Between the Sky of Davos and the Ground of Reality: How I Saw Canadian, American Speeches
Like many others, I listened to the speeches of world leaders at this year’s Davos conference. Because of my past career as a pilot, I learned not to focus only on what is said, but also on what is not said. I listen to tone, watch direction, and follow the compass, not just the words. In the cockpit, experience teaches you that danger often comes not from loud alarms, but from misleading silence.
Many speeches talked about the economy, climate, partnerships, and the future, using careful and familiar language. But among all of them, two speeches caught my attention: the speech of the Canadian Prime Minister and the speech of the American President. Not because their countries are the strongest, but because each of them described a very different view of the world, as if they were speaking about two separate planets, not one international system.
While listening, I felt as if I were not at an economic forum, but inside a global cockpit. One pilot was looking at warning screens and admitting turbulence. The other was pushing the throttle forward with confidence, trusting engine power more than the rules of the sky.
The Canadian Speech: Admitting Global Turbulence
The Canadian speech sounded like a technical report after flying through a strong storm. It clearly admitted that the rules-based global system is no longer working as it was designed. What the world was told for decades was “stable” turned out to be fragile, controlled by double standards.
In aviation, when a navigation system fails, we do not deny it. We announce the problem, recalculate, and look for a safer route. This is exactly what the Canadian speech did. It did not hide reality or blame one side only. It openly said that the rules created after World War II were not applied fairly, and that major powers often broke them when their interests were at risk.
From a pilot’s point of view, this is a responsible approach. Admitting instability is the first step to avoiding disaster. Insisting on using old instruments in new conditions is a sure path to failure.
The American Speech: Flying on Power Alone In contrast, the American speech had a very different tone. It sounded like a pilot saying, “As long as my engines are strong, turbulence does not matter.” The focus was on strength, superiority, and national interest, and on the right of the United States to act as it sees fit for its security, even if this conflicts with sovereignty or international rules.
The speech was not about fixing the global system, but about managing it from a position of power. As a former pilot, I know this kind of confidence. It can be useful at certain moments, but it becomes dangerous when it turns into denial. The sky does not respect power alone. It holds accountable anyone who ignores its laws, no matter how strong the aircraft is.
Between Two Schools of Thought: A Cockpit View
What concerned me most was that the difference between the two speeches was not only political, but philosophical. Canada spoke about a world that recognizes its limits and looks for a new balance in a system that no longer works. The United States spoke about a world where chaos is managed through power, where superiority replaces rules.
From the perspective of a middle-sized country like Jordan, and from the experience of a pilot who understands discipline, planning, and procedures, I believe global aviation cannot continue if every aircraft decides to write its own rules. Power matters, yes, but power without rules is like flying without air traffic control. You may fly high for a while, but sooner or later, you will hit something you did not see.
Conclusion: Davos Was More Than Economics
This year’s Davos was not just about markets and numbers. It was a quiet confrontation between two ideas: one accepts that the world has changed and needs reorganization, and the other believes that strength alone can overcome all turbulence. Between these two visions stand many countries—like ours—watching the sky and knowing that safety depends not only on engine power, but on the wisdom of the one holding the controls.
Like many others, I listened to the speeches of world leaders at this year’s Davos conference. Because of my past career as a pilot, I learned not to focus only on what is said, but also on what is not said. I listen to tone, watch direction, and follow the compass, not just the words. In the cockpit, experience teaches you that danger often comes not from loud alarms, but from misleading silence.
Many speeches talked about the economy, climate, partnerships, and the future, using careful and familiar language. But among all of them, two speeches caught my attention: the speech of the Canadian Prime Minister and the speech of the American President. Not because their countries are the strongest, but because each of them described a very different view of the world, as if they were speaking about two separate planets, not one international system.
While listening, I felt as if I were not at an economic forum, but inside a global cockpit. One pilot was looking at warning screens and admitting turbulence. The other was pushing the throttle forward with confidence, trusting engine power more than the rules of the sky.
The Canadian Speech: Admitting Global Turbulence
The Canadian speech sounded like a technical report after flying through a strong storm. It clearly admitted that the rules-based global system is no longer working as it was designed. What the world was told for decades was “stable” turned out to be fragile, controlled by double standards.
In aviation, when a navigation system fails, we do not deny it. We announce the problem, recalculate, and look for a safer route. This is exactly what the Canadian speech did. It did not hide reality or blame one side only. It openly said that the rules created after World War II were not applied fairly, and that major powers often broke them when their interests were at risk.
From a pilot’s point of view, this is a responsible approach. Admitting instability is the first step to avoiding disaster. Insisting on using old instruments in new conditions is a sure path to failure.
The American Speech: Flying on Power Alone In contrast, the American speech had a very different tone. It sounded like a pilot saying, “As long as my engines are strong, turbulence does not matter.” The focus was on strength, superiority, and national interest, and on the right of the United States to act as it sees fit for its security, even if this conflicts with sovereignty or international rules.
The speech was not about fixing the global system, but about managing it from a position of power. As a former pilot, I know this kind of confidence. It can be useful at certain moments, but it becomes dangerous when it turns into denial. The sky does not respect power alone. It holds accountable anyone who ignores its laws, no matter how strong the aircraft is.
Between Two Schools of Thought: A Cockpit View
What concerned me most was that the difference between the two speeches was not only political, but philosophical. Canada spoke about a world that recognizes its limits and looks for a new balance in a system that no longer works. The United States spoke about a world where chaos is managed through power, where superiority replaces rules.
From the perspective of a middle-sized country like Jordan, and from the experience of a pilot who understands discipline, planning, and procedures, I believe global aviation cannot continue if every aircraft decides to write its own rules. Power matters, yes, but power without rules is like flying without air traffic control. You may fly high for a while, but sooner or later, you will hit something you did not see.
Conclusion: Davos Was More Than Economics
This year’s Davos was not just about markets and numbers. It was a quiet confrontation between two ideas: one accepts that the world has changed and needs reorganization, and the other believes that strength alone can overcome all turbulence. Between these two visions stand many countries—like ours—watching the sky and knowing that safety depends not only on engine power, but on the wisdom of the one holding the controls.
Like many others, I listened to the speeches of world leaders at this year’s Davos conference. Because of my past career as a pilot, I learned not to focus only on what is said, but also on what is not said. I listen to tone, watch direction, and follow the compass, not just the words. In the cockpit, experience teaches you that danger often comes not from loud alarms, but from misleading silence.
Many speeches talked about the economy, climate, partnerships, and the future, using careful and familiar language. But among all of them, two speeches caught my attention: the speech of the Canadian Prime Minister and the speech of the American President. Not because their countries are the strongest, but because each of them described a very different view of the world, as if they were speaking about two separate planets, not one international system.
While listening, I felt as if I were not at an economic forum, but inside a global cockpit. One pilot was looking at warning screens and admitting turbulence. The other was pushing the throttle forward with confidence, trusting engine power more than the rules of the sky.
The Canadian Speech: Admitting Global Turbulence
The Canadian speech sounded like a technical report after flying through a strong storm. It clearly admitted that the rules-based global system is no longer working as it was designed. What the world was told for decades was “stable” turned out to be fragile, controlled by double standards.
In aviation, when a navigation system fails, we do not deny it. We announce the problem, recalculate, and look for a safer route. This is exactly what the Canadian speech did. It did not hide reality or blame one side only. It openly said that the rules created after World War II were not applied fairly, and that major powers often broke them when their interests were at risk.
From a pilot’s point of view, this is a responsible approach. Admitting instability is the first step to avoiding disaster. Insisting on using old instruments in new conditions is a sure path to failure.
The American Speech: Flying on Power Alone In contrast, the American speech had a very different tone. It sounded like a pilot saying, “As long as my engines are strong, turbulence does not matter.” The focus was on strength, superiority, and national interest, and on the right of the United States to act as it sees fit for its security, even if this conflicts with sovereignty or international rules.
The speech was not about fixing the global system, but about managing it from a position of power. As a former pilot, I know this kind of confidence. It can be useful at certain moments, but it becomes dangerous when it turns into denial. The sky does not respect power alone. It holds accountable anyone who ignores its laws, no matter how strong the aircraft is.
Between Two Schools of Thought: A Cockpit View
What concerned me most was that the difference between the two speeches was not only political, but philosophical. Canada spoke about a world that recognizes its limits and looks for a new balance in a system that no longer works. The United States spoke about a world where chaos is managed through power, where superiority replaces rules.
From the perspective of a middle-sized country like Jordan, and from the experience of a pilot who understands discipline, planning, and procedures, I believe global aviation cannot continue if every aircraft decides to write its own rules. Power matters, yes, but power without rules is like flying without air traffic control. You may fly high for a while, but sooner or later, you will hit something you did not see.
Conclusion: Davos Was More Than Economics
This year’s Davos was not just about markets and numbers. It was a quiet confrontation between two ideas: one accepts that the world has changed and needs reorganization, and the other believes that strength alone can overcome all turbulence. Between these two visions stand many countries—like ours—watching the sky and knowing that safety depends not only on engine power, but on the wisdom of the one holding the controls.
comments
Between the Sky of Davos and the Ground of Reality: How I Saw Canadian, American Speeches
comments