If you had been raped in Bahrain while you lived there, your rapist could have escaped any punishment if he forced you to marry him. Bahrain only JUST repealed that law. |
This is a very ignorant post. The only gulf country where women were not allowed to drive was Saudi Arabia (and this is no longer the case since the law has changed). Places like Qatar and Dubai treat women very well. I was in Dubai a few weeks ago and I was amazed that women could walk ALONE in the streets at 1-2am and absolutely no one bothered them. Would you walk around DC or another US city alone at 1am and feel perfectly safe? I highly doubt it. I suggest you visit these countries before you spout off your very ignorant nonsense. |
Where to stay in Oman?!? |
| Has anyone mentioned Budapest? One of my favorite cities ever. Not undiscovered, but not Paris, Rome, London. Your travel dollars will support a totalitarian government, but you will also see amazing history and art and drink amazing hot chocolate and shop at fun boutiques... |
And the baths and gorgeous architecture! I loved Budapest when I went. It was 15 years ago, though. |
+1 for Cambodia. For others, Galicia, Spain. Basque region of France (not sure if under-rated). I also really liked a town in the interior of France named Clermant-Ferrand. Pretty cathedral, nice town center, and nice hikes on old volcanoes. Bosnia. |
| Rwanda - beautiful hills, kind people, important history, gorillas. |
I’m also “European”. I’d rather live in Qatar than Mississippi but you put on your American flag shirt, travel to London and talk about how worldly you are. |
That poster is an idiot. They have traveled to Europe so of course they know how women are treated in the Middle East. |
And in NorthCarolina you can’t claim it was rape if you started and then told the man to stop. that is STILL a law. |
This is great to hear! I'm taking DD (who will be 12) to vienna and budapest this spring--if you have any suggestions (areas to stay in or stuff for tweens....) I'm all ears. I will be part of a (HU) government sponsored thing for 1-2 days, but the rest of the time is free. |
|
I feel like Georgia (Caucasus) has gotten a lot of publicity over the last ten years among certain crowds, but hasn’t really become a mainstream tourist destination. Probably because people are scared of what Russia might have in mind. Understandably. Though I’m floored by how many people still seem to think Georgia is part of Russia.
It’s also not the most convenient place to reach - you usually fly through Istanbul and the connecting flight is usually at 4am. Transit and infrastructure are rather questionable. But once you’re there, it’s more than worth it. Gorgeous landscapes, delicious food and wine, wonderful, friendly people, and very, very cheap. And they WANT tourists and foreigners, especially Westerners. Young people prefer English over Russian as their second language and they will love it if you try your hand at learning Georgian (haha, good luck), and they would love to have a tourism economy to compete with the finances of Russian-backed oligarchs. |
If you ignore its illegal occupation and the fact that it was built on ethnically cleansing Palestinians |
Um, it was built on being successful in a post-independence war in which all of its neighbors attacked it. Sorry for those on the losing side, but when you buy the ticket, you take the ride
|
Sure. Whatever helps you sleep at night |