Anonymous wrote:+1 the Copper Queen Hotel in Bisbee. That whole area of Arizona is creepy.
Edinburgh, UK
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Huge swaths of Belgium
Savannah, GA. Downtown Newnan, GA. Parts of Rome, GA.
Anonymous wrote:Crossing into WVa driving to Snowshoe...the abandoned Seneca Rocks ES gives me the creeps even in the day time and not to mention all the other sights along the way
Anonymous wrote:Some spots in McLean.
Anonymous wrote:I feel very uneasy around the White House now that there is a convicted felon rapist in there.
Anonymous wrote:We were driving in the middle of nowhere in Ohio on a blazing hot summer day. I have to go and we see a sign "Rest Area." A tiny building in the middle of a cornfield. No cars in the parking lot.
I walk into this building and am hit by a blast of cold air. A guy in a uniform is sweeping a gleaming marble floor. A pristine, fully stocked convenience store/cafe contains a single employee staring into space. Hushed, ambient music is playing. I go into the bathroom and it looks like a luxury Zen retreat.
Then I walk out and I am again surrounded by an endless cornfield baking in the sun.
This was one of the weirdest things I've ever seen. It was like I traveled through a wormhole to Narita airport.
Anonymous wrote:The Forks in the Road National Historic "Park" in Natchez, MS
It was the second largest slave market in the US with TENS OF THOUSANDS of human beings being sold from this very spot. That was after many of them had WALKED all the way from Virginia in chains via the Natchez Trace.
Aside from the eerie, heartbreaking "vibe" it is also shameful and enraging that such a place of historic significance is commemorated by a pathetic little display. Look for yourself at the photos.
This is akin to a former concentration camp location and it is appalling that this is the best Americans can do to commemorate it.
Anonymous wrote:Zagreb. Police got on the train as we entered Croatia. Show us your papers! Flashlights in our faces.
I guess that's happening here now.