Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Qatar. I think it is kind of a place most people wouldn't think to vacation. We absolutely loved it and I was pretty shocked by what a great time I had (i admittedly didn't know much about it before we went)
IDK.. I don't think I like the idea of spending my money in a country where women are second class citizens. Just doesn't feel right to me.
that sentiment applies to about half of the US as well since the dreadful SC decision last year
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Qatar. I think it is kind of a place most people wouldn't think to vacation. We absolutely loved it and I was pretty shocked by what a great time I had (i admittedly didn't know much about it before we went)
IDK.. I don't think I like the idea of spending my money in a country where women are second class citizens. Just doesn't feel right to me.
I hate this attitude from Americans. We’ve never had a woman president, we teach college women that they can’t go out alone at night because they’ll be raped, yet we’re the backwards ones. Learn to think critically about your own environment, see beyond the American perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Bayeux, France. Great place as a base in Normandy. We stayed in the loveliest hotel. They had a great breakfast and a pretty garden where we had a glass of wine and charcuterie in the afternoon. And a really memorable dinner in a restaurant near the center of town.
Planning a trip to Normandy next year, would love to know the name of this hotel!
Anonymous wrote:I too am jumping on the Mexico train. Not spoken about enough: Acapulco.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Annecy, France. Super clean beautiful lake surrounded by mountains, warm enough to comfortably swim in in July and August. French food. 45 minutes from a major airport. 90 minutes from the heart of the French Alps. And yet I have met very few Americans or even Brits who have ever heard of it.
Went over 20 years ago on a People to People trip and LOVED it!
Yeah, it’s different now. Violence against children, especially babies & toddlers, is something I thought I would never see there.
I don’t know why pp wrote the above about Americans & Brits. There’s a small but mighty group of expats in Annecy, known as the “Venice of the Alps.”
Huh?
I think PP was referring to this.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jun/08/its-unbelievable-annecy-shocked-by-knife-attack-on-young-children-in-park
It was shocking partially because it's so rare. And obviously because of the viciousness of attacking kids on a playground.
Just as a side note, 12 children under 18 have been shot and killed in the District this year.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2023/06/28/teen-shot-southeast-dc-homicide/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Qatar. I think it is kind of a place most people wouldn't think to vacation. We absolutely loved it and I was pretty shocked by what a great time I had (i admittedly didn't know much about it before we went)
IDK.. I don't think I like the idea of spending my money in a country where women are second class citizens. Just doesn't feel right to me.
that sentiment applies to about half of the US as well since the dreadful SC decision last year
Do you include almost all European countries that have significantly more restrictive abortion policies?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Annecy, France. Super clean beautiful lake surrounded by mountains, warm enough to comfortably swim in in July and August. French food. 45 minutes from a major airport. 90 minutes from the heart of the French Alps. And yet I have met very few Americans or even Brits who have ever heard of it.
Went over 20 years ago on a People to People trip and LOVED it!
Yeah, it’s different now. Violence against children, especially babies & toddlers, is something I thought I would never see there.
I don’t know why pp wrote the above about Americans & Brits. There’s a small but mighty group of expats in Annecy, known as the “Venice of the Alps.”
Huh?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Qatar. I think it is kind of a place most people wouldn't think to vacation. We absolutely loved it and I was pretty shocked by what a great time I had (i admittedly didn't know much about it before we went)
IDK.. I don't think I like the idea of spending my money in a country where women are second class citizens. Just doesn't feel right to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Annecy, France. Super clean beautiful lake surrounded by mountains, warm enough to comfortably swim in in July and August. French food. 45 minutes from a major airport. 90 minutes from the heart of the French Alps. And yet I have met very few Americans or even Brits who have ever heard of it.
Went over 20 years ago on a People to People trip and LOVED it!
Yeah, it’s different now. Violence against children, especially babies & toddlers, is something I thought I would never see there.
I don’t know why pp wrote the above about Americans & Brits. There’s a small but mighty group of expats in Annecy, known as the “Venice of the Alps.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Annecy, France. Super clean beautiful lake surrounded by mountains, warm enough to comfortably swim in in July and August. French food. 45 minutes from a major airport. 90 minutes from the heart of the French Alps. And yet I have met very few Americans or even Brits who have ever heard of it.
Went over 20 years ago on a People to People trip and LOVED it!
Anonymous wrote:Moravske Toplice. Spa in Slovenia. Amazing food.