International-Aid

The UN Peacebuilding Commission's 'Emotional Reconciliation Metrics' Now Require Every Post-Conflict Nation to Submit Quarterly 'Grief Audits' Before Receiving Reconstruction Aid

GENEVA — When you hear the word “reconciliation,” you imagine something poetic — perhaps two warring tribes meeting under an olive tree, hands clasped, hearts healed by the Mediterranean sun. What you don’t imagine is a 487-page Excel spreadsheet, a mandatory “emotional baseline survey” administered by UN peacekeepers, and a three-month waiting period before your country can receive the next tranche of humanitarian aid.

To understand this, we must first return to 1947, when the world’s first formal post-conflict emotional assessment protocols were drafted by a committee of tired UN delegates who had too much coffee and not enough sleep. At the time, a simple handshake was deemed “adequate evidence of forgiveness.” Today, the same handshake must be accompanied by Form 88-B: Pre-Conflict Emotional Baseline Assessment, signed by at least one psychologist, one cultural anthropologist, and one UN-appointed “emotional metric auditor.”