only cause he's black lol imagine a geeky white dude driving around memphis, new orleans, chicago, etc trying to make a driving video. he'd be spotted and pressed if anyone notices lol.
@@jackkehrli8223 no pretty sure new orleans, memphis, detroit and baltimore are more dangerous. These mexican hoods are obviously poorer but not sure if they're more dangerous
I got deported after being released I currently live in Juarez it's not has bad as the news makes it sound 99% of the people are super friendly I haven't had any problems
A Mexican or an American of Mexican ancestry? big different and NO, the; I was born in Mexico or left when I was a kid don't cut it, I live in Mexico for 46 years its takes a good 20-25 year to really know Mexico, being all over Mexico and speaking Spanish, if Mexico is so bad, why are American invading Mexico to live a better economic life?
I ended up in a 'ghetto' in Spain when I went wandering on my own one night in Seville. The next day my friend told me I was in a pretty dangerous area, but Seville is so nice it didn't look very ghetto to me.. this looks very much like the slums. Lol
Whenever I hear Juarez mentioned, the 1st thought that always comes to my mind, is the Bob Dylan song "Just Like Tom Thumbs's Blues" that starts out "When your lost in the rain in Juarez and it's Easter time, too. And your gravity fails, and negativity don't pull you through." It's among Dylan's best.
i always see large slums full of gray concrete buildings on the highway. Always wondered what they looked like from the inside looking out. Thanks for the video
One of the worst unis in América though 😂😂😂😂😂. Go to the mcgoffin house and you will see fine pasoans living on the streets in tents like in Kesington ave or in los Ángeles.
3:51 that dog is my spirit animal. Also, wonder how the average "poor" person in neighborhoods like that does for money from week to week to get food etc
Well...I’m from the Ukrainian Donetsk and artillery shells and aerial bombs explode here every day - I have to live in the basement and have nowhere to leave. So I think this town in Mexico is quite safe for me)
@@Freethinkers219 I suppose you are right, but it’s hard to tell in this video. My family is from Mexico, so I have seen this countless times before. They are sometimes abused. I like your way of thinking, though.
Atleast here there are no tents for homeless people whom seems to have mental illness and drug abuse ....despite appearing dangerous...... Take care Charlie
Juárez is no longer as dangerous as before, it is still dangerous in some areas, but I suppose that is the case in all cities in the world. In Mexico, there are already more dangerous and violent cities like Colima, Celaya, Zacatecas, Ciudad Obregón, Uruapan etc.
Still waiting for the non-dangerous neighborhoods of Juarez video. BONUS: the MOST scared I’ve ever been in my life, walking out of a Tijuana whorehouse at 1am in a Barrio that makes this video look like Beverly Hills. Our taxi driver left us. Almost shit myself.
At least Charlie doesn’t talk shit or disrespect the cartels. He’s not looking for trouble or asking for drugs or talk to Random ppl there he just mind his own business
@@ChicagoMillingCo. Chicago population over 2 million had a murder rate of 600 Juarez Mexico population 1 million had a homicide of over 1000. You did the math.
@@bladebrown8261Mexico isn't Juarez. Chicago has 25.2 murders per 100,000 inhabitants. Mexico City has 13.2 murders per 100,000 inhabitants, Campeche 4.9, Merida 5.9, San Luis Potosi 7.1 Etc. In the Case of Mexico city keep in mind it's a city with a population of 9 million and the murder rate is around half of Chicago's murder rate of 25.2 even though Mexico city is over 4 times the population. Americans are just too reactionary with how they consume information.
@@ChicagoMillingCo.Juárez ain’t even that dangerous, yet it’s still more dangerous than any city in the USA Celaya has a murder rate of 109.8/100K… that is insane
Some people call them gangs, most people call them simply as the Mafia in Mexico, cartels in Mexico are a family of factions with allegiance to a bigger cartel crime family in organized crime as being the main crime family to smaller syndicates. Cartel are much more dangerous than any street gangs in comparison and has more of a widley connections to all local, state, federal and international level.
I don't get why people think living in hoods is dangerous. If you mind your business and go about your day no one will bother you, unless you make yourself a mark by being loud. I'm pretty well off financially, but if you saw me at a gas station at 1am buying some hot cheetos, you'd think I'm broke and homeless lol.
The people look poor because the government is not going to invest in the streets that are outside the urban areas, however despite the bad appearance of the soils, all those houses have a clean and painted construction for the most part, however the bad appearance of the concrete from the street or dirt will make it look bad; All those people who live there range from handicraft workers, bricklayers, mechanics, warehouse assistants, to small school teachers and employees in convenience stores or large companies with production lines on the outskirts of the cities which have their personnel transportation, They are all workers and the crime you encounter are really bad people who go to hide in places that "look poor." I live near places like this, and they are not dangerous neighborhoods, they are just, as I already said, "places where bad people go to hide because they appear to be poor and lack government."
Unless you make yourself look Mexican. 😂 Straighten your afro-hair at a salon for $150 and wear a Fly Emirates soccer jersey with some flip-flops (AKA 'chanclas') and some cheap Wrangler jeans from Walmart. Follow these steps and you could probably blend in with the locals.
These comments are tripping. Mexico has cartel problems, not so much gang problems. You're in far more danger in a US hood as gangs there love doing dumb petty s it. As an American you are especially safe as no cartel wants the international attention of messing with a foreign national. Most of the people in this neighborhood are working class.
That’s 🧢🧢 keeping living in yore fantasy world in la la land, Juarez had a homicide 1000+ people last year that’s 10x more than any major us city with population over 1 million
@@xavi4694also America is a continent, not a country I’m getting tired of this gentrification bs stop trying to turn Mexico into the USA, I’m so glad the president made it illegal for USA immigrants to go to own a home in Mexico
Tho its not, one of the cities with the highest homicide rate in the world. Just because the US has hella homeless people doesnt mean this city isnt bad
@@gabrielw0177 There are neighborhoods in Chicago that have 3 times the murder rate that Juarez has. Last year, Juarez has a 104 per 100k murder rate while Fuller Park in Chicago had a 311 per 100K. There were 8 neighborhoods in Chicago in total that all were higher that Juarez. When I say "neighborhoods", some of them have close to 100,000 people living in one neighborhood, Austin, Chicago for example. So while Juarez in very high in murders, there are places in the US that are much, much worse. Keep in mind, this is only murder I'm talking about. There were over 21,000 vehicles stolen in Philadelphia alone in 2023. There were 60,000 in the entire country of Mexico during the same time.
@@Danlovestriviumur city is not more dangerous than the formal murder capitol of the world for a DECADE straight, no comparison dude thousands of deaths don’t compare to 300 at most just cut the act already