Body autonomy is a fundamental human right. Roe v Wade was struck down nationwide for starters |
That’s a stretch |
What did you do in peace corps that they couldn’t have done for themselves? Do Americans have super human abilities? |
Yay for you and a lot of people around the world live very comfortably with good food and clean environments without tons of money. |
| I'm extremely lucky. My parents immigrated from agent Europe in the 90s and I was 10. Economy was booming in the US. They were able to have good jobs, buy a house (I can't afford to buy their house at market value now) and invest in the stock market. My family was able to get a good interest rate as well as keeping jobs not affected by current administration. As a woman and a mother of daughters it's terrifying to look into the future. But so many things were good timing for me an I'm capitalizing on it. |
+1 ♥️ |
🥰 love stories like this. Welcome to America |
I agree. Considering Canada. Because they still have rule of law and they seem to hate less. |
They're super strict on letting immigrants in. Do you have canadian ancestry? |
No. No it's not. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c801k7rkkd7o https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/nov/04/trump-department-of-justice-weaponization-enemies I could provide twenty more examples. If you don't know, it's because you don't want to know, not because the information isn't available to you. |
Yes, I do. |
Lucky!!! Please organize the USA-canadian faction of the MAGA resistance |
Yes, $150k is a lot, and you should be very proud of yourself for earning that. You may not make $150k in other countries, but you also don't really need to. With healthcare covered, you aren't paying for health insurance. With food quality much higher, you aren't spending as much to feed your family. If all you crave are material things, the US is great. Many people strive for other things. |
PP and health insurance would be one of the things I would like to see changes in. Yes, healthcare costs are lower in other developed countries, but having lived in one and used its healthcare system, I think Americans would be surprised to find old facilities, and really pretty basic care compared to what is available here to people willing and able to pay for it. Personally I prefer to spend less on insurance (HMO) so I can use the savings to apply additional savings for old age, and focus on diet and exercise, so a basic low cost system like that would be fine for me. And I would rather make sure every person have access to basic care than the current system of either having expensive private health insurance, being eligible for Medicaid, or being left out altogether. But there is no affordable basic option here because of lobbying, PE, and all the other crap that goes on that increases costs. |
Success in the U.S. has zilch to do with the lack of freedoms, economic opportunities, or political structures of foreign countries. Those countries set their own economic policies, tax rates, design their own social welfare programs, etc, with none of that being related in any way to what the U.S. does for its people. When standards of living are lower elsewhere, that's not the result of U.S. success, but of the choices made by the governments of those other places. |