North Korea—saw it from the DMZ. Saw the world’s largest or second largest flag billowing in the distance, the Potemkin village, as well as an underground tunnel leading into darkness. Our guide made the same annoying joke fifty times: “please don’t defect!” People have to be paid to live on the farms on the South Korean side because it’s so dangerous there, so they are also pretty much Potemkin villages. The “residents” only hang around for a few months out of the year. I was there in the winter, when it was extremely windy and cold. My impression was of a pretty bleak place. The mountains seemed to have all their trees cut down. But South Korea in the winter is also remarkably bleak. Factories, apartments, highways, smog. Having an American soldier show us the world’s most dangerous golf course should have been radicalizing but wasn’t.

Laos—spent a week or two there on two different occasions about ten years ago. My impression was that the country was much poorer than Thailand and that the people made almost no effort to ingratiate themselves with me, whereas Thailand probably has the friendliest people I have ever encountered (aside from some Kurds I met on the Turkish side of Kurdistan). I was a lib at the time but when I saw all the red flags everywhere I was just like, huh, cool. I only remember seeing them at the border with Thailand, and they were small, however. A lot of construction was going on in the new capital, Vientiane, whereas the old colonial capital, Luang Prabang, was in the middle of the jungle on the Mekong River and had a lot of charm. Fellow tourists told me that Chinese companies were cutting down all the trees. If only they were AMERICAN companies! I got into a crazy weird fight at a travel agency in Luang Prabang. It was the only time I’ve ever found myself in a shouting match with a total stranger. But things worked out in the end.

China—only been to the airports. They’re extremely large, new, and efficient and put American airports to shame. I don’t know if this is the policy now, but if you have to transfer, there comes a point where you can just walk out of the airport and hang out in China, even if you don’t have a visa. While I was moving from one terminal to the other I just found myself in front of the doors leading out to the taxis and I was like, whoa. A lib colleague teaches English in China now and told me that life went back to normal there months ago and that the people worship the government like robots. I wonder why!

Kerala—haven’t been, but feel like I want to live there. Ditto with Cuba and Vietnam. I was briefly in the Republic of Georgia as well as Cambodia, but both are obviously no longer leftist (or leftist-seeming in Cambodia’s case) states. It seemed like every other person was missing at least one limb in Cambodia and there were a lot of young kids there. Tbilisi had a cool subway system and some nice architecture but overall seemed pretty dead but I was there for barely more than one day.

    • duderium [he/him]
      hexagon
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      4 years ago

      My traveling days are over. I stopped wanting to do it as much when I realized how much it damaged the world and how empty it made me feel. I saw lots of cool people and places, but for what purpose?

      • ImperativeMandates [none/use name]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I believe the travelling is good to get another view of home. But if it becomes routine it might be good to embrace a place for multiple month a year, with people living there or doing work there to scratch more than the surface. Else it really isn't great. Though we will need exchanges of people before and after the revolution to keep human connections.

  • shellac [he/him]
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    edit-2
    4 years ago

    I went to Cuba and visited three cities during warming of relations under Obama. I've also been to PR, and Haiti, and I have to say Cuba is the nicest of any of the Caribbean Islands. Its very safe, people seem happy in general, and while its not rich, it doesn't have the abject poverty of Haiti or that of poorer people in San Juan.

    I also being to Beijing and Western China pre-Olympics. Great place also, except for the horrendous air pollution.

  • fitterr
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    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

  • 420clownpeen [they/them,any]
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    edit-2
    4 years ago

    Been to China once for a month as a tourist. Food culture's really good although the palette and staple ingredients are naturally quite different. The cities are enormous, the parks (inside cities and in the countryside) are wonderful, and I had a lot of fun clothes shopping out there. Really awesome museums as well, even if you can't read shit. Would definitely be hard to get around without having someone who's fluent and who knows the country pretty well tho.

    Can definitely feel the surveillance state's presence more than you do in the US, but that's about the extent of my experience with Politics or The Government there. I know, very weird for an American to not form strong political opinions of a country where they were just a tourist ambling along with no ability to read write or speak independently lol.

    • CommieElon [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      How do common Vietnamese people feel about Socialism, Marxism, Ho Chi Minh? Are they neutral about it all?

  • Kereru [he/him]
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    4 years ago

    Went to Vietnam when I was much younger, and with only a very vague idea of it's history.

    I think it's hard to get a real sense of a place as a tourist, everyone was really nice, food was amazing, but that would have just been hitting the popular tourist spots so probably not a meaningful idea of what life if like for most people.

    The one weird thing was Da Nang where a shit load of Russian bourgeoisie apparently go for beach vacations. Real weird vibe, seedy and kind of predatory feeling. Might have been the area we where in.

  • AdamSandler [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I would move to China but personal reason make we want to stay here.

    • duderium [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      4 years ago

      Thanks for asking, and sorry it took me so long to get back to you. No, I blew it. I got about 5,000 votes, out of about 12,000 cast. I didn't (couldn't) campaign, but also didn't want to campaign because I viewed the job as being like a glorified prison guard. Although I entered the race, I did so on the understanding that I wouldn't have to campaign. When George Floyd happened, the local Republicans found out about me—I had been flying under the radar—and organized rapidly to stop me. If I had won, I wouldn't have been able to change anything, and the local media would have been going apeshit about a communist destroying the police from the inside. My family would have been threatened, and there is no organization out here to protect us. So although it sucks that I lost, it's probably for the better. Even when I started the campaign, I believed that revolution was the only real way to effect change. I was hanging on to electoralism with Bernie, but when he lost I was just like, ah, fuck it, there really is no hope for this government. This was my fourth or fifth election, and will probably be my last. I've won 2/5, but I just don't think I have the stomach to waste my time with this bullshit any longer. I don't know. It takes so much work, and what do you gain? On the other hand, there is virtually no revolutionary awareness where I live, at least so far as I can tell. I've been organizing a leftwing group, but we can't really do anything because of coronavirus.

  • ultraviolet [she/her]
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    edit-2
    4 years ago

    I've lived in China as a kid so I don't have too much experience but China's trains and public transit are miles above than the shit we have in North America. It's affordable and you can basically go anywhere in the country. Cars still fuck up the cities though.

  • Sen_Jen [they/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I haven't gotten the opportunity to plan my own trip, but when I can my first destination will have to be Cuba.