K-Dog wrote:Just chill out and take a joke for once. I myself said it was stupid to say and wanted to make a point about Bangladeshi's posts. Have a sense of humor.
I do have a sense of humour.
I have very good friends from all races and colour, and we beat the heck out of each other especially when it comes to joke. I tease my Europeans friends with a joke like this, “hey, how come your mum forgot to leave a bit longer in her oven (womb). In return, they use all sort of crazy jokes on me. We cool with that, because we are very close friends – no hidden agenda.
Here is an example of bad joke:
In my city we have a mental-ill white group who called themselves “white supremacy” and calling for Hitler’s ideology to be brought back. They take to the street from time to time holding swastikas etc. Ppeople threw rubbishes at them every time they do it.
Now, if I go to white folks whom I never met, and say a joke like this, “you guys are racist because I saw your fellows’ skinheads holding swastikas”. How would you think this innocent people would react to my joke, am sure they’d kick the hell out me. Why, because first the joke is stupid and tasteless, second because I’m using a twisted minority’s action and put it into a joke to demean a whole race. See, it’s not right, huh.
You see, UAE and other Gulf countries are rapidly developing, and they are determined to speed up their societies’ advancement, economically and educationally. In the Arab world it’s a tradition to learn from the best in order to be the best in the future. However, I think that there are wide misconceptions throughout the region that, people who are educated in the West are ought to be good, which is not the case sometime. Japanese students hardly go abroad to study, yet they are on the top when it comes to innovation, technology etc.
Last week a group of secondary school from China went to a trip to Australia for an inter-education program, teachers were shocked to find these Chinese students are far more superior at math, science than even Australian high school student. This discovery has made the Australian education minister to shakes up their education system.
Things are changing worldwide, countries are now well aware that they have to made dramatic changes to their systems to catch up and cope in the 21st century – look at Indian for example. It’s not wrong to copy a good system that’s working well in a European country or in India etc – after all, humans are imitators by nature. Most the technologies that we are using today were based on old versions.
So it’s just logical and wise to judge everyone on his/her merit and personality. Not to mention, as a professional, your work ethic requires you to sincerely point out the things that you think would benefit your organization, and try to leave a positive change so when you go back home people would remember you in a nice way. If I was working the UAE, I would do my best to help them to achieve their long term goals, because it is the least you could do in return for a country that opens its door for you.
Peace/Love