So where do they look for images?    Japan has too many people on too little
land with no natural resources.   America has fewer people and almost
unlimited  natuaral resources.   What are the models that the Saudis can
use?    America took its Desert peoples, in the American Southwest and in
Alaska and created a culture of consumption making things even more fragile
than they were.    I guess when the Saudis have even less they can immigrate
to America the land of physical plenty and very few laws and encrease the
Moslem population here.   In fact I can see it as a missionary effort on
their part being preached by the Imams.   There are a lot of possibilities
and most of them are bad since Americans are jingoists about such things.
They have been taught from birth by advertising jingles and we all know how
true those are.

Ray Evans Harrell.


February 20, 2002
The Saudi Challenge
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
IDDA, Saudi Arabia -- I could tell that Saudi Arabia had undergone a big
change since I last visited when I checked into the Sheraton Hotel here and
the desk clerk was a Saudi. Five years ago, the hotel owner would have been
a Saudi but the clerks and key hotel personnel all would have been imported
labor from the Philippines, Pakistan or Lebanon. Not anymore.
Today, with the oil boom over, the Saudi economy can no longer afford the
welfare net that once guaranteed every Saudi a government job. Since 1980
Saudi Arabia's population has exploded from 7 million to 19 million, thanks
to one of the highest birth rates in the world and zero family planning.
Meanwhile, per-capita oil income has fallen from $19,000, at the height of
the oil boom in 1981, to about $7,300 today. With less money trickling down
to sustain extended families or bloated government offices, several million
Saudis are now unemployed, underemployed or taking jobs they never would
have before.
To soak up all the unemployed here, Saudi Arabia will have to learn how to
drill human oil wells. That is, its crude oil wells built an impressive
infrastructure, but they can't sustain the future. Saudi Arabia will be able
to thrive only if it can reform its schools to build young people who can
innovate and create wealth from their minds - not just from their wells.
That means revamping the overcrowded Saudi universities, which right now
churn out endless graduates in Islamic studies or liberal arts, but too few
with the technical skills a modern economy demands. It also means revamping
the Saudi legal system to attract foreign investors to create jobs. That
means real transparency, rule of law, independent courts and anti-corruption
measures.
Without those changes, this country is going to get poorer and poorer,
because 40 percent of the population is under 14 - meaning the biggest
population bulge hasn't even hit the labor market yet. This could be
dynamite. In December an end-of-Ramadan youth brawl erupted on the Jidda
coastal road, during which the crowd turned against the police and shouted
anti-government and anti-U.S. slogans, leading to some 300 arrests.
The good news is that a move was already afoot before Sept. 11 to begin
English education - and more teaching about the world beyond the domain of
Islam - in the fourth grade instead of the seventh, which will start next
year. But with extensive class time devoted here to teaching Islam, often by
rote, shifting students to more independent thinking in other areas won't be
simple, and already has conservatives grumbling. "We are now in the middle
of a major change of our education system," said Khalid al-Awwad, the deputy
education minister for curriculum. "It will be based on the idea: Think
global, act local."
The bad news is that the only top leader of the al-Saud ruling family who
has reformist instincts, and is untainted by corruption, is the aging Crown
Prince Abdullah. But he is often stymied by his brothers or traditionalists.
When the Crown Prince proposed letting women drive - so Saudi Arabia would
not have to employ 500,000 expatriate chauffeurs to shuttle women - he was
blocked by conservatives. This is also a problem for middle-class Saudis who
can't afford chauffeurs. "I have a man who works for me who has three
daughters," said a Saudi businessman. "He's constantly having to leave work
to drive his daughters home from school or somewhere else. It affects
productivity." Imagine being a Saudi man with six daughters and no
chauffeur - that's a soccer dad on steroids.
Leaders like to make changes here the gradual "Saudi way" to keep the peace,
but that may no longer be possible. "You can make people change with time,
but do we have the time?" asks Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi. "With
globalization, I don't think we have time. We are living in a crystal ball
now. People see what's happening worldwide on every screen."
We have a stake in Saudi success. Almost all of the 15 Saudi hijackers on
Sept. 11 came from one of the country's poorer regions, 'Asir, which has
recently undergone a rapid but socially disruptive modernization. As one
middle-class Saudi put it to me: "The problem here is not Islam. The problem
is too many young men with no job and no university and nowhere to go except
to the mosque, where some [radical preachers] fill their heads with anger
for America. Every home now has two or three not working. This is the real
problem."


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