OPINION The world will be as oneNot quite the way Lennon envisioned in Imagine, but an invisible virus has swiftly put everyone on the same page to protect a single planet. It will redefine globalism, make us accountable, and make travel a richer, more immersive experience, but in smaller numbers. JUMP TO Current column Can the Covid-19 scare turn travel into a less mass, more immersive experience? IN A FEW MONTHS when the tumult caused by the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) subsides to a level where people and governments have stopped panicking and more clues emerge on how to stay safe or battle this zoonotic scourge, there may be time to appreciate just how much the world has changed. From an outpouring of global angst on social media to crackpot remedies and feel-good memes, the Internet has crackled with the zeitgeist of our times – abject terror – its bandwidth devoured by the new crusaders clicking likes, and perhaps not very many actually doing anything about it. One of the first things anyone can do apart from continuing with safe social habits and the enforced cleanliness that has been foisted upon us like a divine epiphany, is to get working speedily in some productive sphere, your own, or in borrowed garb if your industry has collapsed or the job has migrated. Send us your Feedback / Letter to the Editor The national GDP everywhere needs rebuilding with effort and good cheer. Almost like the post-War world our fathers built and bequeathed us it will not come about through Facebook hilarity and Twitter outrage though these platforms can all play a constructive role. A comeback on this scale requires hard work, sacrifice, and perseverance; something the new generation will need to learn. {it's time to return to that enriching immersion in small numbers that do not overwhelm the destination, destroying the very things that drew us there If anything, this invisible virus has brought the world together and shown in one insouciantly savage act how vulnerable our planet is. Suddenly something Greta Thunberg has gone hoarse shouting about is staring us from our screens 24 hours a day. The bug cares nothing for borders, passport, race, ethnicity, colour, age, or wealth. It has been a great leveller of people and myths. There is a single planet. And it is time to mend it, from health and lifestyle, to addressing wasteful consumerism, divisive politics, supply chains and climate. The mending happens with a changed worldview. While it is possible that the triumphal progress of globalism may come to a screeching halt with countries sealing borders and xenophobic nationalism rearing its head everywhere, it is more likely people and countries will realise they need each other to survive. Seemingly independent actions – even in obscure locations – have a ripple effect on others. Too many people have died for this not to be painfully obvious. Travel is a powerful healing force as well as a disruptive agent that has in the same breath offered hope for orphaned Cambodian amputees as well as devastated fragile tribal eco-systems around the world with ignorant manners and a mistaken belief in the crusading might of the dollar and that all-important bucket-list selfie. No more trampling on people and their traditions. There is a need for sensible regulation to prevent over harvesting of tourism from Bruges to Everest. The world of tomorrow – and it’s right around the corner – must be calmer, saner, and more equitable. The anguish felt over the plight of frontline Wuhan doctors and Italian patients in street side ICUs is a fraternal wake-up call. There is no us and them. And it has taken an existential threat to galvanise the world, discard old stereotypes, and help shed some of its vacuous opioid consumerism. Despite the Wuhan-coronavirus baiting and the US-germ-warfare-gone-wrong counter, it is abundantly clear that the world is too deeply enmeshed in globalism and global supply chains to pull out in an instant or even contemplate such action. Loved or hated, China has authored much of the world’s recent prosperity, from brand-crazed shoppers in Hong Kong and luxury trippers in Bali to pharmaceutical supplies for much of the world from India to the USA. The iPhone is not manufactured in a single place, nor is a B787. Intricately embroidered dresses from Milan are often created off the sweat industry of nimble-fingered but underpaid children in Bangladesh or elsewhere. Parts for just about every must-have gadget, from solar panels to satellites, are universally sourced. We need each other as never before. And that is the power of Covid-19 – to unite the world as a single home. It will change the way people ‘see’ travel. No more should tourism be practiced as a locust industry that depletes local resources and turns fine art into tat in an instant as the demand for tawdry gewgaws grows. No more can travel be a monoculture with hotels vying for just European guests or rich Japanese. Travel is for all. When travellers of yore laboured across continents aboard a soot-spewing train, a cranky motorcar, or a sedate ship, the experience was gracious – a gentle incremental process, a growing relationship rather than a hurried one-night stand. People read up avidly on places and cultures and savoured the moment, the stories. It was immersive. It was the journey and not just the arrival. The time has come to return to that enriching immersion in smaller numbers that do not overwhelm the destination, destroying the very things that drew us there in the first place. The info-barrage on the Web, much of it wacky, and designed for mass clicks, has reduced ‘education’ to small sound bites, a snarky sentence in the Twittersphere, or a must-do Cappadocia Instagram pose. In all the primping and preening lands and peoples have disappeared. Lands and Peoples was a brilliant 1954 collection of handsomely bound volumes presenting the world with erudition and evocative photography. It sparked a profound curiosity and the travel bug in many. It is time to rediscover this ‘lost chapter’ with a vengeance. Do travel – when it becomes safe to do so – like it’s the last meal on earth. Only then are you going to truly relish the diversity on offer as you appreciate another paradox: how much we have in common with everyone else. Send us your Feedback / Letter to the Editor Previous Columns2020 2019 Broken bonds, dying brandsLately, the strangest feelingHow safe our skies?Is Hong Kong safe?Death of loyaltyNo rest on EverestBoeing fix leaves it in a fixCathay tries the limbo rockB737 MAX-8: accident by designI'm looking through youEveryone can auditionWhy is everyone screaming?
2018 The Sleep/Service equationThe Disappearing GMEco travel: less is moreBest of the restHow to win an awardPlane truth about punctualitySweet summer sweatWho's Top Dog?Don't unpack my bagPicture perfect holidaysTale of two women, or threeSomething in the air
2017 Hello, any humans here?An Aye for an AyeTravel, the fear factorHow to turn blue seas greenPolls, planes, queuesBlockade by blockheadsShanghai, back to the futureNo lap dance aloftFriendship is a rocketWhy I really need a dateIn the ICU with Legionnaires
2016 Give Bangalore its dueRoom at the VPN?How big can be beautifulWhy it's brand on the run Premeditation and physics Samsonite in a snit Bogged down by blogsRight brain has the right stuffWho's the fairest of them all?How have you been lately?Got a Black Magic Woman The rebranding of Asia
2015 Smoke gets in your eyesThe devil beaters of Hong KongThe lure of InstafameYes, still number oneStill tripping up onlineBetter late than neverCan you read bar codes?Domo arigato misuta robotoFast and furious - 2Terminal Man – the true storyHow bad ads kill good onesA matter of time
2014 Are you kidding me?Time to face the factsThe decline of reclineArt of hitchhikingShot out of the skyLies and statisticsBottoms up for goldShanghai surpriseNow, fake festivalsWhy ghetto is goodFrequently flummoxed flyersLaughing to the exits
2013 A matter of prideSpeak and it shall be understoodLet's go phishingAsia's best travel brandsBad scrambled eggsHow to pick a happy flightThe Wild Waist aloftClicks come a clatteringBrand on the runThe unfair fares affairSafe on cloud nine?Man-eaters of Mumbai
2012 The fine art of goodbyeStay fit or fake itMore than wordsWhy hotels and pigs can’t flyTo B or not to B737Are you being hacked?Snap-happy hounds bewareDelhi daze in springtimeLet's celebrate with KittyHide your prying eyesPilot project for beginnersGreen flights of fancy?
2011 The art of arriving lateWhen life drives you pottyAirports, awards, and alarmA fright for sore eyesDry skin wet eyesBack to the Tunnel of LoveWhy fearless flyers won't flee feesMore wind in the hairTravel tremors after JapanThe case of the intact bagsEnd of the OTA-man empire?A picture says a thousand words
2010 Only Engrish spoken hereVoices in the skyA tale of three airportsWhat's in a brandA big bite of a bad AppleNow haste to the hustingsJust 400 homicides and all's wellNo sex please, we're BritishSome minor details aloftHighway to the heavensYou look radiant darlingGood info a needle in a haystack
2009 Please watch that safety drillA classic cycle folderolUtterly eggcentric behaviourThe price is rightFlashing in public is a crime[Offset] my kingdom for a horseYour cash or I'll sneezeThe greening of the worldDo broccoli need passports?Could I see your profile?Great Scott! Empty seatsTravel in an age of terror
2008 There is no free lunchAnother Night in BangkokBeatings on the beachTravelling with Teenage KidsWhither Wi-Fi at 30,000ft?Are you locked in the toilet?Charge of the Flight BrigadeAcross the UniverseBaby it's cold outsideWhy I'm dying to travelA key questionGorillas in the mist
2007 Confounding customsWhen blackmail worksBy taxi through AsiaA really cheap dateMake a meal of itTales of two teethPutting curbs on carbsDial R for rip-offThe New Math aloftWhy boutique is bestAre you terminally mad?Heavy question, ladies
2006 The secret of good sleepJust bring Pluto backA fluid situation aloftWhy Friday's the bestNothing but the truthGone in 60 secondsJust use your imaginationFree flights for allIs your travel in vein?Pet peeves and solutionsViral travellers welcomeYes it's safe to step out
2005 A passage to IndiaIt is a "brand" new AsiaThe show must go onCriminally good holidaysThe accidental touristIt's a free rideSleep tips for the roadI'll follow the sunA good pillow fightA bridge too far?World's safest spotsThe need for speed
2004 Small is beautiful, sometimesBumming around AsiaSamsonite and DelilahJust one good bookSpace, the final frontierExtreme Travel for Real MenJust grin and bare itUnfazed by phraseHoney, I Shrunk My BrainMiss World to the RescueWhen things go bumpTo catch a croc, in Hongkong
2003
NOTE: Telephone and fax numbers, e-mails, website addresses, rates and other details may change or get dated. Please check with your dealer/agent/service-provider or directly with the parties concerned. SmartTravel Asia accepts no responsibility for any inadvertent inaccuracies in this article. Links to websites are provided for the viewer's convenience. SmartTravel Asia accepts no responsibility for content on linked websites or any viruses or malicious programs that may reside therein. Linked website content is neither vetted nor endorsed by SmartTravelAsia. Please read our Terms & Conditions. |