Americans leaving US in record numbers

I've been looking into leaving for some time, I got it down to Costa Rica, or Ecuador, the later has cheap land and are "American" friendly.

But if you dont have a passport already, I am hearing that new passports carry a way to track and tax you anywhere you go, regardless. Now, this is rumor, I read this on Zero hedge awhile back.

why not Belize? just curious.

http://sanctuarybelize.com/
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bh.html
 
Which did you prefer ultimately?

Switzerland is much more business friendly and for a liberty type, Switzerland is culturally more compatible. However, the legal systems are very different, and Switzerland can go the tyranny of the majority one better than the US. Example: if want to become a Swiss citizen, you jump through the legal hoops, and finally, the citizens in your community vote on whether or not they want to have you as a citizen.
 
I'm living in South Korea and I'm happy not to be paying US taxes to fund the American empire/drug war/bailouts/etc. and that I'm not earning a living in Federal Reserve Notes. It's not exactly a more free country, unfortunately.

I'll definitely move back to the US if Ron Paul wins!
 
Honestly, where the hell can you go. It's tyrannical everywhere.

But i was wondering about Switzerland, do the states (cantons) have more power (pound for pound) then the states in america ?
 
Honestly, where the hell can you go. It's tyrannical everywhere.

But i was wondering about Switzerland, do the states (cantons) have more power (pound for pound) then the states in america ?

Yes, but just as in the US, Kanton power is being eroded by federal level lawmaking. Example in immigration - the feds set a max quota of immigration permits and there is a federal pool for "targeted skills". The Kantons can let in anybody they want, up to the quota. In any particular case, the Kantons want the federal pool to be used if possible (mine came from the federal pool) before using their quota. The advantage I had in a federal granting of immigration is that I could choose my Kanton of residence (which determines income tax rate, which is a combination of federal rate, the Kanton rate, and Community rate. When you have the ability to choose where you live (limited to Swiss citizens, foreigners with C permits, and foreigners with federal granted B permits). I got to choose where I wanted to live with the federal B, before I got the C (permanent resident).

Generally, the federal government handles foreign affairs, military, mail, autobahns and rail, constitutional law and rights. Just about everything else is Kanton / Community, and almost anything is subject to vote based on type of new law or initiative.
 
So Ron's comment about building fences to keep us citizens in doesn't seem so crazy anymore.
 
Switzerland is much more business friendly and for a liberty type, Switzerland is culturally more compatible. However, the legal systems are very different, and Switzerland can go the tyranny of the majority one better than the US. Example: if want to become a Swiss citizen, you jump through the legal hoops, and finally, the citizens in your community vote on whether or not they want to have you as a citizen.

I assumed that Switzerland would be more conservative/free. I've also heard that it's one of the hardest, if not the hardest, places to get citizenship. Last I saw, the right-wing SVP was gaining influence.
 
I assumed that Switzerland would be more conservative/free. I've also heard that it's one of the hardest, if not the hardest, places to get citizenship. Last I saw, the right-wing SVP was gaining influence.

To apply for citizenship, you have to be a permanent resident (unlimited B or C permit) for 14 years, the last 7 of which must be in the community in which you wish to apply. You go through an interview process to see if you have learned to fit into the Swiss lifestyle (language and culture), then your name goes on the next quarterly ballot in your community for a referendum on if the community wants to accept you as a citizen. If rejected, there is a time restriction on applying again.

The SVP is now the largest (plurality) party in Switzerland, and it is always a riot to get their literature in my mailbox ("The Truth About Foreigners").
 
Been looking at Costa Rica as well. Check out the eastern shore for cheap land, the Americans have pretty much taken over the west coast thanks to the great fishing and surfing and beautiful sunsets. But the carribean side is still relatively untouched.

From my father and I have been told from our visits to Costa Rica, (We own some condos and real estate on the west coast) the east is partly untouched because of the drug trade going up the cost line from South America and Jamaica.
 
Costa Rica generally just wants your money to become a resident. $250k in a Costa Rican bank account or $50k invested in a tourism venture or maintain (or start) a multinational business and have an office there. Those sorts of things will get you in the door in CR.
 
Why in the world would an American prefer Australia to America? Australia is light-years ahead toward global government with their green president, cap and trade, etc.
They're way behind on the GM foods side though , waaaaay behind.
And the sodas have real sugar not corn syrup in!
 
South-East asia maybe, but not China.
This ^^ It might not be a bad idea to learn Mandarin, though. The Chinese regime could well become the new dominant market in the world in the next decade. Wasn't it Jim Rogers who predicted this will be "The Chinese Century"?
 
If anyone is considering Ecuador, don't. I just spent a month there and while it is beautiful and land is cheap, there's also a lot more crime than we're used to. Everything has obnoxious alarms (houses, cars), people don't stop at red lights at night, gated communities are double-gated with multiple layers of security, and you generally don't go out alone at night. They also converted to the dollar a few years ago and many people lost a lot of money.
 
From my father and I have been told from our visits to Costa Rica, (We own some condos and real estate on the west coast) the east is partly untouched because of the drug trade going up the cost line from South America and Jamaica.


East Coast town Limon, Costa Rica, was a very rough town, and rather scary for a lone backpacking young female when I was there - not my kinda place. I had just come from Guatemala during its civil war and felt safe there in comparison - machined-gunned soldiers on every street corner, military checkpoints and all.

Makes sense about the drug trade. East coast town Bluefields, Nicaragua is said to have a cocaine addiction problem as bales of it washes up on the beach lost in transport. Eastern Costa Rica probably has the same problems.
 
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I was saw the Singapore episode of Anthony Bourdain's "The Layover" & that might be a good place to move to. The majority speaks english. Crime is very low. Great food. Just do not bring any drugs with you because Singapore is hardcore when it comes to illegal drugs.
 
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