Have you ever visited Paris?

Have you ever visited Paris?
Have you ever experienced the Paris syndrome?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_syndrome

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Yes and yes. I swear to God I'll build a concentration camp for arabs right on the site of the train station where one of them filthy animals stole my iPhone last year

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Yes

isn't paris nothing but afghans pooing in bushes

May God preserve me from stepping into this hellhole.

Soon

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Ukulele dans ma phrase, ok?

arrondissements 1-8 are quite alright
Unfortunately my hotel was very close to Gare de l'Est, which unironically felt less safe than the most run-down ghetto in Toronto.

Nafris and nogs

Sneed

I hear if you're not careful you'll lose your head.

I unironically realised how beautiful life can be when I visited Paris again after 12 years.
Not even memeing.

Yes and no. Consider this thread debunked.

Yes.
I saw more niggers and homeless than muslims.
Pretty city but a bit grey and sad.

>this is what Zig Forums does to people

literally

You gotta visit when it's sunny

I was pretty eyes wide open even though I visited. It was pretty sad to see that the city was just so fucking rude and the Africans everywhere with their carpet set ups selling tourist trinkets was weird. Someone begged me for money which was odd. There was an Algerian lady who worked at a bakery in the train station who I ordered a chocolate croissant from and that was the first time I ever used french in real life in person, which was cool. The view from Sacred Heart was also amazing.

The city was much larger than I expected and the major things I wanted to see were quite far apart, and the Arc de Triomphe is in the middle of a road and hard to get to. I don't know, it just wasn't great. I spent most of that trip in Amsterdam and took a train to Paris for two days. The old part of Amsterdam is much more centralized and I liked that.

I don't regret visiting France. Some people were nice like that lady and this dude that sold me sandwiches and talked to me on his break. But a lot of people were very rude even though I always spoke in french and tried to be polite.

no but my mom did a trip through europe and her only big compain was Barcelona

>Arc de Triomphe is in the middle of a road
wut there's an underpass

Kek, big mistake. The area around Gare de l'Est is a mix of Africa and Pakistan.

Ameribro, don't tell me you tried to cross the Place de l'Etoile to reach the Arc...

>a lot of people were very rude even though I always spoke in french and tried to be polite.
the problem is not the language, parisians are just elitists imo. If you look good and are well dressed they will be much more likely to help you regardless of the language you speak.

I did see a group doing that once.

Isn't it racist to say that you are disappointed when another race is in Paris?

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I'm not going to lie to save face. I did initially think that's what I was going to have to do and had to look up on my phone how to get there. It was early march and there weren't many tourists. I was in a foreign capital and didn't really know what I was doing.

Along with Gare du nord and Barbes

I did this at Berlin Victory Column lol I didn't see the passage

I don't know how the amerifat looked like, but usually you can recognize them from miles away. They are loud and dress badly with very large clothes. It's hard to stay polite in these conditions.

I had a similar impression of unwarranted elitism but a lot of it seemed to be due to language and something else that I’m not sure about but isn’t clothing. It’s ironic because the place is depressing beyond belief. I think they just particularly dislike Americans.

but it is just a stretch of kyrgyztani forest-steppe with kara kitians and bedouins shitting everywhere tho

dunno when I'm in Paris people literally help me even if I don't ask them to.

I was wearing black work boots, jeans, and a medium sized hooded sweatshirt. I am not loud, and not everyone was rude. It's possibly they just aren't as friendly as I'm used to people being. I live in a state where people wave to you when you walk down the street even if you don't know them, and here people treated me like a weirdo just for talking to them.

I visited Paris about 7 years ago
lots of dark-skinned gentlemen tried to sell me keychains