Let's Go Together

Wherever I go I see you people, I see you people just like me. And whatever you do, I want to do. And the Pooh and you and me together make three. Let's go together, Let's go together, Let's go together right now. Let's go together, Let's go together, Let's go together right now, Come on. Shall I go off and away to bright Andromeda? Shall I sail my wooden ships to the sea? Or stay in a cage of those in Amerika?? Or shall I be on the knee? Wave goodbye to Amerika, Say hello to the garden. So I see - I see the way you feel, And I know that your life is real. Pioneer searcher refugee I follow you and you follow me. Let's go together, Let's go together, Let's go together right now. Wave goodbye to Amerika, Say hello to the garden.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Why Are So Many People Choosing To Leave The United States Permanently?

Why Are So Many People Choosing To Leave The United States Permanently?



The United States Of America At NightHave things gotten so bad that it is time to leave the United States for good? That is a question that a lot of Americans are dealing with these days, and an increasing number of them are choosing to leave the country of their birth permanently. Some are doing it for tax reasons, some are doing it because they believe the future is brighter elsewhere, and others are doing it because they are very distressed about the direction that America is heading and they don't see any hope for a turnaround any time soon. Personally, I have several friends and contacts that regard themselves as "preppers" that have decided that the United States is too far gone to recover. They have moved their families out of the country and they never plan to return. As this nation continues to head down the very troubled road that it is currently on, this trend is probably only going to accelerate even more.
In fact, some Americans are even going so far as to renounce their citizenship when they leave. This represents only a small percentage of those that are leaving the country, but as Bloomberg recently reported, the number of Americans that renounced their citizenship in the second quarter of 2013 was six times larger than the number that renounced their citizenship in the second quarter of last year...
Americans renouncing U.S. citizenship surged sixfold in the second quarter from a year earlier as the government prepares to introduce tougher asset-disclosure rules.
Expatriates giving up their nationality at U.S. embassies climbed to 1,131 in the three months through June from 189 in the year-earlier period, according to Federal Register figures published today.
Renouncing the country of your birth is not an easy thing to do. From the moment that we come into this world, those of us born in this country are trained to think of ourselves as "Americans". The following is an excerpt from a recent article by Simon Black of the Sovereign Man blog...
It doesn’t matter where you’re from– the United States, Sweden, New Zealand, or Venezuela… many people all over the world are inculcated from birth with a sense that their country is ‘better’ than all the others.
We grow up with the songs, the flag waving, and the parades until the concept of motherland becomes deeply rooted in our emotional cores.
Not to mention, when so many of our friends and neighbors unquestionably fall in line, it’s a powerful social reinforcement that only strengthens the bond.
We come to view our nationalities rather ironically as a big piece of our core individuality. I am an American. I am a Canadian. I am an Austrian. Instead of– I am a human being.
It has taken decades… centuries even… to reach this point. So the fact that more and more people are making the gut-wrenching decision to ditch their US passports is truly a powerful trend.
Traditionally, the American people have been some of the most patriotic people on the face of the planet.
So why are we now seeing such an increase in the number of people choosing to leave the United States permanently?
Well, the truth is that there are a whole host of reasons why people are losing faith in this country and are deciding to leave...
-The U.S. economy has been steadily declining for many years and that decline now seems to be accelerating.
-We are being taxed into oblivion.
-The quality of the jobs in our economy is rapidly declining.
-The middle class is continually shrinking.
-Poverty is exploding.
-Escalating social decay in our major cities.
-Our culture is rapidly going down the toilet.
-Our health care system has become a complete mess and a giant money making scam. Obamacare is only going to make things even worse.
-Our politicians are tremendously corrupt, but the same clowns just keep getting sent back to D.C. over and over again.
-Our nation seems to be on a relentless march toward collectivism.
-America is rapidly turning into a "Big Brother" police state that is run by control freaks that seem obsessed with watching, tracking, monitoring and controlling virtually everything that we do.
Of course the list above could go on indefinitely, but hopefully I have made my point. A whole lot of people out there are absolutely horrified as they watch what is happening to America, and leaving the country for good is increasingly being viewed as a potential option by many.
But as tempting as "going Galt" may seem, please come up with a good plan first.
As one family recently discovered, hopping into a small boat and sailing off into the Pacific Ocean in search of a better life is probably not going to work out too well...
A northern Arizona family that was lost at sea for weeks in an ill-fated attempt to leave the U.S. over what they consider government interference in religion will fly back home Sunday.
Hannah Gastonguay, 26, said Saturday that she and her husband "decided to take a leap of faith and see where God led us" when they took their two small children and her father-in-law and set sail from San Diego for the tiny island nation of Kiribati in May.
But just weeks into their journey, the Gastonguays hit a series of storms that damaged their small boat, leaving them adrift for weeks, unable to make progress. They were eventually picked up by a Venezuelan fishing vessel, transferred to a Japanese cargo ship and taken to Chile where they are resting in a hotel in the port city of San Antonio.
Yes, life in America is definitely going to be extremely challenging in the years ahead, but the grass is not always greener on the other side of the planet either.
There are a whole host of things to consider before you make a permanent move to another country. The following is an extended excerpt from one of my previous articles...
*****
The following are 10 questions to ask yourself before you decide to move to another country...
Do You Speak The Language? If Not, How Will You Function?
If you do not speak the language of the country that you are moving to, that can create a huge problem. Just going to the store and buying some food will become a challenge. Every interaction that you have with anyone in that society will be strained, and your ability to integrate into the culture around you will be greatly limited.
How Will You Make A Living?
Unless you are independently wealthy, you will need to make money. In a foreign nation, it may be very difficult for you to find a job - especially one that pays as much as you are accustomed to making in the United States.
Will You Be Okay Without Your Family And Friends?
Being thousands of miles away from all of your family and friends can be extremely difficult. Will you be okay without them? And it can be difficult to survive in a foreign culture without any kind of a support system. Sometimes the people that most successfully move out of the country are those that do it as part of a larger group.
Have You Factored In Weather Patterns And Geological Instability?
As the globe becomes increasingly unstable, weather patterns and natural disasters are going to become a bigger factor in deciding where to live. For example, right now India is suffering through the worst drought that it has experienced in nearly 50 years. It would be very difficult to thrive in the middle of such an environment.
Many of those that are encouraging people to "escape from America" are pointing to Chile as an ideal place to relocate to. But there are thousands of significant earthquakes in Chile each year, and the entire nation lies directly along the "Ring of Fire" which is becoming increasingly unstable. That is something to keep in mind.
What Will You Do For Medical Care?
If you or someone in your family had a serious medical problem in the United States, you would know what to do. Yes, our health care system is incredibly messed up, but at least you would know that you could get the care that you needed if an emergency arose. Would the same be true in a foreign nation?
Are You Moving Into A High Crime Area?
Yes, crime is definitely on the rise in the United States. But in other areas where many preppers are moving to, crime is even worse. Mexico and certain areas of Central America are two examples of this. And in many foreign nations, the police are far more corrupt than they generally are in the United States.
In addition, many other nations have far stricter gun laws than the United States does, so your ability to defend your family may be greatly restricted.
So will your family truly be safe in the nation that you plan to take them to?
Are You Prepared For "Culture Shock"?
Moving to another country can be like moving to a different planet. After all, they don't call it "culture shock" for nothing.
If you do move to another country, you may quickly find that thousands of little things that you once took for granted in the U.S. are now very different.
And there is a very good chance that many of the "amenities" that you are accustomed to in the U.S. will not be available in a foreign nation and that your standard of living will go down.
So if you are thinking of moving somewhere else, you may want to visit first just to get an idea of what life would be like if you made the move.
What Freedoms and Liberties Will You Lose By Moving?
Yes, our liberties and our freedoms are being rapidly eroded in the United States. But in many other nations around the world things are much worse. You may find that there is no such thing as "freedom of speech" or "freedom of religion" in the country that you have decided to move to.
Is There A Possibility That The Country You Plan To Escape To Could Be Involved In A War At Some Point?
We are moving into a time of great geopolitical instability. If you move right into the middle of a future war zone, you might really regret it. If you do plan to move, try to find a country that is likely to avoid war for the foreseeable future.
When The Global Economy Collapses, Will You And Your Family Be Okay For Food?
What good will it be to leave the United States if you and your family run out of food?
Today, we are on the verge of a major global food crisis. Global food reserves are at their lowest level in nearly 40 years, and shifting global weather patterns are certainly not helping things.
And the global elite are rapidly getting more control over the global food supply. Today, between 75 and 90 percent of all international trade in grain is controlled by just four gigantic multinational food corporations.
*****
Leaving the United States permanently and setting up a new life in another country can be done, but it isn't for the faint of heart. It takes planning, preparation and lots of hard work.
However, there are lots of people that have done it successfully, including quite a number of people that I know personally.
In the end, you have got to make the decision that is right for you and your family. Don't let anyone else tell you what to do.
For many, staying in the United States and preparing for the tough years that are coming is the best choice. For others, getting out of the United States and heading for greener pastures is the right choice.
What about you?
What is your choice?
Please feel free to share your perspective by posting a comment below...

Syria's exodus: a refugee crisis for the world

Syria's exodus: a refugee crisis for the world

• Exodus from Syrian civil war is overwhelming region – UN
• Britain may be asked to take thousands of displaced people
• Aid officials say population flight is becoming permanent
 Zaatari refugee camp
The Zaatari refugee camp near the Jordanian city of Mafraq shelters 115,000 Syrian refugees, posing a humanitarian crisis and a threat to global security, say UN officials. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Western countries including the US and Britain may be asked to accept tens of thousands of Syrian refugees because the exodus from the civil war is overwhelming countries in the region, the UN's refugee chief has warned.
With no end to the war in sight, the flight of nearly 2 million people from Syria over the past two years is showing every sign of becoming a permanent population shift, like the Palestinian crises of 1948 and 1967, with grave implications for countries such as Lebanon and Jordan, UN and other humanitarian aid officials say.
One in six people in Lebanon are now Syrian refugees. The biggest camp in Jordan has become the country's fourth-largest city. In addition to those who have crossed borders, at least four million Syrians are believed to have been displaced within their own country, meaning that more than a quarter of the population has been uprooted.
In an interview with the Guardian, António Guterres, the United Nations high commissioner for refugees, said the situation was already far more than just a humanitarian crisis. If a resolution to the conflict was not found within months, the UN will look to resettle tens of thousands of Syrian refugees in countries better able to afford to host them, including Britain. Germany has already offered to take 5,000, but other offers have been limited, Guterres said.
"We are facing in the Middle East something that is more than a humanitarian crisis, more than a regional crisis, it is becoming a real threat to global peace and security," Guterres said.
"We are already seeing the multiplication of security incidents in Iraq and Lebanon, and Jordan is facing a very difficult economic situation."
Guterres compared the Syrian refugee issue to that of Iraqis during the last decade, when more than 100,000 were resettled away from the region. "If things go on for a prolonged period of time then resettlement will become a central part of our strategy," he said. "We would like when the time comes … to be able to launch a resettlement programme as massive as the one for Iraqis."
The Syrian exodus has already surpassed almost every other refugee crisis that international organisations have dealt with in the past 40 years. The Yugoslav wars of the 1990s provide the closest parallel, with both conflicts having a strong ethnic-sectarian dimension and the crumbling of state control raising the spectre of partition.
The knock-on effect on regional countries has been telling. Tensions between refugee communities and local populations have increased dramatically in Jordan and Lebanon, as the influx of people piles pressure on local services such as schools and hospitals, and disrupts job markets. The upshot has been a greater effort by Syria's neighbours to manage the flow of refugees into their countries.
"Turkey and Jordan have become so overwhelmed. At the same time there are some very worrying consequences on the security point of view, with the infiltration of armed people, that the border has had to be more controlled. This means refugees are still coming, but they have to come in gradually, which means we have a number of people stranded waiting to cross," Guterres said.
Some refugees have found life so wretched in camps that they have started to return home. But at present this is still a trickle.
"They are not going home, and nor can they be expected to at a time when communities are being slaughtered and Syria is disintegrating," said one Jordanian official who declined to be named. "We are living the reality of a long and devastating war with perhaps unmanageable consequences for us."
"The original expectation was that this was going to be a short wave of people that would quickly recede," said the EU's humanitarian commissioner, Kristalina Georgieva, who has twice visited Zaatari recently. "It has taken more than a year to recognise that this conflict is going to be long. We have been in contact with development organisations. We need urban managers, we need planners. We need permanent solutions."
Throughout the year, the UN has steadily increased its humanitarian aid appeal, which now stands at $5bn (£3.3bn) – the largest amount the global body has ever sought for a single crisis. The money would not just help refugees but assist Lebanon and Jordan to make the enormous social adjustments required to deal with rapidly expanding populations.
But Guterres said he was not optimistic the target would be reached. Gulf donors in particular such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar appear to prefer to fund their own humanitarian activities rather than contributing to the general pot.
And needs are outstripping even the money raised so far. "The conflict produces more victims faster than our collective capacity to help," said Georgieva.
"When we look at the prospects, one that we all have to face is that this conflict is creating a large risk of sectarian cleansing. This is how Srebrenica happened, how Rwanda happened, by gradually building up this enormous wave that leads to catastrophic consequences. This is the [crisis] that makes me lose sleep."

Exodus Network


EXODUS is a network of persons and associations in contact with asylum seekers and other foreigners held in airports and transit zones in Europe, grouping chaplains, social workers and legal assistants.
More..

News

Interim Measures – Practical information

The Court has established a dedicated Fax number for sending requests for interim measures:+33 (0)3 88 41 39 00 Read
Read the article»

Migration-related detention

The data base of the Global Detention Project (GDP) updates on migration-related detention practices (asylum seekers and irregular immigrants until they can be deported). It already contains several reports on the practice of european countries including information on the detention of asylum-seekers. This website can be of interest for appeals procedures on Dublin cases. SEE
Read the article»

A dozen of asylum seekers waiting for their expulsions were released by the judges / The Nigeria is one of the few Countries having a readmission agreement

A dozen of asylum seekers waiting for their expulsions were released by the judges just before Easter.
The Nigeria, destination for the special flight booked for the late 29 years old young man, is one of the few Countries having a readmission agreement with Switzerland.
Read the article»

The creation of a transnational network of advice and assistance for asylum seekers in a Dublin procedure.

This project aims to provide better information about, and closer monitoring of, asylumseekers in a Dublin Procedure .
Read the article»

Asylum seekers under expulsion have ceased their hunger strike

The movement has been launched following the death of a 29 years old Nigerian. The latter was in a hunger strike at the time of his compelled expulsion.
Read the article»

Exodus - Refugee Immigration


Welcome

Every day millions of courageous persons flee their homelands due to unimaginable persecution and human rights violations. They seek refuge in neighboring countries in the hope that they can stay safe until they can someday return home. Many remain in refugee camps for years as it is still too dangerous to return to their home countries. Every year less than 1% of refugees world wide are resettled in a third country.
Burmese girl with face paint on. Photographer: Katie Basbagill
Exodus is fortunate to participate in a humanitarian aid effort to offer refugees a place to call home. Each year Exodus welcomes hundreds of courageous refugees from countries around the world, including Burma, Iraq, Eritrea, Somalia, Iran and others.
Exodus is an independent, non-sectarian 501c3 not for profit agency based in Indianapolis. Exodus is part of a network of affiliates that work with Church World Service Immigration and Refugee Program (CWS/IRP) and Episcopal Migration Ministries (EMM) in the resettlement of refugees from all over the world representing many faiths, cultures and languages. Once a refugee case is assigned to CWS or EMM, Exodus works in partnership with individuals and community and faith based groups to welcome and assist the refugee individuals and families to become self-sufficient and acclimated to their new neighborhoods and community.
Refugees come to our country with only what they can carry. Therefore, prior to arrival Exodus staff and volunteers coordinate the necessary resources to welcome families when they arrive in Indianapolis. Exodus arranges housing, furnishings, food and clothing as well as other basic items to ensure that individuals and families have what they require to begin their new lives. With each new arrival, Exodus staff work closely with community partners as resources to assist newly arrived refugees in obtaining necessary documents and services such as health screenings and care, education, language and cultural orientation, employment training and placement, transportation and interpretation.

Help Our Cause

Exodus relies on donations from individuals, groups, churches and foundations to provide the items necessary to meet the basic needs of refugee newcomers. You can help support our mission by making a donation.
Welcoming people who have lost so much requires much more than providing food and shelter. It also means creating a network of support for refugee newcomers in Indianapolis their new home city. A warm offer of friendship and support makes all the difference to these new neighbors. Sharing your experience and a helping hand that expects nothing in return is a rewarding and enlivening opportunity for all. Volunteer opportunities at Exodus include helping to provide refugees with needed services while giving volunteers the chance to learn about other cultures and make new friends.

Exodus - Modern History

  • Jujuy Exodus, the massive evacuation of people from the province of Jujuy, Argentina, in 1812, during the Argentine War of Independence
  • Mormon Exodus, the transcontinental migration of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from the Midwestern United States to the Salt Lake Valley
  • Exodus of 1879 (The Kansas Exodus), in which black Americans known as Exodusters fled the Southern United States for Kansas
  • Operation Exodus (WWII operation), an Allied operation to repatriate European prisoners of war to Britain in the Second World War
  • Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–1950), the expulsion of Germans to the east of Germany's and Austria's post-World War II borders
  • Istrian exodus, the exodus of Italians from Istria, Fiume and Dalmatia after World War II
  • The exodus of ethnic Macedonians from Greece, the exodus of Ethnic Macedonians following the Greek Civil War
  • SS Exodus, a ship carrying thousands of Jewish refugees in 1947 that was refused entry into Palestine
  • Jewish Exodus from Arab lands, the twentieth century emigration or expulsion of Jews from Arab lands
  • 1948 Palestinian exodus, 1949–1956 Palestinian exodus, and the 1967 Palestinian exodus in which Arab population fled or were expelled from Mandate of Palestine, Israel, Gaza strip and Sinai peninsula, Golan heights, and the West Bank during, and after wars
  • 1976 Sahrawi exodus, the exodus of Sahrawis during the Western Sahara War
  • Exodus from Nazi Germany before WW II

    In Germany, there were more than half a million Jews living in Germany in 1933. By the time the war started, that number had reduced to 214,000 so approximately 300,000 migrated out of Germany to other countries. Unfortunately, many who migrated were eventually caught up in the war as the Nazi tyranny spread.

    When Hitler was made Chancellor of Germany in January 1933, his Nazi regime immediately began mass dismissals of Jewish scientists, judges and other scholars and resulted in the loss to Germany of much of its best scientific talent. Of the 100 Nobel prizes in science awarded from the first one in 1901 until 1932, 33 went to Germans or scientists in Germany, Britain had 18 and the USA 6. In the next 27 years Germany won 8 of the science prizes and Britain 21. The first two chapters of this book summarise the advanced and productive state of German science before 1933 and then the disastrous effects of the coming to power of the Nazis. After the exodus of dismissed Jews from the old and respected Göttingen university, a German government minister asked the great mathematician David Hilbert about the state of mathematics in Göttingen "now that it is free of Jews." "Mathematics in Göttingen?", Hilbert retorted, "There is really none any more."

    The AAC, the Academic Assistance Council, that later became the SPSL (Society for the protection of Science & Learning) and survived for a total of 25 years, was started by people like Sir William Beveridge (director of the London School of Economics) and G. M. Trevelyan (Master of Trinity College, Cambridge) in response to these dismissals. Its formation appeal was supported by the British Press and the Royal Society and during its existence it helped over 2000 exiled scholars.

    Much of the book tells the stories of some of the best known physicists, mathematicians, biologists and chemists, who fled to Britain, or in some cases to America. Most of these were Jewish, though a few non-Jewish scientists fled because they opposed the Nazi regime or had Jewish wives. Among the stories are those of Albert Einstein, Erwin Schrödinger (not Jewish), Max Born, Fritz Haber, Otto Frisch, Rudolf Peierls, Hans Krebs, Max Perutz, Ernest Chain, Richard Courant, Edward Teller, Hans Bethe, and Enrico Fermi (Jewish wife).



    Max Perutz, who shared the 1962 Nobel prize with John Kendrew for their work on haemoglobin, wrote the foreward to this book. In it he says "According to the authors, their [the scientists'] emigration was Hitler's loss and Britain's and America's gain. As one of the scientists included in the book, I must protest. ... the gain was mine. Had I stayed in my native Austria, even if there had been no Hitler, I could never have solved the problem of protein structure. ... We all [the exiled scientists] owe a tremendous debt to Britain."

    Some of the refugees were also interned in the Isle of Man, Canada or Australia and Max Perutz's account of his internment, first published in the New Yorker in 1985, is reproduced here. He tells how they were treated relatively well, organised a "university" with courses in mathematics, astronomy, several languages, gave concerts and made furniture and clothes.

    The authors have special interests in this subject and are well qualified to write such a book. Jean Medawar is the widow of Sir Peter Medawar a Nobel prize-winning scientist. She sensed the danger from the Nazis when she took a holiday in the Black Forest in 1932 and saw swastika flags flying illegally. She was also an undergraduate at Oxford at the time that some of the refugee scientists were there. David Pyke was born in 1921, the son of a non-practising Jewish father who was highly politically aware. He spoke on "The rise and possible fall of Adolf Hitler" in a speech competition at his school in 1934, but the text has been lost.

    Several factors determined the ebb and flow of emigration of Jews from Germany. These included the degree of pressure placed on the Jewish community in Germany and the willingness of other countries to admit Jewish immigrants. However, in the face of increasing legal repression and physical violence, many Jews fled Germany. Until October 1941, German policy officially encouraged Jewish emigration. Gradually, however, the Nazis sought to deprive Jews fleeing Germany of their property by levying an increasingly heavy emigration tax and by restricting the amount of money that could be transferred abroad from German banks.

    In January 1933 there were some 523,000 Jews in Germany, representing less than 1 percent of the country's total population. The Jewish population was predominantly urban and approximately one-third of German Jews lived in Berlin. The initial response to the Nazi takeover was a substantial wave of emigration (37,000–38,000), much of it to neighboring European countries (France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, Czechoslovakia, and Switzerland). Most of these refugees were later caught by the Nazis after their conquest of western Europe in May 1940. Jews who were politically active were especially likely to emigrate. Other measures that spurred decisions to emigrate in the early years of Nazi rule were the dismissal of Jews from the civil service and the Nazi-sponsored boycott of Jewish-owned stores.

    During the next two years there was a decline in the number of emigrants. This trend may partly have been due to the stabilization of the domestic political situation, but was also caused by the strict enforcement of American immigration restrictions as well as the increasing reluctance of European and British Commonwealth countries to accept additional Jewish refugees.

    Despite the passage of the Nuremberg Laws in September 1935 and subsequent related ordinances that deprived German Jews of civil rights, Jewish emigration remained more or less constant.

    The events of 1938 caused a dramatic increase in Jewish emigration. The German annexation of Austria in March, the increase in personal assaults on Jews during the spring and summer, the nationwide Kristallnacht ("Night of Broken Glass") pogrom in November, and the subsequent seizure of Jewish-owned property all caused a flood of visa applications. Although finding a destination proved difficult, about 36,000 Jews left Germany and Austria in 1938 and 77,000 in 1939.

    The sudden flood of emigrants created a major refugee crisis. President Franklin D. Roosevelt convened a conference in Evian, France, in July 1938. Despite the participation of delegates from 32 countries, including the United States, Great Britain, France, Canada, and Australia, only the Dominican Republic agreed to accept additional refugees. The plight of German-Jewish refugees, persecuted at home and unwanted abroad, is also illustrated by the voyage of the "St. Louis."

    During 1938–1939, in an program known as the Kindertransport, the United Kingdom admitted 10,000 unaccompanied Jewish children on an emergency basis. 1939 also marked the first time the United States filled its combined German-Austrian quota (which now included annexed Czechoslovakia). However, this limit did not come close to meeting the demand; by the end of June 1939, 309,000 German, Austrian, and Czech Jews had applied for the 27,000 places available under the quota.

    By September 1939, approximately 282,000 Jews had left Germany and 117,000 from annexed Austria. Of these, some 95,000 emigrated to the United States, 60,000 to Palestine, 40,000 to Great Britain, and about 75,000 to Central and South America, with the largest numbers entering Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Bolivia. More than 18,000 Jews from the German Reich were also able to find refuge in Shanghai, in Japanese-occupied China.

    Sunday, July 7, 2013

    Chile - International Living




    Chile is safe, stable, and spectacular
    International Living has produced a comprehensive report onLiving in Chile that explores its culture, its economy, and its lifestyle.
    Everything you need to know about Chile whether you are interested in visiting, investing in, or living in Chile...or are just interested in learning more about the country.
    Simply provide your email below to receive the Free report. You willl also receive a free subscription to our International LivingPostcards - a daily e-letter that explores living, traveling and investing in Chile and other exciting countries.

    What is included?

    • Chile: Safe, Stable and Spectacular First World Living
    • Getting a work visa
    • How to become a resident
    • Taxes, bank accounts & other financial matters
    • Setting up a business
    • Tips on visiting Chile
    • Healthcare, government and the economy
    • Languages spoken
    • The best places to visit, live or buy real estate
    • Maps and geography
    • And much more!

    Enter your email below and receive ourFREE publication instantly.

    Find out about LIVING IN CHILE
    *Enter your E-mail Address Below

    We value your privacy.
    We will not share your email address with anyone else, period.
    Read the International Living Privacy Policy
    .
    International Living | Elysium House, Ballytruckle | Waterford, Ireland
    Tel. 353-51-304-557 | (US dial 011-353-51-304-557) | Fax 353-51-304-561