has Trump been playing chicken (and chickening out) on tariffs, but his reneging on the deal with he struck Canada and Mexico in his last term and his statements about not honouring the commitments America has to NATO have underscored the fact the any deal he is willing to strike is not worth the paper that its written on. American industry will suffer badly as a result. Why would you want to predicate any major, long term projects on a suppliers who might suddenly be involved in a trade war or change their alliances with your enemies? Trump said he wanted to reshape global trade, and he will. The problem for him (and the people of the US) is that America will loose out when everyone else is striking deals without them (and sticking to them).
      • This.

      • but his reneging on the deal with he struck Canada and Mexico in his last term and his statements about not honouring the commitments America has to NATO have underscored the fact the any deal he is willing to strike is not worth the paper that its written on.

        Just like Hitler who wrote in Mein Kampf that he would never be held to any commitment he made on foreign affairs. Neither is Trumpskyy.

      • > any deal he is willing to strike is not worth the paper that its written on.

        Similar to a Trump university diploma. How can MAGA still not see the problem?
        • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

          MAGA is sold on the destruction of the country. All the damage is easily spun as virtue.

          It will only change when a critical mass of MAGA are personally harmed seriously enough. The plan is for there to be an unsurmountable hold on power before that happens.

      • The problem for him (and the people of the US) is that America will loose out when everyone else is striking deals without them (and sticking to them).

        People are stupid in unique ways. They will continue to do business and Trump will do his thing and his cronies will slurp up the mess. Yes, America will fall, but Trump and his cronies will profit mightily from the fall. What is the problem? Everything is working exactly as planned and everyone is happy to go along with it. *shrug*

        (why is everyone so happy to go along with a compromised leadership? it is blindly fucking obvious that Israel has our legislators by the balls (literally) and yet everyone just

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Foreign policy wonks have taken to describing the US as "agreement incapable", because to my knowledge just since the turn of the century there isn't a single major treaty or agreement that the country hasn't violated.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The rest of the world has been looking at America that way since at least the first Trump administration. China has been pushing that narrative in trade negotiations, painting itself as the stable, fair, non-judgemental partner.

      At this point I think until something happens to basically wipe out the Republicans as a political force, that perception of the US isn't going to change. At best we might get 4 years of moderate stability.

      By the way, that might also be why the Democrats are so useless. In the pursui

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      Transactional doesn't mean anything without consistency. To my mind the worst damage this administration is doing is to themselves in the longer term. What's the point of making any concessions for a deal at all if it will just not honor it? By defanging any oversight, and make itself its own enforcer, other parties really have no foundation upon which to assume that negotiated terms mean anything at all..

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @10:53PM (#65541218)
    Fixing the messes left by 8 years of republicans. We didn't get that this time. It's going to be rough.

    A lot of people reading this who own houses right now won't be owning them in the next 4 or 5 years. Your mortgage your property to pay for medicine or food and then the bank will take it when you can't make the payments.
  • by TheFerretman ( 6672292 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @10:54PM (#65541222)

    UNESCO hasn't done any real "science" in years anyway, and generally seems to be a waste of taxpayer money. Anything spedifically useful we can provide specific grants for.

    Ferret

    • Trump is evil. He does anything which will get him votes, no matter how awful.

      UNESCO has been taken over by the hateful woke ( which large non-profit organisations haven't ? ).

      A pox on both their houses.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      UNESCO stands for the "United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization" and was founded after WW2 to promote peace through international cooperation in education, science, and culture. UNESCO sites include Grand Canyon and the Statue of Liberty.
      • by Shag ( 3737 )

        UNESCO stands for the "United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization"
        and was founded after WW2 to promote peace through international cooperation in education, science, and culture.
        UNESCO sites include Grand Canyon and the Statue of Liberty.

        Yes, this. UNESCO doesn't "do" science, it promotes international cooperation in science. About twenty years ago, when George W. Bush was President, I went to UNESCO headquarters in Paris for the "Third Global Conference on Oceans, Coasts and Islands," convened by something called the " Global Ocean Forum [globaloceanforum.com]," led by the late Dr. Biliana Cicin-Sain. At that point in time, the Forum was hosted at the Gerard J. Mangone Center for Marine Policy at the University of Delaware.

        That was an age when the US saw value

    • It's good that you demonstrated all you know about an orgnaisation is based on one word in the organisation's title. And in interpreting that one word you used a no-true-scottsman fallacy.

      Thank god we have you there to determine what "real "science"" is, and that you give no fucks about the far larger cultural mission of the organisation.

    • Trump just added $3.4 trillion to the national debt. Saving taxpayer money is not really his thing.
    • UNESCO hasn't done any real "science" in years anyway

      That is not and has never been the purpose of UNESCO, it is not a research institute.

  • Trump is an idiot (Score:5, Insightful)

    by GrahamJ ( 241784 ) on Wednesday July 23, 2025 @11:56PM (#65541346)

    Trump has no idea what he's doing.

    • Trump is an attention whore, and a greedy person. I think what you meant to say is that Trump does not know what the President of the Untied States should be doing. Trump knows what he is doing. Trump is a good attention whore and greedy person.
    • by crtreece ( 59298 )
      Or, an even worse idea, he DOES know what he is doing.
  • ...constantly, isn't he drawing more attention to it?

    • If you watch CNN, and MSNBC, yes, Epstein is all they are talking about. Fox "news" is putting up anecdotes, and generalizing.
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        It'll be interesting to see how much that changes if Trump pisses off Rupert Murdoch enough.

  • F MAGAnderthals!

  • The US (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Thursday July 24, 2025 @03:27AM (#65541556) Homepage

    I think all international organisation are now realising:

    The US is entirely unreliable, especially when it comes to funding.

    I wouldn't bank on any of their promises or budgets any more. They've totally lost all credibility.

    And especially where anything humanitarian is concerned, I'd be treating them as a minor player just because of their variable attitude and flakiness now.

    I'd rather concentrate on those nations providing 5% reliably than one providing 8% but could disappear at any moment. And the longer this continues, the more it will be the way those organisations operate.

    The US held - rightly or not - some position of authority in these organisations and could quite well use the "what am I paying you for" lines with some justification (though always over-egged). Now it's just a partner the same as everyone else, but far more flaky and unpredictable.

    It's lovely to see them throw away so much influence so very quickly.

    • Re: The US (Score:2, Interesting)

      by subie ( 1062756 )

      Since all those countries don't trust us then they are more than welcome to use their own tax money to cover the difference. The only thing these countries want is for the US to pay for everything so they don't.

      • I guess itâ(TM)s time for the world to start collecting the debt and sever the ties then, no? The US regime can then mind their own business. They are welcome back when/if they change their mind. No hard feelings.
      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Exactly this!

        As to all the comments about 'extraordinary privilege' as the dollar trade goes..

        yeah well so is enjoying navigating seas largely free of piracy, having a ready source of weapons that actually work if you get invaded (even if you do have to "buy" them), being part of peace umbrella that is ONLY credible because of US power.

        By all means lets see the EU or anyone else deliver this stuff on its own.

        The real problem is Donald Trump lacks the courage to provide the demonstration that is evidently re

  • Besides UNWRA secretly supports Hamas....
  • Good, since UNESCO is captured by dictatorial anti-US regimes.

    But why is this in /.?

    • Good, since UNESCO is captured by dictatorial anti-US regimes.

      But why is this in /.?

      Well, now it will at least be free of authoritarian US regimes. Also wondering why this is /. material

  • What little good they do is far outweighed by how they support terror and tyranny.

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