On the turn of the year, I see that some Iranian friends,
who post New Year’s Eve wishes, are being subject to ridicule by some others. There might be a lot of different reasons for that ridicule, an important
one being the western or occidental values expressed by the ones, who are oriental, posting such wishes.
It is absolutely
legitimate to be funny, of good sense of humor, and make people laugh. But
making fun of people for being open to new cultures and amenable to cultural
changes is simply a signal of cultural regress and having a mind full of
prejudices and bigotry. Those satirists, if we may call them so, often project cultural
protectionist attitudes as well, the same sorts of attitudes that
have found their way to the public policy. Compare the weekends in Iran (Thursdays
and Fridays) with those in the rest of the world!
The world is
changing fast and one has to be agile in his adaptations. Waves of
globalization have swept away many barriers and if we are fearful of facing the forces of globalization, for whatever reason, we will soon become irrelevant. Adaptation is and will be the key for the survival of any nation as well as any individual. To paraphrase Keynes, when the world changes, I
change my mind, manners, demeanors, and customs and adapt my life style
accordingly. What do you do, Sir/Madam?
We know of the old
adage, “if you can’t beat them, join them”. If a country or a culture cannot
establish its norms as the dominant one with the greatest number of countries
and cultures in its network, it is imperative for that country to shift to the
norms of the dominant culture, and to shift quickly. Do we know how much it
costs to have different weekends (Thursdays and Fridays) from those of the rest of the
world?
If we do not join them in time, we will become, to borrow from Thomas Friedman, roadkills of global highway. After the killing, it is not important to know who killed the roadkill, but it is important to learn the lesson on how not to come to a standstill or reverse on the global highway.
If we do not join them in time, we will become, to borrow from Thomas Friedman, roadkills of global highway. After the killing, it is not important to know who killed the roadkill, but it is important to learn the lesson on how not to come to a standstill or reverse on the global highway.
It is an omnipresent fact that there are always those fainéants
who ridicule those who do things. Ignoring the former is the most virtuous and
gracious response by the latter. If we are not able to do things, or we are not
amenable to changes, perhaps we are the one who is to be ridiculed and
criticized. Fortunately enough, throughout history the former (fainéants)
are the losers, for had they been winners, we would have been living in
antiquity, if not in the Stone Age, for good.
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