Anonymous wrote:I'm honestly surprised that people poop in public in America. Which world are we in? We need laws like Singapore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:San Francisco. Never been in a city where I saw so much human excrement as that. I saw a PP mention Naples. I lived there for 2 years. It had its trash piles, but not really that bad. San Francisco grossed me out.
This is heartbreaking. I remember how 25 years ago San Francisco was a jewel.
It still is a shockingly beautiful place, almost surreally so. But I've traveled many places and there's only two cities in the world where someone has crapped on the sidewalk right in front of me: NYC and SF.
Yea right. I live in the Bay Area and go into SF at least twice a month and have never seen anyone crapping on the sidewalk, SF is very clean and surprisingly safe for a large city.
Anonymous wrote:India.
Paris
Rome
Lisbon
Hospital-grade sterile compared to India.
Anonymous wrote:I'm honestly surprised that people poop in public in America. Which world are we in? We need laws like Singapore.
Anonymous wrote:New Orleans... walked out of our very nice hotel after brunch and there was a man passed out on the sidewalk, pants down and gross stuff coming out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Liberal cities need to consult Singapore to fix the homeless and drug problem
The reason Singapore is so clean is that they import foreign workers from places like India and Bangladesh to be professional street cleaners. It is a huge issue when the cleaners aren’t available in an estate (neighborhood) and everyone can see how much trash and nastiness the cleaners take care of each day.
The social safety net is also quite robust. And there are a lot of well-enforced rules and taxes.
I'm an expat and have lived in Singapore for the past few years, and the ONLY part of Singapore where I have EVER seen "trash and nastiness" is Little India. The people who live there seem to have looked around at the rest of Singapore, noted the clean streets and green, lush grassy areas and public spaces, then collectively decided to reject standards of cleanliness en masse. After a festival or weekend night it's a mess. It's baffling to me that people would decide to live that way when everywhere else in Singapore is so pristine.
Cleaning also requires time, and if the poor are too busy working, dealing with children, cooking, the last thing they are going to do is clean.
Anonymous wrote:Seoul was clean, but when I was there, the first three days of my visit had winds bringing filthy particle matter from Chinese factories. Without a mask, the stuff got in your lungs. The air was terrible to look at and hard to breathe. When the winds shifted, skies cleared up and air was great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Liberal cities need to consult Singapore to fix the homeless and drug problem
The reason Singapore is so clean is that they import foreign workers from places like India and Bangladesh to be professional street cleaners. It is a huge issue when the cleaners aren’t available in an estate (neighborhood) and everyone can see how much trash and nastiness the cleaners take care of each day.
The social safety net is also quite robust. And there are a lot of well-enforced rules and taxes.
I'm an expat and have lived in Singapore for the past few years, and the ONLY part of Singapore where I have EVER seen "trash and nastiness" is Little India. The people who live there seem to have looked around at the rest of Singapore, noted the clean streets and green, lush grassy areas and public spaces, then collectively decided to reject standards of cleanliness en masse. After a festival or weekend night it's a mess. It's baffling to me that people would decide to live that way when everywhere else in Singapore is so pristine.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not well traveled but of the cities that I've seen I'd have to say the New Orleans was the dirtiest. We saw human poop on the sidewalk and the individual who was presumably responsible for taking a dump on the sidewalk was passed out nearby taking a nap.