Pubdate: Wed, 12 Sep 2007
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2007 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://www.seattletimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Mark Rahner, Seattle Times staff reporter
Cited: National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws 
http://www.norml.org
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Rick+Steves

Q&A

THE WORLD ACCORDING TO RICK STEVES

"Travel as a Political Act" may sound about as bourgeois as Yachting for Peace.

But Rick Steves says that after Sept. 11 he wanted to talk about more 
as a travel teacher than just finding bargains. Hence his 
above-titled speech Thursday at Town Hall. Drawing upon his three 
decades of experience abroad, the travel-guide guru and left-leaning 
host of "Rick Steves' Europe" on PBS will talk about how we 
understand our own country better by leaving it.

I went through the front door of Europe Through the Back Door, 
Steves' travel office in Edmonds, to find out more about this 
subversive anti-ignorance ploy of his -- and ask some intrusive 
personal questions.

Mark Rahner: When you bring up "travel as a political act," you won't 
be talking exclusively to prospective shoe-bombers.

Rick Steves: (Laughs.) When I talk about travel as a political act 
I'm talking about how travel can change your perspective in a way 
that when you get home, all of a sudden you're more difficult to con.

MR: I think of boycotting Thailand because of the child-sex trade, 
but that's nothing new. What are you adding to the issue?

RS: I'm saying when you travel, you find smart people who would not 
trade passports. You have people who are ethnocentric like you and I 
are, but they find other truths to be self-evident and God-given.

MR: Such as?

RS: Slow service is good service, instead of fast service is good 
service. Tolerance of alternative lifestyles. I think in Europe 
they've learned that society has to make a choice: you can tolerate 
more alternative lifestyles or you can build more prisons. And they 
always remind me how good we are at incarceration. We're four percent 
of the planet with more than a quarter of its prisoners.

MR: How about some do's and don'ts? I'll go first: If you're 
traveling in India, don't make a stink because you can't find an 
Arby's. Your turn.

RS: If you're traveling in India, don't assume you know what pain and 
love and the value of time is.

MR: I have to think about that one, but I'll take another turn. If 
you are a famous Scientologist, stay out of Berlin.

RS: If you're a famous rock star, don't hang a baby out the window in 
Berlin. When Americans go to the Brandenburg Gate ... it frustrates 
those guides, because all they want to know is "Which balcony did 
Michael Jackson hang his baby out on?"

MR: Don't you think the teen beauty-pageant finalist's incoherent 
answer about why Americans can't find America on a map says all we 
need to know about our ignorance of the rest of the world?

RS: (Laughs.) I love that, too. That clip would not surprise people 
- -- not even in Europe, in the developing world. It's not a fair 
example of an American, but you can make a case that we think we're a 
hub and everything relates to us. And the rest of the world interacts 
with each other, with or without America, which I think is real 
interesting. One of the most poignant moments I had last year was in 
Morocco, looking at a beautiful square in Tangier realizing these are 
successful affluent people going places and they neither emulate 
America or dislike America. America doesn't even enter into their 
awareness. And I thought that's a beautiful thing.

MR: You're suggesting actually learning about a culture before 
invading it? I mean traveling to it.

RS: Yeah, I'm saying if everybody traveled before they could vote, we 
would not be outvoted in the United Nations routinely 130 to 4. We 
would not go into wars alone. We would work better with the rest of the planet.

MR: What have you observed first-hand to be the effect of the Iraq 
war and our current foreign policies on the way people treat American 
travelers?

RS: People in most countries know from first-hand experience that you 
can elect a person that's an embarrassment, so they cut us some slack.

MR: We don't have to see Europe through the back door now because they hate us?

RS: No, they don't hate Americans. People love Americans. Some people 
go over there and want to put their judgments on other people to tell 
them how to do things right. Europeans don't need other people to 
tell them how to do things right and wrong. And they don't take very 
well to it. As long as you go to a country with a wide-open 
enthusiasm and an open mind and an interest in giving some of their 
ways of living a whirl, they love to have you visit. ...

MR: Tell me more about your speech Thursday.

RS: I'm going to share examples of the value of travel broadening 
your perspective and how important in a post-9/11 world that is. 
Because we live in a society that's using fear as a tactic to confuse 
us, and powerful people profit from our confusion.

MR: How does travel help?

RS: If you travel to Iraq you'd be less likely to bomb a wedding 
party just because one guy in the crowd was tall. I've traveled 
across the Middle East. I've traveled in Kurdistan in eastern Turkey 
and Afghanistan, and it changes the sadness of being able to look at 
a bombing like a video game.

MR: Are you recommending then that Americans travel in the Middle East?

RS: I think if the world knew what was good for it, it would 
establish a fund to pay for Americans all to have a free trip for six 
weeks, anywhere they wanted around the world upon graduation. It 
would be the best investment the world could ever make. Because right 
now an America that is threatened by, fearful of and misunderstands 
the rest of the world is a costly thing on this planet.

MR: You serve on NORML's [National Organization for the Reform of 
Marijuana Laws] board of directors and advocate the decriminalization 
of marijuana. My question to you: What's your favorite snack food?

RS: (Laughs.)

MR: Answer the question!

RS: Answer the question! My favorite snack food! Triscuits are fun to eat.

MR: With nothing on 'em?

RS: You can decide if you want to eat them with the grain or against 
the grain. That takes a little while.

MR: Do people who buy your travel books and watch your show ever find 
your marijuana advocacy incongruous? Or do they say, "No wonder he 
recommends grabbing uneaten food from other people's cafeteria trays!"

RS: Ha. Most people haven't put together what of my writing and my 
business might have been inspired from smoking marijuana. I mean, 
when you're overseas and you decide to go local and you're a travel 
writer, you take careful notes.

MR: You've cultivated a trademark look which I've heard described as 
"The Winkerbean."

RS: Really?

MR: Really. Do you think business would fall off if you switched to contacts?

RS: Oh, that's interesting. I've got to do TV shows where I'm looking 
no more out of style than I was at the time 10 years later. I don't 
want to make a fashion statement because it'll make a show more dated 
than it needs to be. But I don't have much of a fashion sense anyway.

MR: Consistency is comforting.

RS: Yeah, when I sit down at the Mexican restaurant 200 yards from 
here for lunch, I never order. They just bring me the same lunch I've 
had for five years.

MR: Which is what?

RS: Chicken tostada and cranberry juice. So I get enough variety on 
the road, when I come home I would rather wear the same clothes every 
day and not concern myself with that.

MR: Aren't you successful enough now that you don't have to follow 
your own advice?

RS: I could forget all the budget tricks and just spend as much as I 
like in Europe, but I honestly believe fundamentally the less you 
spend the more you experience.

MR: When I was studying abroad 20 years ago, students were advised 
not to wear American-looking clothing or symbols, and not to be loud, 
because it was likely to draw trouble. And more than once, people who 
overheard my accent in bars felt free to walk over to the table and 
start arguing. Are we back to that?

RS: Other people don't walk around with T-shirts that say "Proud to 
be Norwegian." It's inconceivable that a Norwegian or a Belgian or a 
Portuguese person would walk around with a T-shirt that says Proud to 
be Norwegian or Portuguese. Americans walk around with T-shirts that 
say essentially "America, love it or leave it." "America, right or 
wrong." "God bless America." When somebody to me says "God bless 
America," I think, well what about everybody else? I would advise 
people not to wear an American flag, because the American flag has 
been hijacked. It doesn't symbolize America anymore. It symbolizes an 
American war around the world. That's not my opinion. That's what it 
means when people see that. That's changed a lot lately, and that saddens me.

As far as Americans talking loud, we're notorious for talking loud, 
and that's just a matter of simple sensitivity to foreign cultures. 
If I'm on a train car with 40 people and I can hear one conversation, 
it's invariably an American conversation. And I almost feel like 
getting up and saying "Gee guys, listen to everybody else here, 
there's 40 people on this train. We could all be enjoying some peace 
and quiet, but we're all listening to your conversation. It's just 
classic American cluelessness when it comes to living in densely 
populated areas.

MR: What's the most clueless thing you ever did in a foreign country 
when you were an inexperienced traveler?

RS: I used to think the world was a pyramid with us on top and 
everybody else trying to figure it out. And I really traveled 
believing I could just share with people all the beauties of American 
culture, and I don't believe that anymore. I like my way of living, 
but I don't think that other people want to copy it.

MR: When I got to a fishing village in the north of Scotland, an 
embarrassing situation ensued because I wasn't aware of their meaning 
of "shag."

RS: Oh yeah. Well that happens all the time. If you ask for a napkin 
you can get a tampon. I'll never forget how shocked I was when a man 
at a bed and breakfast tapped on my door and said "What time would 
you like to be knocked up in the morning?" I used to always ask for 
leche caliente in Spain -- that's hot milk -- until somebody told me 
that's local slang for sperm.

MR: Hello!

RS: I didn't order it like that anymore. And for years as a tour 
guide I would call myself a "capa gruppa," which is a female tour 
guide [in Italian]. And people just understood I was a tourist 
struggling with the language.

MR: But you said they're more tolerant of other lifestyles and they 
might have assumed that you were ... Politeness abroad always makes 
sense. A man in a bar in Scotland once asked me, "Do you want a fag?" 
And I said, "Uh, no thank you," unaware at the time that he was 
offering me a cigarette.

RS: Actually faggots are meatballs in South Wales, which sometimes 
needs some explaining.

MR: That guy from "Grey's Anatomy" may have been thinking of that.

RS: "Fanny" is a vagina in Australia.

MR: Making fanny packs horribly awkward. Staying out of the country 
long enough to settle into the vibe somewhere showed me how oblivious 
American travelers can be.

RS: When you say Americans are oblivious, what you're saying is 
Americans have not had the opportunity to leave our country and look 
at our country from a distance and get to know another culture. 
That's just a matter of lack of experience. What I try to do is get 
people to travel in a way that takes advantage of that experience to 
let them better understand the world, broaden their perspective 
through travel, to look at America through French eyes.

I mean, for America to say that the French are surrender monkeys 
really shows what little we know about the French. Half of all their 
men between 15 and 30 were casualties after WWI. They lost as many 
people as we lost in the Vietnam War, many times on a single day. And 
they have one quarter of our population. There's a country that knows 
what war is like.

America, frankly, doesn't know what war is like. We don't have many 
living memories right now of what a serious war that the Europeans 
have experienced is. Consequently, we've sanitized it. And Europeans 
have many more powerful reminders of how war can devastate a society. 
Consequently they're inclined to find alternatives to war a little 
more aggressively than we are.

MR: So you were against freedom fries.

RS: Ha! I was appalled that people were pouring out good French wine! 
I was appalled that people were not eating Mr. French's Mustard 
thinking that was a French thing, when Mr. French was, I think he's 
English or something. It has nothing to do with France. There's 
people that just, as I said, they have not had the opportunity to 
travel. If I grew up in some middle American state and never left the 
country, was surrounded by people that never left the country, I 
would be scared to death of Muslims. I'm not scared to death of Muslims.

My daughter just spent a month in Morocco living in a village, having 
a life-changing experience as a 17-year-old, and she knows that 
people in Morocco regardless of their religion get out of bed in the 
morning, and they just want to live a good life. They have no ideas 
in their mind to hurt America. They like our music. They don't like 
our wars. They want to be left alone. They don't dress up with their 
whole heads covered up. They look just like our kids. They have 
different religious traditions.

MR: So mere exposure to Islam reveals that Muslim fanatics are about 
as exceptional as Christian fanatics?

RS: Exactly. I mean if all you know about Islam is what you've 
learned from American media, it's not much different from what 
Muslims have learned about Christians from Al-Jazeera.

MR: You and I in Amsterdam for a weekend. How's it play out?

RS: It's fun to go to a coffee shop. You've got to find a coffee shop 
that's comfortable for you. You want the right ambience. You want for 
you and me -- well, for me I'd want an older crowd. Wouldn't want so 
much tie-dye and dreadlocks and piercings.

MR: Is that how I strike you?

RS: No, I don't know. I'd want a mellow sort of older crowd at a 
coffee shop. We could go to the Van Gogh museum, that'd be pretty 
cool. It could pan out a lot of ways. I don't care to tell you what I 
would do. I'd probably be working so hard that I wouldn't get high. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake