Peace Begins Where Countries End: No borders. No armies. No blood.
The Earth does not belong to us — we belong to it. Long before our borders were drawn, the animal kingdom walked these lands freely, shaping ecosystems with no need for ownership or violence. What if belonging was not a matter of nationality, but of shared existence? Recognition that we are free to roam, not as invaders or outsiders, but as fellow inhabitants.
ROLAND AZAR: We were born into borders we never consented to. Lines carved by conquest, guarded by fear, and worshipped like gods. Yet the sky remains undivided, the oceans unclaimed. A bird crosses continents without a visa. A wolf roams territories without a flag. Only we, the self-proclaimed stewards of Earth, build fences around freedom and call it country—or civilization. We raise armies to defend imaginary lines, stockpile weapons to protect what was never truly ours. And for these lines—these illusions—we spill blood, wage wars, bury generations beneath flags that flutter over graves.
But the Earth does not belong to us — we belong to it. Long before our borders were drawn, the animal kingdom walked these lands freely, shaping ecosystems with no need for ownership or violence. What if belonging was not a matter of nationality, but of shared existence? What if peace required no defense—no armies, no weapons, no spilled blood—only recognition? Recognition that we are free to roam, not as invaders or outsiders, but as fellow inhabitants — moving from one place to another as freely as we walk through a city, or cross into a neighboring land. All that’s required is respect — for the systems, the rules, the ways of life that shape each place. Not domination, not assimilation — just presence, and reverence. SOURCE…
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