Latest 3 Blog Entries

View Entire Blog

America's Cup in Ras al Khaimah??

Posted On: August 13, 2009 | By: George Rowand

The recent news that next year's America's Cup -- which used to be the premier yacht racing event in the world -- was going to be held off shore of Ras al Khaimah in the UAE made me ask, "What are they thinking?"

Ras al Khaimah is a podunk little town on the Persian Gulf right at the Strait of Hormuz, the choke point between the UAE and Iran. It has one decent hotel, maybe two, if you're being generous, and the nightlife is non-existent. The idea of spending months of time in that locale must be chilling to the sailors who will compete. It's easy to get tired of the place fast, and last I heard, sailors aren't shy, retiring types who like to settle down with a good book after a day at sea. They'd better get used to that idea.

Then there is the wind for the sailing, which certainly doesn't match what the yachts used to face off Newport or even off Perth, after the Aussies won the Cup in 1983. I never saw what I would consider anything but light winds on the Gulf, so it isn't likely that the event will have a lot of drama, sailing-wise.

Well, on second thought, maybe. There always is the threat of Iranian gunboats interrupting the proceedings, especially if the West has tightened the screws on the country because of their nuclear ambitions. They're about 30 miles away, so it could make for great TV! I can see the headlines now. "Yachtsmen Captured By Iranians." How much will it take to free billionaires from Iranian jails?

I supposed they could have found a worse place to hold the event. Let's see, there's North Korea ... and ... and ... I'm thinking ... yeah, that's about it. Way to go America's Cup planners! You're in the top two places where the Cup should never be held!




Moving past Dubai

Posted On: June 25, 2009 | By: George Rowand

It's been almost three months since we returned from our stay in the UAE, and we are blissfully happy to be back in America, back in Virginia, back in Fauquier County. Friends -- and people with whom we only have a nodding relationship with -- have been united in what they have said to us: "We're glad you're back." That has been most heartwarming.

You see, we live in a community. It's not just a bunch of houses close together. People care about each other here, and many were worried about us and praying for us while we were in the UAE.

(Actually, where we live really isn't a bunch of houses close together. We live in the outskirts of Orlean, where cable TV will never arrive, and where one cannot see another house nearby when the leaves are all on the trees, as they are now.)

Now, only three months later, our time in the UAE seems to be a long, long time ago, and the country seems far, far away. Since we've been home, people we know here and there have been sending articles about what is going on there. It hasn't been good. Sheikhs have been accused of beating people and of fondling a man in a bar. A real estate development connected to the ruling family in the UAE seemingly has collapsed, taking innocent investors money in the process.

Seems like another day in the office in the UAE to me. Same old, same old.

Would I go back there? No. It simply isn't interesting enough to visit, and the attitude of the natives is feudal, and, therefor, un-American. For me, I really don't intend to comment about the place again. It's just not worth my time.

So we're home. Rita is heading off to Moscow on Sunday for about a week. George Mason University is working on a partnership with Moscow State University, and Rita is going to help introduce George Mason to the MSU students. Michael and I tried to go along, but with air tickets, hotel rooms and Russian visas, it just got too complicated to get together in about a week.

We are planning on going to Montreal and Quebec City in July. Michael and I are both looking for jobs, but I'm keeping myself busy with a fair number of freelance articles for Warrenton Lifestyles magazine and for the Bull Run Observer. Perhaps I will go on to a new and different career. I've done this before. I was a lawyer, a thoroughbred stable manager, a real estate agent, a drama teacher, a reporter, editor and a published author. Must be something out there that can combine that eclectic set of skills into something meaningful. Personally, I would love to find a way to help local businesses and organizations through these trying economic times. Maybe I will.

People have asked me to continue this blog, and I will. Check back in from time to time to see what is going on and what my thoughts are. Again, I want to thank you all for keeping us in your thoughts while we were in the UAE. It meant everything to us to know that so many cared about us.  

 




Dubai and the UAE are not what Americans think they are

Posted On: May 12, 2009 | By: George Rowand

When people hear that we spent three months in the UAE, their reaction usually is something like, “You lucky dog! That place looks fabulous!”

It's true. Some of the buildings that are going up there truly are amazing, and they are building islands with fancy hotels and homes on them, but you know, “Looks can be deceiving.”

I'll tell a story I heard over there the first month we were there. We went to an art show in our emirate, Ras al Khaimah, and I met an American ex-pat who had lived there for a decade or so. I asked her how she liked it, and she said, “Do you remember the movie, 'The Fly?'” I said I did. Then she said, “Well, remember when Jeff Goldblum had the two transporters, and he put a nice, thick steak into one, and pushed the button. The steak then appeared in the second transporter, and it looked the same. It looked like the same steak, seemed like the same steak, but when you cut into it, it was horrible. That's what the UAE is like. I call it 'The Fly Syndrome.' It may look good on the surface, but when you cut into it, it's horrible.”

I'd say that about sums up the UAE. Like most other places, visiting the place and living there are two different things.

The dirty little secret is that Dubai and the UAE are third world countries with money – at least for now. But they have third world ideas about how life is to be lived, and it doesn't include such things as freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion and the due process of law.

I walked into the Dubai World Cup media center in March, and when I opened the souvenir magazine, I almost laughed. There, on the first page was something called, “Ruler's Message,” with a photo of the unsmiling Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum.

So the place is “ruled” by people whose only claim to legitimacy is the fact that a couple of generations ago, their great grandfathers were the toughest guys in the tribe, so now they get to decide how people get treated, and how the money gets spent. Basically, it seems, other people don't get treated very well, and the money gets blown on whatever crazy idea the ruler comes up with.

The stories of how the people who actually work in the UAE – 90% of whom are not local – are rife with horror tales. The guys doing the construction work make 50 cents an hour ... if they get paid at all. Their passports are taken from them when they enter the country so that they can't go home again. They live 10 in a room in un-air conditioned places. The temperatures get to be 130 degrees or so in the summer.

Filipina women who come to work as maids often find themselves trapped, unable to leave their employers, worked 12-14 hours a day, often unpaid, and, according to an ex-pat friend who had been there for a decade and a half, subject to sexual assault by the males in the family.

People in America complain – rightly – that there are too many lawyers and too many lawsuits in America. But try living in a place where the law is what the sheikh says it is. If an Emirati runs into you going 140 miles per hour, you are the one who may end up in jail. If you get laid off from work, your bank account can be frozen, even if you've never bounced a check. If you have a contract whose other side is a company owned by the ruling family, good luck enforcing that thing. They can cut you loose without a second thought and without any compensation.

You see, you don't really understand the UAE until you realize that the place is set up to benefit the ruling families. And, evidently, you don't get to be the ruler by being Mr. Nice Guy.

Right now, the UAE is hurting, though they don't want that to get out to the world. Oil revenues aren't what they were, multinational corporations are cutting back, not expanding to new places like Dubai, and the UAE seems to be banking on becoming a high-priced tourist destination. Every emirate seems to be building an island with fancy resorts on it. One problem ... people are being laid off in the UAE, and they are leaving in droves, so the residences are sitting there empty while the building keeps going on.

There are several big problems with the idea of the UAE as a tourist destination. For one thing, the weather is good about three months a year, maybe four at the most. After that, it's pretty much over 100 degrees every day and humid. Going outside is like sticking your head in an oven.

For another thing, what do you do when you get there? After you see the buildings and go to the shopping malls – where there are no bargains – then what do you do? This place is Las Vegas without gambling, Disney World without the rides. There's no history to see, and you won't get to mingle with the locals since they consider themselves above people who have to work for a living, so what actually do they think will draw the tourists?

True story: There are a lot of septic tanks in the UAE, and drivers are hired to go and pump them out. Then they are supposed to take the sewage to a treatment plant in the desert. The only problem is that they are paid by the load, and the lines to get into the place are long, so the longer they sit waiting, the less money they make. Some came up with a solution. They started dumping their loads into storm sewers in Dubai. Which went right into the ocean, next to the Royal Yacht Club. They tried to cover that up, but people notice when raw sewage washes up on the beaches.

Would I go back to Dubai? No. There's really nothing to see there. The people don't make anything, so there are no local crafts to buy. There is no history, so that's out. The weather is lousy most of the time, unless you like living in a sauna. And the buildings seem phony. They built a shopping center with an Egyptian theme, but the stores are the same you'd find in any big American city. Yes, they do have a ski slope in one of them. You skiers want to pay more for a couple of hours on man-made snow than a lift ticket to Deer Valley, Vail or Aspen? Probably not.

The UAE is a facade. They want to seem to be just like the West, but a place that still has rulers with unlimited powers can hardly be called an enlightened place to live. Sure, there are people who have lived there a long time. We met some. But they all were aware of the thin ice they all were treading. The UAE? It's “The Fly Syndrome.” That sums it up pretty well.




Home Blog Services About Me Contact