We’ve gone to multiple places but is say the worst areas are the big cities. We visited Chicago and if you strayed a bit towards the outer edges of the downtown area it got sketchy kinda quickly. Downtown itself wasn’t too bad but at night I still felt a bit exposed walking around there with all the dark allies.
The plural of “alley” is “alleys”, not “allies” (that’s the plural for “ally”!) Those two mess me up, too. Damn you, English, with your sound-alike words and weird pluralizing rules.
people unfamiliar with how to move and operate in america are absolutely not ready for our suburbs and exurbs where the real danger is…
i think their experience of “chicago got scary for me” is legitimate, but it has more to do with not knowing who the threats are than the existence of said threats. chicago is in a massive struggle between the police and people who would like to not be killed by the police. out in the country side… lowkey the police won
Yeah, the comment sounds a lot like an American tourist being afraid to step a single foot off of their beach resort in Cancun. In these instances, the fear comes more from the lack of experience, and not knowing some of the biggest pitfalls that locals avoid to stay safe. Things that the locals won’t even think about, because avoiding it is just so engrained as habit.
I’d say the bigger issue for me was the fact that everyone can have a weapon with them and could literally kill you in seconds if they want to. As someone from a country (and continent) where this isn’t considered normal (the worst someone can carry is a knife and even that’s illegal) that’s just a real culture shock. Also, last time, our first day there consisted of being on public transport between the airport and our hotel where there was some crazy person shouting and trying to start fights with other passengers. We then got to our hotel, put our stuff away, heard noises outside and when we walked out we found out there had been a shootout at a restaurant around the block just minutes earlier.
So yeah, call it whatever you want but I wouldn’t call it safe.
We’ve gone to multiple places but is say the worst areas are the big cities. We visited Chicago and if you strayed a bit towards the outer edges of the downtown area it got sketchy kinda quickly. Downtown itself wasn’t too bad but at night I still felt a bit exposed walking around there with all the dark allies.
The plural of “alley” is “alleys”, not “allies” (that’s the plural for “ally”!) Those two mess me up, too. Damn you, English, with your sound-alike words and weird pluralizing rules.
do not listen to this person. it got “sketchy” outside of downtown chicago? pffft! someone needs to get out more often.
people unfamiliar with how to move and operate in america are absolutely not ready for our suburbs and exurbs where the real danger is…
i think their experience of “chicago got scary for me” is legitimate, but it has more to do with not knowing who the threats are than the existence of said threats. chicago is in a massive struggle between the police and people who would like to not be killed by the police. out in the country side… lowkey the police won
Yeah, the comment sounds a lot like an American tourist being afraid to step a single foot off of their beach resort in Cancun. In these instances, the fear comes more from the lack of experience, and not knowing some of the biggest pitfalls that locals avoid to stay safe. Things that the locals won’t even think about, because avoiding it is just so engrained as habit.
I’d say the bigger issue for me was the fact that everyone can have a weapon with them and could literally kill you in seconds if they want to. As someone from a country (and continent) where this isn’t considered normal (the worst someone can carry is a knife and even that’s illegal) that’s just a real culture shock. Also, last time, our first day there consisted of being on public transport between the airport and our hotel where there was some crazy person shouting and trying to start fights with other passengers. We then got to our hotel, put our stuff away, heard noises outside and when we walked out we found out there had been a shootout at a restaurant around the block just minutes earlier.
So yeah, call it whatever you want but I wouldn’t call it safe.