- Notes on what I want to write:
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@blu3mo: Arrived at the hotel after picking up two scam rickshaws and visiting two self-proclaimed tourist information centers.
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I’m tired.
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It was unrealistic to avoid scams in this getup with two backpacks.
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@blu3mo: While I don’t want to be a “superficial tourist,” it feels like I haven’t seen anything no matter where I walk for a whole day.
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Feeling a little sad(?)
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@blu3mo: I even feel like I haven’t seen anything in New York, where I lived for a year.
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@blu3mo: If I don’t even know the language, maybe it’s more humble to embrace being a “tourist” openly.
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@blu3mo: @ricknakazawa Indeed, being an “outsider” and having a “uniform way of spending time” are not the same.
- ”Philosophy of Tourists” (tkgshn)
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Rin’s delicious food list
- It was really good.
- It’s fun when you have a desire to eat something during your travels.
- It’s even more enjoyable when you can share it with others.
- The recommended food list for Hiroshima Trip Summer 2022 had the same appeal.
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It was a very challenging tourist destination.
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I’m starting to understand how to deal with the broad category of scammers in tourist areas (people who approach you on the street, rickshaw drivers, etc.).
- Just jotting down my thoughts for now, might organize them later.
- For now, forget concepts like goodwill, trust, and emotions.
- “Trust” requires a continuous relationship, so it can’t be based on a one-time encounter.
- Consider what incentives the other person is acting on.
- Aim to minimize what they can gain from you.
- i.e. Make yourself less appealing.
- For example, if you declare that you’re leaving India and going to America today, the rickshaw driver won’t benefit from taking you to a tourist information center.
- If you only have 100 rupees in your wallet, there’s a limit to how much the rickshaw driver can overcharge you.
- Taking a detour to an ATM is possible, but you still have a chance to refuse.
- Aim to minimize what they can gain from you.
- Consider what cards you can play against the other person.
- Show a hint that you can get off the rickshaw at any time.
- Consider the upside and downside of your actions.
- Suspicious signals
- While riding in a rickshaw, they tell you not to look at your phone because it’s dangerous.
- They have a reason not to be seen checking the map.
- They ask to take a selfie together and get rejected.
- They once said it was due to religious reasons, but it’s definitely a lie.
- While riding in a rickshaw, they tell you not to look at your phone because it’s dangerous.
- Say no and ignore.
- Be stubborn.
- Even if you pay less than the requested amount, if it exceeds the other person’s minimum threshold, they won’t chase after you?
- I did it twice, paying about half of the requested amount and then running away, but I wasn’t chased.
- No matter how hard I try to avoid it, as a tourist, I can’t avoid being overcharged by rickshaw drivers in the end.
- If I can use Uber Auto, I should.
- If I can’t, I should be prepared to be stubborn when they overcharge me.
- There is asymmetry due to differences in prices.
- After having an old man show me around the city, he asked for a fee, and in the end, I paid 200 rupees, but I think I got more value than that (blu3mo).
- He introduced me to various things, like places to eat.
- I was taken on a roundabout route by a scam rickshaw and charged a higher amount than initially agreed, but I had fun seeing various sights that I couldn’t have seen on the shortest route.
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@blu3mo: If you think of it as driving around Delhi for 200 yen, it was actually fun(?).- By being aware of these points and navigating skillfully, it seems possible to establish a win-win relationship.
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- After having an old man show me around the city, he asked for a fee, and in the end, I paid 200 rupees, but I think I got more value than that (blu3mo).
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- However, there may be cases where you could lose tens of thousands of yen, so caution and careful consideration are important.
- Think about “how that person makes a living.”
- College students who wear nice clothes tend to be less assertive compared to others.