

The Lebanese modus operandi is intrinsically chaotic. Is this a good or a bad thing?

In an article entitled “In praise of cacophony”, Micheal Young had this to say on the Lebanese Media:
Lebanese media comes out looking relatively free. The paradox, however, is that this is often the result of an abnormality: media outlets are private and mostly represent contending political or other interests, and from that cacophony information emerges that would not in a more centralized, government-controlled media environment.
I would like to build on that article: As any Lebanese knows, the cacophony he mentions acts a checks-and-balances system not only to the media, but to all aspects of Lebanese life.
When I was driving in Tripoli one day, I wanted to make a U-Turn, but I had two problems: a “No U-turn” sign and a police officer standing right under that sign. But in total disregard to the police officer, the cars in front of me went ahead and made that U-Turn. The police officer wasn’t bothered at all. In fact he helped us by stopping the other cars.
When my friend Kelly, a Canadian, visited me in Lebanon, she remarked: It’s funny how things work in this country, there seems to be an unwritten agreement between drivers that they can all drive chaotically, but somehow, you can sense an order in the chaos.
Why are we like that? Why are police officers very lenient? Why are our security officers and soldiers very nice with us (The amn 3am personnel in the airport for instance are notorious for their kindness, sir, madam, please, thank you, sorry. Even our armed forces are, unlike the repulsive syrians, chummy)
The answer is simple. It’s for the same reasons that Micheal Young mentions.
Because of our system of patronage in Lebanon, security officers would not bully someone who drives a nice car because it could cost him his job. As the case of Wafik Jezzini, the official in the interior ministry who refuses to be disciplined by his boss (with big people protecting his back), shows, Lebanon is a chaotic places that derives its order from that very chaos.
The never ending debate remains though: Is the chaos a force for creativity, or a sign of backwardness?
Hello, my name is Mustapha and I blog in The Beirut Spring about Lebanese society and politics. I started in February 2005 after the killing of P.M. Rafik Hariri.

haha Mustapha, I know exactly which U-turn you mean! I have hesitated there many a time with my mom always prodding me to go ahead and finally the officer waving me forward!
I believe it is a sign of backwardness, but at the same time it prepares you to face the odds. To keep with the driving example, in Lebanon you drive on the defensive and you are ready for any surprise. In the States, you drive blindly, putting a lot of confidence and trust in your fellow drivers. When someone does disobey, an accident is almost always unavoidable.
CK
Mustapha this is funny. I was just reiterating that same conversation with some friends just two days ago. And I agree with “CK”. North American drivers really are horrible drivers, and always wagging our fingers when someone does something “wrong”. Don’t we have better things to do? And don’t our police officers have better things to do? In the grand scheme of things, why waste our time on someone making a U-turn? Although I didn’t pay so much attention to whether it was a status/money thing.
anyone know the price of gas in lebanon?
it has dropped $1.oo in a month here in the states.
Hello,
I am a photographer specialised in documentation.
During the summer war i have taken picturs in a Israeli refugee camp.
I am looking fora a Lebabobnese photograhper that did a simularity in Lebanon or with the families that lived durino the war in Cyprus.
Please contact me for any information or link regarding this.
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Maya Kapelushnik
Maya_kapel@hotmail.com