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264 comments
  • I don't want to leave my family, my community or the places I live near that I love. But if I could trade out my government for Iceland's or Norway's, I would in a heart beat.

    • Exactly. Immigration is hard, and very costly in more ways than just literally going to another place. Changing one's government is, too, but in different ways that are distributed over the society it governs.

      So if I was alone and without family or friends or language or a job to tie me to the place I live? Absolutely I would emigrate to somewhere more socialistic, not least because I'd be in a prime position to benefit from it, but also because I think it's morally right to organize society in a way that protects its most vulnerable.

  • Absolutely. There is no hope or faith in me for settler-descent Americans; I literally think it's more likely I die at the hands of a cop in this country than any other possible way. If I knew I'd never have to worry about the exorbitant exit tax, and knew I had a paying job and comfortable shelter on the other side, I'd go as far as to learn the lingua franca and never think about America again other than to "damn, I'm fuckin glad I got out of there before this NEW SHIT happened."

    But since the job market is a fraud in and of itself, techbros are by-and-large sociopathic ghouls, there isn't a such thing as a boss that doesn't steal enough of one's paycheck week to week to make flight from America impossible, and most actually-existing socialist nations have lists of pre-existing conditions they don't admit; that's outside of my means, and ultimately an idealist waste.

  • If it was someplace in Europe, absolutely. I would have zero qualms about ditching this dystopia. Sure, other places have their issues, but few are as bad the the US. With the far right takeover of the Supreme Court, it won't be very long until the "land of the free" is no freer than Russia or China.

  • I'd emigrate to the DPRK if I could, and if they'd take me.

    It costs something like $3,000 to renounce U$ citizenship, and that's only if you're able to get citizenship somewhere else.

    Even for the few people with skills in demand elsewhere, it's prohibitively expensive.

  • My grandmother was born in the US not quite 2 years after her parents immigrated. I think semi-often that if she had been born in Sweden I'd be eligible for a passport. I suspect that if the barrier to entry were that low I'd have made the move.

  • I've recently connected with distant family in Norway. I've visited Norway 3 times. I would love to relocate to Norway.

  • One problem is the stereotypically ideal socialist countries -- the Scandinavian ones -- have very tough immigration rules

    They also have unique circumstances around racial / cultural homogeneity and sovereign wealth / resources that help with cohesiveness and generous benefits -- and those can't be easily replicated

264 comments