this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2025
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No Stupid Questions

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Asking because of Mahmoud Khalil is trending...

I don't know if the first amendment still exist anymore πŸ˜–

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[–] IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com 19 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (6 children)

Curious, what country did you go to, and what eligibility requirement did you meet?

Because AFIAK, there only a few ways:

  1. Be a rich person that have money to invest, usually like $500,000 USD at minimum, some countries requiring more (I don't got that money lol)

  2. Be a "skilled worker" (nope)

  3. Have close relatives in a target country (Most of my close relatives are in the US or China)

  4. Marry someone? (Same-Sex marriage laws in the EU makes it easier, but still... I'm not exactly attractive)

  5. Claim jus sanguinis in some country? (The only option I got is PRC, and that's not a fun place to be)

My parents have a small bussiness here, and like, we can't just thanos snap and move everything.

The only advantage I would have is being Han Chinese so I could blend in and I'm not a minority group that'd get genocided, but I'd still have to shut up and not criticize the government, and if they find out about the shit I've been saying while in the US, I'm fucked either way.

So basically, I can stay in the US and just shut up and don't criticize the government. (And pray that no holocaust v2 happens.)

Or I can try claiming jus sanguinis in PRC and hope they don't know or don't care about the stuff I've been saying in the US, and I also have to shut up and don't criticize the government.

These are my most realistic options.

EU is very unrealistic. Canada is also similar, and about get invaded. Everywhere else is instability and/or authoritarianism.

US being nominally a democracy isn't gonna help with political asylum applications, and by the time the EU takes it seriously, the borders would already be closed.

[–] Varyk@sh.itjust.works 15 points 2 days ago

that sounds like you're talking about permanent immigration.

another easy way to permanently immigrate is to move a place on a tourist or digital nomad visa, and then stay there legally or otherwise until you're allowed to apply for citizenship.

spain and portugal require about $40,000 a year for their digital nomad visas.

The thing is, it's even easier to move without changing citizenship and you can still stick it to the US government.

if you don't change citizenship, and you live outside of the US 11 months out of the year, you don't have to pay taxes on earned income. so you're not supporting the current administration.

The cheapest golden visa is $75,000 for the whole family in the Philippines, btw, not 500k.

I still wouldn't pay that.

I travel full time, you can easily get 3 to 6 month visas in a bunch of countries, Visa-Free travel in the others, live permanently abroad, legally avoid US taxes and enjoy a much lower cost of living in countries that aren't tearing themselves and their constitution apart.

[–] ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org 8 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Curious, what country did you go to

I lived in many countries. The one I went to when I left the US was the UK. But it was in Europe back then. I would never move there now.

Because AFIAK, there only a few ways

You missed mine πŸ™‚ I had dual citizenship. I simply gave one up. I had to pay the extortion racket but other than that, that's all I had to do.

Also, if you're trans or not male or female (some people are born with extra X and Y chromosomes, which flies in the face of the administration's idiotic male / female classification), you've basically become a non-person in the US. As such, I'm fairly sure you could make a convincing case for asylum in many European countries.

[–] starlinguk@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Marrying someone means nothing. They're taking people with green cards who are married to Americans and are making them disappear.

[–] IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I think you're mistaken. I mean like marrying a EU citizen in order to obtain EU Citizenship.

I'm already a US citizen.

[–] starlinguk@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

There are European countries that don't allow you to have dual citizenship.

Most European countries also don't give citizenship to people marrying someone from their country. For example, in Germany you have to live there for 3 years, pass a German citizenship test and pass a B1 language test. In the UK it's pretty much the same, but the citizenship test is virtually impossible and the entire process costs a bloody fortune. And you don't get your money back if you get rejected.

My parents have a small bussiness here, and like, we can’t just thanos snap and move everything.

Remember that many jews said the same thing in Germany before the war, until they realized it really was time to get out of Dodge and they couldn't.

[–] Delvin4519@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Australia and NZ also exist, those countries are likely fine in that no major global trade routes go through there (unlike the Arctic), so that mitigates the risk of war over there. Those I've read somewhere on r/IWantOut that some countries like Australia have a list of medical conditions that would mean one is not allowed to emigrate there.

England/the UK I haven't read much, but that's about as far as one can go, aside from Canada; to go elsewhere means learning a new language is outright required.

I'm in a similar position as OP, and trying to leave with someone else would be even more trickier. Even Canada is very limited in how many family members/friends/relatives that one can sponsor or emigrate with.

I'd feel like being of Chinese descent is more of a liability. If the PRC goes after Taiwan, I could totally see the cheeto crowd go after my ethnicity and be a repeat of what happened in WWII.

I just hope any one country will start allowing asylum seekers to get out before it's too late, but I won't hold my breath given that everywhere in the developed world seems to have a housing crisis all at once.

[–] IDKWhatUsernametoPutHereLolol@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

to go elsewhere means learning a new language is outright required.

Ah shit, here I go again

This time, I don't have the advantage if being a kid and it was 10x easier to learn a new language as a kid. I mean, I'm so good at English, my classmates say they don't hear any accents. I'm practically a native English speaker.

If I were to move, the language thing is gonna make me cry...

flashback to spanish class in middle school / high school πŸ˜“

[–] Delvin4519@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Yeah, it's pretty dire. Those aformentioned countries are the only places in which to go where learning a new language isn't necessary to get permanent citizenship.

To get permanent citizenship in any other country generally requires fluency in the native local language in pretty much all cases.

If I wanted to move to the EU, say the Netherlands for example, I wouldn't be able to get EU/Dutch citizenship until learning and becoming fluent with the Dutch language, plus x amount of years with residence in the 1 specific EU country. Replace the language/country with whatever EU country and it's the same situation.

Even with Canada, since I didn't take French in middle or high school, that means Quebec is pretty much off the table for me, unless I go through the hassle of learning French as an adult.

Even if Canada could have a threat of invasion from the south, I do not think it would likely succeed, as there are at least 5 border states that are blue/democrat, and Canada would likely get help from other countries. Perhaps Mexico may start a second front from the south siding with Canada, so that there's 2 fronts to deal with? Canada does have the city of Edmonton located pretty far from the US border, so it is not required to live adjacent to the US border in Canada. I would say that fleeing to Canada is about the same risk as fleeing to Finland or Estonia, and the latter two are in the EU.