Spyke

Hate to tell ya, but corporations have been running the US government for most of its existence.

The scariest part about Trump is that the plutocracy no longer need to even hide the vacuous corruption. So many people are so mentally ill they'll literally defend satan to your face, while feeding you an alternate version of reality, citing some dead shit crackpot with 1k YouTube views as "evidence", while calling you crazy. Having dealt with these people, their OS is simply corrupted. They don't know what logic or reality is anymore, and most of them never will... If they can ignore all evidence thus far, they're more likely to murder you than they are to self reflect.

30
lemm.ee

Tourists walking though a farmer's tulip field, trampling the flowers, just to take a stupid picture. Not just one, but dozens of tourists per day.

95

We get that in Provence with lavender fields, people pick them like it's not the farmers' livelihood

8
lemmy.world

Somebody once hoisted her skirt up, dropped a diarrhea on the wall in a cave, and continued on with her day as if she hadn't just committed a speleological war crime.

90
coaxilreply
lemm.ee

What kind age was this person? What did they even look like?

10

I wonder about people who do this. Like, what goes through their head to ever think that's okay? And what does their house look like?

4
fedia.io

Kyoto, I've seen an older tourist literally stop 2 young ladies in kimonos by holding their hand out in front of them in a stop signal then pull out his camera and take a picture. Not once did he ask them. Treated them like they were characters at Disneyland.

81

And that's why foreign tourists are no longer allowed on certain streets there. They ruin it for everyone.

34

Even the characters at Disneyland have specific meet and greet areas where you're supposed to take photos.

9

Funnily enough, the two ladies in kimonos were probably tourists too, although maybe domestic ones. It's a common thing in Kyoto to pay to get dressed up in traditional garb and tour the sights.

5
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

France is south to the Germans, Swedes etc but north to Italians, Greeks etc. So there are both people trying to cut in line (it can be any one, an old lady or a young person), but then other people fight them back with loud "oh you are in a hurry?!!", "Oh, we just stand here, not queueing at all!!", or the "Heey! / Eeh!"

Sort of some urban training it feels like.

18
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

Das is richtig mein freund!

Well, the northen france is on pair with southern germany, but the idea here is the north/south differences, where in the north people are on time and follow rules, in the south not so much.

3

Germans: arrive 20 minutes early because "you never know"

The thing I was trying to convey was, Germans and Swedes follow the rules religiously, south europe not so much.

2

Curiously one of the only times I've seen a tourist trying to cut in line they were french, and tried to pretend they didn't spoke English (at the exit of the Harry Potter studio tour).

3
Damagereply
feddit.it

Usually French tourists are among the worst behaved, so that's kinda weird

-10
lemmy.world

That's odd I've almost exclusively heard this said about Americans, British, and Chinese tourists. Though I have heard that the French will take you to task if you treat their home like it's some amusement park, which seems fair?

18

Yeah but if they're tourists they're not at home, by definition.

I'm basing my comment on my experience with them here in Italy

1

Go hiking in insane heat with just a little water bottle. You're going to die in an area with no cell phone service and it's going to suck the entire time.

79
rzlaticreply
lemmy.ml

even more, will call emergencies and search & rescue services who will fly helicopters to the back of the mountain to pull out a dumbass wearing flipflops.

in our country it's not yet charged but in such idiot cases, it should be.

38
lemmynsfw.com

They have to start doing health insurance (which is where an emergency rescue is or should be billed) like car insurance.

If it's your fault, you have to pay much more.

4
Maxreply
lemmy.world

And if you can't afford the post your-fault car insurance you don't get to drive a car, so if you can't afford the post your-fault health insurance you don't get to live?

6

I assumed this was for tourists, so you don't get to visit other countries anymore.

2
lemmy.world

Vote to leave Europe and then complain that you lost all benefits living in Benidorm

79
01011reply
monero.town

Brits in Spain are a truly strange bunch. Live in Spain for decades, cannot speak Spanish but complain about immigrants in the UK who manage to speak English.

31
Nibodhikareply
lemmy.world

Please tell me that the moment they start complaining about it you switch to Catalán, Gallego or (pretty please) Basco. Some of them do know Spanish, at least enough to get by, but I noticed that even though it's extremely similar they can't make the jump to Catalán (I'm new here and haven't had time to study Catalán just yet, but Spanish being my native tongue I can understand around 80% of what people tell me in Catalan, but I noticed that people who don't speak fluent Spanish can't make the jump from one language to the other that easily). I've never heard Gallego but I assume it's somewhat similar as well, but speaking to them in Basco would be just perfect.

10
ludreply
lemm.ee

Vote to leave the EU

FTFY.

The UK is still in Europe

13
lemmy.world

Was in a brewery in South Carolina, tourist asks the bartender for a bud light. Bartender politely explains that it's a brewery, make their own beer, and directs him to a beer menu. Tourist says, "just give me whatever is closest to a bud light." Absolute monster.

71

Sounds like gonorrhea. You might get yourself checked.

2
frankreply
sopuli.xyz

I used to work for a large craft brewery. We'd have the same sentiments sometimes.

Someone was furious we wouldn't sell them a keg of Miller. Homie, I don't know how to explain this better, but we only sell the beer we make and that ain't it

35

Kegs aren't even hard to get. If he really wants that keg he can just call the nearest distributor and they'll be happy to hook him up. They might even deliver it.

3

This is alcoholic behavior. The alcoholics I know that drink beer (vs wine or whatever) absolutely drink only light beer by the gallon and will order it wherever they are.

6

If I didn't like beer, didn't know it care about meet, but felt I needed to drink it socially to "be a man", that's exactly how I'd approach the problem.

3
4amreply
lemm.ee

What the actual fuck

Even in the USA that’s weird behavior

49
batmaniamreply
lemmy.world

Yank. Can second. Unless it was well and truly off most bartenders would just laugh at you. You might get an exception if you're in the kind of joint that's $20 for a Sam Adam's or something because at that point it's not a pub it's an adult daycare.

11
treadfulreply
lemmy.zip

Yank. Can second.

Brave of you to share your secondary can identity with us.

9

In the us you can ask for a taste and they'll pour a splash. That's ok.

Order the pint, only refund should be if it's off or something

1

Back when I lived in North Edinburgh someone got shot at my local (Jock's Lodge). They keep changing the name to try to distract from that colourful incident but all the locals stick to the original name. Nice place; friendly bar staff!

7
lemmynsfw.com

Used to work for a few ski resorts and still live in town so I've got plenty:

*Skiing into the pit of a ski lift (the area right after the chairs leave the loading station that's roped off for a reason) face first into a thankfully empty chair and asking me "why didn't it stop?". Well chief, it did stop, about 20 feet after I pressed the button, you were within 20 feet.

*Grown man cradling his skis sideways in his arms like a child attempting to board a gondola cabin and clotheslining himself.

*Grown men pushing children out of the way to cut in line.

*Jumping off chairs just before the unload station.

*Father attempting to hit his own children in a tube well after I told him they go like 30mph and can fuck people up.

*Walking along the pavement still wearing skis.

*Dropping the comfort bar on a passing chair, resulting in the people who were about to sit in said chair to get bowled over into the pit. I just about lost any semblance of professionalism on that one...

*Underaged girl riding the bungee trampoline asked me if putting the harnesses on guests turned me on. Resulting in me dropping the harness and telling one of the female coworkers that had just been playing with their phones and talking amongst themselves that the harnesses were their fucking job now.

*Lift I was on stopped for awhile because a guy carrying his skis over his shoulder was absentmindedly decking people in the face which resulted in a fistfight the bottom operator had to break up.

I can keep going for a while.

62
lemmy.world

Is it a thing at ski places to just ride the ski lifts up and down? I have no desire to ski ever, but I've always wanted to try one of those things.

9
4amreply
lemm.ee

You’re not really supposed to ride them around the wheel at the end

17

Depends on the lift, but yeah extra weight on the bullwheel causes excess wear and with the older ones it can really fling you off to the side during that turn. Saw a guy try to ride the bullwheel on a dinosaur of a fixie and it chucked him out of the chair before I could get it stopped.

8

For the chairs that's more of a summer thing, as the ramp isn't something you should be walking on and it's not great for the lift to have weight on the chair while it's going around the wheel up top. The gondola style lifts (enclosed cabin) you can absolutely do that just to hit the bar at the top or whatever, hell, most resorts will give you a cheaper ticket price if that's all you plan on doing.

4
BossDjreply
lemm.ee

Many of them do this during the off-season to make some extra money.

Otherwise they do allow people to go back down every place that I've been for various reasons like sudden panic/fear or broken equipment

3

Depends on the lift and downloading a guest on most chairs is real annoying for everybody involved, including the people waiting in line at the bottom. On a gondola it's of course trivial. If you do manage to get yourself stuck somewhere you can't download from that's more of a patrol problem than anything ops can help you with.

3

Oh and a bunch of resorts use a gondola to access parking lots or other areas of the base if you wanted a completely free option.

3
proudblondreply
lemmy.world

*Dropping the comfort bar on a passing chair, resulting in the people who were about to sit in said chair to get bowled over into the pit.

I’m guessing this was a grown adult? I volunteer at my kids’ school and I’ve seen some extremely impulsive behavior from eight year olds where they clearly didn’t think about what would happen if they pulled some stunt that popped into their heads. Dropping the comfort bar sounds like that kind of thing. No thought about who it might affect; just hey, that’s something to do. It’s not even something cool, it’s just something. Like WTF???

8

Yeah, kids are kids, you can't entirely blame them for not understanding the consequences of their actions quite yet, somebody older than me though? That pisses me right the fuck off.

6
lemmy.world

American lady absolutely losing it and hysterically screaming at a McDonald's cashier for not accepting US dollars. In Ireland.

53
lemmy.world

A big group of Chinese tourists wanted to be first on a boat for some reason so they all just started shoving everyone out of the way, including little old ladies and children. It was really shocking behavior, like suddenly everyone around them was no longer a person. The boat was huge and had plenty of room for everyone so it wasn't really obvious why they decided to attack people, they didn't really gain anything by being the first aboard.

52

Shoving is pretty normal in mainland China. It's just how you get through crowds. I've heard it's getting better.

15
lemmy.world

Was it Niagara Falls? Seen Asians do this before for the maid of the myst but not sure what nationality they were. Always assumed it was some Asian version of a college or school frat.

11
ultranautreply
lemmy.world

Nope, happened in Paris getting on one of the big tour boats that cruise the Seine. I think it was a large extended family or possibly a tour group composed of multiple families, the youngest were preteens and the oldest were maybe 50s or early 60s. I couldn't figure out if there was a tour guide or anyone in charge of the group. We stayed as far from them as we could, they seemed like a bunch of rich assholes and were mostly loud and obnoxious the entire cruise. And just to make it clear, I've seen a lot of shit behavior from tourists in my life and no ethnicity or nationality has a monopoly on shitty tourists. People are monsters, and rich assholes are gonna rich asshole. This one just stands out as the worst because it was such a large group and the violence was so sudden and pointless, and then we were trapped on a boat ride with them.

15

Seen Chinese do (try) the same thing in plitwice national parks. There are only these small wooden paths leading down to the boats. Let’s put it this way: it’s rather unamused when someone two heads smaller than you and half your weight tries to force you into a lake/marshland. What is however amusing is simply stopping to move and watch them loose balance.

10
OceanSoapreply
lemmy.ml

I went snorkeling in a group alongside a Chinese tourist family. The dad literally swam over top of me. To be clear, I was floating on the surface. Instead of going around me, he just swam over me, legs kicking and all. Fucking weirdest experience ever.

10

For some reason I find that hilarious I would've been so shocked I wouldn't have reacted.

4
lemmy.world

For a while I worked at a theme park in central Florida. Yeah, it's that one. Some of the guests went wild.

One time I was walking through a guest area on my way to the break room when a dude pushing a stroller ran into me without looking. Apologies on both sides and then the dude tried to hand me something. I put my hands behind my back as a kind of "no thanks," we're not really supposed to take things from guests. I looked down and it was a used diaper. He thought he could just hand a park employee his child's shit filled Pampers and that we'd take care of it. There was a trash can literally right behind him, but thinking on it later where did he change the diaper? There's trash cans in the bathrooms and they all have changing stations... did he just change the kid outside? Is that a thing parents do?

Another time I was helping the transportation department during a park closure. Up on the monorail platform I was shoulder to shoulder with like a thousand people. A train arrives, the doors and gates open, and people start boarding. A woman who'd been standing near me stopped at the doors, turned to face me, poked her finger into my chest and shouted "YOU RUINED OUR VACATION!" She stared daggers into my soul as she walked backwards like a Bond villain into the car and continued staring me down as the doors closed and the train left the station. I have no clue who this was or what I had done.

Finally, I had to break up a fight where grown ass adults were yelling at each other and had started spitting on each other's children (like WTF). No idea who started it or even if the two groups knew each other, but shit was looking to come to blows and the security people weren't quite there yet. Another park employee and I stepped up between them with a "come on folks" and "this is a place for families." Both of us were big guys so we made a wall between them, I'm 6'2 and was about 280lbs at the time (128cm [typo edit: 182 lol] and almost 130 kgs [edit for my fellow Americans: that's about one refrigerator in height and around weight of a Shetland pony]). Saw the parents faces drop from anger to embarrassment immediately realizing how dumb they were being when security jogged up and a manager on a Segway rolled in.

The most magical place in central Florida really brings out the strange in some folks.

52
AA5Breply
lemmy.world

There's trash cans in the bathrooms and they all have changing stations... did he just change the kid outside? Is that a thing parents do?

Yes. We’re used to no facilities or disgusting facilities and ya gotta do what ya gotta do. Of course you’d have to be an idiot to not take advantage of facilities when they’re available

24
lemmy.world

What really shocked me the whole time I worked there were the number of parents that gave their kids just way too much autonomy... like eight and ten year olds roaming around without a guardian anywhere in sight. It's not a cruise, the parks are not safe places to do that... there's Code Adam training for staff and a ton of security, but theme parks attract PDF files by the bus load.

10

PDF Files! hadn't heard that one before, ha!

I remember getting lost there as a child. I was with my family, but that day it started raining cats and dogs, so we went to the closest shop and bought rain ponchos... which evidently is what EVERY family did. We started walking, I got separated for a second, and ended up following this other family around the park for what seemed like hours, but was probably only a few minutes. When I finally caught up with the family, and grabbed the mom-looking ponchos hand, I realized what I had done.

I ended up running from them, and hung around the shop we bought the ponchos from. Luckily, my mom came and found me there. but yo I legit was like "Well, I guess I'll just live and work at the park now. 😐" Like some Floridian Robinson Crusoe, I felt like I was awash on a strange island, and it was there I would remain after being abandoned. 😅

12
treadfulreply
lemmy.zip

You've got to be the only person I've ever heard with positive things to say about the PDF format.

11
absGeekNZreply
lemmy.nz

I was just about to say that, tis a cursed format.

3
oozynozhreply
lemm.ee

It has its merits. If I want a document's formatting to be consistent upon delivery and accessible to anybody with so much as a web browser, I export to PDF.

2

I use them all the time, it has its place.....but people tend to overuse them.

Nothing worse than someone sending me data as a fucken PDF file. Hey here is a table with a bunch of data, it is spread over multiple pages, and no you can't get the data as a csv file. Because I want you to spend a lot of time verifying that the data has imported correctly.

2

Both of us were big guys so we made a wall between them, I'm ... 128cm

Hahahaha I know you fixed it, but 128 is 4'2, that's not even tall for a Hobbit, so I immediately knew you had Missconverted/mistyped the value, but it was hilarious anyways, thanks for leaving it and just adding the correct value after it.

9
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

I'm kind of a big guy, for you europeans. I'm 4'2 and weights 280lbs.

;-)

5

I mean in fairness that's still a big motherfucker, just in a different dimension

8

Grew up in a tourist town in Aus, the amount of stupid shit I have seen is wild.

Saw a tourist once bite into a meatpie still in its aluminium tray, and the pie was still hotter then the sun, so yeah, aluminium on the teeth and hectic burnt mouth, hahhahahah gave me a good giggle.

29
lemm.ee

[off topic?]

I live in New York City. One of my friends used to teach an art history course at the4 College of Staten Island.

She once told me that she'd had students who'd never travelled the 12 miles to get to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan. The Met is considered one of the top museums in the world, but going there was too much hassle

38
lemmy.world

The Staten Island Ferry is such an awesome ride, though. It's free and goes past beautiful views of the skylines and the Statue of Liberty.

I live in New York City, and when I'm hosting or hanging with visitors from out of town I always take them to ride the ferry to Staten Island and back if I can.

17
Nibodhikareply
lemmy.world

I always take them to ride the ferry to Staten Island and back if I can.

I know what you meant, but my brain read that and thought "what if he can't, he just leaves them there?"

6

It’s fine as a tourist but doing it regularly must suck. I assume living on Staten Island sucks in general.

3

I mean, from SI to Manhattan, you either need to take a ferry or come into Bayonne, so that's a whole thing. Then again, I'll admit, I prefer the Cloisters to the main Met.

5

I was in the Navy and one of my shipmates got so drunk he passed out on a bench in front of the fountain at the Kings Cross intersection in Sydney. So a prostitute told him he was going to get arrested and when he spoke she realized he was American and somehow one thing leading to the other....

She gave him a bj at 7am during the beginning of rush hour traffic. She later took us to a couple private bars that were creepy and she stole his Levi's later after they had sex and she left

37
lemmy.world

Yep lived there! This was pre-2010, to be certain. Now there’s a safe injecting site, lockout laws, and other things that make the neighborhood less fun

14
VerticaGGreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Safe consumption sites save lives and improve communities, blatantly so when compared to the status quo. Fuck outta here with that tired, bloodsoaked, right-wing, reactionary NIMBYism.

You dont care and that dehumanization is why you'll catch an ez block; I'm not rehashing this debate for the nth time.

To those reading on or willing to learn more:

Https://crackdownpod.com Actually hear the perspectives from survivors of the War on People [mostly of color] who use Drugs

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=dg8DA1LuZFk 5 minutes on why Harm Reduction/Safe Consumption Centers are a better way

2
lemmy.world

Mate... dunno where to begin with you. I work in these places and I'm 100% for. You sound like you need to address an anxiety or anger problem.

1

IF that's true:

Doesnt matter if you do; your anecdotal life experience does not make for a better world for people who use.

What's more, im not given to policing my own emotions, nor allowing you to judge my emotions, as if we should be robots. Humans are emotional and biased, acting otherwise doesnt make you the very enlightened voice of logic and reason you seem to think it does -- Thst's just basic manipulative behavior.

With all do buddy...

Enjoy the block 😇

1

I stayed there in 2011 and the hotel didn't have wifi. Jet lag led me to sitting on the sidewalk outside McDonald's at 5am to get some internet.

2

Haggle and argue with a street vendor in a 3rd world country. He might've been mildly overcharged but the kind of amount that even I let go as a local.

Plus since there's basically 0 tourism here many just like to give away stuff for free to em.

Many also treat the tourist as a tourist attraction lol. Staring and awkwardly asking for photos and what not.

34
mander.xyz

A lot of articles aimed at tourists stress that you should never accept the initial price and always haggle, so I can see how that would happen.

37

In fact, many of them say that haggling is a sign of respect and an important social norm in some cultures.

14

Many also treat the tourist as a tourist attraction lol

Ha ha yes, a friend visiting China was handed a baby by its mother, who proceeded to take a photo. Then took the baby back and walked away, without a please or thank you.

12
atro_cityreply
fedia.io

Weeeell, tourists are often seen as easy money even in rich countries. There are tourist traps all over and when you don't speak the language or don't know the place, it's very easy to get ripped off. Plus, if you grew up in a place with markets, it's quite normal to haggle - some people go to the market just to haggle because it's fun.

8

some people go to the market just to haggle because it's fun

This sounds like an actual nightmare

3
lemmy.world

Try to touch a baby Canadian goose with the parent geese near by. WTF was that lady thinking!?!

32

Nobody goes their whole life without becoming intimately aware of the danger cobra chickens present. Once when I was a teenager, I decided to drive aggressively close to a couple geese while they were strolling around a busy parking lot. The goose took exception, and as I went by, he pecked at my car door, which left a dent and made a VERY loud noise. I was so flabbergasted by the violence contained within this downy devil, that I let my car slow, which was a mistake. The goose took it as a sign of weakness and was now charging at me.

I freak out, not wanting him to damage my car anymore, so I make haste out of the car park, pause for a moment at the stop sign, and turn right onto the road. I look back to the parking lot and what do I see? The goose, full flight, full speed, coming right at my passenger window. Before I can accelerate away, he collides with the passenger side door, leaving a HUGE dent, right next to the little dent he made earlier.

At that point I was doing like 60 in a 35 mph zone just to gtf away from that hellish demon spawn. Methinks perhaps reincarnation is real, and all truly evil people come back as canadian geese.

24
IMongoosereply
lemmy.world

If you go to Yellowstone National Park it is very likely you will see someone almost die to wildlife. They think it's Disney land or something and the park is filled with friendly show animals. On a week long trip I saw someone getting way too close to bison, caribou (in the town with video screens playing Caribou attacking cars and people on loop), and a bear with a cub. People are completely clueless.

16

And when people get or almost killed by an animal it is the animal's fault instead of the idiot who created the situation.

3
feddit.nu

this.

tl;dr: showed up to hotel a day before their room was ready, wanted to sleep in the lobby, got abusive and violent with the staff when they refused, then accused the police of assault when they were forcibly escorted out after refusing for hours to leave.

this got attention in swedish media first, and only got a response from the ccp after it had gone viral.

31

After reviewing the footage, the Chinese Embassy in Stockholm wrote in a statement that the incident “severely endangered the life and violated the basic human rights of the Chinese citizens.”

That’s rich, coming from officials of a country that runs concentration camps.

22
21Cabbagereply
lemmynsfw.com

'then accused the police of assault' ah, so not an American story then. "Yeah we did it, and we'll do it again!"

5

yeah watching the video the police are so uncomfortable with having to handle them. the guy basically goes limp in their arms and starts screaming, so another policeman has to grab his feet and they carry him out like ewoks while he screams "THIS IS KILLING".

very strange.

6
infosec.pub

A British tourist riding on the worst metro line left her (expensive) phone on the seat and went behind the seat to look at the metro map. Even stayed there while the doors were open and at least me and three more people could have easily snatched it and left. I don't think the subway in the UK is much better so not sure what she was thinking.

26
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

I was on a train in sweden, and at a stop this guy just went and forgot his phone (no backpack or any kind of things left, just his phone), I tried to hail him but that didn't work, so I took the phone and raced after him, giving it to him outside the train.

He was talking to someone and was clearly not happy about it all.

Well well, I boarded the train and thought I had at least done a good deed.

Guy comes aboard and rides the train to the next station...

9

Hey maybe he learned not to leave his things like that and it was a good deed in the end

6

The only place where I'd do this would be in one of those Islamic countries where they cut your hand off for stealing

-9

You could probably get away with it in Japan or Korea, too. In Japan, they'd be glaring at you for saving your seat, and in Korea, an old person might sit on your phone or yell at you...but the phone would still be there

6
Aqariusreply
lemmy.world

Nah, draconian punishments are usually a sign of high-crime, low-enforcemwnt, so you're overdoing punishment to drive the point home for the few thieves you manage to catch.

1

This one is just Sharia law, lol. The UK used to have similar draconian punishments for stealing, namely, deportation to Australia

2

I live in New Orleans and the police on Bourbon St. ride specially-trained, very large horses for crowd control. I’ve definitely seen some drunk tourists try to resist an officer’s command to calm down by trying to push back on the horse and the horse just being totally unphased.

20

I had to move a horse, to fill its water bucket while it was eating. I tap and talk, nothing. I push, can't. I had to punch it literally as hard as I could so it would acknowledge me. They have really thick skin.

Disclaimer: Don't punch a horse if you don't know it and what you are doing. They get scared easily and you won't be the first to get your jaw wired back together.

4

We hosted some Japanese tourists a few times when I was younger.

My mom and dad got pretty freaked out when they caught one of the older women (young adult age, from what I remember) going into my brother’s room (~age 7-9) and sitting on his bed and looking at him as he slept. I don’t think she actually did anything but it was super creepy. They ended up kicking her out.

Another one at another time got really upset at us and ended up leaving. I don’t remember specifics, I just remember her screaming at my parents and then leaving. I was pretty young when this happened. If I had to guess, I’d say it was because we lived close to a big US city at the time but not within walking distance. But looking at a map might give you that impression and she may have thought she’d get to do more in that city when she couldn’t.

We hosted quite a few groups and most seemed to enjoy their stay and have a fun time. I remember my brother and I getting quite a few gifts from them, small stuff like toys and treats, and getting to hear a bit about Japan.

18
lemm.ee

Overdose on heroin in a country that didn't really have any emergency services.

18
21Cabbagereply
lemmynsfw.com

One imagines the middle of the Venn diagram between people with international tourism money and people who overdose on heroin is pretty slim.

7
lemm.ee

You have to spend a lot of money to get to the places where the heroin is cheap...

4

In San Diego, Arizona tourists (who are often fucking pieces of shit) like to walk up to groups of seals (past signs and barriers) to fucking pet them.

Fuck you, Zonies!

17

The seals don't bite the zonies? I don't go near the seals or sea lions because I assume they will bite. They look too much like sea doggos, and domesticated doggos will still bite strangers.

1

Switzerland. Taking the very busy cableway down the mountain. People waiting in line to get in. Next stop, I see some people exiting and immediately getting in line again there. Apparently they thought you need to get in line again at every stop. Crazy. Sweet maybe, but crazy.

14

Not the craziest thing in this thread but inside a train, arguing loudly on the phone.

It sounded like the tourist was scammed or something.

13

A family was trying to have a 3-day-old baguette and breaking their teeth on it

13
lemmy.world

I was in the line to get tickets for Leeds Castle in UK. Some guy got off a bus ran past the line to the ticket guy. He started slamming his hands down and yelling "Fish and Chips" over and over again.

The ticket guy wasn't selling any food and wasn't going to sell him a ticket unless he got in line. After about 2 minutes of this he just got back on the bus.

8

Never had the chance to go out of the US, what's wrong with Berlin? Seems like an orderly and we'll run place from this side of the pond

1
jlai.lu

Spend money (waste fuel, and worse: waste precious time) to go to touristic places so they can take the exact same picture/video everyone else has taken, and share it on the exact same social networks everyone else has done. Why not just buy a postcard or repost a photo already shared. Why not, you know, look around and suddenly realize there are many other things worth looking at... things that may not even be that remote from where they live.

For me, that's one of the most extreme demonstration of generalized craziness, if not worse. Or maybe it's just me who's crazy (or worse)?

Edit: added a missing word.

7
programming.dev

The point of a photo is to remember something you did. Not generally the photo itself.

Resharing someone else's photo is not even similar to going somewhere and capturing the moment.

When you're old those photos might be all you have left.

33
Libbreply
jlai.lu

The point of a photo is to remember something you did. Not generally the photo itself.

Why then share it? I don't share the (very few) photos I take.

Resharing someone else’s photo is not even similar to going somewhere and capturing the moment.

I should have added a '\s' to my sentence ;)

When you’re old those photos might be all you have left.

Sure, memories are priceless and they may differ for everyone. I mean, I'm old(er) and I much prefer words to images myself (I've been journaling for almost 50 years). Also, I don't care to remember seing the Eiffel Tower (even less so since I live in Paris, which is a privileged place to observe tourists), or NY, or Bangkok, or any other place in particular. I wish to remember people.

Note that I simply answered the OP question (what is the craziest thing you have seen a tourist do). I may be wrong, like I hinted to in my previous comment, but to this still is the most mind boggling stupid thing I can see people do over and over again every singled day... the moment I pass in one of those few Parisian streets full of tourists ;)

-10
ChicoSuavereply
lemmy.world

The craziest thing you've seen is people behaving the same as a photographer who came before then? You sound mad about other people being excited that they finally saved enough and took an opportunity to enjoy themselves. People go to places to see things because that's what tourism is. Do you not try to do things yourself because others have done it before you? Did you know that tour groups are a business formed to do exactly what you think is crazy?

There is a remarkable detachment between you and the people who are trying to have fun.

12
Libbreply
jlai.lu

The craziest thing you’ve seen is people behaving the same as a photographer who came before then? You sound mad about other people being excited that they finally saved enough and took an opportunity to enjoy themselves. People go to places to see things because that’s what tourism is. Do you not try to do things yourself because others have done it before you? Did you know that tour groups are a business formed to do exactly what you think is crazy?

There is a remarkable detachment between you and the people who are trying to have fun.

Let me recap your reply:

Do you not try

Did you know

There is a remarkable detachment between you and the people who are trying to have fun

and

You sound mad about other people

Pardon me, but who exactly sounds mad, here?

It's possible I'm over-interpreting the way you answered and maybe, like me, English is not you native language and you may not master it enough to express all the nuances of your deep and rich opinions and thoughts. It is such a pain, it happens to me all the time too.

So, to make it clear, I answered a question without worrying much about pleasing anyone, yourself included hope you won't mind me saying so. And I answered what I thought was the craziest thing I see tourists do.

What I never tried to answer is this question you pulled out of the fleshy sitting part of your anatomy:

The craziest thing you’ve seen is people behaving the same as a photographer who came before then?

To put it politely, it's quite unfair to change the question and then criticize my supposed answer to it. What was it you were saying? Oh, yeah: there is a remarkable detachment between you and the actual facts.

So, once again, I was only talking about tourists doing tourtisty things, and nothing else. I was not talking about people in general or crazy things in general. But since you asked, let me tell you you probably don't want to know the craziest shit I've seen people do. And, no, they were not mere tourists behaving like mere tourists. Unless the tourist you know have a tendency to end up in jail, too?

That said, I'm grateful for the time you spend trying to help me realize the absolute dick I was by daring sharing my unflattering opinions on tourists behaving like tourists. Allow me to oblige in return. I insist.

  1. To recap, all I did is express my personal unflattering opinion on a question about tourists, right?
  2. To which you answered by expressing your own and rather unflattering opinion on the kind of person I must be, right?

But then, if 1. makes a dick out of me, what does 2. make out of you? Right.

So, to summarize, it seems we both have diverging personal and unflattering opinions. That's great! I am always so happy to meet people willing to discuss without anger or being dismissive to one another, even more so when those two persons have slightly diverging opinions on very delicate topics.

Once again, from one dick to another, thank you very much for what I consider a very enriching discussion.

-7
fedia.io

People share photos to seek validation that they are interesting and are doing interesting things. Is this very classy? Not really, but it's true. It'll always be true. I don't really think there's much point in judging people too heavily for it. We're all just apes enslaved to whatever acts cause our body to release good chemicals.

I think there is a point at which it may be unhealthy if someone is only doing things for validation without taking any personal satisfaction at all, and tourism especially should be done respectfully and after a certain amount of tourists are in an area I do think it defeats the beauty, but I think deep down we all know why tourists are a thing, and why sharing pictures online is a thing.

2

Thx. Agreed. And yes, we all know why it is a thing.

When I answered to Chico Suave's slightly less amiable comment I wanted to share a few links to what I consider interesting reads. Then I read your comment and thought maybe they would be read with a lot less hostility if I shared them here.

They're in no order of importance and they're a bit redundant too (there were many more, hopefully anyone will find one more exciting to read) and they may help better understand my opinion on tourism in general (and their photographic laziness in particular). It may also be worth saying that we do our best to put our money where our mouth is as, both my spouse and I, we decided some 25 years ago to quit traveling by plane to fancy places (at the time we realized the ecological crisis that was to come and because it suddenly seemed to us an inexcusable waste of energy just to satisfy our mere 'leisure' needs), and soon after that we also quit flying for work. No revolution mind you, and no 'no fun allowed' either, we made all our 'touristic' activities local and all our work travels/meetings virtual.

So if anyone is interested, about tourism (there are others, I simply grabbed the first few not obviously AI-written results I could find):

And if anyone is interested in trying to make...less touristic images (not that I'm a pro myself, far from it but isn't it exciting to try to do better?) a few quick/easy suggestions:

1

Out fishing with some buddies on a river popular for its springs and people floating on inner tubes.

Except, we were well south of the exit for tubers to be picked up by the shuttle and taken back to the start, and we start hearing a loud group approaching. Eventually they saw us and loudly spoke to each other saying something about "asking the rednecks". When they got closer they did, to the point of saying, "Hey rednecks, where is the exit for tubers? Did we pass it or is it coming up?"

They were probably a 20 minute float past the exit. I told them they had about another 20 minutes to go.

"Thank you rednecks!"

4
lemmy.world

I once saw a lady pick up her toddler, help him stand on a trashcan, and piss into it.

2
bitchkatreply
lemmy.world

That's just smart. When I was little, they just had kids pee into the gutter.

3
KubeRootreply
discuss.tchncs.de

I mean, the gutter is made for dealing with liquids, whereas a trashcan is meant for solid waste, so that doesn't seem like a good idea?

1
bitchkatreply
lemmy.world

What do you do with a paper cup that has liquid in it?

1
Mesopharreply
lemm.ee

Finish the drink or pour the liquid out first, same as I'd do with the trash can in my kitchen

2
bitchkatreply
lemmy.world

Where do you pour the liquid? Most trash cans out in public do not have drains conveniently located next to them.

1

Patch of grass or mulch near by, or in a storm drain if there is one. Otherwise I continue carrying it until I get to such a place. If I'm in inside, like a mall or an airport, I pour in a restroom sink and then rinse it down the sink drain with water from the tap.

But it rarely comes to that. I generally finish whatever my drink is long before I have a need to throw the container out.

1

Attempt to hitchhike across the US. No clue if they made it, but I carried them through Kentucky.

I say this as someone who has successfully hitchhiked the length and breadth of the 48 states, but these folks were not prepared for what they were attempting.

2