Someone should show this to Don, so he can say "they're one of the good ones"...
"Omanism" describes the distinct socio-political strategy and cultural ethos used to build a unified Omani national identity.
Historically, Oman was highly fractured by geography, intense tribal rivalries, and religious divisions. Starting in 1970, the state actively engineered a collective national consciousness. This unique identity matrix is defined by several core pillars:
1. The Blending of Ibadi Islam and Religious Tolerance
The Ibadi Path: Unlike its neighbors, which are predominantly Sunni or Shia, Oman is the only country with a significant population of Ibadi Muslims. Ibadism values moderation, consensus-building, and privacy in worship, deeply shaping the country's quietist, neutral foreign policy.
State-Enforced Tolerance: To prevent sectarian friction, the government purposefully renamed its regulatory body the "Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs" rather than "Islamic Affairs," explicitly enfolding non-Muslim expatriates and minority sects into the legal and cultural landscape.
2. A Maritime and Indian Ocean Melting Pot
An Outward-Looking Nation: Unlike the historically land-locked, nomadic tribes of the central Arabian Peninsula, Oman's history is rooted in the sea. For centuries, the Omani Empire controlled maritime trade routes stretching down to East Africa.
Cosmopolitan Lineage: Omani identity celebrates a polyglot, transregional heritage. A significant portion of the citizenry is multi-ethnic, with ancestral roots and family ties in Zanzibar, South Asia, and Balochistan. Cultural assimilation is favored over exclusion; foreign lineages are neatly mapped onto traditional Arab tribal classifications.
3. Deliberate "Identity Engineering"
Replacing Tribalism: Under the long reign of the late Sultan Qaboos bin Said, the state executed a deliberate top-down strategy to replace localized tribal friction with absolute loyalty to the nation and the ruler. This was achieved by standardizing Arabic in schools and implementing centralized education.
Reimagining Heritage: Rather than erasing the past, the state curated specific symbols to represent the collective populace. This includes the universal adoption of the Khanjar (the traditional curved dagger) as the country's official emblem, and strict regulations surrounding the daily wear of the national dress (the dishdasha tunic and the East African-influenced kumma cap) to clearly visually differentiate Omanis from other Gulf citizens.
4. Modern Political Realities
Omanization (Ta'meen): A core economic tenet of this identity is the official government policy of Omanization. This systematic initiative aims to reduce reliance on foreign expatriates by training, qualifying, and prioritizing native Omani citizens to fill positions across both the public and private work sectors.
The "Partnership" Future: This curated heritage continues to evolve. The government launched a Unified Promotional Identity under the slogan "Partnership," blending historical isolationist pride with a modern framework designed to invite global investment and tourism
"In the next five years, the Earth is overwhelmingly likely to surge again and again past the international climate threshold set as safe and shatter its hottest-year record along the way, according to new United Nations climate projections."
Maybe the heat from it will burn all of the straw men on both sides of the argument.
Anti-Environmentalist Straw Men (Attacking Green Policies)
"They want to ban all cars, meat, and modern technology."
"They care more about bugs and plants than human lives and jobs."
"They want to collapse the economy and return to the Stone Age."
Pro-Environmentalist Straw Men (Attacking Skeptics or Opponents)
"Anyone who questions a green policy is a climate change denier."
"Opponents are just greedy and corporate-funded."
"They just want to pollute the earth for profit."
The reality is that it's a very complex problem involving both natural and human made conditions. There are things that humans can and should collectively do to try to mitigate the problem; automatically jumping to political "tribes" is not going to help the problem.