10 of the last 10 years were the hottest on record. It’s time. I know so many people that will give lip service to the environment and then think nothing of taking multiple flights per year on the flimsiest of pretexts.
And as all too often happens, people go to poorer countries where they get waited on hand and foot, and then act like they’re doing some giant favor to the locals. All too often these tourist sights end up being an unmitigated natural disaster, not to mention locking the locals out of their own back yard.
And then they’ll turn around and claim they’re “helping the local economy” trying to justify it. It’s colonialism by another name. If they paid fair wages to the workers these vacations would become much more expensive, perhaps prohibitively so.
And wtf is wrong with you, you can’t relax in your own region? Gonna cook the planet because you can’t be happy and relax in your own hemisphere. Y’all need to chill it with the air travel!
I feel like you’ve redefined tourist. You can visit another culture and still participate in it respectfully with an intent to learn and be part of the cultural exchange. That’s still tourism. Why does tourism mean specifically commodifying another culture?
Yes and no. You’re right in that the dictionary definition of tourism is basically just visiting another place, no matter what you’re doing. And your second sentence I was definitely trying to allude to. But colloquially, (and maybe this is just my experience) we talk about touristy things to do and touristy attractions and tourist season and building economies around tourism. It really feels like tourism is something that is outside invading into a community and often either setting aside or commodifying the culture of the destination. Maybe there’s a different word that I can’t think of that would be more accurate to use instead of tourism, but I don’t think I’m using it in a way that’s contradictory to how I usually hear the word used. I also say all this as someone from and living in an area that attracts a lot of tourists.
I like the term “cultural voyeurism.”