The Problem With A Globalisation

idiot101

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You save for years, skimping and sacrificing. You book a flight to somewhere twenty thousand miles away. Jetlagged and discombobulated you go through immigration. The advertising billboards show Nike shoes and Channel perfume, the airport is the same concrete and glass of every other international airport in the world. The same carpet squares, the same exact airport benches with armrests. The taxi is a Honda, you pass the Golden Arches on the way to the hotel, there is Pizza on the menu and the house beer is Heineken.

The most popular soft drink in Kazakhstan is Coca-Cola, of course it is. Of the 195 countries in the world, only 10-12 countries sell more of something else. For five of those its Pepsi. Russia, Cuba and North Korea don’t count as they can't get it at all. “I was now in a country utterly different from any I had ever seen before.” Said Karamojo Bell. Well he can’t have written that from the lobby of any of the 9300+ marriott hotels in 144 countries.

Despite a lack of university education and to the surprise of everyone who has letters after their name, I do understand convergent evolution. That disparate animals evolve towards an optimum form to suit the task or the environment. It’s why sharks and dolphins share a similar hydrodynamic form, a tail for propulsion, fins. In a free market it’s also why all smartphones look and function identically. I know why it’s happened, I just wish it hadn’t.

The problem I think with globalisation is homogenisation. It’s hard to find oneself, to adventure, to get a change of perspective when the four corners of the earth look increasingly like your own backyard. The cynic might quote Hemmingway ““You can't get away from yourself by moving from one place to another.” but that’s kinda my point, I want to feel that because I’m in a place so completely different, that I must have changed too. In the office I’m a businessman, doing emails in my work voice. In the mountains I am the same man but at the same time now an adventurer transformed by the choice and followthrough of an adventure. I want that on a bigger scale. Ruark said the same thing of himself, he became a hunter by definition because he was hunting.

The theory behind globalisation is fantastic but each nation/region/city used to have its own bright colour of culture. Foods, fashions, music, smells, accents, identity. But we mixed all the bright vibrant oilpaints on the pallet until we ended up with a muddy brown, thank god it hasn't bled all the way through into every bit of countryside quite yet.

The thing is I’m going through a rich vein of books written before my parents and grandparents time, Days and Nights of Shikar by Mrs Baillie, Kingdom of the Elephant by Temple Perkins, John MacNab by John Buchan, The River runs through it by Norman Maclean, and I am struck by the vibrancy of them all, and how rich the world was pre-globalisation. Now maybe I’m looking at a glamourised past through rose tinted spectacles but it struck me that I’m a half boiled frog reading about how cool the water in the pot used to be and before too long it’ll be too late and even the tibetan monks will stop wearing orange just like the japanese stopped wearing robes and the world will be worse off.

Guess it’s time to stop whining about it and google ‘where has the lowest number of netflix subscriptions per capita’ and book a trip before it’s too late.

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Enjoy your trip. Hope you find your rough diamond.
 
Steinbeck bemoaned this in Travels with Charley. At that time he was talking about how national radio broadcasts were eroding regional accents and dialects.

Homogenous media does erode fashion and language and cuisine uniqueness.

It also allows me to have wonderful ethnic foods within a short distance of my house. It has benefits and costs.

But I agree it can be frustrating to travel and find things so similar to home. But you can seek out uniqueness. Don’t stay at the Marriott. Get an Airbnb or find a local boutique hotel or B&B.
 
I think its a double edged sword....

We just got back from a week in Seoul South Korea.
LOTS of American business in Korea of course.
But, that allowed us to stay with the familiar Hilton Hotel and the wife was able to have her Dunkin Donuts morning coffee...
We were also able to easily get off the tourist path to the local markets, shops, restaurants and experience some of the local culture.
We used UBER to get around. I didn't have to communicate in Korean and the driver didn't have to speak English. As long as we both understood how to work the App, all was well....
 
You're right in a lot of ways but that is just the default state that globalization has brought us.

It can be fought but you have to do the work yourself and just kind of glance over the parts that you can't change. When I went last year I had the mindset of wanting to recreate Hemmingway, Roosevelt, et. all. I told my PH I wanted to not see the fences as much as possible, I wanted to eat in the field when we could, I dressed in TAg safari shirts wearing Jim Green boots and hunting with a Hogbacked wooden stock rifle with Iron sites. I got a cartridge belt from Jaques and made sure we got off the truck as much as possible. I only drank the local beer.

I knew I had hit peak immersion when we stopped by the camera guy's house to get fishing poles and his wife started speaking Afrikaans to me since she thought I was the PH, not the client. NOt gonna lie, that felt good because I had settled into the trip I dreamed of.

Sure it was back to reality when we got back to the nice air conditioned lodge and but I did enjoy the AC and nearly unlimited private hot water shower.

GLobalization sucks but you can still carve out an "authentic" experience if look hard enough and Suspend disbelief a tiny bit where you have to.
 
Some band had a song back in the 80s maybe," you cant go back" But you can visit some places that have never left, Africa is basic in the bush. with AI coming on strong our grandkids will say "wish ID have lived back in the 20th century like grandpa. Well me too.
 
It’s like when my PH picked me up at Tambo with Bob Seger playing in the truck.
 
Same way in most of the populated United States. You could close your eyes and be in a town in Delaware, move to another state half way across the country and it's the same fast food joints, chain restaurants, shopping malls, Walmart, Target, car dealers, ad nauseum. I remember an old timer telling me about how he felt about this. He said "I've lived too long".
 
This is happening in spades in the American West. You literally cannot tell whether you are in Utah, Idaho, Montana, etc. Even the small towns are starting to look like cookie-cuter cutouts. Same shitty franchises displacing legacy restaurants, high-density housing, generic generic generic. I call it the Homogenization of the West.

The furthest I have ever felt from home was a place called Kula Mawe in Kenya. Kula Mawe means 'eat rocks'. That's about all that was out there. Was kinda nice.
 
Its not too late, there are still places you can go. But they are getting harder to find and harder to get to.

I found once you get out of the city, Namibia was a wonderfully different world. At least it was when I went there in 2016.
 
I think this is why I like the bush so much. I land in Dar es Salaam, huge city with a huge population; nothing very interesting; then off to bush camp where nothing but Swahili is spoken, the days are long and you are at piece with the world.
 
Go to any bar in the world and sing, ‘Take Me Home Country Roads!’, everyone there will know the words!
 
I love being where cell phones don’t work. Within a few years, the entire globe will be covered by Elon’s network. It’s all in beta form now. Eventually it will make ground based towers obsolete.

I’m not sure which would be better - a single three-month safari to old British East Africa in the days of steamships or multiple one or two-week trips in the sterilized jet-set age. Both have their perks. Every age has nostalgia for the one before, I suppose.
 
I admit, I often miss the days before cell phones and gps’s. The days when you kept a jerry can in the back of the pickup because it was 130 miles to the next gas station and you may need it, and a water bag hanging infront of the truck to help cool the radiator while crossing the desert. Of course you always had a few nickels, dimes and quarters in your pocket incase you needed to make a phone call at a phone booth, hopefully the gas station had one, which they usually did.

You can stll find some gems on the backroads no matter what country you’re in. Often the people are nicer away from the cities and their culture will express that. I once had a structural steel fabrication plant in the middle of Alabama. Their culture was different than mine, being I am from California. I found them very pleasant to be around and I love Southern cooking. Chicken Fried Steak, Mashed potatoes, Gravy, Greens fried pickles and Pie, makes my mouth water.

Sometimes you can find odd and interesting things in big cities. My wife is Belgian and she usually goes back home to visit family every year or two. When there she will spend a few days in Paris France. One year she took the kids with here. There they went into a McDonalds to see how it compared to the one’s here in the U.S. Well they all thought the burgers and fries there were better there. But the strange part was they served beer also. Go Figure, you wont see that here.

One more, my wife had a friend who, after she retired, she and her retired husband decided to take a trip to Europe. The only problem was her husband was deathly afraid of airplanes. Their solution, take the train from California to New York. Then they got on a Ocean Liner and sail to Europe and then they took the train and traveled all over Europe. It may have been more expensive but I bet it was more relaxing, they saw more, and had a more adventuristic time.

While we can’t escape the 21st Century I think if we keep our eyes open and do a little do diligence we will find things that we will cherish the rest of our life.
 
The problem I think with globalisation is homogenisation
It can be a problem, or a solution. But it is not feasible.

In my opinion, and contrary to popular belief: there is no "right" or "left".
Those are obsolete political terms.

Modern split is to: "globalists" and "sovereignists".

When we go to globalization part, we have a live model:

Modern EU (European union) is a micro project of globalist agenda.
It works like this:
EC (European commission, unelected body) brings out EU law directives.

Member states apply the law directives to national laws, with minor differences.
Then entire EU and its 27 member states have similar and compatible legislative, and for that they will get various European development funds.

Side effect is loss of sovereignty.
If a member state does not follow, it will pay fine, or at least not get various EU development funds.

Apply this to hunting, and globalization.
Make globalist hunting and fire arm law directives, apply them around the globe within a reasonable time frame under global legal directives. (which international body will regulate law directives, is separate question)

Implement similar game management systems globally, and go hunting to China, India or Kenya.

Well, it will never work.
At least not at our level of global cultural and political differences.
Even the European agenda faces the problems with various historical, political and economical member states interests.
 
The theory behind globalisation is fantastic but each nation/region/city used to have its own bright colour of culture. Foods, fashions, music, smells, accents, identity. But we mixed all the bright vibrant oilpaints on the pallet until we ended up with a muddy brown, thank god it hasn't bled all the way through into every bit of countryside quite yet...

Guess it’s time to stop whining about it and google ‘where has the lowest number of netflix subscriptions per capita’ and book a trip before it’s too late.

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I spent my first 10 years out of school traveling up to 8 months a year for work. I still travel now but it's more like a trip every other year. Initially, the bright colors of culture were a bit scary and intimidating. The 20 something me relished finding familiar. The more I travelled, the more I found my self seeking the color as things were turning muddy brown.
When you find the lowest number of netflix subscriptions per capita, let me know. I may meet you there.
 
Not just globalization but commercializing everything......

"Bubba Gump Shrimp Co." is the #1 sign that you are in a corporate tourist trap hell hole of a destination!

Destin Florida is the worst example of this I've seen, got dragged there on a family vacation a few years ago and I'll never go back.
 
I will admit that it was a bit of a disappointment when I saw that some of the shiny parts of Johannesburg looked more like the boutiques of Beverly Hills than the downtown of old Nairobi. When Disney World looks more like Africa than Africa does, it is time to call BS, lol.

Still, I told my PH that I wanted all the meals to be authentic African cuisine and to serve game meat as often as possible. We ate in the field often and I wore my favorite TAG Zimbabwe hunting vest most days as well as my old vintage Cabelas Safari line cotton shirts. Funny story. I am not really a huge fan of shorts for hunting unless I am up North where the heat is more common. Still while travelling from Free State to Limpopo one year, I had worn my favorite pair of African bush style hunting shorts and a vest from my outfitter that had his logo on it as well as one of their logo hats. We had stopped for fuel and a lunch break and I was minding the Land Cruiser while the PH went inside since our rifles were in the back. Another PH approached me in the car lot speaking in Afrikaans because he had mistaken me for a fellow PH. I speak the language enough to understand about every 4th word and was able to greet him and explain that I was the client not the PH. We both had a laugh and then he spotted my Cape Buffalo skull and got excited and asked if he could bring his clients over to see it? Of course we agreed and they all being bird hunters from Europe had a great time examining the heads, and chatting with us. I felt good knowing that on a bad day I could pass for an old fat PH, looking a bit hung over and tired, lol.

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