US president Barack Obama recently suggested that the current global melancholia is brought on because the world is a more connected – and consequently more pained – place. Olivier Douliery / AFP
US president Barack Obama recently suggested that the current global melancholia is brought on because the world is a more connected – and consequently more pained – place. Olivier Douliery / AFP
US president Barack Obama recently suggested that the current global melancholia is brought on because the world is a more connected – and consequently more pained – place. Olivier Douliery / AFP
US president Barack Obama recently suggested that the current global melancholia is brought on because the world is a more connected – and consequently more pained – place. Olivier Douliery / AFP

Life’s better than ever, so why are we so miserable?


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In this week of Eid celebrations and cautious optimism for the ceasefire in Syria, it’s worth asking why news headlines aren’t more cheery and the global outlook is not more positive. Barack Obama recently suggested that the current melancholia is brought on because the world is a more connected – and consequently more pained – place. Addressing a gathering of young people in Laos, Mr Obama referred to the daily war – between optimism and pessimism – that each of us fights when we scroll through our mobile phones and cast an eye over our social media feeds. It’s easy, said Mr Obama, to feel that the world is worse off.

“I think we all have to recognise these are turbulent times. A lot of countries are seeing volatile politics,” he said. “But then when you look back over the course of eight years, actually you find out things have got better.” This is, he added, the best time in the world to be born.

Was that the customary patter of the consummate politician? Or is the world really in a better state today than 30, 50, 70, a hundred years ago? If it is better, how to explain Brexit? How to decode US presidential hopeful Donald Trump’s isolationist “America First” policy? How to rationalise the Islamophobic anti-immigrant rhetoric of prime minister Viktor Orban’s Hungary? Can the rise of the far-right AfD party in Germany ever be cast in anything less than doleful terms? Is there any way to read Philippines’ president Rodrigo Duterte’s carte blanche for freelance killers to target suspected drug traffickers as anything other than extrajudicial murder?

The dirge of dispiriting news is so persistent it’s not unreasonable to ask how much lower are we to fall? Can we expect to be happy in our time? Are we destined to marinate in a coarsely pulverised mix of racial, cultural and economic antipathy towards people outside the borders of our countries?

Not if Johan Norberg’s book-length buttress to Mr Obama’s assertion has any traction. The Swedish economic historian’s new book is titled Progress: Ten Reasons to Look Forward to the Future. He gives it to us straight. Average life expectancy worldwide has gone from 31 years in 1900 to 71 today. Global literacy has risen from 21 per cent in 1900 to 86 per cent in 2015. Poverty fell by 24 per cent in India between 1993 and 2012. Less than 10 per cent of humanity subsisted on less than $1.90 a day in modern money in 2015, a massive change from 37 per cent at the same level in 1990 and 44 per cent in 1981. Now, 68 per cent of the world’s population has modern sanitation, nearly double that in 1980. Slavery, which existed worldwide in 1800, has been formally banned everywhere. Most people are more literate, more free and more equal now, writes Norberg. There’s less poverty and violence in the world, never mind the daily or even hourly tidal wave of discontent and downright rage that breaks over us on social media.

So why such profound pessimism? A 2015 YouGov poll found that 71 per cent of Britons were convinced “the world is getting worse”; only 5 per cent said it was getting better. More than half said they believed world poverty was rising. A recent poll by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs found 42 per cent of Americans beset by the sorrowful belief their country was less safe than before September 11, compared with 27 per cent in a 2014 survey.

This is the sort of pessimism that has produced Brexit, a credible Trump run for the White House, an Orban-governed Hungary, AfD’s menacing rise and Mr Duterte’s legitimisation of violence in the Philippines. A huge part of it is fuelled by nostalgia for an imagined, more secure past. As one Trump supporter, a white man in his fifties, recently put it, his candidate may be his last chance to “preserve the culture I grew up in”. Ditto Brexit, Hungary and AfD. The politics of fear and despondency is in the ascendant, in turn triggering a response from those who feel they are more empathetic.

Norberg suggests that people all over the world seem increasingly able to imagine themselves in other people’s shoes and thereby better able to feel each other’s pain. There is some evidence to back this up. The world is not just better travelled. It is also more tolerant of racial, sexual and cultural difference and more nakedly hostile to prejudice premised on birth, caste and creed.

Nearly 30 years ago, for instance, less than half of Americans approved of interracial liaisons; by 2012, nearly 90 per cent did. Now, racially charged incidents routinely get enormous play on social media. Misogyny, Muslim-bashing and prejudice of all sorts are punished with social scorn after they air as a smartphone video.

In all sorts of ways then, especially awareness, the world is more in sync with itself. For those still profoundly doleful, Francois La Rochefoucauld’s 400-year-old advice still holds true: we are never so happy, or so unhappy, as we suppose ourselves to be.

Rashmee Roshan Lall is a writer on world affairs

On Twitter: @rashmeerl

Milestones on the road to union

1970

October 26: Bahrain withdraws from a proposal to create a federation of nine with the seven Trucial States and Qatar. 

December: Ahmed Al Suwaidi visits New York to discuss potential UN membership.

1971

March 1:  Alex Douglas Hume, Conservative foreign secretary confirms that Britain will leave the Gulf and “strongly supports” the creation of a Union of Arab Emirates.

July 12: Historic meeting at which Sheikh Zayed and Sheikh Rashid make a binding agreement to create what will become the UAE.

July 18: It is announced that the UAE will be formed from six emirates, with a proposed constitution signed. RAK is not yet part of the agreement.

August 6:  The fifth anniversary of Sheikh Zayed becoming Ruler of Abu Dhabi, with official celebrations deferred until later in the year.

August 15: Bahrain becomes independent.

September 3: Qatar becomes independent.

November 23-25: Meeting with Sheikh Zayed and Sheikh Rashid and senior British officials to fix December 2 as date of creation of the UAE.

November 29:  At 5.30pm Iranian forces seize the Greater and Lesser Tunbs by force.

November 30: Despite  a power sharing agreement, Tehran takes full control of Abu Musa. 

November 31: UK officials visit all six participating Emirates to formally end the Trucial States treaties

December 2: 11am, Dubai. New Supreme Council formally elects Sheikh Zayed as President. Treaty of Friendship signed with the UK. 11.30am. Flag raising ceremony at Union House and Al Manhal Palace in Abu Dhabi witnessed by Sheikh Khalifa, then Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi.

December 6: Arab League formally admits the UAE. The first British Ambassador presents his credentials to Sheikh Zayed.

December 9: UAE joins the United Nations.

ESSENTIALS

The flights

Emirates flies from Dubai to Phnom Penh via Yangon from Dh2,700 return including taxes. Cambodia Bayon Airlines and Cambodia Angkor Air offer return flights from Phnom Penh to Siem Reap from Dh250 return including taxes. The flight takes about 45 minutes.

The hotels

Rooms at the Raffles Le Royal in Phnom Penh cost from $225 (Dh826) per night including taxes. Rooms at the Grand Hotel d'Angkor cost from $261 (Dh960) per night including taxes.

The tours

A cyclo architecture tour of Phnom Penh costs from $20 (Dh75) per person for about three hours, with Khmer Architecture Tours. Tailor-made tours of all of Cambodia, or sites like Angkor alone, can be arranged by About Asia Travel. Emirates Holidays also offers packages. 

THURSDAY FIXTURES

4.15pm: Italy v Spain (Group A)
5.30pm: Egypt v Mexico (Group B)
6.45pm: UAE v Japan (Group A)
8pm: Iran v Russia (Group B)

RESULTS

Bantamweight

Victor Nunes (BRA) beat Siyovush Gulmamadov (TJK)

(Split decision)

Featherweight

Hussein Salim (IRQ) beat Shakhriyor Juraev (UZB)

(Round 1 submission, armbar)

Catchweight 80kg

Rashed Dawood (UAE) beat Otabek Kadirov (UZB)

(Round-1 submission, rear naked choke)

Lightweight

Ho Taek-oh (KOR) beat Ronald Girones (CUB)

(Round 3 submission, triangle choke)

Lightweight

Arthur Zaynukov (RUS) beat Damien Lapilus (FRA)

(Unanimous points)

Bantamweight

Vinicius de Oliveira (BRA) beat Furkatbek Yokubov (RUS)

(Round 1 TKO)

Featherweight

Movlid Khaybulaev (RUS) v Zaka Fatullazade (AZE)

(Round 1 rear naked choke)

Flyweight

Shannon Ross (TUR) beat Donovon Freelow (USA)

(Unanimous decision)

Lightweight

Dan Collins (GBR) beat Mohammad Yahya (UAE)

(Round 2 submission D’arce choke)

Catchweight 73kg

Martun Mezhulmyan (ARM) beat Islam Mamedov (RUS)

(Round 3 submission, kneebar)

Bantamweight world title

Xavier Alaoui (MAR) beat Jaures Dea (CAM)

(Unanimous points 48-46, 49-45, 49-45)

Flyweight world title

Manon Fiorot (FRA) v Gabriela Campo (ARG)

(Round 1 RSC)

Thanksgiving meals to try

World Cut Steakhouse, Habtoor Palace Hotel, Dubai. On Thursday evening, head chef Diego Solis will be serving a high-end sounding four-course meal that features chestnut veloute with smoked duck breast, turkey roulade accompanied by winter vegetables and foie gras and pecan pie, cranberry compote and popcorn ice cream.

Jones the Grocer, various locations across the UAE. Jones’s take-home holiday menu delivers on the favourites: whole roast turkeys, an array of accompaniments (duck fat roast potatoes, sausages wrapped in beef bacon, honey-glazed parsnips and carrots) and more, as  well as festive food platters, canapes and both apple and pumpkin pies.

Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse, The Address Hotel, Dubai. This New Orleans-style restaurant is keen to take the stress out of entertaining, so until December 25 you can order a full seasonal meal from its Takeaway Turkey Feast menu, which features turkey, homemade gravy and a selection of sides – think green beans with almond flakes, roasted Brussels sprouts, sweet potato casserole and bread stuffing – to pick up and eat at home.

The Mattar Farm Kitchen, Dubai. From now until Christmas, Hattem Mattar and his team will be producing game- changing smoked turkeys that you can enjoy at home over the festive period.

Nolu’s, The Galleria Mall, Maryah Island Abu Dhabi. With much of the menu focused on a California inspired “farm to table” approach (with Afghani influence), it only seems right that Nolu’s will be serving their take on the Thanksgiving spread, with a brunch at the Downtown location from 12pm to 4pm on Friday.