Posted By Andrew Lochlyn Ure
I've been watching these threads on these forums with great interest. I currently work in Oman - from my purely subjective view, a much better place to be than Dubai. I've also worked and lived in Russia and Australia and briefly in South Africa, Brunei, Sri Lanka, Abu Dhabi, Qatar and yes, Dubai. The one thing that I would say, along with a number of others who have posted sensibly on the subject, is this - do not be fooled by stories of the streets being paved with gold and being able to make vast sums of money instantaneously. You won't, unless you are either very, very lucky, or a criminal. Also, the comments I see being made by ex-pats who voice surprise that "Western behaviour" (often a euphemism for acting atrociously and with no respect for their hosts) is frowned upon astonish me. The GCC region are a group of Muslim countries with a different belief structure to the UK, and a society which differs in several fundamental ways. In Dubai, yes of course you can drink Guiness until you fall over, play golf on a grass golf course and drive around in a Lexus but unless you remind yourself frequently that the immediate trappings of your life are a bubble, and outside of that bubble is a Muslim city in the United Arab Emirates run by a family of multi-multi-multi-billionaires as a cross between rampant capitalism and benign dictatorship, then you're likely to come a cropper.
My most powerful memory of Dubai is the last time I flew back to Heathrow from there in the Business Class cabin of an Emirates Boeing 777. I was surrounded, predominantly, by orange coloured Brits rattling with gold bling they'd bought at the gold souk, and covered from head to foot in designer labels. That, for me, was quite enough of that. And then just last year I happened to be standing in the Immigration Hall at Domodedovo Airport in Moscow, and an Emirates Airbus discharged it's cargo of a couple of hundred Russians, and guess what? They were all bright orange and rattling with gold bling they'd bought at the gold souk, and covered from head to foot in designer labels.