Anonymous wrote:https://news.gallup.com/poll/697382/record-numbers-younger-women-leave.aspx
40% of American women under 44 want to leave the USA
Interesting
Anonymous wrote:I m an immigrant from SEA. I think USA is much better for women than a lot of places I know or came from. And I am consider upper middle class in my country.
I love the USA. It’s give me a new life. You have it so good that you take it for granted here.
Anonymous wrote:What percentage of women vote against their own interests?
Anonymous wrote:Healthcare, food, education, public transportation, gun control - these are all very important to many people, understandably.
Anonymous wrote:And do many more want to come in? Everyone thinks the grass is greener somewhere else.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know any women, even those under 40 who feel this way. We have family in Europe and have spent plenty of time there. As others have said, there are pros and cons everywhere you go, but we have a pretty good here.
Anonymous wrote:I would leave if I was younger too.
Thank God I've gone through menopause.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m one of them.
Being an immigrant is tough. I’m desperate to leave but nicer places don’t want Americans and getting a visa let alone citizenship is an uphill battle.
I don't understand why Americans want to move to, particularly Europe so badly given they pay higher taxes for public services and earn a whole lot less overall. All the high-skilled people limited by their market in Europe move to the United States to earn more than they do in the old continent.
Have you been in a coma for the last decade?
New poster here. I lived in the UK for years and also worked in Germany for a brief period, plus many work trips to offices in Germany. Europeans make substantially less than Americans, especially at professional roles. Salaries are lower. Cost of living is still pretty high, especially in cities where the good jobs are. Many aspects of QoL is lower, such as housing and material comforts. There are some things they do well, such as national health (which still come with plenty of restrictions) and vacation policies. And I do love the cities. But European economies are more moribund and career growth is more limited. You'd be surprised by how many high performing Europeans have actually moved to the US for careers. Dubai is also hugely popular due to jobs and tax free incomes.
Europe also has significant cultural and political challenges. Some economic related, others over mass migration. The latter is an enormous tension point. And, guess what, European countries have stricter abortion laws than blue America (shocker, eh?). The grass is definitely not greener on the other side of the fence and spending a week in a fancy European city center isn't a taste of real life for the typical European. I've seen a particular hysteria and that is totally clueless among young progressive American women who have no idea what life is really like outside the US.
This. I have several European friends, and they all say both Europe and the US have their pros and cons. Careers and entrepreneurship are much more difficult in Europe, and there is tremendous pressure to conform and not do better than everyone else. I’ve even heard stories where someone will start to do well, buys themselves an expensive car, and people will trash it just to keep them in line.
Interestingly many of my American and European friends have moved to Mexico and love it. So Mexico could be an option.