I want to immigrate away from the United States, but I don't know where to immigrate to.
  • The U.S is an awful place for workers, specifically neurodiverse workers; I am diagnosed with Autism and ADHD, and have dark-skin. :(
  • I also think it will turn fascist in some years which, based on history, does not give a good life experience for the disabled or neurodivergent.
  • I have not been employed anywhere; but I have read online about the dozens of awful worker stories, which (probably for my benefit) dissuaded me from getting a job as a teenager; and I don’t feel motivated to get one because of my ADHD.
  • U.S Self-defense laws seem draconian; even if I just rely on basic self-defense, exercise, and Krav Maga; I still fear that my potential self-defense plea will get thrown out.

(I think I want to dodge the NATO countries.) I think I would like to and try to immigrate to a socialist country; but I haven’t fully layed out my reasons for that yet.

If I think of anything else to add; I’ll edit the post to add it here.

  • @lssssj
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    152 years ago

    Keep there until you get knowledge and abilities. Looking by your experience, or lack of it, looks like you will not get a good job in another country. Migration requires a lot of work and you have great chances of suffering from lack of money, inhumane living and working conditions, etc.

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  • @panic@lemmygrad.ml
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    112 years ago

    I’ve had family members who tried migrating (from a 3rd world country to a 1st world one). They are amazing workers with years of experience but they have no post-secondary education and some didn’t finish high school. They didn’t speak the language.

    It was a terrifying experience to see from the outside. I can’t imagine it first hand. Physical laborers are so exploited my family had to come back. Housing problems, they weren’t getting payed properly, overworked… all this when they at least had the safety of a contract and visa. I was worried they were suicidal.

    Unless you get extremely lucky, try working towards some type of certification and work experience and learning the language. If anything, at least focus on becoming mentally stronger so you can endure that type of hardship.

    • AmiceseOP
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      • @panic@lemmygrad.ml
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        42 years ago

        I’m not comfortable sharing the country but it wasn’t in North America or Europe.

        I have some self-taught programming skills; but I haven’t gotten very far with my projects (IMO).

        That’s a good place to start. I have heard some successful stories about programmers. The problem is that those people had work experience and higher education (I think it was with the US equivalent of an associate’s degree and/or certifications).

        How do you make yourself mentally stronger?

        Well, usually trying out incrementally harder things while you live in a place you know. Going to school, finding coping strategies with therapy or a support group, a job, etc. But I don’t know what options you have available or how much support you need so I can’t give you a specific plan.

        First you need to find out if immigration is what you want in life and where you want to go. After that you can decide how you’re gonna tackle that journey.

        Unless you get extremely lucky all of this takes years to achieve. But it’s a good motivator.

        • AmiceseOP
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  • Brazil is a decent one. It’s relatively open, diverse enough that you won’t stick out, and it’s well developed.

    If you wanna continue speaking English there’s New Zealand, which while imperialist isn’t completely Americucked

    If you want a good communist countries to flee to Vietnam and Cuba. Beware, as an English speaker learning Vietnamese will take years of deep-immersion training.

    Russia is pretty good for immigrants, but it’s also very unstable.

    If you need a first world country Ireland. It’s not NATO but it is EU.

    The main paths for immigrating are to have a job, have a special skill (doctor or scientist for example), or to have family (could just be a spouse).

    • AmiceseOP
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  • @isleofmist
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    22 years ago

    The English spoken in the Netherlands is often better than the one spoken in the US. Lots of English-speaking go there as a result.

  • 10_0
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    -72 years ago

    Maybe Japan? Or the other side of the US. (From west coast to east coast, or visa versa.)

      • 10_0
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        52 years ago

        Why not?

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      • AmiceseOP
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        • Unfortunately Japan is not very progressive when it comes to matters of race. Foreigners get treated differently and there is a good deal of bigotry against them in general. I don’t know for certain but I know that white people get treated that way so I can only imagine that a brown person would get it much worse.

          Japan never got over its imperial ambitions and it has a very strict immigration policy because, essentially, it doesn’t like the idea of diluting its culture and national identity with migrants. Chinese people and Korean people are held in particular disdain in mainstream Japanese culture.

          If you were thinking of moving to Japan, I’d investigate other people’s experiences of bigotry and racism especially if they are brown-skinned before I’d make up my mind about it.