At least we are not Dubai  By George Fulton April 21, 2010George Fulton is a 
freelance broadcast and print journalist.We haven’t got a lot to be thankful 
for these days in Pakistan.But at least we are not Dubai.Fed up with 
loadshedding, bombs, and TV cynicism pervading Pakistan, I recently escaped to 
Dubai for a holiday. Big mistake. Huge. Ten days later I returned, gasping for 
Karachi’s polluted, but far sweeter, air. Dubai may have the world’s tallest 
building and the world’s largest shopping mall, but it also has the world’s 
tiniest soul. It’s a plastic city built in steel and glass.It has imported all 
the worst aspects of western culture (excessive consumption, environmental 
defilement) without importing any of its benefits (democracy, art). This is a 
city designed for instant gratification a hedonistic paradise for gluttons to 
indulge in fast food, fast living and fast women. It’s Las Vegas in a dish 
dash. You want to eat a gold leaf date? Munch away.You want to drink a Dhs 
3,000 bottle of champagne? Bottoms up. You want a UN selection of hookers at 
your fingertips? Tres bien. Let’s start with the malls. These cathedrals of 
capitalism, these mosques of materialism are mausoleums of the living dead. 
Slack jawed zombies roam around consuming food, clothes and electronics in a 
desperate attempt to fill the emptiness of their existence.Whilst at the Mall 
of the Emirates the azan goes off. Nobody appears to move to the prayer room; 
everyone’s too busy performing sajda before Stella McCartney, genuflecting 
before Gucci, and prostrating themselves at Prada. With Dubai, one recalls F 
Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby.The people are modern day Gatsbys, buying 
shirts that they will never wear and books they will never read. Like 
Fitzgerald’s roaring 20s America, Dubai is a moral failure a society obsessed 
with wealth and status. Everyone is trying to keep up with the Jones’ or the 
Javaids. You see the goras with their perma-tans, streaked highlights and their 
flabby cleavages.The upwardly mobile South Asian man prances around wearing a 
silly shirt with a large picture of a polo player on a horse, whilst their 
women wear oversized sunglasses and carry oversized handbags. And the Arabs 
walk about with enough gold bling to blind you at ten paces. But not everything 
that glitters is gold. And Dubai is not only morally bankrupt it is also 
financially bankrupt.Lately, Dubai, and its ruler, Sheikh Mohammed Al-Maktoum 
have been compared to another piece of literature — Percy Shelley’s famous poem 
Ozymandias, which illustrates the inevitable decline of all leaders and the 
empires they build. Shelley finishes it thus: Look on my works, ye mighty, and 
despair! Nothing beside remains.Round the decay Of that colossal wreck, 
boundless and bare The lone and level sands stretch far away With $80b of debt 
and a stock and property market that has tanked, the comparisons with 
Ozymandias are apt. Abu Dhabi may have bailed them out but can Dubai survive as 
a regional hub in the long-term? Or will this city of hubris built on sand and 
folly sink back into the dunes a desert mirage that evaporates once the public 
relations people, the speculators and the tourists disappear?So for all you 
naysayers that bemoan Pakistan and its numerous problems please temper your 
pessimism. Take time to celebrate our cultural, religious, linguistic plurality 
and richness. Stop the cynicism coursing through your corroded veins. For all 
its inadequacies, at least we have a democracy.For all its irresponsibility, at 
least we have a robust media. For all the police corruption, at least we are 
not a police state. For all our littering, at least we have paper wallahs. 
Remind yourself that at least we have a heart. At least we have a soul. At 
least we are not Dubai.


"Praise your struggles for they surprise you with many rewards…"Zohra Moosa 
(Deaf Poet)

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