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| (page last updated: 8/9/05) |
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| Travel can help mend a fractured world
By Rick Steves For many Americans, the critical question in this election season is, "How can we make America safer in the world?" Call me a girly man, but I think � given the fact that Americans are outnumbered 20 to 1 on this planet � we'd be safer by better understanding our world. A great first step is to travel � thoughtfully. Increasingly, our government finds itself at odds with the rest of the globe. Our standing in world opinion is at an all-time low. Even our closest allies � 30 of 35 nations according to a University of Maryland poll last month � oppose U.S. policies. The United States is routinely outvoted at the United Nations 140-5. On issues that relate to Cuba, Israel and Palestine, land mines, environmental initiatives and nuclear regulation, our only allies are Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, Palau and Israel. Though many Americans aren't particularly concerned about America's unpopularity, it is dangerous and expensive. If the world is a mean neighborhood, more friends are better than more enemies. Huge military costs abroad, skyrocketing security costs at home and the loss of trade as American goods become shunned overseas are an economic drain, the brunt of which we'll all bear. If Americans traveled more, we'd better understand our place on this complex planet and fit in more comfortably. And eventually, perhaps, we wouldn't need to spend as much as the rest of the world combined on our military to feel safe. How the world sees America Thoughtful travel � becoming a "temporary local" to really get a break from our cultural norms � shows us how the world sees America. My travels have taught me that people around the world are inclined to like Americans. They just disagree with our government: �Travelers see stop signs in Portugal that have "USA" spray-painted below the "STOP." �In Switzerland, "beware of dog" signs show a picture of our president inserted where the dog belongs. �This summer in Slovenia, I learned that locals are annoyed when the United States sends them an ambassador who doesn't speak a word of their language. They joke that Americans who hear the name of their capital, Ljubljana, don't ask "Where's that?" but "What's that?" My Slovenian friends mused that the world would be smart to establish a scholarship giving each American a free trip abroad as a high school graduation present. While they know that's unrealistic, they're convinced that if more Americans traveled before they voted, they would elect a government with policies that didn't put it at odds with the rest of the world. Though many Americans travel, millions more don't venture out to see or experience the world. About 80% of Americans do not hold a passport. Many of those have stubbornly held worldviews based on little more than TV news. Travel gives us a firsthand look at the complexity and struggles of the rest of the world, enabling us to digest news coverage more smartly. Travel helps us celebrate � rather than fear � diversity. On a trip through Afghanistan, I was eating lunch in a Kabul cafeteria. An older man joined me with his lunch, intent on making one strong point. He said, "I am a professor here in Afghanistan. In this world, one-third of the people use a spoon and fork like you, one-third use chopsticks, and one-third use fingers � like me. And we are all civilized." Understanding other societies Travel helps us appreciate the challenges other societies face. Stepping into a high school stadium in Turkey, I saw 500 teenagers punch the sky with their fists and shout, "We are a secular nation!" I asked my friend, "What's the deal? Don't they like God?" She said, "Sure, they love God. But here in Turkey, we treasure the separation of mosque and state as much as you value the separation of church and state. And, with Iran just to our east, we're concerned about the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism." Travel shows us that Americans are the haves in a have-not world. With fewer than 5% of the planet's population, we control 50% of its wealth. We are the global fat cats. In contrast, nearly half of this world's people live on $2 a day. A traveler who has looked into the eyes of a desperate mother � baby in her arms too weak to flinch at the flies on his face � can better understand how that statistic translates into human suffering. Travel combats ethnocentrism. I was raised thinking the world is a pyramid with the USA on top and everyone else trying to get there. But as I traveled, I met intelligent people � living in countries nowhere near as rich, free or full of opportunity as America � who wouldn't trade passports with me. They are thankful to be Nepalese, Bulgarian, Turkish or Nicaraguan. Such cultural snapshots � the essential joy of travel � have made me both thankful to be an American and an enthusiastic citizen of the planet. Travel gives us a perspective that can translate, through the voting booth, into American policies that will not alienate us from the family of nations. And when that happens, we'll all be truly stronger, safe and better off. Rick Steves spends four months a year in Europe, writing guidebooks, leading tours and producing a public television series. |
| Here's an article by the author of the travel book we used to plan our trip abroad. He does a pretty good job of encapsulating why we love to travel. It's something to think about. |
| Dear Traveler, I was recently in Munich, standing in line to buy a ticket at the train station. The young man in front of me (wearing a black cap that reads, �no logo�) assures me I�m in the correct line, so we pass the time chatting. I�m heading for the romance of Venice. He�s catching a train to Frankfurt for a flight to...the USA. It�s a 19-year-old German�s dream come true: Florian is flying to California for snowboarding, rollerblading, mountain biking...and cars. �We go to the United States for action and for nature,� Florian says. �I love your cars. In America, you have V-8 engines. For us, the V-8 sound makes you a very cool person. With a V-8 you are not driving -- you are cruising.� With visions of Porsches and BMWs dancing in my head, I counter, �But I thought Germans had it good behind the wheel.� �Yeah, I drive a BMW. But it is like a computer. No soul. My friend in Munich just bought a Chevy Caprice Classic with a big 5.6-liter V-8. He will pay very bad taxes for such an engine, and even more because it pollutes so much. But it is worth it.� You can learn something about a country by how it taxes its cars. The practical Dutch are taxed by the weight of their cars. Money-minded Americans are taxed according to what their cars cost. The German government goes right for the thrill-seeking jugular vein, carefully calibrating vehicle taxes by horsepower. Which way is best? Who cares? Discovering a culture�s unexpected everyday differences -- and temporarily diving (or driving) into that world -- is one of travel�s great attractions. Tickets and reservations in hand, Florian and I go off to pursue our separate travel dreams...each of us feeling a little better connected to our world, and thrilled to be on the move. If you are ready to get moving too, this month's Travel News will shift you into high gear with an April Fool�s peek at some of Europe�s delightful deceptions, a profile of an Irish-American icon, a preview of Easter in Rome, and lots of news for those traveling to Europe in 2005. In our Travel Store: this weekend is your last chance to save 15% on all travel accessories. (Next week we'll begin a new special: You'll get a free Civita Day Bag when you buy a Wheeled or Back Door Bag.) ...and we're all out of Chevy Caprice Classics. Thanks for traveling with us! Rick Steves |
| Here's another article by Rick Steves that might be interesting for those of you in love with your SUV (or Geo Metro for that matter). |
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