
Pope Francis presented himself as a champion of the poor and dispossessed in a sweeping address to the United Nations on Friday, urging world leaders to adopt concrete solutions to combat widespread poverty and environmental destruction.
Francis, who is in New York as part of a weeklong visit to the United States, is the fifth pope to address the United Nations, and his speech followed a familiar papal formula.
First, the Pope laid out his moral vision for a more just world, arguing for a series of “sacred rights,” including labor, land and lodging.
Adopting the urgent tone of a disappointed prophet, he then cataloged the most pressing problems facing humanity — from drug trafficking to the nuclear arms race and the rise of an “all-powerful elite” that hoards wealth and resources.
“In effect, a selfish and boundless thirst for power and material prosperity leads both to the misuse of available natural resources and to the exclusion of the weak and disadvantaged,” Francis said.
Lastly, the Pope offered ideas for world leaders to consider.
Here’s exactly what the Pope thinks is wrong with the world, followed by his suggestions for fixing them:
Powerful elites rule the world
Poor countries don’t have a real presence in the United Nations, and poor people don’t have a voice in international aid programs and projects, the Pope said.
“To enable these real men and women to escape from extreme poverty,” he said, “we must allow them to be dignified agents of their own destiny.”
Talk, talk, talk
World leaders seem not to realize that while they hedge, real people suffer, Francis said. When they finally do find a solution, it is often imposed without thought to local realities.
“In wars and conflicts, there are individual persons, our brothers and sisters, men and women, young and old, boys and girls who weep, suffer and die,” he said, “human beings who are easily discarded when our only response is to draw up lists of problems, strategies and disagreements.”

Using the United Nations for ill intentions
While praising the U.N. as an important instrument for good, the Pope also noted that certain countries have been able to manipulate the international body, using it “to mask spurious ends.”
Noting the conflicts in Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, Libya, South Sudan, Francis said some countries have used the U.N. not to solve problems, but “as a means of masking spurious intentions.”
“These realities should serve as a grave summons to an examination of conscience on the part of those charged with the conduct of international affairs.”
’United by fear and distrust’
Nuclear weapons are poor instruments of peace, the Pope said, frankly dismissing the idea that no one will use bombs if everybody has them.
“An ethics and a law based on the threat of mutual destruction — and possibly the destruction of all mankind,” he said, “are self-contradictory and an affront to the entire framework of the United Nations, which would end up as nations united by fear and distrust.”
No checks, no balances
World leaders can draw up all the treaties and programs they want, the Pope said. But if there are no ways of enforcing decisions, they remain useless white papers.
“The number and complexity of the problems require that we possess technical instruments of verification,” Francis said.
But even those “instruments” can become bureaucratic mazes in which real solutions recede into a hazy horizon, he said.

“We cannot permit ourselves to postpone ’certain agendas’ for the future,” the Pope said.
“The future demands of us critical and global decisions in the face of worldwide conflicts which increase the number of the excluded and those in need.”