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The Secret To Moving To A Foreign Country


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2024 Nov 8, 4:33am   98 views  8 comments

by ohomen171   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

#moving to country After the election here in the U.S., there has been a massive amount of interest in the U.S. from people seeking to move to other countries. I could write a book on this subject. Central to this decision to move is "getting off on the right foot" with the immigration department in the country that you are seeking to move to.
Here is my pedigree in this area as follows:
1) My first wife and current wife: I moved both ladies through this process from tourist visa to U.S. citizenship.
2) I went through the Argentina immigration process from tourist to permanent resident with a national identity card and ready for citizenship.
3) I went through the Brasilian immigration process from a tourist visa to a permanent resident.
4) I went through the South African immigration process from a tourist to permanent residence with an identity book for life.
5) I went through the Australian immigration process. I achieved a permanent residence visa.
A good immigration lawyer is essential to your success in moving to another country. There are three easy ways to transition to another country. The first is to marry a citizen of a country. The second way is to meticulously do your genetic research to prove that you have ancestors in a given country. European countries are very receptive to such immigration applications. The third way is to invest in the country where you want to move. In many cases, buying a house worth $500,000 or more will get you admitted with a residence permit.
If you do not have these options, you are in for some hard work. The U.S. immigration system is the toughest in the world, in my opinion. Our readers Mandy Findlater and Nancy Dai made it from a tourist visa to a US citizen. It was a Herculean task. I got the surprise of my life when I began the process of obtaining permanent residence in Argentina. Even though I was married to a local citizen, the immigration process was just as tough as the U.S. It was a painful and lengthy process. I was blessed to have a brilliant immigration lawyer.
If you do not get the immigration process right, your transition to another country will fail.

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1   WookieMan   2024 Nov 8, 4:58am  

ohomen171 says

The U.S. immigration system is the toughest in the world, in my opinion.

Tell that to 10M illegals. They didn't seem to have a problem and are getting benefits and housing. Rough life. Doesn't seem that hard. Take your black nephew with you to Mexico and have to get notarized documentation from his mom. You live in a different reality my friend.

Mexico is stricter than the US. The US is a cake walk to get into. You literally have to do nothing besides get across the border. US Customs is a joke as well.
2   Rin   2024 Nov 8, 5:49am  

WookieMan says


The US is a cake walk to get into. You literally have to do nothing besides get across the border.


I think he means in terms of doing it 'legally' than being a border runner.

As for Claire & I, both of us have gotten long term business visas, hers for the US and mine for the UK, where we can come and go, for up to 6 mos at a time.

Hypothetically speaking, if we were to get married and she wanted to settle down in the US, it would be easier for me to file for a K-1 fiance visa than to get married in the UK and immigrate her under the K-3 category which can easily take more than a few years (or so) of processing time. Vice versa, however, it's easier as I'd already be under a long term UK business visa and the process would be a conversion from that to family reunion thing which is less of a headache there than here.
3   clambo   2024 Nov 8, 6:40am  

US Citizens should not be allowed to marry foreigners and confer US Citizenship to others. This process is abused constantly, usually by foreign females.

In Santa Cruz I personally knew 5 Japanese girls who came to "study English" with student visas, and then married some suckers. A couple of them are still married to the guys.

I also knew 4 girls from Peru who did the same thing.

I also dated a girl from Shanghai China who married a rich dude, but they were on the rocks after she wanted to learn English and he wanted her to stay home and cook, clean, etc. She had an education so she didn't agree and they split up.

I'm a "permanent resident" in Mexico which was a slightly frustrating process but not difficult really.
I was at the Miami Mexican Consulate seeking a "Temporary resident" visa for the sole purpose of buying private health insurance while I'm in Baja California Sur. The interviewer at the consulate suggested they give me a permanent visa instead, to which I agreed.

In the case of Mexico, the only significant barrier is your income or financial net worth; my net worth was sufficient for permanent resident status. I brought some mutual fund statements to the interview.

I didn't consult a lawyer or anyone else; the expats from USA and Canada usually hire someone.
The single difficulty was the shitty website I had to use for step 2 in Mexico; I had to create an account just to make an appointment with the local office. The website rejected all of the passwords I came up with, then passwords Safari suggested. I finally got one through.

Anecdote: after my interview, the female gave me the cell phone number of her female friend in La Paz "I think she would like to meet you."

Anecdote #2: I forgot to mention, in Jupiter Florida I met a Colombian and her 16 year old daughter. The mother spent her last dime to visit the USA on a tourist visa and had no intention of leaving, ever.
After she and I started "dating", she assumed I would "help her and her daughter" and marry her.
They overstayed their tourist visas and were illegals.
Of course, her pussy power was not that great. I said I was returning to Santa Cruz soon.
A couple of years later she said "You broke my heart." I said "You seem alive to me."
Her daughter was hot and eventually found a sucker to marry her; so now the mother's problems are over because they both live with the sucker and the daughter will get her mother in with "chain migration".
I want them all out of the USA, fuck them all.
4   Rin   2024 Nov 8, 6:50am  

clambo says


Shanghai China who married a rich dude, but they were on the rocks after she wanted to learn English and he wanted her to stay home and cook, clean, etc


Well ... hate to say it but that's kinda the story of PatNet's own Turtledove. Eric Sills was only "marriage material" because of his MD job/salary, not his looks (& guessing personality).

clambo says


US Citizens should not be allowed to marry foreigners and confer US Citizenship to others.


Well, if Claire can make me a Britisher then why not vice versa?
5   komputodo   2024 Nov 8, 8:10am  

ohomen171 says

After the election here in the U.S., there has been a massive amount of interest in the U.S. from people seeking to move to other countries

same as 2016 and they are still here..It's a popular thing to say but It's ok not to really mean it in the new language of 2024. First you state that you are leaving then you state that leaving would be the easy way. Next you say that you are going to stay and fight, which is also a popular thing to say. It's almost makes a person sound heroic. Now woman can also state that they are going to join the 4B movement...That should last about a week for the common slut.
6   komputodo   2024 Nov 8, 8:11am  

clambo says

A couple of them are still married to the guys.

Why were they SUCKERS?
7   clambo   2024 Nov 8, 8:13am  

They're suckers for marrying a girl who is out of their league, who will divorce him after she puts in a couple of years with him.
Actually, I think marrying in general in the USA is for suckers.
8   stereotomy   2024 Nov 8, 8:30am  

Rin says

clambo says



Shanghai China who married a rich dude, but they were on the rocks after she wanted to learn English and he wanted her to stay home and cook, clean, etc


Well ... hate to say it but that's kinda the story of PatNet's own Turtledove. Eric Sills was only "marriage material" because of his MD job/salary, not his looks (& guessing personality).

clambo says



US Citizens should not be allowed to marry foreigners and confer US Citizenship to others.


Well, if Claire can make me a Britisher then why not vice versa?

I have a close friend and I can affirm his account - some women only get moist when they're with men who make $$$$$. I guess it's a female fetish.

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