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brits_americans--always good for a sadistic laugh
Feb. 6th, 2006 03:36 pmI love reading entry after entry that basically boil down to "Will someone please tell me that everything I'm reading about how to emigrate to the UK is wrong and that really it's easy if you know the secret handshake?" :-)
I feel for all these folks, but it does remind me of the game designer who said that 90% of the inquiries he got on rules questions amounted to "Please tell me the rule doesn't say what it does say, because that sucks for me in the game I'm playing right now." Only this is a lot bigger than a game. :-/
I feel for all these folks, but it does remind me of the game designer who said that 90% of the inquiries he got on rules questions amounted to "Please tell me the rule doesn't say what it does say, because that sucks for me in the game I'm playing right now." Only this is a lot bigger than a game. :-/
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Date: 2006-02-07 01:43 pm (UTC)As far as being welcomed in another country - I sometimes have this fantasy that one could extend their welcome in another country if one opened a business and hired as many folks or more than the number who immigrate to that country. For example, if my wife and I were to move to the Czech republic, we'd probably be welcome for life if we established a business that employed at least two people (say a small book shop). It's just a fantasy, but one would at least be contributing to the taxes and the employement rosters. So the Czech republic is particularly welcoming to ex-pat Americans right now, but over time that will change.
The other truth that many Americans find hard to adjust to is that formal education is far more important overseas than it is here. I probably could not hold a job like the one I have here without a degree... the phrase "independently educated" does not really have meaning in most countries (or Japan and England would be my home now).
I have a pair of friends who took a very different tack. The own a sailing vessel, a house boat. They travel from Caribbean island nation to island nation whenever their visa runs out in one place. They are still U.S. citizens, but they are living in a variety of places throughout a typical year.
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Date: 2006-02-07 01:55 pm (UTC)You mean like proclaiming how we want regions to be democratic, then rejecting the governemants that people int he region elect democratically while we support absolute monarchs and military dictators? ;-)
I sometimes have this fantasy that one could extend their welcome in another country if one opened a business and hired as many folks or more than the number who immigrate to that country.
If you can open a business that will employ you and two UK citizens, you are welcome to move to the UK, according to IND.
The other truth that many Americans find hard to adjust to is that formal education is far more important overseas than it is here. I probably could not hold a job like the one I have here without a degree... the phrase "independently educated" does not really have meaning in most countries
Well, while that's true to some extent, you can probably get more recognition for your actual work *experience* than you realize.
I have a pair of friends who took a very different tack. The own a sailing vessel, a house boat. They travel from Caribbean island nation to island nation whenever their visa runs out in one place.
That sounds very nice, if one can find a way to pay for it. And oen doesn't ever have a health emergency. :-)