@MLClark Regarding the "(in)ability to respond effectively and ethically to atrocity" ...
I'm sure you know "Things to Come," H.G. Wells' 1936 film loosely based on his 1933 novel "The Shape of Things to Come." He posited the notion of an airborne benevolent dictatorship to impose international will on certain hotspots.
Our inability to respond in the real world is due to the fear that a "benevolent" dictatorship could turn malevolent. Sovereign nations don't want to be told what to do. (1/x)
@MLClark #StarTrek posited that WW3 finally cause humanity to mature. #TheOrville posited that the invention of the replicator made money and therefore poverty irrelevant, because people could make whatever they needed. (Yeah, but who decides who has access to a replicator?) (3/x)
@MLClark I don't see a solution. The grievances and grudges have been around for centuries.
Besides, certain sovereign nations are more than happy to use terrorists and extremist groups as proxies in their larger chess game. Iran won't spill its own blood, but it's sure happy to have Hamas attack Israel to distract us, which makes their ally Russia happy for reasons you know.
I don't see a "Wings over the World" in future, and I'm not sure we should have one.
Humanity sucks, amirite? <shrug>
@MLClark Sometimes atrocities are committed by supposed "benevolent" nations. The European colonists considered themselves benevolent, forcing their religions and cultures on the "heathens" while they looted natural resource. The U.S. thought it was in the right when it invaded Iraq in 2003. And, of course, Vietnam ... (2/x)