Dr Emmett Brown and Marty McFly in the Back to the Future trilogy. (Credit: Universal Pictures)
Dr Emmett Brown and Marty McFly in the Back to the Future trilogy. (Credit: Universal Pictures)

The day Marty McFly went back to the Middle East's future



‘The present changes the past,” says the judge in Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss. “Looking back you do not find what you left behind.” It works the other way with the future. Looking forward, you often only find the past.

Next week, on October 21, aficionados of the 1980s film Back to the Future and its sequels will be marking “Back to the Future Day”, that very specific moment when, in the second part of the trilogy, the main character is transported 30 years into the future, to a world of flying cars and mist-shrouded cities.

The imagined world of 2015 looked familiar to audiences in 1989, when the film was released: it was basically the same, just slightly different. People still lived in suburbs and went to work in cities. They drank branded drinks, wore branded clothes and still gathered in public spaces like cinemas and cafes to socialise.

Similarly, this region's real future would have felt familiar to the viewers in 1989, similar countries, similar conflicts.

If Marty McFly stepped from 1989 into today's 2015, he would find it surprisingly familiar. Iran’s relationship with America is still of vital importance. What the US and its allies do in Afghanistan still matters, there and abroad. Palestine is still under occupation. The US relationship with Iraq is still complex. The Levant (Syria this decade rather than Lebanon then) is in the midst of a civil war. History repeats itself, but the future is always subtly different.

There is one fragment of the Middle East in the film: when Marty, in 2015, goes to an 80s nostalgia cafe, he is greeted by robot waiters arguing with the voices and faces of Ronald Reagan and Ayatollah Khomenei.

The contortions of US policy towards Iran would have been very familiar to American audiences. The 1980s, just after the Iranian revolution of 1979, were the pivotal decade for US-Iranian relations. The nuclear deal just concluded this year with Iran is, in many ways, the first attempt to move on from a pose of confrontation defined by the Reagan administration.

Other politics have also come full circle. In 1989, the first intifada was raging in Palestine, just as the third appears to be brewing today. Thirty years on, the Israeli occupation continues and is getting worse. The Oslo Accords of the 1990s, the first real attempt to end the occupation, came out of the first intifada. Now, three decades on, Oslo is dead and there is nothing to replace it but the BDS movement.

Nor has the Russian-US rivalry gone. In 1989, the Russians had just left Afghanistan, exhausted by a proxy war with the US fought by the Afghan mujaheddin. Audiences would have found it completely unsurprising that the US and Russia appear to be fighting another proxy war in Syria today – although no one, not ordinary people nor analysts, could have predicted that the Taliban, an offshoot of the mujahideen, would today be America's enemies in Afghanistan, nor, especially, that the Soviet Union would collapse two years later.

And that's the problem with gazing into a crystal ball, even if peering just three decades down the line. Some things are obvious. But the real revolutions are unpredictable.

In the film, the technological wizardry that director Robert Zemeckis imagined was surprisingly similar to technology that existed in 1989: hoverboards glided and cars flew, but they were still, at their heart, skateboards and cars. The utter revolution in the developed world sparked by ubiquitous smartphones and internet access was unimaginable 30 years ago.

As with technology, so with politics. The challenges of 2015 were unimaginable 30 years ago. Yes, it was easy to foresee that there would be differences with Iran or Russia, both are important countries in a crowded region.

But it's the other things that no one foresees that affect the future, the unknown unknowns. The Arab Spring. The mutation of jihad. The twists and turns of politics which can lead one revolution to a Nobel Prize, as in Tunisia, and another, as in Syria, to the worst war in the world. The future can be grasped in outline, but the details are always shrouded. But it is the details that make the future.

If Marty McFly, stepping into today's 2015, with similar wars in similar countries, thought that nothing had changed in three decades in the Middle East, he would be profoundly wrong.

The 1980s were one of the worst, most volatile decades for the Middle East. Yet the situation today is both much better and much worse. Better because the Arab world has more power and autonomy than it did in the 1980s, and the world is safer and more interconnected. Worse, because the challenges are more complex, have rarely been faced on this scale, and require new ways of thinking about policy to solve – just as the world appears to be lurching from one global recession to another.

Is this particular 2015, this particular version of the present, worse than that imagined by the film? The answer is that it is particular. Politics and technology, culture and society, all could have moved in many different ways. For us, in 2015, they moved in one way.

As tempting as it might be to imagine going back to the past to alter the present – changing the outcome of Syria's war, stopping the invasion of Iraq, or whatever single event we imagine could have been altered – that, as the film showed, would only have its own negative consequences.

That's the problem with the future. No one ever sees it coming. But now that it is here, the challenge is not to alter the past, but change the present.

falyafai@thenational.ae

On Twitter: @FaisalAlYafai

Company%20Profile
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WHAT%20MACRO%20FACTORS%20ARE%20IMPACTING%20META%20TECH%20MARKETS%3F
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A timeline of the Historical Dictionary of the Arabic Language
  • 2018: Formal work begins
  • November 2021: First 17 volumes launched 
  • November 2022: Additional 19 volumes released
  • October 2023: Another 31 volumes released
  • November 2024: All 127 volumes completed
Meydan card

6.30pm: Al Maktoum Challenge Round-1 (PA) Group 1 US$65,000 (Dirt) 1,600m
7.05pm: Conditions (TB) $100,000 (Turf) 1,400m
7.40pm: UAE 2000 Guineas Trial (TB) $100,000 (D) 1,600m
8.15pm: Handicap (TB) $175,000 (T) 1,200m
8.50pm: Al Maktoum Challenge Round-1 (TB) Group 2 $350,000 (D) 1,600m
9.25pm: Handicap (TB) $175,000 (D) 1,900m
10pm: Handicap (TB) $135,000 (T) 1,600m

Company%20Profile
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ECompany%20name%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Hoopla%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EDate%20started%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EMarch%202023%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EFounder%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Jacqueline%20Perrottet%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EBased%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Dubai%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ENumber%20of%20staff%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%2010%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EInvestment%20stage%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EPre-seed%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EInvestment%20required%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20%24500%2C000%3C%2Fp%3E%0A

Bareilly Ki Barfi
Directed by: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari
Starring: Kriti Sanon, Ayushmann Khurrana, Rajkummar Rao
Three and a half stars

COMPANY PROFILE

Name: Lamsa

Founder: Badr Ward

Launched: 2014

Employees: 60

Based: Abu Dhabi

Sector: EdTech

Funding to date: $15 million

Sanju

Produced: Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Rajkumar Hirani

Director: Rajkumar Hirani

Cast: Ranbir Kapoor, Vicky Kaushal, Paresh Rawal, Anushka Sharma, Manish’s Koirala, Dia Mirza, Sonam Kapoor, Jim Sarbh, Boman Irani

Rating: 3.5 stars

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: HyperSpace
 
Started: 2020
 
Founders: Alexander Heller, Rama Allen and Desi Gonzalez
 
Based: Dubai, UAE
 
Sector: Entertainment 
 
Number of staff: 210 
 
Investment raised: $75 million from investors including Galaxy Interactive, Riyadh Season, Sega Ventures and Apis Venture Partners
TO A LAND UNKNOWN

Director: Mahdi Fleifel

Starring: Mahmoud Bakri, Aram Sabbah, Mohammad Alsurafa

Rating: 4.5/5

COMPANY%20PROFILE
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The%20specs
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Ticket prices
  • Golden circle - Dh995
  • Floor Standing - Dh495
  • Lower Bowl Platinum - Dh95
  • Lower Bowl premium - Dh795
  • Lower Bowl Plus - Dh695
  • Lower Bowl Standard- Dh595
  • Upper Bowl Premium - Dh395
  • Upper Bowl standard - Dh295
The Bio

Hometown: Bogota, Colombia
Favourite place to relax in UAE: the desert around Al Mleiha in Sharjah or the eastern mangroves in Abu Dhabi
The one book everyone should read: 100 Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. It will make your mind fly
Favourite documentary: Chasing Coral by Jeff Orlowski. It's a good reality check about one of the most valued ecosystems for humanity

Business Insights
  • Canada and Mexico are significant energy suppliers to the US, providing the majority of oil and natural gas imports
  • The introduction of tariffs could hinder the US's clean energy initiatives by raising input costs for materials like nickel
  • US domestic suppliers might benefit from higher prices, but overall oil consumption is expected to decrease due to elevated costs
If%20you%20go
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City's slump

L - Juventus, 2-0
D - C Palace, 2-2
W - N Forest, 3-0
L - Liverpool, 2-0
D - Feyenoord, 3-3
L - Tottenham, 4-0
L - Brighton, 2-1
L - Sporting, 4-1
L - Bournemouth, 2-1
L - Tottenham, 2-1

RESULT

Uruguay 3 Russia 0
Uruguay:
 Suárez (10'), Cheryshev (23' og), Cavani (90')
Russia: Smolnikov (Red card: 36')

Man of the match: Diego Godin (Uruguay)

The specs

Engine: Dual 180kW and 300kW front and rear motors

Power: 480kW

Torque: 850Nm

Transmission: Single-speed automatic

Price: From Dh359,900 ($98,000)

On sale: Now

Important questions to consider

1. Where on the plane does my pet travel?

There are different types of travel available for pets:

  • Manifest cargo
  • Excess luggage in the hold
  • Excess luggage in the cabin

Each option is safe. The feasibility of each option is based on the size and breed of your pet, the airline they are traveling on and country they are travelling to.

 

2. What is the difference between my pet traveling as manifest cargo or as excess luggage?

If traveling as manifest cargo, your pet is traveling in the front hold of the plane and can travel with or without you being on the same plane. The cost of your pets travel is based on volumetric weight, in other words, the size of their travel crate.

If traveling as excess luggage, your pet will be in the rear hold of the plane and must be traveling under the ticket of a human passenger. The cost of your pets travel is based on the actual (combined) weight of your pet in their crate.

 

3. What happens when my pet arrives in the country they are traveling to?

As soon as the flight arrives, your pet will be taken from the plane straight to the airport terminal.

If your pet is traveling as excess luggage, they will taken to the oversized luggage area in the arrival hall. Once you clear passport control, you will be able to collect them at the same time as your normal luggage. As you exit the airport via the ‘something to declare’ customs channel you will be asked to present your pets travel paperwork to the customs official and / or the vet on duty. 

If your pet is traveling as manifest cargo, they will be taken to the Animal Reception Centre. There, their documentation will be reviewed by the staff of the ARC to ensure all is in order. At the same time, relevant customs formalities will be completed by staff based at the arriving airport. 

 

4. How long does the travel paperwork and other travel preparations take?

This depends entirely on the location that your pet is traveling to. Your pet relocation compnay will provide you with an accurate timeline of how long the relevant preparations will take and at what point in the process the various steps must be taken.

In some cases they can get your pet ‘travel ready’ in a few days. In others it can be up to six months or more.

 

5. What vaccinations does my pet need to travel?

Regardless of where your pet is traveling, they will need certain vaccinations. The exact vaccinations they need are entirely dependent on the location they are traveling to. The one vaccination that is mandatory for every country your pet may travel to is a rabies vaccination.

Other vaccinations may also be necessary. These will be advised to you as relevant. In every situation, it is essential to keep your vaccinations current and to not miss a due date, even by one day. To do so could severely hinder your pets travel plans.

Source: Pawsome Pets UAE