Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the past you had to be a citizen/resident of a foreign country for a number of years in order to call your self an expat.
But today there are millennials posting videos of themselves online staying in Airbnb abroad for as little as 3 months and they are calling themselves expats.
They are not expats they are Americans on extended vacations abroad.
They are desperate to be cool and woke. Let them be. I'd rather they make fools of themselves than have to deal with their screeching and caterwauling here back in the states. Maybe they'll decide to stay wherever they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the past you had to be a citizen/resident of a foreign country for a number of years in order to call your self an expat.
But today there are millennials posting videos of themselves online staying in Airbnb abroad for as little as 3 months and they are calling themselves expats.
They are not expats they are Americans on extended vacations abroad.
They are desperate to be cool and woke. Let them be. I'd rather they make fools of themselves than have to deal with their screeching and caterwauling here back in the states. Maybe they'll decide to stay wherever they are.
Anonymous wrote:In the past you had to be a citizen/resident of a foreign country for a number of years in order to call your self an expat.
But today there are millennials posting videos of themselves online staying in Airbnb abroad for as little as 3 months and they are calling themselves expats.
They are not expats they are Americans on extended vacations abroad.
Anonymous wrote:Expats are generally weirdos anyway. Why would you want to call yourself one?
Anonymous wrote:Typical millennial behavior of wanting the title without having to put in the work to achieve the title
Anonymous wrote:I was an expat for 12 years and did occasionally meet someone who was living in my current city for a few months, sometimes traveling or a temporary work gig for a project. We never considered them expats.
Anonymous wrote:I was an expat for 12 years and did occasionally meet someone who was living in my current city for a few months, sometimes traveling or a temporary work gig for a project. We never considered them expats.
Anonymous wrote:No, if you live and work in another country, you are considered an expat. Though I am not sure if this is correct if you are working virtually for your company in the U.S.
Anonymous wrote:No, if you live and work in another country, you are considered an expat. Though I am not sure if this is correct if you are working virtually for your company in the U.S.
Anonymous wrote:Two things:
(1) they are not expats. My sister-in-law and and my college roommate, both of whom have children and husbands and both of whom have been working in Europe for 30+ years while retaining their American citizenships and dealing with all the intricacies of that status are true expats. There is an extensive network of American expat families in Europe who help each other out in extraordinary ways. A remote worker in an AirBNB for 6 mos. has nowhere near the experience and expertise to earn the albeit informal and unofficial title of expat.
(2) Read "The Expats" by Chris Pavone. It's a fictional spy story but it conveys some of the complexities of a true expat life.
The young single here-for-a-season-while-it's-still-fun workers are trying to borrow some glamour and prestige by using that word. Ick.