Thanks again everyone - appreciate the comments. I'd been very interested in SA culture for a long time before going and I feel like the trip makes me want to go back even more.
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Originally Posted by destroycreate
Difference being is that most American cities have crime relegated to really bad, often isolated ghettos. SA crime seems to be basically everywhere, in particular the CBD areas. I'd still feel 100x safer in the French Quarter than anywhere shown in the pics here.
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Interestingly enough the French Quarter was the only place in New Orleans I almost had an issue. It was the northern part of it though, at a bar that I only went in because I was frustrated about a flat bike tire - and it seemed to be white supremacists. I'd say Parkhurst in Joburg is safer than Bywater in NOLA, which is an area that I love.
In Cape Town the CBD is the safest area interestingly enough. I think it's similar in Durban. Joburg is the odd one out - probably because the CBD is massive.
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Originally Posted by Crawford
Based on your pics. looks and feels like basically every big Latin American city. Overwhelming security apparatus, huge racial socioeconomic disparities, interesting but somewhat decayed CBD (usually stuck in the 1980's), great cheap food and drink, colorful streetscapes, friendly people, bizarre outdated pop culture references, horrible traffic.
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Yeah that sounds about right! I'm not sure if you can add infrastructure that has all the pretences of being fully modern but just not. quite. there. And traffic lights out, constantly. Gauteng province has an issue with this due to cable theft that apparently the Western Cape does not, somehow.
Adding on to my response to Kilgore above RE Cape Town vs Joburg. In CT I went to a ton of great restaurants and bars, but often I felt like it was really just the same thing that I go to in Toronto. Not that it's a bad thing at all because I enjoyed them a lot. But sometimes the only black people you see are servers and you realize that's a bit weird. After CT on our last night we stayed in Braamfontein and the crowd was very mixed and just felt more like an accurate representation of what a modern South Africa should be. Earlier in the trip we were at a great bar in Braam (Great Dane) and at one point realized we were about 2 of 5 white people in the only place but it wasn't an issue. Made friends with a gay guy originally from a village in the country who currently lives in an area we "probably shouldn't go to" (Berea). He walked home though I think, about 30 mins walk.