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10 votes
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Where would you live if you had no ties to where you are now?
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a...
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a year like we've just had.
For me, the difficulty has always been figuring out where to go: politics/climate/healthcare/lifestyle/language are a delicate balancing act, and I don't think anywhere's a slam dunk. Everyone's going to have their own take on what perfect looks like, and what compromises to make mapping that to the real world!
So let's assume you're packed and ready to go, nothing holding you back. You've still got to navigate inbound immigration, handle the language, find a job, all that good stuff - but the world is your oyster. Where would you choose to go?
16 votes -
Do any other US citizens think of emigrating?
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past...
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past year and a half.
What factors motivate you to move?
What would be an ideal location for you?
What timeline would are you looking at?One of the main motivators I seek to emmigrate is climate change. As the world continues to progress and evolve I do not think the United States will be able to equitabbly address the changing landscape and ways of life. As for when I would want to move, I'm not sure; currently it seems like a far off probability, but I know it's a choice I will have to make in my own lifetime.
33 votes -
A beginner’s guide to Italian ghost towns selling houses for €1
22 votes -
'Flexing their power': How America's richest zip code stays exclusive
8 votes -
Jreg (Greg Guevara) has recently "toured" his apartment and people are genuinely getting concerned about his mental health and wellbeing
Admittedly the forcibly neutral headline should probably be changed. The video has been unlisted but this is the link. One important thing to note is that he recently made a video satirizing how...
Admittedly the forcibly neutral headline should probably be changed.
The video has been unlisted but this is the link. One important thing to note is that he recently made a video satirizing how people pretend your life condition doesn't affect your mental health implies that wasn't satire, which is incredibly concerning.
He deleted the comment where he talks about his landlord but it has been screenshotted here. It's also proof that's actually where he lives.
Someone has unironically compiled how that house violates Canadian/Ontarian legislation
r/jreg is in some mix of meme-ing and genuine concern.
9 votes -
Logging in to get kicked out: Inside America's virtual eviction crisis
7 votes -
Evictions have led to 10,000 additional COVID deaths
12 votes -
Thousands of DC renters are evicted every year. Do they all know to show up to court?
10 votes -
The rat tribe: Meet the million migrant workers living beneath Beijing's streets
7 votes -
How Covid reveals the ghoulish reality behind anti homeless propaganda
11 votes -
The eco-yogi slumlords of Brooklyn
6 votes -
How does it feel living in a crypt? Impressions of one year later.
11 votes -
Let's window shop for French fairytale homes
9 votes -
San Francisco tenants break leases in startling numbers, giving renters upper hand
12 votes -
Why this woman chooses to live in a ghost town
6 votes -
Making a home that’s affordable, for good
4 votes -
Landlord says he won't collect rent because of coronavirus outbreak, urges others to do the same
8 votes -
The invisible city: How a homeless man built a life underground
10 votes -
Talking to your neighbours is mandatory if you live in this block of flats – it's all part of a plan to help tackle loneliness
9 votes -
Extreme Silicon Valley: A 2:30 AM bus from Salida. Tech employees move all the way into the Central Valley. Private tech shuttles follow.
6 votes -
How poor Americans get exploited by their landlords
7 votes -
A group of mothers, a vacant home, and a win for fair housing
5 votes -
When Minneapolis segregated
4 votes -
Denser housing is gaining traction on America’s east coast
9 votes -
I'm freaking out and need advice
My mother died last month and I've been thinking of leaving my father's house ever since then. I initially thought I'd be okay with doing that, regardless of whether or not my father would object,...
My mother died last month and I've been thinking of leaving my father's house ever since then. I initially thought I'd be okay with doing that, regardless of whether or not my father would object, but he talked with me last night saying he'd be okay if I left and now I'm FREAKING OUT.
Background: I'm 23 and living in Houston, Texas. I have an older brother who lives in Dallas who offered to take me in, but it wouldn't be very permanent as he plans on leaving the country for a trip next year and will be gone for some time. I also have a friend from high school who offered me a room, but she lives in Seattle and was fired from her job. No one else who is close to me is able to offer me a place to stay.
My concerns: I dropped out of college. I was planning on going back but then my mother died and that plan was put on hold, so I don't have any marketable skills (I've only ever worked in retail). I also don't have a job lined up anywhere else. I've never had to take on so many bills at one time and therefore I don't know much about budgeting.
I'd like to leave, but where I am it's secure and comfy. Maybe it's finally time I pushed myself out of my comfort zone and start taking control of my own life, but I don't want to risk my safety and finances on a crazy idea.
I welcome any and all advice, and thanks for reading.
edit: changed a word
27 votes -
Middle-class millennials aren’t leaving home
20 votes -
The fight to make Austin affordable
4 votes -
Is it OK if someone wants to live for years on a bench?
6 votes -
In some towns in Finland, one-person households are now a majority
9 votes -
The homeownership obsession - How buying homes became a part of the American dream—and also a nightmare
35 votes -
Roads from the past - a short animated history of Britain's Gypsies, Roma, and Travellers
6 votes -
Oregon woman turns school buses into tiny homes for working homeless families
7 votes -
How do you achieve an efficient house move?
I'm getting my own place -- i.e. an apartment that I own, and not rent -- and I find myself needing to prepare for another house move (this'll be the 4th of such events for me), only this time...
I'm getting my own place -- i.e. an apartment that I own, and not rent -- and I find myself needing to prepare for another house move (this'll be the 4th of such events for me), only this time with a lot more stuff.
I'm in a situation where I have to plan how I proceed carefully, since the elevator isn't working yet at the new place, and I have to carry everything up 7 flights of stairs.Every single time I've done a house move in the past it's been a disaster; didn't plan at all, just stuffed things into my car and left for the new place when it was full; rinse and repeat. I'm positive I did at least double the number of trips I actually needed.
I want to think ahead on this one since the number of trips matter a lot.
What are your tips for house moving? Any weird but efficient way of packing/labeling/sorting/whatever?
Also interested in hearing the stories of your most horrible (or most enjoyable -- although I can't imagine this being the case) house moves.
PS: don't want to hire a moving company, I like doing things like this on my own.
13 votes -
Here’s what San Francisco’s most expensive home on the market looks like
13 votes -
Swedes typically stop living with their parents earlier than anywhere else in Europe – but can leaving home at a young age have a dark side?
5 votes -
Many properties in rural Sweden are simply abandoned as more people move to the towns and cities
7 votes -
The tyranny of lawns and landlords: Renting culture puts dreams of cultivating wildness out of reach
16 votes -
Suburb in the sky: How Jakartans built an entire village on top of a mall
9 votes -
Cities: Skylines | Power, Politics, & Planning: Episode 6: Public Housing Part 2
11 votes -
New measure would link jobs and housing in San Francisco
8 votes -
When affordable housing in Shanghai is a bed in the kitchen
4 votes -
Rent and its discontents: Against the landlords and the police, in cities poisoned by wealth
6 votes -
Minimum wage still can’t pay for a two-bedroom apartment anywhere
27 votes -
A Housing Economy for the Many: To deal with the housing crisis, we need to roll back the financialization of housing.
5 votes -
These millennials got new roommates. They’re nuns
7 votes -
The Permian Basin is booming with oil. But at what cost to West Texans?
4 votes -
Here comes the neighborhood: Many US cities are booming -- and experiencing housing crunches as a result. Here's a look at two cities that tried to do something about it.
6 votes -
People are moving to smaller cities in search of affordable houses that don't exist
13 votes -
Coming of age in cohousing: Growing up communally brings exposure to the world of adults—and lessons in interdependence
7 votes