The Miracle of Citizenship

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  • Опубліковано 17 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 65

  • @nomadcapitalist
    @nomadcapitalist  Рік тому +1

    Are you planning to obtain a second citizenship? Which one have you chosen?

  • @Therealjoshuaparker
    @Therealjoshuaparker Рік тому +14

    This is probably one of the best, most valuable videos you’ve produced, Andrew. The big “Why” behind the the need for a second passport was explained more clearly in this video than any other that I’ve seen.

  • @ib9511
    @ib9511 Рік тому +6

    Thank you, Andrew, yet again. The philosophical underpinnings of your position on expanding choices, are important to hear.
    Look forward to your next video

  • @villageintheshire
    @villageintheshire Рік тому +4

    I'm very glad you are still making these vid's Mr Henderson. The "I'm Out" upload was an error as you have too much info yourself to delegate to others

  • @LuLuBu13
    @LuLuBu13 Рік тому +3

    It only took them 39 years, but the UK finally decided to extend the miracle of their citizenship to children of British women born outside the UK. So in the next 12 weeks or so i will be receiving something that I have desperately wanted (and absolutely deserved) my whole life, a UK passport.

  • @dbongo1
    @dbongo1 Рік тому +7

    Excellent video. I like your perspective on passports, it makes much sense.

  • @vsevolodpetrolhead8689
    @vsevolodpetrolhead8689 Рік тому +12

    Hey Andrew!
    In Transnistria, some people(rumors that there's a lot of them though) have up to 5 passports - Transnistrian(not recognized by anyone except Russia), Moldovan, Romanian, Ukrainian and Russian

    • @Felixxxxxxxxx
      @Felixxxxxxxxx Рік тому +1

      Everyone has an internal passport and some people have either a Moldovan, Ukrainian, or Russian passport. You would need to be half Russian half Moldovan to get those 2. In order to get a Romanian passport you need to live and be registered in Moldova proper, and apply. In 2019 the waiting time was about 2 years. I think it is very unlikely that you would meet anyone with 5 passports there. I have friends who have kids, one has a russian and the other one has a moldovan passport. The kids only got the Russian one + the Transnistrian of cource.

    • @vsevolodpetrolhead8689
      @vsevolodpetrolhead8689 Рік тому +1

      @@Felixxxxxxxxx interesting. I think those who got 4-5 passports already left to either country, there's actually no reason to stay there if you got so much opportunities.
      btw I know a guy from there who got 3 - internal, moldovan, russian

  • @dahveed284
    @dahveed284 Рік тому +7

    I know of a couple of people that have moved to Mexico, although I don't think they are doing the citizenship thing there.
    This ability to move and enjoy less taxes and more freedom makes many governments unhappy. They would love nothing more than to prevent these moves. And this is at the state and federal levels of some countries.

  • @berlon-mtl
    @berlon-mtl Рік тому +5

    In ex USSR space almost every citizen who live near borders can travel with residence card (not pasport) to another Country over the border without any additional visa. Example Moldova-Ukraine border.

  • @richardnokes6752
    @richardnokes6752 Рік тому +3

    Wise Beyond Your Years Sir

  • @ThatsEunice
    @ThatsEunice Рік тому +8

    I was a prisoner in America because the concept of the American Dream. I wasted my life in America. My biggest regret. I’m lucky I wasn’t a citizen because I can walk away freely, even though my family are trying to pressure me to become a permanent resident of America. I am hoping my crypto investment will allow me to become a South Korean resident instead.

  • @matgood6231
    @matgood6231 Рік тому +2

    Love all your clips! I’m looking at leaving canada to Mexico or Costa Rica atm. Probably going to reach out to your team this month.

  • @Bitcoinistheshit
    @Bitcoinistheshit Рік тому +12

    Love your content, just moved to Mexico 🇲🇽 I love it

    • @Pelican5077
      @Pelican5077 Рік тому +3

      Where in Mexico? Very interested to know. We presently live on our gracefully aging 35ft sailboat and have done so since 2011. We have travelled to many countries on our boat but all of it has been in the North Atlantic basin. Covid curtailed our cruising due to vax mandates in many places. We are getting older and contemplating our next (and maybe last) adventure. Mexico is on our list, but we have not yet really explored the options there.

    • @NN57143
      @NN57143 Рік тому +2

      Hi! Where in Mexico? I’m waffling between a beach town and Mexico City. Such different options, and CDMX is expensive..

    • @Bitcoinistheshit
      @Bitcoinistheshit Рік тому +2

      @@NN57143 I love Mexico City but we went beach town in Cabo San Lucas , San Jose and east cape really cool too we chill there a lot too we love Mexico so happy here . We have a baby too and he loves it

    • @Pelican5077
      @Pelican5077 Рік тому

      @@NN57143 I’d go for the beach! LOL. Thank you.

    • @Pelican5077
      @Pelican5077 Рік тому +1

      @@davidrichards1741 Hmm. We live quite comfortably but cheaply on our gracefully aging 35ft sailboat and have done so for more than a decade. We are very careful to keep our income under the level where we have to pay any Federal tax. And we are technically FL residents, even though we don’t reside there. So are we chumps or peasants? Asking for my wife so she knows going forward how to classify herself.

  • @rahuliyer7456
    @rahuliyer7456 Рік тому +2

    Hey Andrew...few things
    1) In Asia, my background, not where I was born, many of my relatives hate the schools there. They are trying every way to send their kids to Europe, North America, or Australia for study.
    2) In developing world Asia, not a NIC, or a developed country, people want to come to the West. Maybe because they don't know any better.
    I point this out because the minute you mention Latin America...they tune out.
    3) Also worth noting that dual citizenship is legally forbidden in many parts of Asia. I know Vietnamese who don't want their Vietnam citizenship when they come to the West. Same for India. Vietnam allows dual, but they don't want it.

    • @srinivasareddyindia5737
      @srinivasareddyindia5737 Рік тому +1

      Many Indians are migrating overseas because, pay scale is 5-6 times higher than India. Indians are migrating as skilled professionals, but not as refugees. Many western countries prefer graduates of their country. That's why, Indians are going to western countries for higher education. 😊

  • @ADAMREES-GRITGYM
    @ADAMREES-GRITGYM Рік тому +1

    Great video. Thanks Andrew

  • @pdemp5780
    @pdemp5780 Рік тому +4

    Great video. One of your best.

  • @UnitedChristians.Academy
    @UnitedChristians.Academy Рік тому +1

    Glad I live in Netherland!

  • @fernandoluiz8850
    @fernandoluiz8850 Рік тому +3

    Excellent info as usual

  • @coddiwompler59
    @coddiwompler59 Рік тому +3

    I think we are more defined by our culture... and if we move to another 'country' how much we can adapt to the other culture.

  • @PrototypeThinker
    @PrototypeThinker Рік тому

    When we talk about imposing rights, it is a good comparison, for example, of Poland, where the third pension pillar fund was established and the liberal government, which had a constitutional problem with the budget, took half of the funds from the third pillar without the consent of the citizens.

  • @gutsandgrittv5076
    @gutsandgrittv5076 Рік тому

    Best thing I ever did was diversify. Thank God I took the time and made the effort!

  • @harisadu8998
    @harisadu8998 Рік тому +1

    Indian law doesn't allow dual citizenship in any case. So I'm not sure how this would work.

  • @Robinshahidullah
    @Robinshahidullah Рік тому +1

    I am happy to see your transformation from a businessman to a philosopher...now you are becoming wise...start to see the whole world as your own...I am lovingly watching you pal...take care...🥰

  • @TheThreatenedSwan
    @TheThreatenedSwan Рік тому +2

    When people talk about freedom in the West, they mean that you can say what you want with a relative degree of tolerance. You would be immediately cracked down on for publicly proselytizing your views in many of the countries you advocate living in. And while with cancel culture, things in the West are getting bad, and some countries like Germany have quite authoritarian speech controls on views that would be normal for all of history until 10 years ago, it is because the West is becoming more like the third world that these things are happening. As our elite is furnished by a flood of mass migration and the native populace too is becoming less intelligent, people are less tolerant

    • @fwefhwe4232
      @fwefhwe4232 Рік тому

      if you dont want alqeuda ppl to come to europe and convert yts to alqeuda religion, dont do the same in africa.

  • @marcusd9192
    @marcusd9192 Рік тому +2

    I want to change my name. Should I do so before or after I get new passports, residence, bank accounts etc? I have no criminal record but guessing it will complicate the procedures.

  • @Carolinapetroska
    @Carolinapetroska Рік тому

    True !

  • @srinivasareddyindia5737
    @srinivasareddyindia5737 Рік тому

    I thank for this video. It's an eye opening for the western countries. Google CEO, Microsoft CEO and many talented people...passed degree from Indian universities, but the sad thing is non of the Indian universities are in top 400 of the global ranking. Many Indian professors boycott ranking system given by the west from the past few years. Talent should be recognized for the development of the society. 👍

    • @whatever04811
      @whatever04811 Рік тому

      Too bad those CEOs who graduated from Indian universities started to censor Americans and Europeans.

  • @CAFE367
    @CAFE367 Рік тому

    U r absolutely right
    India might have lower Passport compared to U. S
    BUT we surely have better Education and Medical services and that to very very affordable rates
    Dental extraction for
    $ 5
    Heart Bypass surgery for $ 3000
    Or $ 700 at govt hospitals
    Even charitable hospitals offering nearly free services on all above matters

  • @TheThreatenedSwan
    @TheThreatenedSwan Рік тому +1

    Nation, from the Latin for birth, is blood and soil. You subsist in a nation and have obligations to it as a chain like an extended family. This is why the constitution says "for ourselves and our posterity." That being said, the state and ruling elite are often (usually in the modern age) not on your side, so you should be pragmatic about your essential values.

  • @doyourbestleavetherest
    @doyourbestleavetherest Рік тому +2

    You may wanna leave because you are scared you may be shot by a lunatic any time anywhere. But I love America to some extent still.

  • @christophilous4831
    @christophilous4831 Рік тому +1

    The nation state is a relic of a bygone social and technological era. Just as we today scoff at antiquated social norms like theocracy and chivalry, people of the future will scoff at the mythology that surrounded nation state citizenship.

  • @diannaboyd7876
    @diannaboyd7876 Рік тому +2

    I can obtain a British passport by descent (my father was born in England) but I'm not sure if it's worth getting. They seem to be very WEF/NWO dominated, and circling the drain economically.

    • @tommyd3813
      @tommyd3813 Рік тому +1

      Might as well just do it get the passport and you could use it sometime in the future there is literally no dropbox so I would recommend yes get the British passport

    • @diannaboyd7876
      @diannaboyd7876 Рік тому

      @@tommyd3813 Thank you for your comment. I will definitely do that.

  • @raul0ca
    @raul0ca Рік тому

    In the West, To Serve Man is a cookbook

  • @thevalet2011
    @thevalet2011 Рік тому +1

    I am a Philippine citizen. Before gaining a HK residency permit, it was so difficult to even get visas in many places. Now I’m on track to transforming this residency to a PR status and gain a SAR passport not be enslaved by a single Philippine passport.

    • @dantorres506
      @dantorres506 Рік тому

      As long as you have a decent job it's easy to get tourist visas to a lot of places. For example, all my relatives and friends have gotten 10-yr US visas and 5-yr Japan visas.

    • @anthonychen6237
      @anthonychen6237 Рік тому +2

      @@davidrichards1741 True, and once that happens, the HK SAR passport does not have much value because PRC passport needs visas traveling to a lot of countries! So any HK SAR passport owners should consider the "shortcut" Australian government provided last year to HK SAR owners to quickly gain Australian PR.

    • @anthonychen6237
      @anthonychen6237 Рік тому

      @@davidrichards1741 True for some (the rich one who has both high income and high taxable assets) but for others, it is nice to have a good place for them to do their best and to make more (job or business opportunities).

  • @waddayat6739
    @waddayat6739 Рік тому +1

    I have a dream of finding a country that is not part of NATO, The WHO, or in the pocket of the WEF and does not participate in the Paris Accord, where I could perhaps declare political asylum from Canada. Is this a possiblity?

  • @Rok_Piletic
    @Rok_Piletic Рік тому +5

    best citizenship is on Mars ... do you have office there?

  • @freerange6739
    @freerange6739 Рік тому

    Cleveland (The mistake on the lake)

    • @freerange6739
      @freerange6739 Рік тому

      I drove a truck in 48 states and Canada for 29 years. 24 years of that as an independent contractor

  • @equynenergie
    @equynenergie Рік тому +1

    Great video - Thanks Andrew

  • @pdemp5780
    @pdemp5780 Рік тому +1

    Great video. One of your best.