Can the world choose to build one day instead of demolish?
RUBA AYYASH

The whole world has become rubble, so why don’t we become rubble too? We become rubble that is scattered absurdly, in vain. Everything is fallible and collapsed. But, how often does a person fall? A lot? It seems so.
I didn’t like the game. Like it? Do you enjoy looking at people’s lives that have become like a spiral tunnel?
The destiny of homelands that have become like a train of death, in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon, in Syria, Sudan and Libya, in Africa rich in resources and poor people.

Between the rubble and the missed opportunities. Look closely at the scenes of the return of the displaced to their areas in the northern Gaza Strip, walking in staggering, burdened and tired steps among the rubble of their disappointments. They come back to start from scratch. When we think about alternative options and opportunities, wasn’t the past year an opportunity to build societies that respect individuals?
“This is a pity for man, consider it a plea if you want: can we break the curse of this repeated history, and reject interests that trample values? Can the world choose to build one day instead of demolish? The answer remains in the hands of man.”
In economics there is the term “opportunity cost”, i.e. calculating the loss of profits or benefits from alternative opportunities when choosing a single option. Was the best option really to create an eternal hell for individuals in Gaza, Yemen, Afghanistan and the rest of the regions?
How many options have been wasted in favor of destruction? Wouldn’t it have been better to build stronger infrastructure in the country than to demolish what is on the heads of millions?
Wouldn’t it have been better to invest in better education than to destroy and blow up the entire educational sector with its material and value structure, investing in a health sector?
Many bear responsibility for what happened, and many others bear responsibility for all the devastation that has befallen the Middle East. From Gaza, the scene sets out to look at the map and the surrounding areas. You will find an elaborate hellish matrix in which individuals have been imprisoned.

There are artists in the world who are adept at creating the abyss: massive numbers of poverty and unemployment, a crumbling economy, faltering education systems, and a health sector struggling to survive.
So what? Then the wheel of this world tramples man, values, thought and culture. She misleads him by faith, tying him by the neck of his needs to become a captive. Isn’t that what George Orwell had previously predicted between the lines of his 1984 novel? “If you want to look into the future, imagine shoes that trample and stamp a human face forever and ever,” he said.
In a world that thinks of replacing traditional cars with electric cars to save the environment, there are people who are back on foot, using animals to move. In a world that builds earthquake-resistant skyscrapers, there are areas whose homes have been replaced by tents. In a world where all the technologies are available that can improve the quality of life, food and water, modernize agriculture and transform arid lands into productive lands.

Many regions suffer from water pollution, the spread of diseases, the expansion of desertification, nihilistic arid lands, and barely food is available, in 2025 where technical and technological development and many regions in the world suffer from food crises. In a world where there is a spider web and media. As knowledge content is available tremendously, ignorance increases rather than awareness and perception.
Tell me, what’s the difference between 1904 and today? Some indigenous peoples of different peoples were then displayed as monsters in zoos of “humans” in the style of zoos, and today entire peoples are crushed under the wheel of political and economic interest. It seems that man has not yet learned to respect himself, and fails to find a matrix that respects the rights, freedoms and entity of individuals.
This is a pity for man, consider it a plea if you want: can we break the curse of this repeated history, and reject interests that trample values? Can the world choose to build one day instead of demolish? The answer remains in the hands of man.

RUBA AYYASH: Multimedia Journalist @ Sky News Arabia ; Master’s in Journalism, Abu Dhabi Emirate, United Arab Emirates
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