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The U.N. General Assembly's vote to back the ICJ climate resolution is a landmark moment for climate justice. Fossil fuel infrastructure already threatens the health and livelihoods of roughly 2 billion people, and this resolution turns legal obligations into a real roadmap for accountability. Frontline nations like Vanuatu fought hard for this, and the overwhelming backing proves the world is ready to hold governments responsible for climate-driven human rights harms.
The U.N. resolution launders a non-binding court opinion into fake legal obligations, bypassing democratic consent and national sovereignty entirely. The ICJ advisory opinion was never agreed to by member states in a contentious case, yet the resolution treats it as ironclad law — a legally unfounded move that would let unelected bodies dictate energy policy. The U.S. was right to oppose this resolution, and more countries should have pushed back.