If Americans could stay in the US that would be great.
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Americans who want to leave are clearly able to identify the problems in the US, and are therefore probably not the ones causing the problems over there.
And in general we should welcome people who want to change their life conditions. Freedom of movement is important.
Those that want to leave are probably not the ones you want to avoid.
IMO, anyone who is awake and aware of the situation in any capacity, and can think rationally has, or is, considering leaving, or has left already.
It's the people who agree and are happy with what is happening that you should probably avoid, and they don't want to leave.
Seems xenophobic
that's because it is.
fantastic take from someone immortalizing a serial rapist and sex trafficker.
Get a working visa in AU's or Canada, stretch it out and in the 5th year when the concentration camps and gas chambers are in full swing, there should be a refugee visa available.
Mexico actually is a great country to live. Cheap living expenses, and the food is just ridonculously good. There are always good jobs available for educated people with good English
Student exchange programs - > job - > permanent residence is one of the easiest ways to migrate.
This is what I would suggest.
Looking for grants and bursaries for the effort is something that should always happen. You may get lucky, or not, either way it will probably cost less than the same from an American university.
I mean, I haven't done this, but it seems logical since OP is looking to further their education.
Use European Grants for foreign Students and be debt free when you finish. ..... Even that should set you in front of your peers in the materialistic USA. ( No fees for studying and cost of living in less fancy european cities is really low for students).
Semi serious. Who said it is gay to marry your homies?
Not OP, where do I apply
Do you have ancestry from a country that makes immigration easier if you can prove it?
Step 1: Marry a EU Citizen
Step 2: ???
Step 3: Enjoy your life
(remember, same-sex marriage is legal in the EU so you got plenty of options, just saying 😉)
Same sex marriage is legal in the EU isnt true.
Basically nothing is "in the EU" There are some general laws that each country applies on their own (often treating them as suggestions and get fined if they dont respect them)
It's legal in a lot of the EU though, especially if you stay out of eastern Europe
You still have to learn the language and take citizenship tests to become a citizen in many European countries
Illegally cross the border into Canada or Mexico and try to get citizenship before they deport you back.
Why not legally cross? It's not that hard to do so.
Because imma bad boy 😎
Badman* FTFY
No one mentioned DAFT (Dutch American Friendship Treaty) yet. It's the lowest barrier of entry to EU for English speaking US citizens with no heritage path. It's just money and grit. Other paths require some amount of chance, be it luck in finding employment willing to sponsor, or acceptance into some student program and hoping you can manage to find employment sponsorship before you graduate. DAFT is strictly having a minimum amount of money (4500 Euro), and then being a successful enough entrepreneur to sustain a life anywhere in The Netherlands.
You think being an entrepreneur is more of a sure thing than finding an employer?
Being an entrepreneur in a new country with a different culture and set of laws
80% of startups fail as a benchmark. It's pretty tricky to create a company.
*successfull company, incorporating is dead simple.
What do you mean by incorporating? I'm not super familiar with the term
Incorporating is just the legal paperwork that brings a corporation into existence. Never done it, but I bet it is just paperwork and money.
In the Netherlands it's, no joke, 15 minutes and ~60 bucks.
Did it before, as a foreigner too, easiest shit in the world.
They even have dual language forms.
Huh, didn't know that. It is pretty hard to start a business, but the process itself seems pretty straightforward. I'll keep this in mind and look into it more, thank you.
Associates degrees are non-existent and not recognized in the EU, and most if not all countries require you to be a graduate to be eligible for hire, which would make a student visa the easiest route.
Luckily many countries offer tuition completely for free; though bachelor degrees are often taught in the native language. If your Spanish is solid, you could of course go to Spain, else with English you'd be somewhat restricted to Ireland and Malta (English is the second official language, but the primary for tuition).
Other than that, some universities have English taught bachelor degrees, so you'd have to research them individually. Finland is very English- and Tech-friendly, for starters.
Step 1, figure out if any of your parents, grandparents, or in some cases great grandparents came from somewhere else. Many countries allow near descendents to get citizenship.
and that's the true story of how my partner and i figured out that the only non US place that will take us is ruzzia
And that's the true story of how I learned all my Polish ancestors came over before modern Poland was a thing, and thus didn't have Polish citizenship to pass on.
Mine did, too. I received Polish citizenship this year. If your family came from what is today Poland and you can prove that, you’re potentially eligible. If not, and they came from the territory that is today Hungary, Romania, etc - then check with those countries instead as similar laws apply.
Look up digital nomad visas. Get remote work here, then apply to relocate to EU country. Good luck with the timezone difference, tho.