Americans Are Heading for the Exits

(newrepublic.com)

65 points | by miles 9 hours ago

13 comments

  • kylehotchkiss 9 hours ago
    Where are they headed to that’s doing substantially better government-wise than USA?
    • Arubis 9 hours ago
      That’ll depend on the person—if you’re trans and having a hard time passing, you may well feel safer in Cuba.

      That said, you’re implying a point that’s valid: much of the world is in an oppressive state right now. South America’s always a mix, but most of its states are seemingly less stable now than a few years back; Mexico’s narcoviolence is spiking; Central Europe is trending right-authoritarian, India’s under Modi, and Africa and Central Asia aren’t typically on USian’s radar.

      That basically leaves Canada, the nordics, and Western Europe.

      • margalabargala 9 hours ago
        Brazil is arguably on a trend to become more stable, not less. Argentina is a bit of a tossup, but if Milei pulls off what he's trying to do, it could come out a lot stronger. Or it could all collapse, but I wouldn't say it's right now less stable than it was four years ago. Mexico might have cartel issues but as a whole the country is on a huge economic upswing.

        Somewhere like Singapore is a stable option as well. Australia and New Zealand.

        China might be authoritarian, and the language is hard, but if someone is willing to conform and defer to the Party they can do well there. And if a person's thesis is "I am leaving the US because it is losing its status as a world power", China is the logical country which will be stepping into that vacuum.

        In the past, the languages that "everyone spoke" to do business were first Latin, then French, now English. In the future it will be Spanish and Chinese.

        • glimshe 8 hours ago
          Literally everybody I know in Brazil - and I know dozens of people there - would disagree with the statement that Brazil is getting more stable.
          • margalabargala 7 hours ago
            Could you elaborate? The people you know in Brazil think that the prosecution of Bolsonaro represents less democratic stability than the leadership of Bolsonaro?
        • blargthorwars 7 hours ago
          The next lingua franca won't be Mandarin. Most other asians refuse to learn it for "reasons," and it's hideously hard for others not exposed to tonal languages to learn.
          • margalabargala 7 hours ago
            Both those factors may change if China becomes sufficiently economically dominant on a global scale. Certainly they remain on an economic upwards trajectory, for now.

            They may be staring down the barrel of a demographic crisis and a real estate collapse. Will those happen, at sufficient magnitude and proper timing to prevent their global economic dominance? Hard to say. We'll have to wait and see.

          • inverted_flag 6 hours ago
            Mandarin is already on its way to becoming the lingua franca of electronics manufacturing. Many devices don’t have datasheets in any other language. I expect that to happen in other fields that China is taking over like biotech, especially with the US committing science-funding suicide. People learn a lingua franca out of necessity, not want.
        • mcphage 5 hours ago
          > And if a person's thesis is "I am leaving the US because it is losing its status as a world power"

          I think for more people it is “I am leaving the US because it is becoming a much worse place and the government is self-destructing, and it is sabotaging all of its allegiances.”

      • fallinghawks 8 hours ago
        A friend and his husband have retired to Lisbon and are having a great time. The gay community there seems to be thriving.
      • throw0101d 9 hours ago
        > That basically leaves Canada, the nordics, and Western Europe.

        AU/NZ? JP?

        • Arubis 8 hours ago
          Fair call on AU/NZ. JP is a bigger ask in terms of cultural integration.
    • throw0101d 9 hours ago
    • rokkamokka 9 hours ago
      You are right that all of the first world is under attack by destabilizing forces. But in many European countries these foreign backed extremists are thankfully still the majority, not the elected government.
      • sebazzz 5 hours ago
        It helps that many European countries don't have a presidential democracy but rather a parlementairy democracy - making the concentration of power and execution of bad ideas within a single party and person much more difficult.
        • Redoubts 2 hours ago
          Europe seems to be executing on its terrible ideas just fine
      • spacemadness 8 hours ago
        They probably don’t throw nazi salutes out at their inaugurations either.
      • Bostonian 9 hours ago
        Did you mean "minority" rather than "majority"?
      • blargthorwars 7 hours ago
        If Europe can escape becoming Socialist/Nazi, they'll soon be a Muslim Caliphate if demographic trends continue.
        • slater 7 hours ago
          > Socialist/Nazi

          What?

          • margalabargala 7 hours ago
            See the other half of their comment re: Muslims, considering that among not-formerly-Ottoman European countries the one with the highest % Muslim population is France at 7.5%, the person you replied to is clearly being hyperbolic and not making a serious point.
    • toomuchtodo 9 hours ago
      Europe, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Mexico, Uruguay

      (we hold permanent residency in Mexico, as well as a residency visa in Spain)

    • SanjayMehta 9 hours ago
      The article doesn’t say.

      Implies people are applying for dual citizenship of Ireland and Mexico, but without any concrete data.

    • camgunz 9 hours ago
      Anywhere in the EU.
  • sebazzz 5 hours ago
    I wonder if we will see actual refugees from the US in Europe this term. People who aren't safe in the US anymore, like ones from the LHIBTQ community, government employees, Democrats. Things have already been crazier than most would have expected.
  • voisin 7 hours ago
    Now Trump needs to follow through on his election promise to eliminate citizenship based taxation. The US has the ignominy of joining only Eritrea on taxing its citizens no matter where they live, even in those countries that choose higher VAT or other forms of taxation than income based. It leads to truly absurd outcomes and reduces American competitiveness.
  • tehjoker 9 hours ago
    This is a phenomenon that can only apply to people with money and usually connections to other countries. Most people are fucking stuck here. However, you will see brain drain.
    • toomuchtodo 8 hours ago
      This is not entirely accurate (although sufficient wealth, income or ancestry to obtain residency is easier). If you have skills, you can also expat, as many countries have job boards to help folks who intend to immigrant for work. A list of links to these job boards can be found in my comment here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42943292.
    • Freedom2 2 hours ago
      It's a bit humorous to see so many Americans simply say with hubris "yeah I'm moving to Europe / Asia / NZ / Australia" as if those countries don't have their own immigration requirements and laws.
    • WillPostForFood 9 hours ago
      The Guardian reported that Canadian police apprehended more than a dozen people from Venezuela, the Middle East, and Africa trying to cross the border in dangerously cold temperatures without proper clothing, as the Trump administration revoked humanitarian parole for Venezuelans, Haitians, and others

      You don't have to be rich to leave.

      • tehjoker 8 hours ago
        Point taken, but these are people, particularly Venezuela and the Middle East, living in countries the U.S. has intentionally attempted to economically destroy or in some cases bomb the living shit out of.
      • pphysch 9 hours ago
        With any semblance of security, you do.
  • jmclnx 9 hours ago
    Trump and his boss Musk is cutting Science Research, so people will leave if they are axed.

    Plus these days your research needs to agree with stories written thousand of years ago, thus another reason to leave the US.

  • tim333 8 hours ago
    I remember a lot of talk of Americans leaving for Trump's first term. Not many did.

    We got Ellen DeGeneres over to the Cotswolds this time so that's one at least.

    • 650REDHAIR 6 hours ago
      From the Bay Area I know 3 families that have left to the EU since Trump’s first term. I know another 2 that are planning to join our friends in the EU before the end of the year and are just waiting for consulate appointments that are being booked the instant they are being made available.

      The consulate appointments drying up immediately lead me to believe that people are in-fact trying to leave…

      • jemmyw 6 hours ago
        It's not super easy to emigrate and the systems countries have set up won't be capable of handling x times what they currently process. So it's fair to say many more people could be trying to leave but people leaving doesn't actually rise much.
    • ojhughes 8 hours ago
      Same thing with Brexit, although a lot wish they really did leave now
      • tim333 8 hours ago
        A lot of the Europeans left although that's a bit of a different thing really - them going home rather than Brits leaving. I know a few Brits who have left although it's not especially down to Brexit, more it just being a bit dreary here these days. Though Brexit has contributed to the dreariness.
  • variedpanels 9 hours ago
    My family is waiting for our EU (German) citizenship by descent applications to be processed. We started the process about a year ago specifically because of the prospect of a second Trump presidency.

    I’m an experienced software engineer who already works remotely for a company with employees in Europe. Of course that puts us in a rare and fortunate category among those who want to leave.

    • jkowall 8 hours ago
      Germany is in major trouble, wait for the election tomorrow. The economy is extremely depressed. As someone who spends 30-40% of my time there it's really not good. The immigration is very concerning to many if not most Germans. Energy costs are 4-6x what they are here. Manufacturing is significantly down since COVID (chinese EVs anyone) and with high energy prices they are in deep trouble.
      • variedpanels 3 hours ago
        As someone else mentioned, citizens of any EU member country are entitled to live in any other EU (actually EEA) member state.
      • 650REDHAIR 7 hours ago
        German passport grants access to the entire EU. Infinitely better than not having it.
      • computerthings 8 hours ago
        Yet we're out protesting fascists, not immigrants.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024%E2%80%932025_German_anti-...

        > By the last week of January 2024, the protests had become the biggest in Germany since the protests against the Iraq War in 2003. Soon after, according to some researchers, they had become the biggest in the history of post-war Germany.

  • readthenotes1 8 hours ago
    With an estimated budget deficit of $1.6T, the USA can hardly be considered an example of good governance. People should leave to places that can afford thrm
  • pphysch 9 hours ago
    I was seriously considering moving to Western Europe during Trump 1. Dodged a bullet there.
    • ojhughes 8 hours ago
      Have you actually visited Western Europe recently or is your judgement based on what you read?
  • Trasmatta 9 hours ago
    I want to leave but I have no idea where to go or how to make it work. For now, I think sticking it out in a blue state is a compromise.

    inb4 Trump starts deploying military against peaceful protestors. He's already cleaning house in the military, he wanted to do exactly that in 2020, and he's talked about his desire for generals that do whatever he says without question, like "Hitler's generals" (his words).

    I'm continually shocked by the Trump apologists on this forum. We can debate right vs left all we want (and there's a ton I hate about both Democrats and progressives), but embracing an authoritarian like Trump makes no sense to me.

    • slekker 9 hours ago
      If you are a SWE, there are a bunch of jobs that offer visa sponsorship in the EU. You can check the countries that allow double nationality and usually takes 5-6 years to get it, but that probably means learning another language, unless you go to Ireland, where the housing crisis is one of the worst in Europe. The salary is going to be lower, taxes will be higher, but you'll probably have a better quality of life in general. It's all about trade-offs.
      • Trasmatta 9 hours ago
        I've considered it, but I'm fairly concerned and the situation in Europe as well. Especially with increasing aggression from Russia, the US aligning with Russia, and a weakened NATO. In some ways I wonder if I'm better off in a strong blue US state (especially when my family is still in the states).

        I just don't know though, which is what makes this so hard.

        • urmish 8 hours ago
          > increasing aggression from Russia

          yes that's the biggest problem in EU right now lol

          • Trasmatta 2 hours ago
            It's one of them. Turns out having an aggressive authoritarian dictatorship right next door can be a cause for concern.
  • JKCalhoun 9 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • AlecSchueler 8 hours ago
      Too many people could be inclined to share their feelings of discontent
  • m0llusk 9 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • readyplayernull 9 hours ago
    The only exit is a digital exit, and using Linux won't be enough to avoid surveilance from the last 3 Earth Kingdoms after 2025, that will control all consumer electronics. We were able to do a lot with 90's technology, each village should have its own electronics manufacturing.