Vietnam is the same single party state capital system nominally named the Communist Party that nominally teaches Marxist ideology to a population while doing state capital instead, the same one we - the US - decisively lost to 50 years ago and the same as China
For Americans, why does Vietnam spark ideas of an up and coming fantasy land, while China sparks ideas of a dystopian fear land, when the day to day experience would be the same and completely divorced from the governing system?
> For Americans, why does Vietnam spark ideas of an up and coming fantasy land
It doesn't?
I've known a few people who've traveled there and I don't recall any of them ever saying they wanted to stay forever. However, the idea of it being a "fantasy land" probably has to do with it's climate. Jungle and rain forest (I'm not exactly sure what the distinction here is, if there is one) is not a biome available in the continental US, of which there are relatively few.
I very much doubt rich tourists are suffering the ire of the government in Vietnam while I'm not sure I'd expect as much from China since they are more wealthy.
> when the day to day experience would be the same and completely divorced from the governing system?
Given what I said above, I doubt the experience is at all similar from a tourist perspective.
My experience is one of Americans fawning over new hotels and resort towns and digital nomad lifestyles in Vietnam. Not staying forever but for extended indefinite periods of time.
The same and different Americans would have absolute fear and disdain over the entire concept of China, while my other Western friends might rave over how much fun they had in Shanghai or balmier tropical places like Hainan
Its hard for me to reconcile the different realities, I think theyre related because theyre both single party communist systems that teach marxist ideology, have no check and balance over squashing dissidents, and one group of travellers seems more objective than the other
Perhaps they are just unaware of the reality of the rest of the country.
I live near Mexico and everyone around me is aware of the strife that goes on in Mexico day-to-day. I wouldn't want to live there because of that but, when I visit, I either stay in those resort towns you mention and, when I'm not, I'm obviously a foreigner and am a source of tourism dollars as long as I stay in the right areas.
If I had no idea of the normal conditions of the country, I'd have a much different idea of Mexico than I do.
China is probably similar. News about bad things in China makes it the US. Maybe it's propaganda but it isn't _all_ propaganda. On the other hand, the only thing most people know about Vietnam is an 60 year old war (experienced through media) and the resort town and tourist attractions they visit.
I'd guess that the idea of China is probably exaggerated in the American's mind (including mine) but it's probably more accurate than what they think of Vietnam.
For Americans, why does Vietnam spark ideas of an up and coming fantasy land, while China sparks ideas of a dystopian fear land, when the day to day experience would be the same and completely divorced from the governing system?