I am going to be honest here. Despite its past grandeur, the one that I have thoroughly studied back in university, Egypt had never been at the top of my list. The fact that it has always been such a famous touristy place pretty much made me always lose any potential enthusiasm that might arise. Perhaps it was because of having seen so many times the destructive effects that mass tourism has on local cultures, I don't know. However, it only took just a few hours in Cairo to find myself happily surprised. We landed there at a very difficult time in the history of the country when after three consecutive years of revolts and failed Revolutions have led the country to bankruptcy and a state of desperation. As a result of this, the Media of propagation of evil has taken clear advantage of this situation to place Egypt, unfairly as usual, among the dangerous countries that should be avoided. United States, England, and many others alert their citizens from the official websites of their organizations to terrorize the world: DON'T TRAVEL TO EGYPT! TERRORISM, KIDNAPPINGS, BOMBS, MUSLIMSSSSSS!!!!!! The one very positive thing about all this though, is that the first tourists that feel intimidated by such a load of lies and bullshit are the worst ones, so this keeps them at home and preserves the world from their irresponsible behavior abroad. On the other hand, the negative side of this is that unfortunately, tourism is the engine of Egypt's economy and the situation after three years of tourism drought and without any visible hint of improving in the short or medium term, is desperate, to say the least for a huge part of the Egyptian society that fully depends on it. Entire families have gone bankrupt, thousands of shops have closed, a middle class of businessmen that have turned to either servitude or full unemployment. The Nile has become a cemetery of stranded tourist boats that sit there rusting in the water, and the glorious Pyramids of Giza that have transcended everything along the centuries, are once again sitting in almost complete solitude.
In the meanwhile, life goes on. Apparently, there are still some outbreaks of sporadic protests here and there, and there is a strong military presence on the streets, but you only have to stay away from these to not be able to notice even the slightest of the irregularities. A climate of absolute normality reigns the streets of Cairo, the normality of the chaos that is Cairo of course, with its 30+ million inhabitants that like ants plague every corner of the city. Outside its main arteries, Cairo isn't more than this massive maze of narrow alleys following no logic of any kind, flanked by brick buildings built half-way that are subsequently disguised by clads of clothes hanging out to dry, while people snoop around looking out their windows, looking at the happenings of their neighborhood.