We know Queerty readers are among the most cosmopolitan, fun-loving and well-traveled in world—and now we want to know all about your travel habits.
Take this simple survey sponsored by Community Marketing and the International Gay and Lesbian Travel Association by October 31 and you’ll be entered into a drawing to win one of five $100 cash prizes!
Seriously, it’s ten minutes max and you could walk away with a C note.
Not too shabby!
Frank
I travel by plane….and to avoid the US at any cost
Me
$100?
chpinnlr
you could win $100, but you are guaranteed to get e-mail spam for eternity!
James
@Frank: Good, one less ugly, free loading foreigner!
Mark
@Frank: Sad that you feel that way – there are many wonderful Americans in the country – – it doesn’t pay to make harsh judgements. Where are you from anyway Frank? Perhaps others feel the same way about your country and how would that make you feel?
David Gervais
Mark, individually Americans are wonderful people, however, you have lost control of your politicians and public services.
The unfortunate truth is that although about 80% of Canadians live less than a one hour drive from the border, the border crossing is made so unpredictably hazardous that border crossings are far below what they could be based on historical patterns.
Sorry, but until our friends come to their senses, many Canadians are avoiding you.
FridaTibetans
@David Gervais: Agreed! Our center-right democracy is surely the reason 19 million Canadians visited in 2011. Terrifying.
James
@David Gervais: Gee David / Frank, and still a wonder that America is the only country with a line for citizenship. Problems prevail in all countries, Cananda for sure. I could receive citizenship in Canada, the UK and any EU nation in a matter of a day, but American citizensip is in such demand it takes months, so we must still have some appeal. I totally understand the Canadian over-sensitivity to having no national identity other than being the northern neighbor of the greatest nation on earth, however try to keep your inferiority complex in check.
hudson
@#8 James
you sound like a raving dipshit. The US is not the only country with an immigration lineup nor can you receive citizenship in Canada of the EU or anywhere else in a day. I don’t think we have an inferiority complex so much as there is an increasingly unfounded superiority complex south of the border. That is what turns so many off.
@#4 James
“…free loading foreign”‘- since when is anything in the US free? That would smack of socialism. The reason many I know avoid travel to or through the US is the insulting manner in which the customs agents behave. I’ve seen agents aggressively belittle people at JFK, been told to fill out separate declaration forms by agents even though I’m legally married to my partner, and been subjected to lines of questioning so far out in left field I still laugh thinking about it, and the list goes on. A little less paranoia all around would go a long way- boogey men are not around every corner. Go to Europe and one is treated with dignity and respect and you can even expect to be welcomed with a smile.
And, if it weren’t for the foreigners in your country, not much would get cleaned, childminded, or harvested.
Pull your head out of your backside. Its actually pretty sunny out here.
liquid
@James: eh, that is pretty much completely false. Unless you are a standout in an extremely desired field, you probably wouldn’t get UK, EU OR Canadian citizenship. You probably wouldn’t even qualify for a work visa, to be honest. It’s actually pretty difficult to apply for citizenship in most countries.
Villainguy
I travel a lot. I’ve been to the USA more times than I can count for work and pleasure. I love NYC, DC, Miami, L.A. and Frisco. But what some people above are saying is true. Americans are wonderful people. The country is huge and is beautiful, but if you have to travel and your destination is to the States or via the States it’s more of an hassle than a convenience for a non-American passport holder. I’m from the Netherlands and for Dutch citizens the Visa is waived, so we don’t need one. But that doesn’t make it any easier.
Now there may be many reasons for that and I can understand some if not most of them, but the fact of the matter is that it remains a hassle comparing to other countries.
I am not here to offend anyone or anyone’s country, but I am just stating my opinion here as a frequent traveller. thnx.
VG
damon459
“We know Queerty readers are among the most cosmopolitan, fun-loving and well-traveled in world—and now we want to know all about your travel habits.” Really? I don’t travel I can’t afford it I’m not some Martini swilling rich guy dripping with money to waste on travel, heck I can’t afford a passport and I hate planes. Flying use to be an experience now it’s more like a greyhound with wings.
Pete n SFO
I’m shocked at the defensiveness of some of these posts… shocked, I tell ya.
Have you people been in or thru security at an airport lately? We ARE annoying as a people. I never feel as elitist as I do when surrounded by my fellow Americans.
But, srsly… who cares what other people think about the US? I’m happy for the strength of a US passport when I travel, but I don’t run around in an Old Glory T-shirt. And we ARE a nation dominated by crazy-conservatives and religious zealots… did you really think no one had noticed??? Really????