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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Houston, Texas
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    9,249

    Default My Wife's Vietnam Vacation

    Knowing a good percentage of the folks on this forum are Vietnam vets I thought I'd post a quick note on the state of Vietnam today from an eye witness. I didn't go to Vietnam, during the year of Ted I was maintaining Nike missiles in Korea. Not exactly a bowl of cherries but much less hazardous than the RVN.

    One of my wife's best friend's is a Vietnamese manicurist who's married to a mid level oil exec. Well this lady travels a lot and trips to Vietnam are a priority. She's been on my bride to go to Vietnam with her for a few years now. Well this year the stars aligned work wise for the wife-cakes and she made the trip.

    A quick note about "Miss Vietnam's" background. Her family were closely aligned with the Americans during the war. Some of her family were taken out by our people, some were "boat people" including this gal and got out that way. Kathy met one of her uncles who after a spell in a "re-education camp" he was put to work clearing mine fields . Well it seems Vietnam today is nothing like it was then because this old boy is now quite wealthy and the owner or part owner of several business.

    So Vietnam today: Kathy and her bud went to "Ho Chi Minh City." Now Ho Chi Minh City defines the evolution of Vietnam, which today despite being officially communist is in fact more capitalistic and business friendly than the U.S. To Vietnamese in the United States the city is still Saigon. People in the southern third of Vietnam still refer to it as Saigon. Some of the stuff my wife brought back has Saigon-Ho Chi Minh City written on it and I would not be surprised if the name of the place became officially Saigon again eventually symbolizing the final repudiation of communist economics in Vietnam.

    My spousal unit informed me that Ho Chi Minh City/Saigon is very modern and very clean. The people are friendly, like Americans and the streets are safe. She also said that rural Vietnam can be stunningly beautiful. It is also the land of small business. There are multitudes of "mom and pop" business, including eateries, 15-30 room hotels, transportation services (taxies, etc.,) She said food was good plentiful, and cheap (especially if you like soup ) which shows from the fact that almost all of the local people in the pictures she sent looked like they had some extra "padding." Since my wife was with a local she was able to truly travel on the cheap. Air fare on Singapore airlines was under $900.00 round trip. Adding in a tidy, air conditioned room in one of the aforementioned mom and pop hotels set her back $12.00 a day so transportation and lodging for a 10 day trip came to under $1,000.00.

    When I did my research on do's and don'ts I learned the following: The possession of drugs for recreational purposes is illegal, the laws are strictly enforced and consequences of being caught can include death by hanging. Pornography sale and distribution are also illegal. As an aside, it is illegal to rent a room to a man and woman who are not married to each other or do not possess a certificate of engagement. When asked how this could be enforced I replied that I assume presentation of a national I.D. card which contains that information is required to rent a room (Kathy had to present her passport when she checked in.)

    "Miss Vietnam" is from Danang and they are already talking about a possible trip there. I don't know how they'll work that out since my wife's work schedule makes travel between Sept. and May very difficult and the time to go is Oct. to Mar. which allows avoiding the monsoon-typhoon season.

    It's still a country that has an authoritarian government that in some areas verges on being a police state, but the average Vietnamese guy or gal on the street seems to be doing quite well, but from what I've heard after this trip a very nice place for a slightly off the beaten path east Asian vacation.

    So there it is, the viewpoint of one person on Vietnam (or at least Ho Chi Minh City/Saigon today.)
    Last edited by Art; 02-14-2018 at 06:40.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    North Carolina
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    2,104

    Default

    It was my impression when I was in Vietnam (1970), was that the main problem the average Vietnamese faced was the government. It sounds like the communist takeover did not change that. I also recognized that the average Vietnamese has mastered the art of avoiding the government in their day-to-day lives. There is no doubt that the country is stunningly beautiful, as well as loaded with productive capacity. Thus, the communists wanted it so badly. I would be curious to know how large the fish have grown in the many thousands of round ponds we left for them. Regards, Clark

  3. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Art View Post
    The possession of drugs for recreational purposes is illegal, the laws are strictly enforced and consequences of being caught can include death by hanging. Pornography sale and distribution are also illegal.
    I like all that, esp. the hanging part.

    Have watched several TV reports of American vets re-visiting over the last few yrs--all of them comment on how friendly people are even after finding out that they were former US soldiers.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Durand. MI.
    Posts
    6,778

    Default

    Not to slight any Nam vet's, they did there duty! But it is a war we should have stayed out of! I am a Korea vet and looking at South & North there, we did much better. Politics got us into Nam and lost that one!
    You can never go home again.

  5. #5

    Default

    Some of their food is pretty good.

  6. #6

    Default

    I've been to a few Pho joints around Chicago and Milwaukee. I agree the food is good but I never did care much for tripe. Have seen the footage on TV and they seem to have gotten over the VN War as far as hard feelings go. What the heck. They won in the long run. The achieved a self-governing undivided country.
    2016 Chicago Cubs. MLB Champions!


    **Never quite as old as the other old farts**

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Ottawa, Canada
    Posts
    1,651

    Default

    Those observations are consistent with my observations when I was there a few years ago. It was pretty clear that the Americans had won the peace. American dollars appeared to be the preferred currency and there really was a Hotel called the Hanoi Hilton. We were told that if you wanted the hotel you had to tell the driver that you wanted the Hanoi Hilton Hotel; otherwise they would take you to what was left of the prison. People in the South are very entrepreneurial while those in the north tend to hold to the communist way more than in the south. Note, however, that the majority of people have no personal memory at all of the war.

  8. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by JB White View Post
    Have seen the footage on TV and they seem to have gotten over the VN War as far as hard feelings go.
    Having been fighting the Chinese for a thousand yrs, most recently after their war against the Khmer Rouge mass-murderers, whom China was supporting, the "American War" was not a big blip on their national radar screen.

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