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On 8 Nov 2003 20:22:17 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bjorn Olsson) wrote: >Turby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>... >> On 21 Oct 2003 07:18:03 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bjorn Olsson) wrote: >> > >> >You should generally ignore people who turn up unasked for to "show >> >you something". Without possession of that little piece of common >> >sense, you shouldn't travel anywhere. >> >> Balderdash. I've been "befriended" numerous times and had good >> experiences seeing things that most tourists don't. > >Sure. Me too. > >> You just have to >> have a good sense about the situation and know that it's extremely >> rare for a local in the 3rd world to approach you without an ulterior >> motive. > >Thatīs right. But as solution to the "problems" listed by another >poster in this thread, simply ignoring the people who turn up unasked >for should work well. But then you'd miss getting to know the guy in Luxor - the one whose family has been in the artifact faking business for eons. His family sent him to University in England to study chemistry. He uses that to create the right "aged" patina for scarabs and such. He took me back to his family shop/factory. The artifacts they produce are indistinguishable from the real thing to the naked eye. He showed me a real scarab and a fake one. Or the guy in Amridhil Skoura, Morocco, who accosted me on the street and took me on a tour of the town, intoduced me to his family, and fed me a lunch of tea, almonds & dates, goat cheese and bread - and then refused the gift I offered him. Your rule of thumb usually works ~1/3rd of the time. Another 1/3rd of the time, you have to use the other rule - "NO! Get the hell away from me!" And 1/3rd of the time, it's worth paying attention.
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