Category: March 2026

  • Tourism

    Tourism

    Curiosity is a core component of human nature, and coupled with our desire for independence, has been a key element in driving exploration round the globe over hundreds of thousands of years. One of the ways we engage with our curiosity in today’s day and age is through tourism, which has grown rapidly as an industry in the last few decades. Many new forms of tourism have expanded enough to be their own dictionary entries (eco-tourism, medical tourism to name a few). At the same time, older mainstays of tourism such as cruising and backpacking have expanded their offerings significantly. Many once foreboding destinations have developed friction-free avenues for tourists to partake in new experiences. 

    This growth is accompanied by the simultaneous hand-wringing; how can we visit new places in an ethical way? Is it possible for attractive destinations to harness tourism in ways that benefit locals while also preserving their unique nature? Some of the reasons people travel to new locations are to experience different cultures, climates, witness natural and architectural sights, and sample the cuisine. However, I’m not alone in feeling that famous tourist locations start to bleed into each other, which saps from their intended distinctiveness. After all, there is no shortage of stories about long queues near Everest’s summit, or 🌈insert European city du jour 🌈facing popular unrest for an ever increasing influx of tourists annually (Venice, Barcelona). 

    The following opinions should definitely be taken with a grain of salt, since this piece does not employ more rigorous methods to illustrate my hunches. Additionally, humans are inherently biased towards pattern recognition, so it’s easy for me to find examples of tourist destinations blending into each other, whereas examples of societies leaning into qualities that make them unique are harder to spot. In both cases it’s also difficult to attribute societal direction solely to tourism itself. 

    With that said, there are certain characteristics that over-touristed places tend to share, a short list being overpriced basic services, decreased quality of food, overcrowded attractions, and infrastructure prioritized for visitors over locals. In these ways, unique places converge on a ‘touristy’ equilibrium. 

    Increased access by global supply chains into a place also tends to drive people to ditch local systems in favor of outsourced (and cheaper) solutions. For example, local farming in my parents’ hometown in Kerala has been unable to compete on cost with imported produce. Many of our neighbors in my parents’ generation talk about how the food quality has precipitously declined since their childhood, even in God’s own country. To be fair, many forces conspire to create these conditions, but I would argue that tourist destinations by definition are subjected to  increased access. 

    What makes a place unique? When people lose agency over their land, the stories, celebration, foods built around those spaces cease to be embedded in substance, being instead embedded in memory. This is a familiar experience for folks who grow up in immigrant communities, where attempts to celebrate homeland culture far from home can ring hollow. That same hollowness takes over daily life in places where tourism changes the relationship of people to their land, because the purpose of the land is partly subsumed to provide novelty for visitors. If a Thiruvonam Sadhya in Kerala cannot source its ingredients from a local harvest, then what exactly is the Onam celebrating? 

    The experience of touristy places all blends together, because there’s a playbook that the tourism industry has employed to maximize the returns of an attractive destination. That in Nusa Dua, Cocoa Beach, and Niagara Falls can be found a Hilton Garden Inn is a clear indicator that the unique qualities in those places have yielded to the market conditions of meeting the supply/demand profit curve of lodging. In other words, Hilton is equipped with the expertise to maximise the value of land in a popular tourist destination. Whether it be local/national governments wanting increased tax revenue, well-capitalized businesses outbidding competition, or expats pursuing new income streams, the end result is the squeezing out of warungs, rice fields, and beaches in favor of anything offering a higher possible return on investment. Eventually, folks tired of the infrastructure woes of Bali go to Padang, declare it a paradise, and the playbook can be rinsed and repeated.

    How can our natural curiosity be reconciled with the negative effects of tourism? I wasn’t expecting a book about the Salvadoran civil war to help with this dilemma, but reading What You Have Heard is True provides insight based on how one person (Carolyn Forché) engages with an unfamiliar place. The memoir explores Forché’s time in El Salvador as the country broke down ahead of a dozen-year civil war. Forché’s experience is highly dissimilar to that of most tourists, so there are limits in the conclusions we can draw from her reflections. However, her experience illustrates how our personal approach to tourism can focus on empowering the locals, while simultaneously exploring mutual political, economic, and cultural relationships.

    For someone visiting El Salvador, there are plenty of options to stay in places Forché describes as quite beautiful. For example, the former residence of dictator Hernández Martínez, described as “spacious with shuttered windows and a mahogany wainscoting..” Later on during her stays, Forché makes friends with a socialite (secretly a resistance figure) and spends time at her home, where breakfasts were prepared lovingly: ”tortillas wrapped in a cloth, already-poured juice, a pot of coffee [with the maids] bringing white cheese, black beans, a papaya cut in half and filled with slices of lime.” This was a home with “a sliding glass door leading into a garden, where birds of paradise spiked against the walls and coral bougainvillea climbed them.” 

    For a tourist (especially an American) visiting El Salvador at the time, it would certainly be possible to find hotels or homestays with similar levels of luxury and comfort. However, given that most of the land and wealth in the country was highly concentrated in the hands of a few, these places would be highly non-representative of the daily experience of the workers and peasants (campesinos). Forché spends time in the campos and caserios in the countryside as well, noting the open trench bathrooms and corrugated metal walls common in the majority of homes throughout the country, contrasting with the hot water and window glass of her wealthier friends.

    Someone staying at the properties of military officers or businessmen would very likely be lining the pockets of the wealthy and powerful, who, as the book makes clear, work very hard to perpetuate the dispossession of the campesinos. If Forché had spent her time and money in the opulent homes of San Salvador, she may have come home with some appreciation for the food, the nature, and may even have observed the gulf between the rich and poor from afar. However, it would have left her blind to the true extractive relationship between these classes. Her choice to spend time in the countryside also allows Salvadorans such as Gomez Vides to make inroads with the military junta, and for local poets to find a platform for their work. 

    Therefore, when traveling, a question to ask is: who benefits from the money that we spend? How can we as tourists empower people and spaces which are being consumed by tourism itself? To me, engaging tourism in this way enriches both the tourist and the touristed while also providing our natural curiosity an avenue to be expressed. 

    Understanding the interaction between our home’s political context and our destination’s is another way to engage in tourism in a more meaningful way. Every country operates in relation to the nations around them, and Forché certainly bears witness to this, contrasting the lifestyle of Salvadoran campesinos with the indigenous population in Guatemala. Much more of the book probes the relationship between El Salvador and the US, notably the relationship between US anti-communism policies and Salvadoran military aid. The contrast in lifestyles between the political elite and the campesino peasants is largely enabled by US monetary aid and by extension, the acquiescence of US taxpayers. The security state in turn entrenches their wealth in the name of order and the risks of providing the campesinos with ‘too much democracy’. 

    Looking back with hindsight makes it easy to identify the regional consequences of these interactions, which led to the Salvadoran civil war and modern day American migration patterns. At that time however, even with the US having just pulled out of Vietnam, the extent of foreign policy entanglements may have been less obvious to the average US citizen. Countries as powerful as the US and China have a gravitational effect on the entire world. It’s important for us to understand the effects that we have on our neighbors, and use that knowledge to make more conscious political decisions where such agency exists. When viewed through this lens, tourism actually becomes imperative for someone looking to be engaged in society. Forché herself takes her experiences in El Salvador to give voice to the poets she meets, and broadcast the political situation in El Salvador to a wider US audience


    Tourism irrevocably changes the character of the tourist and the touristed, The idea that tourism should cease due to its deleterious effects is nonsensical, since curiosity is an inherent part of our nature. Therefore, leveraging this curiosity to understand the state of the world is one of the best ways we can be tourists. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that it’s vital that we engage in tourism, since experiencing a place firsthand is the only way to really know it (Descartes noises intensify). It’s far too easy to travel such that new places blend together without making a notable impression, but that reflects more on our level of engagement rather than the locales themselves. New places can augment our value systems, allowing us to synthesize our interactions into new moral frameworks and possibilities for the future.

  • NBA Tanking Rears Its Head

    NBA Tanking Rears Its Head

    Tanking in the NBA is once again aggravating basketball fans around the world thanks to the Jazz and Wizards throwing games before the All-Star game. This topic has been hashed out time and time again, with many proposals being regurgitated and re-discussed for a new generation of NBA fans. These include the Draft Wheel, draft lottery elimination, as well as other wacky ideas such as an NBA Conclave

    The root cause of teams purposefully losing games is that the on-court outcome of each game directly affects the ability of teams to draft rookie players before other teams. This is not new to sports fans – in the current system, the three worst NBA teams evenly split a 42% chance at the first shot at picking from the rookie class. The three worst teams each have a 53% chance of a top-five pick, and in fact, the three worst teams in the league will have the top three picks more than half the time. The below chart shows the breakdown of lottery odds, by pick and by team. 

    Zach Lowe put it best when he wrote in the Wheel draft proposal: “Nearly the entire history of the NBA suggests that a team wishing to win the title must have one of the 10 or 15 best players alive — and preferably one of the half-dozen best”. This has remained true in the twelve years since that article was posted, and remains one of the clearest indicators that linking team record to draft order will keep tanking as part of an NBA fans vocabulary as long as the link exists. 

    There are other reasons to lose games on purpose. Rookie contracts are more valuable than max-contracts (dollar per unit of performance). This exacerbates the incentive to tank because the apron system for team cap sheets is highly restrictive. 

    A 1st overall pick’s salary will not exceed 7% of the salary cap in their 3rd year in the league. Even in the 5th and final year of a rookie contract cannot exceed 11% of the salary cap. Taking into account that most teams operate above the nominal salary cap every year reduces even further the rookie contract’s percentage of a team’s total cap sheet. 

    This contract ceiling can be far lower than a young player’s true worth. For example, Lebron in his 5th year in the league was already averaging 30 points a game, with the 6th best PER of his career. A non-lottery pick, Giannis Antetokounmpo was averaging almost 27 points per game in the last year of his rookie deal. 

    Rookies generally approach their career averages by the 4th and 5th year of their rookie contracts at a cost ceiling that can’t be matched in free agency. More than 120 players in today’s league command NBA contracts greater than the max possible value of a rookie deal, including Dillon Brooks, Kevin Huerter, and Josh Hart. NBA players are more-or-less who they are by the last few years of their rookie contract, but always make much more money as free agents. When this is the case, the chance at adding transformational stars, or just All-Star caliber players while at a discount provides a strong incentive to maximize chances at high draft picks. 

    In my opinion, flattening the difference between rookie and free agency contracts best reduces the incentive to tank while also minimizing changes to the fan’s experience of the game. This article about abolishing the draft was my original motivation to write this piece, and is one way to approach the equalization of contract value AND remove tanking incentives. 

    The draft is just one way an NBA team can improve its roster, some others being trades, free agent signings, and waiver pickups. Under the current CBA, trades are generally hard to make. This is because the league has a soft salary cap, and a roster that costs more than this cap penalizes the team by placing restrictions on trade options and free agency signings. As I mentioned above, most teams spend their seasons above the salary cap, so options become quite limited in terms of mid-season trades and acquisitions. 

    Teams in smaller cities, such as the Pacers or Cavaliers, do not believe they can attract high-end talent purely in free agency, since there’s a perception that NBA players would prefer to live in big cities such as NYC or LA. Because the talent level of the league is very high, a team needs a strong roster from top to bottom in order to compete for a championship. 

    If having just one star could be sufficient to compete for a championship, then it could be easier for small market teams to navigate the trade, free agency, and draft space to build a championship-caliber team. However, If we accept the premise that free agents are less likely to sign in small markets, this problem is compounded if the task of free agency signings must be repeated several times in order to build a competitive team.

    Eliminating the CBA/apron system while also decreasing max contract salaries (as a percentage of the cap) would allow for smaller market teams to more effectively use the trade market to build championship teams. Teams with one star would be less constrained by the star’s salary in making additional personnel signings, and a compressed salary distribution would also make matching salaries in a trade easier to manage for a team’s front office as well. 

    While this would limit the maximum pay of NBA superstars,  the NBA and player association could agree to reserve some portion of basketball revenue for players who achieve certain accolades (such as all-NBA selections, MVPs). This allows the NBA to reduce the max contract a team can offer while allowing a player like Giannis to keep a similar salary while remaining in Milwaukee, while ALSO giving the Bucks the chance to compete for more competitive contracts. 

    While there might be a few teams fielding sub-par rosters in February and March, there are enough competitive games night to night to keep any NBA junkie happy. In my eyes, the larger risk for the NBA is (as always) money outside the scope of league rules. The Aspiration scandal illustrates that owners as wealthy as Steve Ballmer can find ways to achieve their team goals without regard for league rules. Similarly, the gambling allegations facing Chauncey Billups and Terry Rozier (and subsequent shoulder shrug by NBA players) presents an even larger threat to the competitiveness of NBA games. Issues like tanking are truly small potatoes if we can’t trust that NBA teams operate on an even playing field with integrity. In that vein, it feels that basketball fans are being distracted by the issue du jour, and forgetting to focus on the longer term pathologies that threaten the NBA’s health.