Southeast Asia - News

I could only imagine their relief upon their lives ending and not having to any longer endure the presence of the locals.
Cambodia is great from a travel perspective. You're teleported to the start of the 20th century. Instead of carriages lining the dirt streets, it's motorbikes. You're actually travelling by traveling to Cambodia. You're not travelling when you go somewhere to receive western standards, you're basically relocating somewhere new. I see some youtubers claim that Cambodia is the old Thailand but I heavily suspect that's a overexaggeration. They're more conservative than the Thais.

I didn't like their border/customs officials either. The people do have this hispanic feel to them, like they're capable of doing "dirt" if need be. The people are pretty beat up and it clear they feel the pressure from being poor in an increasingly consumerist environment. The one thing that's nice about them is they're country bumpkins and have that simplicity that a lot of us westerners idealize. I actually found them surprising customer service oriented when compared to their regional peers where your accommodations will try to provide you with everything you need. A lot of people complained that the tuk tuks are very aggressive in Cambodia, but they're more pestering than "aggressive". I've been overcharged here and there, but the one thing I respect about the people is they didn't go overboard, at least with me. I didn't feel that they were trying to squeeze me for everything I got, more like they're trying to get premium dollar for standard service. I've been pickpocketed there by a tranny, I've seen travelling hustlers operating and the locals did keep a count on my money and profile me in their head. I've heard opinions how Cambodians are cold blooded, there's violence, virginity being for sale and all kinds of tales from sketchy expats who wake up at dusk. I've also had dreamy liberals tell me how they love Cambodia and want to live in the countryside forever with the beautiful people. A lot of expats also find the place boring and it's not hard to see why. I've also heard the "assimilation" complaint there as well, to be expected anywhere Asian. After many years you're still just a tourist to them.

For whatever reason I liked them. I like the country bumpkin thing, I like how they wear their emotions on their sleeve, and overall, I felt that they were culturally well behaved despite the lack of police presence. Most important of all I actually found that you can befriend them, something lacking severely with Asians. If you hang around Cambodians you grow on them, and they start becoming friendlier. I also felt safe for whatever reason, I was walking home nightly. This kind of goes back to the well-behaved thing, where I felt if someone started bothering me the locals would intervene. Maybe I was delusional? There is a significant crime problem because the locals did lock things up at night and took many precautions. They're pragmatic at their core and culturally conscious so as far wife hunting, it's probably going to be transactional. Not to say that's necessarily a bad thing.

No Idea Idk GIF by Muppet Wiki
 
Cambodia is great from a travel perspective. You're teleported to the start of the 20th century. Instead of carriages lining the dirt streets, it's motorbikes. You're actually travelling by traveling to Cambodia. You're not travelling when you go somewhere to receive western standards, you're basically relocating somewhere new. I see some youtubers claim that Cambodia is the old Thailand but I heavily suspect that's a overexaggeration. They're more conservative than the Thais.

I didn't like their border/customs officials either. The people do have this hispanic feel to them, like they're capable of doing "dirt" if need be. The people are pretty beat up and it clear they feel the pressure from being poor in an increasingly consumerist environment. The one thing that's nice about them is they're country bumpkins and have that simplicity that a lot of us westerners idealize. I actually found them surprising customer service oriented when compared to their regional peers where your accommodations will try to provide you with everything you need. A lot of people complained that the tuk tuks are very aggressive in Cambodia, but they're more pestering than "aggressive". I've been overcharged here and there, but the one thing I respect about the people is they didn't go overboard, at least with me. I didn't feel that they were trying to squeeze me for everything I got, more like they're trying to get premium dollar for standard service. I've been pickpocketed there by a tranny, I've seen travelling hustlers operating and the locals did keep a count on my money and profile me in their head. I've heard opinions how Cambodians are cold blooded, there's violence, virginity being for sale and all kinds of tales from sketchy expats who wake up at dusk. I've also had dreamy liberals tell me how they love Cambodia and want to live in the countryside forever with the beautiful people. A lot of expats also find the place boring and it's not hard to see why. I've also heard the "assimilation" complaint there as well, to be expected anywhere Asian. After many years you're still just a tourist to them.

For whatever reason I liked them. I like the country bumpkin thing, I like how they wear their emotions on their sleeve, and overall, I felt that they were culturally well behaved despite the lack of police presence. Most important of all I actually found that you can befriend them, something lacking severely with Asians. If you hang around Cambodians you grow on them, and they start becoming friendlier. I also felt safe for whatever reason, I was walking home nightly. This kind of goes back to the well-behaved thing, where I felt if someone started bothering me the locals would intervene. Maybe I was delusional? There is a significant crime problem because the locals did lock things up at night and took many precautions. They're pragmatic at their core and culturally conscious so as far wife hunting, it's probably going to be transactional. Not to say that's necessarily a bad thing.

No Idea Idk GIF by Muppet Wiki
I think maybe Sihanoukville was just on a severe downward trend at the time that I visited. Perhaps there was an influx of gangster Chinese construction workers and Cambodian tuk-tuk mafia converging on my vacation space.

I was told by a long-time expat, a British woman who said she'd been cutting hair in Sihanoukville for over 20 years, that recently the tuk-tuks had been racketized and different gangs had established their territories.

She actually described that it was per-establishment storefront that the tuk-tuks claimed as their turf, so they would be at odds with each other from one address to the next.
 
Really sorry to hear this. Looking at your post it sounds like you had horrible experiences in Cambodia and China. Cambodia was also my least enjoyable time when I did my backpack trek about over decade ago there though I knew how to navigate through bribery after going down the coast of Vietnam prior. Truth be told though, I wouldn't be expecting a party vibe while observing the exhibits of the horrors of Khmer Rouge though!

Laos surprisingly had a great setup for backpackers. Vang Vieng was managed as if it was a theme park for backpackers. Great memories and it had a College atmosphere. I heard they clamp down a bit though after I left.
My favorite thing about the trip to Cambodia was visiting the Khmer Rouge museums in downtown Phnom Penh, the S-21 prison & interrogation center, and the killing fields not far outside of town. It was one of my trip objectives to see those and get some basic info on the details of what happened, which I believe I did.

1760552694167.jpeg

Several of the stories about the Khmer Rouge have always stayed with me and one of them taught me about champagne leftist liberals from Western countries. There were some influential Swedes that were part of a group that befriended the Khmer Rouge and who visited Phnom Penh during the massacres. They gladly accepted the nonsense propaganda that was fed to them, which also happened a lot during the Soviet period with visiting Westerners, including Franklin Delano Roosevelt's wife.

1760553462740.jpeg

Here's a photo of three plaques explaining what happened. These kinds of people are so stubborn about their false worldview that nothing will ever change their minds. They are the idiots in Stonetoss comics, but stupider. I don't know the full story, but Pol Pot and many of his gang were never held to any account for what they did and I have to assume that was largely because of leftists like these Swedes.

1760553158678.jpeg

The displays at the museums were great. I spent the whole morning at S-21 downtown and a couple of hours at the killing fields with its tower of skulls.

20170124_155045.jpg

1760552919222.jpeg

1760552935366.jpeg

1760552940906.jpeg

There was a very small and quirky movie theater in the most touristy part of town near all the fancy restaurants that was owned by a British expat and it showed The Killing Fields (1984) every day. The seating is totally non-standard with bean bag chairs and other things, which adds to the unusual experience of watching this movie while in Cambodia.

Although I'd already seen that movie when it was released and once or twice since then, I was glad that I watched it again. It definitely added to my "research project", lol, and there were some cute white girls in the theater to chat with in order to break up the tension of all the commie murdering onscreen.
 

Attachments

  • 1760552894459.jpeg
    1760552894459.jpeg
    394 KB · Views: 0
Last edited:
Back
Top