Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be honest! America is great and everywhere else is less awesome. You people are ridiculous.
Sure, if you are a Nazi enthusiast.
Then do stay away from Bavaria and Austria. They also have crucifixes in public spaces that would be more damaging to your pagan souls than the marching Nazis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Much of this is comical. Few other places in the world will provide a superior quality of life in practical terms.
Try using your "freedom of speech" in many places where you either don't actually have language fluency or where the government places limits on speech which are unknown here, or where the opinions of foreigners are unwelcome.
Good luck finding a place where the political landscape is not subject to change; in any democracy that's a risk and even a given.
Many places feature a predominant lower middle class lifestyle "enjoyed" by most residents. You may be surprised at your inability to improve your quality of life through your own efforts - taxes, culture, the educational system, and the nature of employment opportunities and compensation will suppress most people seeking to rise to higher levels of social and economic class.
Dual nationals may know what they'd be signing up for, the rest of you are mostly clueless hysterics.
It may be easy for you to give up your democracy, but not for others. Why are you trying to convince the people on this thread who are legitimately worried?
Maybe because current domestic politics are not to your liking is an imbecilic reason to uproot yourself in a likely futile expectation that somewhere else will be all rainbows and sunshine in perpetuity. You're not going to immediately have a vote in your new domicile, and when you do you may find the candidates are as unappealing as those representing the domestic parties you're running from. The idea that "somewhere else" will surely be better requires more thoughtful consideration and critical analysis than most panicking progressives here are seemingly capable of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Much of this is comical. Few other places in the world will provide a superior quality of life in practical terms.
Try using your "freedom of speech" in many places where you either don't actually have language fluency or where the government places limits on speech which are unknown here, or where the opinions of foreigners are unwelcome.
Good luck finding a place where the political landscape is not subject to change; in any democracy that's a risk and even a given.
Many places feature a predominant lower middle class lifestyle "enjoyed" by most residents. You may be surprised at your inability to improve your quality of life through your own efforts - taxes, culture, the educational system, and the nature of employment opportunities and compensation will suppress most people seeking to rise to higher levels of social and economic class.
Dual nationals may know what they'd be signing up for, the rest of you are mostly clueless hysterics.
It may be easy for you to give up your democracy, but not for others. Why are you trying to convince the people on this thread who are legitimately worried?
Anonymous wrote:Much of this is comical. Few other places in the world will provide a superior quality of life in practical terms.
Try using your "freedom of speech" in many places where you either don't actually have language fluency or where the government places limits on speech which are unknown here, or where the opinions of foreigners are unwelcome.
Good luck finding a place where the political landscape is not subject to change; in any democracy that's a risk and even a given.
Many places feature a predominant lower middle class lifestyle "enjoyed" by most residents. You may be surprised at your inability to improve your quality of life through your own efforts - taxes, culture, the educational system, and the nature of employment opportunities and compensation will suppress most people seeking to rise to higher levels of social and economic class.
Dual nationals may know what they'd be signing up for, the rest of you are mostly clueless hysterics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be honest! America is great and everywhere else is less awesome. You people are ridiculous.
Sure, if you are a Nazi enthusiast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just bought a large business in Canada, so that will be our ticket if we need to leave.
Gross
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be honest! America is great and everywhere else is less awesome. You people are ridiculous.
Sure, if you are a Nazi enthusiast.
Then do stay away from Bavaria and Austria. They also have crucifixes in public spaces that would be more damaging to your pagan souls than the marching Nazis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I plan to stay.
If I had kids under 18 I would leave.
I have kids starting college in 2025 and 2027- how would you leave in my place? Serious question, they want to stay!
They are probably old enough so that they would not want to go. If you have younger kids, start now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be honest! America is great and everywhere else is less awesome. You people are ridiculous.
Sure, if you are a Nazi enthusiast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're going to feel pretty silly if the next election cycle results in changes in domestic politics and all of a sudden the sky stops falling. Relocating internationally with shifting political winds seems foolish, at best, not to mention expensive and disruptive.
But, if you wear a tinfoil hat and assume there will be no further elections in the U.S. ever, you'll be patting yourself on the back.
Which scenario seems the more likely?
My grandparents lived through WWII in Europe. My grandfather was an RAF pilot. My father fled a dictatorship in a once prosperous and peaceful nation. "Things fall apart, the system cannot hold". There is nothing magical about the US that will keep us from falling into this. No one is coming to save us.
The quote is “things fall apart, the center cannot hold.” It’s from The Second Coming by Yeats.
I was paraphrasing and actually referencing the novel by Chinua Achebe which is about a breakdown of a political system. Hope this helps!
Not really. Achebe used the famous line from Yeats’ poem for his title. The way you wrote it implied it was the quote, which it most certainly isn’t.
He used the first part of the line as the title. I specifically wrote system because the political system is what we're talking about. Anyway glad you got to be pedantic on the internet today! "And say my glory was I had such friends"
Oh just piss off, you wannabe limey.
Hahaha Yates, famously Irish? Limey means British. They...don't like each other. You are learning so much today!
Nope, well aware and recently spent a month in County Sligo which is Yeats country. The PP said she wanted to immigrate to the UK as her grandparents were from the UK. She is a wannabe limey.
Also it’s Yeats, not Yates. Seems like you’re on a roll. Please do leave for the UK. Bland food and terrible weather likely suit you. I always laugh when I see the little UK cars driving around near where I live with huge UK sticker on the back. You’ll fit right in with that dowdy lot.
^ this definitely screams low-class MAGA
Anonymous wrote:Be honest! America is great and everywhere else is less awesome. You people are ridiculous.