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Do they even speak Spanish there? I’m guessing they’re natives who speak a regional language. Great work. Keep it up. Maybe one day South America, then Europe and the world. Maybe Ukraine after the war, right?
@@Dude0000 Bro, everyone speaks Spanish. The only natives in Juarez come from the Sierra, they are called Raramuri, they have their own neighborhood, and are considered a minority population. This is just regular Mexican people living their lives.
I've driven through these neighborhoods and what i find amazing is people hanging out in front of their streets at nighttime, either to get away from the heat in their homes or just to relax. Here in El Paso, right across from Juarez, you hardly see that. I can never get over the amount of dirt and dust that covers the city of Juarez. I also want to say that some of these neighborhoods are tight knit, they look out for each other and help each other out.
The mountains are the reason there poverty is Mexico well desert up north rainforest down south and mountains surrounding it’s coasts except for one area which is Veracruz all only good spots to live is Mexico City and even though it’s too high elevations more than any city in USA by far which is bad for vehicles and agriculture and because of the mountains the pollution lingers right on top of Mexico City vs USA has the Greatest economic advantage in the world all east is flat land with lots of rain and Mississippi river connecting all them farms and factories all the way down to New Orleans Louisiana perfect for global trade so yes they are beautiful mountains but in modern times it’s a curse in Mexico not in USA the Rocky Mountains block the winds that’s why the east rains a lot thats way 80 percent of Americans lives in the east
For everyone thinking that ALL of Juárez (or even Mexico) is like this, as someone who lives in Juárez, I can tell you you're wrong, most of Juárez is developed at an average level (way more than this) at least, I mean, it's still not completely safe, especially for tourists, but again, not all of it looks like this. I was actually in Anapra for the first time (in my 39 y/o life) earlier this year, I was invited to give a speech at a high school there, and honestly expected the school to be dilapidated or something but it had pretty nice installations with A/C, projector, mic, everything I could possibly need, and was treated very nice by the staff and the students, I honestly felt like someone famous tbh (even though I'm not). In contrast, on my way back to the city I was chatting with my colleague while admiring the desert landscape with the houses almost fused together with the hills and told my friend that if we brought someone from Anapra 100 years ago to today, they'd probably wouldn't notice much difference.
@@ramonzzzz I haven't been all over the city, but from what I understand there's three big sectors that compose the city, the poor sector which includes Anapra and other underdeveloped neighborhoods, the central part (which is where I live and is decently developed) and Las Torres sector which is the newest sector and is constantly being developed, so, I guess poor barrios like this would be about a third of a city from what I know.
@@Aikynbreusov We simple people from Russia, love simple people from USA. We don't have problem with people from USA... But we don't love USA government. They hypocrites .
I love those elevated stone faced sidewalks, fences and walls. Like the states, Mexico has many amazing cities with developed and manicured areas as well as those rough around the edges. Consider profiling Chihuahua or other great Mexican cities further south.
Honestly, it looks better than much of the US. I am a Trucker who runs I-10 from SoCal to Texas. I will be going through El Paso tomorrow, heading back to San Antonio, then Laredo. From Laredo, I take 83, go through Eagle Pass, Del Rio, Sanderson, and cut up to Fort Stockton back to I-10. I have never had a problem. In two years, I have only seen one shady dude in the middle of nowhere. Dropped him 4 bottles of water a mile or so after I passed him. It was around Dryden. I live in San Juan, TX. I have no problem, in fact I love. Mexico and Mexicans. I believe without them, the US would have no food. All I haul is food, and everywhere I go, the workers are Mexican heritage. I know politicians want to blame Mexico for the US drug problem, but that's like blaming McDonalds because I'm fat.
@@antoniomenjivar6556no, in México there’s wood and drywall readily available if you want to build a house with those materials, but not even the rich Mexicans build their homes with wood, brick and block is way better.
Well, in reality many of these neighborhoods have their charm, I am a Mexican who lives in a middle class neighborhood, years ago the neighborhood was underdeveloped, very little commerce, areas without urbanization, but the years have passed and we already have some shopping malls, supermarkets, restaurants, taquerias, more parks, everything has usually progressed.
I doubt places like wyoming or maine are going to get there, but definitely all along the southern border. Americans are terribly stupid and unrealistic or naive about demographics. Keep importing impoverished people who aren't reproducing college graduates en masse. Just working class people working for bare minimum in an eroding blue collar sector. Nightmarish consequences, it's unsustainable.
Most def apples to oranges when it comes to overall safety, but I've been to many spots like this in the Philippines. Poverty is a problem everywhere. Be thankful for what you have. It could all be gone tomorrow. Much love and thanks for the tour.
very interesting, in these poor zones you don't see any homeless/zombies peoples like you see in US/Canada, but mainly in US cities... i feel safer in these zones than in any city of US
Every house having walls and fences with gates right up to the public sidewalk is tell tale of a low trust society. In USA that will probably start happening.
Still doens't look as bad as Detroit, E. Cleveland, Gary, IN or Cairo, IL, to name a few. Remember when it used to be fun to go to Mexico even if just for a day of shopping?
all those places have paved roads, and the houses are built out of all modern materials in those cities, this is on another level man than anywhere in the US
Might not look as bad but it's way more dangerous. I'd rather live in any of those cities you mentioned than Juarez. You can't always tell how dangerous a place is just by driving through it
I looked up the world's highest murder rates (by city) and the top six are all in Mexico with Juarez coming in third. The Mexican streak is stopped by St. Louis in 7th place.
@@gangstagummybear3432 have you seen all the trash scattered all over the road ? In literally all of those cities.. definitely cleaner don’t be delusional
Your observation is disingenuous people don't stand on corners because they would literally get mowed down by whichever cartel runs that city shit is ran differently over there, if people standing by the corner of a block bothers u that badly as opposed to the scenery in this video then I recommend u move to the backstreets of juarez and let's see which environment are u more likely to survive in, "andrew"😂😂
The reason why it looks clean is because almost every morning the like to sweep outside there homes and businesses but it doesn’t look like the 24/7. I know cause my pops lives there. And we’re from Torreón
@@internetcensure5849we know you're miserable so you want to bash on people who see their families as their joy, Americans can't wait to abandon their families at 18 or their parents kick them out
Dang the gas is really expensive in Juarez. Saw it was at 17.79 pesos per liter at that Pemex you drove by which would mean about 67.24 pesos per gallon and when converted to dollar means the gas is 3.93 per gallon as of Jun 28th dollar to peso value. Those who cross it'll be cheaper to fill up in El Paso.
Grew up in Anapra but now live in NYC attending NYU. I try and visit 2x a year. It might be hella ghetto but it’s still home 😂. I was low key hoping you were going to turn on my street lol.😂
IDK what it was about this video, maybe the sunset lighting but it honestly didn't look that bad, it has a small town under construction feel to it. And the construction will never actually get finished, but it's okay.
all of the US has paved roads in any place other than our rural areas, we have no cities with unpaved roads in interior urban areas like this, the building materials of the buildings sets this stuff in a whole nother level of poverty than anything in the US
I grew up going there from ABQ and am mad they say as an american its unsafe to got to now....Looks better than it did 20 yrs ago....Feels like going back is no problem. Long Live Juarez!
The places in these desolate ares that have 5-6 high price SUV's standing there scare me more than the ones where everything looks like shit. Probably cartel peoples cars. edit: like this one at 2:18 on the left side of the road
Damn. I'm nervous just sitting on my laptop watching this. TO REALLY BE IN THE MIDST OF THAT is another story. Props to YOU!! Aloha~~ from Hawaii~~ 🍍🤙🤙
As someone who lives in Juárez, I can tell you there are nicer and more developed places in Juárez than this, I wish Charlie would specify that he's strictly hanging in poor neighborhoods so most people wouldn't assume all of my city (or country even) looks like this.
Man, forget the losers who go into abandoned buildings or "haunted houses", and try to act like they're facing off against ghosts and their own imaginations. THIS is the bravest man on UA-cam.
In that part of the city of Juarez, the infraestructure might be old with dusty roads and whatever but it was clean, it was no drug addicts bending over, no beggers, no homeless, no crazy people screaming, happy dogs, families walking together, neighbors chilling outside.
I've seen worst places in the outskirts of Mexico City. There are places like Ecatepec that are much worse. On top of that in Ecatepec is one the garbage dumps for the entire city and the whole place has an awful smell.
idc how poor, messed up, or dangerous these streets are. this is home. i don't care. im american and live in a suburb. but there's just something about this place idc how scary it gets
Another statistic,homicides in San Diego was around 60 compared to the bordering town of Tijuana of around 2,300.It's probably a similiar ratio in Juarez and El Paso.
I'm in the be careful there bro camp. It's not worth your life for these views. If you wanna expand go overseas. This channel should be named Russian roulette if you are going to be messing around down there for the hell of it. Mexico is beautiful. Hit the beaches or the mountains man!
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Do they even speak Spanish there? I’m guessing they’re natives who speak a regional language.
Great work. Keep it up. Maybe one day South America, then Europe and the world. Maybe Ukraine after the war, right?
@@Dude0000 Bro, everyone speaks Spanish. The only natives in Juarez come from the Sierra, they are called Raramuri, they have their own neighborhood, and are considered a minority population. This is just regular Mexican people living their lives.
I've driven through these neighborhoods and what i find amazing is people hanging out in front of their streets at nighttime, either to get away from the heat in their homes or just to relax. Here in El Paso, right across from Juarez, you hardly see that. I can never get over the amount of dirt and dust that covers the city of Juarez. I also want to say that some of these neighborhoods are tight knit, they look out for each other and help each other out.
Because they don't have back yards.
They don't look for each other otherwise the city would look very differrent.
So why would anyone leave?
@@carsonwentz8301more like because they are not as addicted to technology.
As bad as the poverty is in this video, that scenery of the mountains in the background are beautiful. Good work, Charlie
Yes.. thanks for sharing CharlieBo313 👍🏼be safe out there🙏🏽🎉🌟💙
Yeah it's a nice view but where the vuck are the trees man, it gets to 115° down there Sun beating down need more trees.
Venezuela is one of the most beautiful places in the world.
But bad economic policy and culture can take down any society
@@carsonwentz8301prime example….RUSSIA. I’ve been it’s beautiful and it’s ppl are nothing like what the stereotypical American thinks.
The mountains are the reason there poverty is Mexico well desert up north rainforest down south and mountains surrounding it’s coasts except for one area which is Veracruz all only good spots to live is Mexico City and even though it’s too high elevations more than any city in USA by far which is bad for vehicles and agriculture and because of the mountains the pollution lingers right on top of Mexico City vs USA has the Greatest economic advantage in the world all east is flat land with lots of rain and Mississippi river connecting all them farms and factories all the way down to New Orleans Louisiana perfect for global trade so yes they are beautiful mountains but in modern times it’s a curse in Mexico not in USA the Rocky Mountains block the winds that’s why the east rains a lot thats way 80 percent of Americans lives in the east
Although the neighboruhoods shown here are poor, they keep the streets pretty clean, and have public transport. Kind regards from Buenos Aires
For everyone thinking that ALL of Juárez (or even Mexico) is like this, as someone who lives in Juárez, I can tell you you're wrong, most of Juárez is developed at an average level (way more than this) at least, I mean, it's still not completely safe, especially for tourists, but again, not all of it looks like this.
I was actually in Anapra for the first time (in my 39 y/o life) earlier this year, I was invited to give a speech at a high school there, and honestly expected the school to be dilapidated or something but it had pretty nice installations with A/C, projector, mic, everything I could possibly need, and was treated very nice by the staff and the students, I honestly felt like someone famous tbh (even though I'm not).
In contrast, on my way back to the city I was chatting with my colleague while admiring the desert landscape with the houses almost fused together with the hills and told my friend that if we brought someone from Anapra 100 years ago to today, they'd probably wouldn't notice much difference.
you only need to die just a little tiny bit to be totally dead.
Roughly what percentage of the city would you say looks like what we see in the video?
@@ramonzzzz I haven't been all over the city, but from what I understand there's three big sectors that compose the city, the poor sector which includes Anapra and other underdeveloped neighborhoods, the central part (which is where I live and is decently developed) and Las Torres sector which is the newest sector and is constantly being developed, so, I guess poor barrios like this would be about a third of a city from what I know.
@@610Hobbies Thanks for the response.
We Russians love Mexican people. Viva la Mexico🇲🇽❤❤ . We know now strong Mexican people. From Russia with love❤
Viva la Mexico. From Russia with love❤
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA!
@@internetcensure5849not true. As a mexican ive been in new Orleans. África tier 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Viva Soviet Union....... from the USA
@@Aikynbreusov We simple people from Russia, love simple people from USA. We don't have problem with people from USA... But we don't love USA government. They hypocrites .
@Aikynbreusov who let you out of the basement?
I love those elevated stone faced sidewalks, fences and walls. Like the states, Mexico has many amazing cities with developed and manicured areas as well as those rough around the edges. Consider profiling Chihuahua or other great Mexican cities further south.
there is a really uncanny high noon vibe about this place
Evil mariachi music playing in the background looking place
@@eviljesus6111 lol
Bro be careful g, the game is different there bro, different rules stay safe
Safer than the South Side of Chicago!!🤔
I was thinking the same thing.
@@mariooliveira9074lies
@@mariooliveira9074no it isn’t😂
@@mariooliveira9074’m from the shore an it ain’t that bad
Honestly, it looks better than much of the US. I am a Trucker who runs I-10 from SoCal to Texas. I will be going through El Paso tomorrow, heading back to San Antonio, then Laredo. From Laredo, I take 83, go through Eagle Pass, Del Rio, Sanderson, and cut up to Fort Stockton back to I-10. I have never had a problem. In two years, I have only seen one shady dude in the middle of nowhere. Dropped him 4 bottles of water a mile or so after I passed him. It was around Dryden. I live in San Juan, TX. I have no problem, in fact I love. Mexico and Mexicans. I believe without them, the US would have no food. All I haul is food, and everywhere I go, the workers are Mexican heritage. I know politicians want to blame Mexico for the US drug problem, but that's like blaming McDonalds because I'm fat.
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA! Yes, no drug addicts or homeless.
"the workers are Mexican heritage" You mean Chicanos?😂😂
It honestly looks worse in Juarez the cities in the USA are way more modern. I go to Mexico every year
You never drove to northwest, central north, and northeast USA, have you? Their low income communities are very nice and pretty safe
@@AngelicoCiudaddon't forget the southeastern states aka the "Bible belt" states where it's really "nice". 🙃
The bad parts of American cities look like garbage dumps compared to this. I know it's dangerous, but it's clean.
The houses look terrible. USA and Europe have better houses
@@antoniomenjivar6556no, in México there’s wood and drywall readily available if you want to build a house with those materials, but not even the rich Mexicans build their homes with wood, brick and block is way better.
Looks better then Los Angeles.
Cap
At least there's no bum camps and garbage laying all over the place like in L.A.
LA is literally richer than all of Mexico 😂
The lakers and warriors are worth more
@@antoniomenjivar6556 LA sucks
Seeing $50,000+ SUV’s outside some of those extremely low rent houses. Scary. Be safe brother.
where ? I'm seeing 2nd/3rd hand SUVs
Same in the US, with so many fancy cars in black ghettos!
Some are probably stolen from the US and taken to Mexico
That dude who gets in police chases in his sports car is pretty brave, too.
Its amazing how the climate and landscape/geography can make this look appealing!
Well, in reality many of these neighborhoods have their charm, I am a Mexican who lives in a middle class neighborhood, years ago the neighborhood was underdeveloped, very little commerce, areas without urbanization, but the years have passed and we already have some shopping malls, supermarkets, restaurants, taquerias, more parks, everything has usually progressed.
@@j0rgesin like I said...really appealing in many ways...Very fortunate to live in this climate.
The whole of America is going to look like this on day.
Yeah right lol, our cops and government protect us lol. They don't in mexico
We will look like them because we are letting them in. They will overwhelm us and turn us into them. Beware!!
I doubt places like wyoming or maine are going to get there, but definitely all along the southern border. Americans are terribly stupid and unrealistic or naive about demographics. Keep importing impoverished people who aren't reproducing college graduates en masse. Just working class people working for bare minimum in an eroding blue collar sector. Nightmarish consequences, it's unsustainable.
Be a massive upgrade if the usa looks like this
@@martingraham8757 You must be smoking crack
This should be titled: "America in the year 2040"
Nice profile pic 😍
Some cities already look like that
Dear God, that comment is way too scary, and very believable!
Or mexico in 2023
@@Galidorquest Is it real?
Most def apples to oranges when it comes to overall safety, but I've been to many spots like this in the Philippines. Poverty is a problem everywhere. Be thankful for what you have. It could all be gone tomorrow. Much love and thanks for the tour.
very interesting, in these poor zones you don't see any homeless/zombies peoples like you see in US/Canada, but mainly in US cities... i feel safer in these zones than in any city of US
Who cares about homeless, the murder rate is a lot higher in Juarez than any American city lol.
Exactly 💯!!!
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA! Yes, no drug addicts or tents!
Every house having walls and fences with gates right up to the public sidewalk is tell tale of a low trust society. In USA that will probably start happening.
People work here
The drive reminds me of Nevada. My family lived in Juarez for six months. This was in 1959, 1960.
Somehow I'm reminded of that line from Slim Pickens in The Getaway, "Building materials for Chihuahua."
We have the same shape of houses in Kuwait 🇰🇼 called ( Shabyaat Area ) it is kinda old built at end of 70s and still families are living there ,,,
But not so poor, as Kuwait is home to oil-fattened rats!
Is this Los Angeles or San Francisco?
this place is heaven compared too philly
😂😂😂 Philly is safe and paradise compared to this
Those buses are clean af.
Juarez is beautiful in the spring!
Still doens't look as bad as Detroit, E. Cleveland, Gary, IN or Cairo, IL, to name a few. Remember when it used to be fun to go to Mexico even if just for a day of shopping?
BRUH mexico 10 times more dangerous then any of them places mexico has the most dangerous cities in the world
The crime is way worst tho
all those places have paved roads, and the houses are built out of all modern materials in those cities, this is on another level man than anywhere in the US
Might not look as bad but it's way more dangerous. I'd rather live in any of those cities you mentioned than Juarez. You can't always tell how dangerous a place is just by driving through it
I looked up the world's highest murder rates (by city) and the top six are all in Mexico with Juarez coming in third. The Mexican streak is stopped by St. Louis in 7th place.
Why are there so many tires strewn about?
I watch the ad for Tom Cruise‘s new movie before the video. cruise is the man
It looks clean I don’t see zombies the roads need work but I I don’t see what I see in America specially that Pennsylvania.
Juárez a lot more cleaner than some parts of Baltimore, Philly, New York … and you don’t seem a bunch of people just standing around on every corner
but they have paved roads in all of those cities, its not cleaner bro lol
@@gangstagummybear3432 have you seen all the trash scattered all over the road ? In literally all of those cities.. definitely cleaner don’t be delusional
Your observation is disingenuous people don't stand on corners because they would literally get mowed down by whichever cartel runs that city shit is ran differently over there, if people standing by the corner of a block bothers u that badly as opposed to the scenery in this video then I recommend u move to the backstreets of juarez and let's see which environment are u more likely to survive in, "andrew"😂😂
@@74dru Lol, dirt is dirtier than any trash, those cities have enough money to have paved roads, they arent bad man
@@74dru I will at most say those cities have less civilized people, in that they just throw trash out for no reason everywhere
Nice location for a vacation with kids!
they would have fun playing with the local kids, what's your point?
😂
Compared to a lot of hoods in SoCal, this looks like heaven.
The reason why it looks clean is because almost every morning the like to sweep outside there homes and businesses but it doesn’t look like the 24/7. I know cause my pops lives there. And we’re from Torreón
If you don't have homeless or unemployed fools running around the streets the yeah SoCal can look alot better.
The beauty of Mexico is that it is clean… Now I understand some riff-raff here and there but overall people take pride in their property
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA!😂
Clean? I’m from Juarez and I believe it’s not the cleanest cities of all mexico 😂
Clean? Pride? I guess you did not see all the abandoned cars, dead dogs, etc......
@@internetcensure5849we know you're miserable so you want to bash on people who see their families as their joy, Americans can't wait to abandon their families at 18 or their parents kick them out
@@constitutionloversue it’s because the economy more than the violence
Some people can afford a good living with what they get paid
Where was the "extreme" part? Maybe I missed it.
Crazy how clean they keep their streets compared to the us
Those are very dangerous areas
Todos los países tienen lado oscuro.
Nice
Charlie a different breed lol
Damn Chuck, the Vuck you doing in Mexico? Welp, might as well take a walk and talk to some locals.
Dang the gas is really expensive in Juarez. Saw it was at 17.79 pesos per liter at that Pemex you drove by which would mean about 67.24 pesos per gallon and when converted to dollar means the gas is 3.93 per gallon as of Jun 28th dollar to peso value. Those who cross it'll be cheaper to fill up in El Paso.
About the same as some expensive states in the U.S. (ex: Illinois).
Grew up in Anapra but now live in NYC attending NYU. I try and visit 2x a year. It might be hella ghetto but it’s still home 😂. I was low key hoping you were going to turn on my street lol.😂
From someone from the UK, these are fascinating.. thank you!
Nice work Charlie.....stay safe.
I felt like the sandy shores in GTA5
IDK what it was about this video, maybe the sunset lighting but it honestly didn't look that bad, it has a small town under construction feel to it. And the construction will never actually get finished, but it's okay.
You should go to cuauhtemoc chihuahua, beautiful farm region about 4 hours from juarez
Went there .. body hanging near to plaza … didn’t step out of hotel until departure… shitshow😂
Extreme poverty?! Come on Charlie!! Much better there then i most of the places you showed in “beautiful” America.
Still not as dangerous as many Mexican cities
Man please them people are literally dying to go to Philly lol
all of the US has paved roads in any place other than our rural areas, we have no cities with unpaved roads in interior urban areas like this, the building materials of the buildings sets this stuff in a whole nother level of poverty than anything in the US
@@gangstagummybear3432the building materials are much better than the moldy cardboard boxes we call houses in the USA
@@lemonEd001no they're not. The infrastructure of the United States is pretty good. 😂
I grew up going there from ABQ and am mad they say as an american its unsafe to got to now....Looks better than it did 20 yrs ago....Feels like going back is no problem. Long Live Juarez!
Will you be driving through El Paso too? There’s a lot going on with so many immigrants at this time
its alot of dogs just be walking around in mexico standing by stop signs lol
That looks like Skid Row in L.A..
No it doesn't. Streets are full of homeless and it's actually cleaner.
skid row has paved roads
No, it doesn't. Skid Row has garbage everywhere, and homeless people.
wtf are you talking about? Skid Row is full of human waste and tents
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA! But no drug addicts or homeless!
How interesting
That Olds 98
at the 3:40 Mark
Got them white walls😊
The places in these desolate ares that have 5-6 high price SUV's standing there scare me more than the ones where everything looks like shit. Probably cartel peoples cars.
edit: like this one at 2:18 on the left side of the road
EVERYONE W A NICE CAR IN MEXICO IS A CARTEL MEMBER?
Lol no, is a typical car buyed in USA in auction.
'high price' SUVs at 2:18?!?! That's your brain filling in knowledge gaps, the lock like 2nd/3rd hand vehicles
Same in the US, with so many fancy cars in black ghettos!
Damn. I'm nervous just sitting on my laptop watching this. TO REALLY BE IN THE MIDST OF THAT is another story. Props to YOU!! Aloha~~ from Hawaii~~ 🍍🤙🤙
So go to Skid Row in California is much better.
Pueblo magico
Do they have police in this town.?
They are working for the cartels
Muito parecidas com as periferias, do Brasil, Paraguai, Colômbia Argentina. 🇧🇷🇧🇷😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😘😗
show some nice areas too Charlie.. if there's any of course
As someone who lives in Juárez, I can tell you there are nicer and more developed places in Juárez than this, I wish Charlie would specify that he's strictly hanging in poor neighborhoods so most people wouldn't assume all of my city (or country even) looks like this.
Asi se ve todo México en promedio.
Boo Hoo! Nice
Come to Cali my boi. Ull love this shit!!
Where u at in Cali I heard alot of yall are 🐀🐀🐀🐀
New Orleans the 6th most violent city in the world. Juárez the 9th.
The streets look clean and don’t see tents!
Man, forget the losers who go into abandoned buildings or "haunted houses", and try to act like they're facing off against ghosts and their own imaginations.
THIS is the bravest man on UA-cam.
CharlieBosssssss !!!!!!!!!
looks like LA without all the tall Palm Trees
Holy shit😭
Nice clean streets tho, not like in the black hoods of the usa
how are the streets clean when there are no streets?
Youre extremely racist Martin.
Clean, but Black ghettos have better built houses and many, many fancy cars. Shows that we are in a poor part of Mexico, a 3rd world country.
Keep an eye out on your windshield mirror. Never know who is following you
Mexico baby
In that part of the city of Juarez, the infraestructure might be old with dusty roads and whatever but it was clean, it was no drug addicts bending over, no beggers, no homeless, no crazy people screaming, happy dogs, families walking together, neighbors chilling outside.
Looks like you went back in time 100 years, apart from the modern cars.
A place I will never go.
Nobody asked
@@saintjames5816 What? 🤪
THEY ARE POOR BUT CLEAN I SEE NO DRUG OR CRIME UNLIKE THE US
It's so clean and peaceful ❤❤❤
Clean ?? 😂😂
Minecraft desert village 😁
i don't really remember what juarez is like i was just 2 years old when i was there.
my hometown 1975---
they drive so crazy hurry up and get from there
At least they have pride in their city The streets are swept clean. Try finding streets In LA in the same condition.
Aztec Hoods
I've seen worst places in the outskirts of Mexico City. There are places like Ecatepec that are much worse. On top of that in Ecatepec is one the garbage dumps for the entire city and the whole place has an awful smell.
Looks like wartorn Beiruit....
That's safe and not so poor part of Juarez...
idc how poor, messed up, or dangerous these streets are. this is home. i don't care. im american and live in a suburb. but there's just something about this place idc how scary it gets
Go move there and find out
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA!😂
@@internetcensure5849trust me bro it’s still bad that USA even competes with third world countries.
Don’t be such a fool bro, there’s a reason why mommy and daddy left there in the first place
LA & Philly are not far behind.
You couldn't pay me enough to go to Mexico even at a resort 😂
What a coward
Another statistic,homicides in San Diego was around 60 compared to the bordering town of Tijuana of around 2,300.It's probably a similiar ratio in Juarez and El Paso.
In one of these buildings you at least played with that one Mexican kid with the barking dog
I'm in the be careful there bro camp. It's not worth your life for these views. If you wanna expand go overseas. This channel should be named Russian roulette if you are going to be messing around down there for the hell of it. Mexico is beautiful. Hit the beaches or the mountains man!
Viva
I thought this was the east LOS for a sec
where are the unpaved roads?
Looks miserable, even worse than the worst parts of USA! But no drug addicts or homeless.
haha with the Hispanics
Been there, don't go.
Hay sale mi casa jjajajaj
Well i remember when they took me down in juarez mexico
Looks pretty nice to me, maybe low $ but nothing like the horrible hoods like Philadelphia in the US .
The best thing of mexico no Karens.
Nice place.