Summer is winding down but there is still a few weeks
left to squeeze in some vacation time.
Europe?
Hawaii? Legoland? There are lots
of choices but, like a friendly old uncle, I’m here today to put my arm around your
shoulder and advise you on a couple of places to avoid:
Pittsburgh. OK, it wasn’t on your bucket list anyway but
I’ve been there dozens of times (I have in-laws nearby) and it is a beautiful and lively city with great food and the best sports fans in the world. Some locals call it the Paris of Appalachia.
So why stay away? Here’s
why. Uber customers in Pittsburgh later this month can begin hopping
into vehicles that can drive themselves to their destination.
And hilarity or carnage
could ensue. You don’t want to be the victim of either.
Uber has
been quietly testing a handful of tech-laden Volvo cars in Pittsburgh which is headquarters for the tech company's autonomous car
research facility. Many of its staffers are former robotics experts from nearby
Carnegie Mellon University, a self-driving car technology hotbed.
Volvo has so far
delivered a "handful of vehicles" to Uber, but expects to have 100
SUVs ready by the end of the year, according to a Bloomberg report. The
cars will be staffed with safety drivers, per current transportation laws.
Just so you understand
this, you’ll be jumping into a car that will be navigating a city that was laid
out for horse carts in a vehicle imagined by an industry that recalled 56
million cars last year.
And, of course,
Pittsburgh is dissected by three large rivers:
The Allegheny, the Monongahela which meet up to form the Ohio.
Do robotic cars
float? Stay tuned.
The other destination is
North Korea.
It was probably much
farther down your bucket list than Pittsburgh but maybe your inner explorer is
urging you onward to more adventuresome locales.
After all, the North
Korean national anthem declares, “Let morning shine on the silver and gold of
this land/ Three thousand leagues packed with natural wealth.
“My beautiful fatherland/ The glory of a wise people/Brought up in a culture brilliant/With a history five millennia long.”
“My beautiful fatherland/ The glory of a wise people/Brought up in a culture brilliant/With a history five millennia long.”
How bad can it be?
Plenty, as it turns out. We
all know Kim Jong Un and his cohorts as iron-fisted rulers of a rogue nation that hates Americans and leads the world in human rights violations.
And if you’re a visitor, utter a bad word about Dear Leader and you could do 50 years at hard labor.
Still want to go? There’s even more bad news.
It seems that for the
fourth year in a row, North Korea’s Air Koryo has claimed the dubious honor of
being ranked the worst carrier in the world.
Meaning it may be more
dangerous getting there than being there.
Among the gripes: the
onboard meal of hamburgers made of a “mystery meat,” safety demonstrations that
often were skipped, entertainment that consisted of propaganda films played in
a loop and overhead luggage racks with no doors to keep bags from falling
down on fliers during turbulence, according to travel writer extraordinaire Hugo Martin.
You’ll also be traveling
on aging Russian aircraft. Think getting
a 1973 Plymouth for a rental car.
Chinese authorities just
announced they will limit the
operations of Air Koryo, after a Beijing-bound flight made an emergency landing
last month.
The flight from Pyongyang
had to land in the North-eastern Chinese city of Shenyang because of smoke in
the cabin. No one was injured in the incident.
China's Civil Aviation
Administration announced "relevant measures to limit operations"
without giving any details.
As for me, I take these ratings
with a grain of salt.
Malaysia Airlines, struck
by two incidents that left all passengers on board dead
or missing in 2014, was given five stars out of a possible seven in one
recent rating.
Robert Rector is a
veteran of 50 years in print journalism. He has worked at the San Francisco
Examiner, Los Angeles Herald Examiner, Valley News, Los Angeles Times and
Pasadena Star-News. His columns can be found at Robert-Rector@Blogspot.Com.
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