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Full Version: Global Backlash Against Chinese Tourists for Poor Behavior, Shocking Reasons Revealed
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https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/c...from-spore
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/southeast...-singapore
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapor...ca-2428631


WTF?! How come ah tiong behave so barbaric and shameless? lololololol! Tongue Tongue Tongue

Ah tiong either are uncouth tourists or criminals like scammers, robbers, kidnappers etc Tongue Tongue Tongue

Is this ccp cult teachings? No wonder ah tiongs are disliked everywhere like wumaos Tongue Tongue Tongue
AH TIONGS RECENTLY VISITED NEARBY DESTINATIONS FOR HOLIDAY.

SGTOK WUMAOS DAWGS SAY AH TIONGS BOYCOTT AMDK COUNTRIES LOL!

SGTOK WUMAO DAWGS ARE REALLY STOOPID TO PCC THAT MAN-IN-THE-STREET AH TIONGS ARE AS NATIONALISTIC ABOUT THEIR OWN COUNTRY AS THESE LOCAL WUMAO DAWGS NATIONALISTIC ABOUT A FOREIGN COUNTRY CHEENA.

AH TIONGS VISITING NEARBY PLACES ISH SIMPLY BECAUSE THEY RUN OUT OF MONEY  Rotfl Clapping Laughing

SURE GOTCH BUAY SONG WUMAO DAWGS APPEARING AFTER THIS....
British
Spectacularly unpopular in Germany. Toxic in Spain, where British tourists are synonymous with lobster-red sunburn, bald heads, tattoos, drunken and loutish behaviour and the smell of frying chips. But curiously, in France the British are welcomed while Russians and Saudi Arabian visitors are not.

Even more curious, British tourists are disliked even in their native land, where a quarter of those surveyed nominate their fellow countrymen among their least-favourite tribes. Brits also rate low on the self-regard scale. Close to 60 per cent have a negative opinion of British tourists when they're abroad. Less than a quarter believe foreigners have a positive impression of British tourists. That's lower than any other nationality of the 26 surveyed. Cue the violins, please.

Americans
Those loud voices, the white socks, the ever-present comparisons with the USA as the yardstick against which all foreign experiences are gauged. Not forgetting their preference for fast food and the puce-coloured beverage they call coffee and inflict on the civilised world.

So what though, it's all little stuff and it really shouldn't bother anyone – and doesn't, apart from the good folks in South America. Which shows you just how the world has changed. Once upon a time it was the Ugly American who was the most unloved traveller, probably because there were more of them than any other.

These days American tourists have faded into the background – and they're mostly polite, they tip like pros and only rarely do they drink to excess, disrobe and smash everything in sight.

Australians
Although not great in numbers, we can occasionally punch well above our weight to reach the gold standard for misbehaviour. We chug shoeys a la Daniel Ricciardo, wear thongs and T-shirts in temples and fancy restaurants and our fondness for boozing is legendary.

In Bali we get spectacularly wasted, smash up bars and assault strangers – all while having shed our clothes at some stage in the evening. Alone, we're affable, uncomplaining, we go with the flow and the world likes us. But when we form a pack, watch out.

See also: Bali targets Aussie tourists from hell

In Indonesia, only 14 per cent nominated Australians as among their favourite tourists while 7 per cent said we were the worst. In Vietnam, by contrast, 31 per cent of the survey population names Aussies as among their most liked tourists. In India we're at 28 per cent and throughout most of south-east Asia we're among the top three of the most liked.

In continental Europe, apart from Spain, where we score 12 per cent among the most favoured tourists, we're in single digits on the same list, but probably because we have a low profile relative to the huge number of European visitors. In Britain, 17 per cent say Aussies are among their best tourists.

We're also self-conscious about the way we behave overseas according to the data from YouGov. While 57 per cent of Australians have a positive impression of the way we behave when overseas, only one-third of us think the locals feel the same way. That's one of the lowest scores of any nationality for that category. Only Brits and Norwegians rate themselves less positively regarded when overseas.