In an alarming move, the Trump administration has decided to withdraw the United States from 66 international treaties, conventions, and organisations. This sweeping rejection spans a wide range of critical global efforts, from tackling climate change to addressing migration, protecting cultural heritage, and regulating the trade in timber and minerals.
As cultural anthropologist Anand Pandian observes, this decision reflects a troubling trend of “walls of indifference” being erected around the United States. Rather than acknowledging the profound interconnectedness of our world, American policymakers seem determined to insulate the country from its global responsibilities and relationships.
Pandian’s research paints a concerning picture of how this isolationist mindset has crept into the everyday lives of Americans. Fortified homes, bulked-up vehicles, and media that reinforces a divide between “insiders” and “outsiders” have all contributed to a growing sense of separation from the rest of the world. This antagonistic framing of self versus other makes it increasingly difficult for Americans to recognise their shared interests and common humanity with people beyond their borders.
The rejection of climate diplomacy and the embrace of fossil fuels by US leaders are not just policy decisions catering to powerful industries. They also reflect a deeply individualistic worldview that fails to grasp the interconnected nature of our global challenges and the shared responsibility required to address them. As Pandian argues, “the vicissitudes of global weather will increasingly take the shape of natural disasters” that do not respect national boundaries.
Figures like Martin Luther King Jr. long ago recognised this “inescapable network of mutuality,” where “whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” The activists Pandian interviewed in Newburgh, New York, who are fighting to protect their community’s water supply, exemplify this spirit of collective solidarity and watershed awareness.
Going it alone is a path to autocracy, not autonomy. As the Newburgh activist Gabrielle Hill eloquently stated, “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” The wellbeing of the United States is inextricably linked to the welfare of others around the world. Rejecting this truth in favour of isolationism and indifference is a dangerous gamble that threatens to unravel the “single garment of destiny” that binds us all.