the weirdest place in the world u´ve been 2

Ibiza-girlie

New Member
im going to Minsk, Belarus on Wednesday - the country with the last dictator in the world. I have no idea what to expect other than I know KGB is on the street and kinda monitoring all visitors! its just one of those places in he world you cant imagine yourself. My dad works there, so the whole family is going there
 
Downtown Detroit USA. I was there last year and what an eye opener. I am a west coast canadian boy and i love my city (Vancouver)
This place was so dead, dirty and boring it looked like a ghost town. Plus it had the worst roads in the world to drive on.
It was a weird place.
 
I'd hardly call Lukashenko the last dictator in the world. That's the negative PR doled out by the EU and the US governments (and press). To be sure, there's little press freedom in Belarus and the opposition in oppressed, and he certainly runs the country in a Soviet time warp, but he's also got a lot of domestic support (especially among pensioners, who are getting decent pensions in comparison to some of their counterparts elsewhere in the former USSR). I'm not saying he's good (I personally think he's psychotic and has to go) but there are far worse dictators around.

And I hear Minsk is alright... still a bit Soviet, of course.

Probably the weirdet places I've been to are:
- Amguema, Chukotka - a reindeer herding village of 600, just above the artic circle in the Russian far east. I'm pretty confident I was the first black person most people there had seen live.
- Shunja, Kazakhstan - a town on the Kazakhstani-Chinese border, dominated by the Uigur ethnic group whose brethern across the border in China were rudely suppressed by the Han Chinese a la Tibet.
- Bukhara, Uzbekistan - an ancient Silk Road city in Central Asia with a big 4th century fort. The old city is still a living city.
- Los Angeles, California - very very strange place

I really want to make it down to Nepal, Cambodia, Viet Nam. I've heard great things about all three.
 
Morbyd said:
- Bukhara, Uzbekistan - an ancient Silk Road city in Central Asia with a big 4th century fort. The old city is still a living city.

You brought back old memories of my maternal grandfather telling me about Samarkand, Bukhara and Taimur Lang (known in the west as Timur Lame).
 
Kabul, Afghanistan.


Also, the train station in Vigo after a night of extreme partying (sin dormir)can be a bit unsettling. :lol:
 
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LagunaBeachCA said:
You brought back old memories of my maternal grandfather telling me about Samarkand, Bukhara and Taimur Lang (known in the west as Timur Lame).
aka Timur the Lame, aka Tamerlane. Bukhara is a great place to visit as is Samarkand. At one point both were centers of great empires stretching across Central Asia and the Middle East. When I was down there everyone was instantly my friend (don't get a lot of blacks Americans down that way either :lol:). I got invited to people's house for dinner, some people gave me a ride from one city to the other (past numerous Uzbek police checkpoints 8O )... many other surreal moments.

Do your relatives have some Uzbek or Tajik blood?
 
Not ultra strange, but the capital Tunis probably.

Was like being back in the 70's (not that i can remember much of the 70's :lol:)

The Medina was a very intimidating place too 8O
 
Ecuador: Lived there for a year in the late 80's...what an eye opener!

My school had no windows to protect against getting shot! Still, our hill top house was unbelievable!
 
Morbyd said:
Do your relatives have some Uzbek or Tajik blood?

Not in my immediate family lineage, unless someone a few generations ago spread their legs for some Uzbek or Tajik:lol: . I have some very distant relatives that are part Uzbek. My dad's family is from Shiraz, and my mom's family is from Tehran.
 
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