One time I was dicking around on AirBnB and there was an AirBnB called "At the end of the world" in Ushuaia at the southern tip of Argentina, there was another one at the southern tip of South Africa right in front of the beach. https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/12140383?checkin=09%2F16%2F2016&checkout=09%2F17%2F2016&guests=1
Went there just over a month ago as part of a solo journey across Morocco and then the Sahara. Been to 30+ countries, but here ranks easily one of the most desolate, unspoilt, least visited places I've ever come across and also one of my favourites. Imagine a raw paradise with little in the way of tourist sights or even tourists there and you have complete free rein to explore quiet sun baked streets, dusty townships, and miles of coastline / desert. Just watch out for the landmines, but those areas are usually marked with warnings.
Your blinkers are impressive.
The very notion of inventing something as universal as architecture or poetry is ridiculous. Hence me claiming neither. Rather I claimed that the islamic world, which you paint childishly as without merit, has produced beautiful examples of both. At no point did I mention or link to the 6th century.
Rather than accept this point you predictably moved the goal posts and argued against some strawman claim of having invented both.
Equally my example of islamic contributions to the development of algebra is distorted with impressive adroitness by you. Replacing the limited and well documented claim regarding algebra with the wider and patently ridiculous claim of having 'invented mathematics'.
As for all the stuff about the glory of Jewish achievements. Yes very good. Some is more accurate than the other but my interest is not in denigrating the accomplishments of people who happen to be Jewish but rather in refuting your hate filled bigotry and laughing a little at your transparent rhetorical style.
If you're not lucky enough to make it to The Wave, try the Fire Wave in Valley of Fire State Park instead. See a photo I took there in 2018 (unfortunately not in the best light conditions). Get there by the Fire Wave Trail. Less known and no access restrictions.
Tip if you can't make it to The Wave (we tried several times and failed): Try the Fire Wave Trail in the Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada. Not quite as spectacular as the one in Arizona, but therefore much less known or visited.
I think we all on this subreddit would be suckers for visiting this kind of place. But it takes guts to do it. Do you speak portuguese? Was the guy you met to move on Brazilian?
You may enjoy reading The River Of Doubt. It is a book about Teddy Roosevelt's journey, after having been president, to explore an unexplored (but white men) and unmapped river in the Amazon. Talk about guts. What an adventure. He almost died on it. The river is now named after him, and a province in Brazil is named after someone on his trip (I forget who).