International Americans, It's Time to Move to Europe.

Here in the US the trend tends to be to move from expensive blue states to less pricy red states where greater opportunities can be found, where home prices can be less expensive, etc. That is the general trend.

As for Europe some of the crazy court and policing rules has me thinking it is a place I'd want to avoid.

Britain Is Lost: White Men in UK to Face Tougher Sentencing​


UK, here I cum
 
☺️

How convenient, huh.



The areas without people are paradise, though.

usm.jpg


😂

No, seriously. It is absolutely surreal wilderness.
Damn look at the east coast 🙃
 
It's not as if Americans can just waltz into Europe and settle there, most won't even meet the requirements to stay past 90 days. From personal experience, just going on my wifes move to here.

For Ireland : Can you prove you have the means to support yourself ? Have you already got a job that will sponser you for a work visa, as companies need to show the position cannot be filled by EU citizens first ? Are your American qualifications even recognised in the field ? Add to that your drivers licence is invalid and you'll have to apply for one which means starting from scratch. Then there's the cost of renting or buying a place here. Anything cheap in the country is usualy a wreck and has no public transport and everything else starts at 300k.

For Italy : The same as above but with added the language barrier, which you'll need to learn before your permesso di siggiorno runs out.

Then you'll also get hit with local and American taxes on your income.
 
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No need to travel so far when you can just come to Canada. Just sayin'.
If it had Cali's climate I would move there. Not much of a snow guy. I've heard the climate over on the pacific coast is somewhat similar to Oregon and Washington state in places, but that is TOO MUCH rain for me, like 6 months of the year. I've heard the UK and Western Europe climate is generally similar to the Pacific Northwest also.
 
100%

In fact, I'd probably move to Ireland if I were living anywhere in the UK.

Did you get new meds for your boneitis? Two comments I agree with back to back. Shit. What a brave new world.
won't be living there long saying stuff like that
 
Damn look at the east coast 🙃

Depressing, IMO.

This is why we must preserve the West. That is why I put real-life effort, money, and time into doing so, and some of the biggest allies in that fight are actually indigenous tribes who have control over vast tracts of land contiguous and interconnected with a lot of the national parks, wilderness areas, monuments, forests, wildlife refuges, and bureau of land management acreage.
 
America is cut throat and savage. There are numerous countries in Euro that provide a better quality of life for the average person. But I'm not the average person
Yeah, and when all the other above average people leave, you'll be even more not average! I think this was the plan all along.
 
Lol, that was a pretty horrible sales pitch tbh. It's just a weird list of misinformed complaints from someone who's never lived here, and no real reason anybody should pick Europe.

One of "the three keys to living a good life" is lower carbon emissions? Not even your personal carbon emission, the per capita carbon emissions of other people in your country.

<JagsKiddingMe>

The guy's sales pitch for Europe is that you'll make 25% less money, will have to "cut back on consumer goods", and can just have friends and family on whatsapp like his shut in friend who stays on the internet without leaving his house for days at a time because he's scared that some people in the real world might not be white libs?

You don't need to leave the country to "cut back on consumer goods", nor would you need to leave to have less processed food. So much of this guy's complaint list is things that other people are doing that don't affect you. His tangible complaints are "unable to afford a home in America's largest cities", which you couldn't afford in Europe's largest cities either, and "$25k/family for health insurace", which employees don't pay either. Employees pay an average of $1500/year for themselves or $6k for a family, which is qutie a bit less than the 25% decrease in pay and significantly higher taxes you would owe.

And yes, the guy looks exactly how you would expect him to.



iu
 
I lived in Europe for a spell.

Seemed more like Beirut tbh.
 
Yeah, and when all the other above average people leave, you'll be even more not average! I think this was the plan all along.

Nobody that can hack it here who owns property, doesn't struggle living paycheck to paycheck, and has no personal need for the social safety net is likely to leave.
 
It's just a weird list of misinformed complaints from someone who's never lived here
I live emotionally between the two continents. As a British student in the US in the early 1990s, I thought it was the greatest country on Earth. I acquired an American wife and kids, but we ended up in Paris. Over decades of transatlantic visits, I’ve tracked the lives of American friends and relatives.
 
Anyone that can say "I'm upset at an election, I'm uprooting my life and moving to Europe" is someone out of touch with most people who vote and we'd probably be fine without them.
 
I live emotionally between the two continents. As a British student in the US in the early 1990s, I thought it was the greatest country on Earth. I acquired an American wife and kids, but we ended up in Paris. Over decades of transatlantic visits, I’ve tracked the lives of American friends and relatives.


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Kuper was born in Uganda of South African-born parents, and moved to Leiden in the Netherlands as a child, where his father, Adam Kuper, was a professor in anthropology at Leiden University.

He has lived in Jamaica, Sweden, Palo Alto, California, Berlin and London. He studied History and German at Oxford University, and attended Harvard University as a Kennedy Scholar.
 
My wife goes to Paris in a month for two weeks. She really wants to live abroad at some point. Me, not so much, but only for a few months for the kids.
Paris is not a great place to expensive and the weather is extremely unpredictable. Actually the South of France is really nice and you can get a vila for around 340,000 US that has a pool and pretty sizable living area. But migration right now is hard unless you have family same with Spain I believe? I am not moving though my family been through it all.

Here is one property that is a half a million around 600k that has an indoor pool and a lot of land. Though I noticed an electrical wire in the pool hopefully that is for the pool cleaner lol.

 
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