On happiness and hypocrisy | Opinions
I took a look at the 2022 World HappinessĀ ReportĀ during the weekend, hoping to take a break from the misery of wars from Ukraine to Yemen.
I found it pretty amusing and utterly depressing.
The fact that Finland, long a ābufferā state between Russia and the West, is crowned the happiest country in the world for the fifth consecutive year should give Ukrainians and the rest of us, pause.
Ukraine, which ranks 98, has come under Russian assault mainly or allegedly because it rejected the ābuffer stateā status, among other demands.
Switzerland and Austria, which ranked fourth and 11th respectively, have also been neutral states since the beginning of the Cold War.
But before we discuss the reportās findings, let us start at its beginnings.
According to its authors, the tiny poor Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan should be thanked for the āWorld Happiness Reportā and for āmuch of the growing international interest in happinessā.
Well, it is not like until Bhutan intervened much of the worldās interest was focused on misery, but it may have emphasised the wrong indicators, considering that prosperous modernity has proven no guarantee for happiness and may well cause greater unhappiness.
At any rate, when Bhutan moved from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy in 2008, it also started to use gross national happiness (GNH) ā which assesses āthe collective wellbeingā of the population based on sustainable development, environmental conservation, cultural preservation and good governance ā instead of the āantiquatedā gross national product (GNP) as its main development indicator.
To quantify the peopleās wellbeing, the Center for Bhutanese Studies began by surveying some 8,000 randomly selected households using a questionnaire of more than 200 questions about their personal lives and feelings. That must have been torture.
In 2011, the āKingdom of Happinessā sponsored a UN resolution, inviting other governments to āgive more importance to happiness and well-being in determining how to achieve and measure social and economic developmentā.
And the following year, Bhutan, along with a number of academic enthusiasts of the newly created āhappiness industryā, presented the UNGA with āevidence from the new emerging science of happinessā, paving the way for the UN proclamation of March 20th as International Day of Happiness.
I find āhappiness dayāĀ andĀ āhappiness scienceāĀ ratherĀ contrived,Ā defeatingĀ the whole point of happiness as the end goal of all human endeavour, as the Ancient Greeks and Romans wisely observed, be it through the pursuit of virtue and justice, or the pursuit of pure pleasure.
Either way,Ā the pursuit ofĀ happiness is only possibleĀ through the happiness of pursuit, or so goes the cliche.
At any rate, the first annual World Happiness Report saw the light in 2012 under the auspices of the United Nations ā arguably the most constipated and miserable organisation the world over!
But joking aside, the report seemed to zero in on two possible sources of happiness: subjective preferences, related to culture, community and environment; and objective factors relating to wealth, health, security, education, etc.
I suspect the latter more objective indicators weigh heavily in the reportās ranking, and go a long way to explaining why the culturally introverted and largely reserved Nordic and other European states continuously make it to the top of the list. They are seemingly more ācontentā than happy, as per their own studiesĀ and surveys.
Sadly, the ranking of āKingdom of Happinessā has gone from low to lower during the years, descending from 79th to 97th position.
AndĀ the one country famously associated with happiness other than Bhutan, āHappy Yemenā, hadĀ clearlyĀ not gotten the memo that year, as it plunged into civil war and turmoil, drawing in a Saudi and Emirati-led military intervention that produced āthe worst humanitarian disaster of the 21st centuryā.
On the upside, as the war entered its second year, the UAE established two ministers for happiness and tolerance, promoting virtue as a fundamental value of the state and society, while tightening its political and security grip.
Thatās when George Orwell turned in his grave.
Still, after briefly falling to 28th place in 2016, the economically liberalised super-rich emirate remained ahead of its Arab peers for four consecutive years according to the Reportās index.
However, this year, the UAE was bypassed by the tiny, relatively poorer Gulf kingdom of Bahrain, which ranked at 21 on the world index.
Bahrainis to be sure, have been living under tight political and security control since the Arab Spring upheaval almost paralysed it 11 years ago, which prompted Saudi military intervention to help suppress the popular uprising.
So, it begs the question how is it that Bahrain came ahead of the likes of Spain and Italy, which ranked 29 and 31, respectively, and almost beat France āĀ evenĀ ifĀ the French areĀ famousĀ forĀ railingĀ against anything and everything, including happiness.Ā It is their national sport; their collective charm.
Bahrain did sign a āpeace agreementā with Israel, though I doubt it brought the Bahrainis much joy as most of them were against ānormalisation with the Zionist enemyā.
Which brings me to Israel, which leaped into the top 10, ranking ninth on this yearās happiness index, despite its violent system of apartheid, as documented by international human rights organisations. The worse the apartheid, the higher the rank!
I have long associated military occupation with happiness, especially after watching Pharell Williams shamelessly sing, Happy, to a shameless list of Hollywood A-list guests among the shameless Friends of Israeli Defense Forces, FIDF, in Los Angeles, while Israel was shamelessly pounding the Gaza Strip.
SoĀ jolly.
Perhaps, we finally know for sure why, as TIME magazine once tried to explain in a cover story āIsrael doesnāt care about peaceā. Well, because it is happier without it. Thanks in no small part to the miserable failure of Palestinian and Arab leadership, whose war-ridden states rank terribly poorly.
It is indeed remarkable how a country that expels, occupies, oppresses, imprisons and humiliates an entire people for decades and in close proximity, can be so freakishly happy. Is it delusion, indifference, sadism, racism, or what?
Bhutan, āThe Land of the Thunder Dragonā, shows it could be a combination of factors.
In the years leading up to its obsession with happiness, the Bhutan military expelled about 100,000 Nepali-speaking people residing mostly in the impoverished south of the country, to pave the way for the monarchās āone nation one peopleā vision. King Jigme Singye Wangchukās other vision was to marry four sisters, which he did happily and festively in 1988.
Despite its turn to democracy after the kingās abdication, the government has done little to rectify, compensate or reverse the dreadful ethnic cleansing. In a tellingĀ interviewĀ with Al Jazeera a dozen years ago, Bhutanās prime minister denied it, justified it, and happily embraced it, all without flinching.
But the problem is bigger than Israel, Bhutan, and Bahrain or for that matter, Russia, China and the United States. It is about the prevailing international hypocrisy of happiness, preaching virtue and projecting violence, speaking of peace and waging war, proclaiming love and spreading hate, hugging trees and polluting the air.
Wellbeing may be achieved through ālife, liberty and pursuit of happinessā, but only in tandem with, not at the expense of another individual, nation, race or gender or generationās ālife, liberty and pursuit of happinessā.
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