If you’re thinking about leaving…

Guest Post by Simon Black

Canada has been busy for weeks creating contingency plans for tomorrow’s US Presidential election.

A lot of Canadians seem worried that their country will be inundated by violent, plague-infested Americans fleeing the election results.

That’s probably a bit of a stretch. But this does seem to be a recurring theme.

Every four years there are always a bunch of people– usually very out of touch celebrities– who threaten to leave the US if their candidate doesn’t win.

And Canada is a perennial favorite destination among these famous American would-be political refugees.

I never really quite understood this; sure, Canada’s great. But the world is a big place. And, especially now, with so many people no longer constrained by geography due to Covid, it makes sense to expand one’s escape plan beyond just a single country.

Consider Mexico, for example.

Mexico is the country that the US federal government has tried so hard to block for immigration purposes. Yet in an ironic twist of fate, Mexico is one of the only countries still welcoming to Americans.

Right now US citizens have limited options for international travel. But Mexico is still open, including to Americans.

You can enter Mexico without a visa, and stay for up to 180 days, no questions asked.

One of our Sovereign Man team members did this recently, enjoying a great deal of freedom on Mexico’s Gulf coast, as well as a fantastic lifestyle at minimal cost.

He told us recently that he went to a barber and paid just $4 for haircut (including a generous tip), then treated his family to a delicious lunch at a great restaurant for less than what McDonalds would have cost in the US.

Safety was not a concern; this region of Mexico is about as ‘dangerous’ as Wyoming in terms of crime incidents.

So, Mexico presents an opportunity to spend 6 months on the beach, avoid strict lockdowns, distance yourself from politics and riots, and save a ton of money.

Probably the only other places that rival Mexico’s low cost of living in the Western Hemisphere are Colombia, Argentina, and Ecuador.

(Panama and Costa Rica, for example, are also great expat destinations, but both have become costlier in recent years.)

Sure, you could easily pay New York prices for dinner at a world-class restaurant in Mexico City, or even in Cancun.

But if you are willing to venture beyond the typical tourist traps, you’ll be pleasantly surprised.

Playa Del Carmen is touristy, and therefore not very cheap by Mexican standards. And still, a family of four could live comfortably on $3,000 a month, rent included.

Temporary residency in Mexico is easy to acquire for anyone who can prove they have sufficient savings or income– you’ll need at least $1,700 per month after taxes, plus $700 for each dependent.

After four years of temporary residency, you can upgrade to permanent residency. That is a great asset that gives you another option to live and work (or escape) outside of your home country.

Retirees have a shortcut to permanent residency in Mexico, as long as you can prove you are officially retired and have a pension or Social Security income of at least $2,800 per month.

After five years of legal residency, you can apply for naturalization, which means becoming a Mexican citizen, and obtaining a Mexican passport.

And most of these options can be started now from your nearest consulate, before you even set foot on Mexican soil.

Although it is rare, there are other countries that offer easy residency, various paths to citizenship, and a low cost of living.

But Mexico remains one of the very few places on earth open to travelers from the United States and Europe; there are still plenty of nonstop flights between Mexico and cities like Houston, Paris, Miami, New York, Madrid, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, etc.

So you’re thinking about leaving… whether due to strict lockdowns, peaceful protests, inevitably higher taxes, or simply to retire in peace, Mexico might be worth considering.

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16 Comments
Cricket
Cricket
November 4, 2020 7:50 am

I don’t think your average American would enjoy life in Canada. Canada’s finances are worse than California’s so our taxation rates are outrageous, and Trudeau is working hard to install the basic Chinese dictatorship he so admires so freedoms we used to enjoy are quickly being taken from us.

The idea that is America really is the free world’s last chance. If you’re a citizen there, stand and fight to save it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 4, 2020 8:58 am

leaving, fucking hell, i had left close to 15 years ago (was only originally for a few years, then life got in the way) and have been trying to convince the missus that its way past time to move back to the states already! thats a big harder because she’s not american, apprehensive about leaving relatives etc , and then theres the uncertainty in the visa/green card process hanging over it all.. leaving the us was one of my biggest mistakes in life!
you think it’s bad in the states? yes, it is. but it’s even worse in the openly socialist hell of europe!

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Anonymous
November 4, 2020 12:37 pm

Europe has good bread. And those cool old churches – that oddly keep catching fire.

Montefrío
Montefrío
  Anonymous
November 4, 2020 6:26 pm

Europe (Spain in my case) has certainly declined since I left it after five years to move to Argentina 17 years ago. Oddly, Argentina is a lot less socialist than people seem to believe it is. Once away from cities, the capital in particular, the informal economy thrives, “racism” is for all practical purposes non-existant and we have no tranny-readings at the local library.

Stucky
Stucky
November 4, 2020 10:53 am

Simon and his relentless effort to get Americans to leave America. Huh! I wonder what his real motivation is.

I understand why people consider the question. Just the other day I asked mom if she regretted leaving Austria. “Yes” … even 60 years later.

Simon endlessly blabbers about the Absolute Wonderfulness of leaving the land of your birth …. but, never talks about regrets those same people have afterwards, sometimes for years.

Generally speaking, I loathe Simon Black and his bullshit recruitment articles.

yahright
yahright
November 4, 2020 11:14 am

It’s that grass is greener over the next hill thinking. There’s just another valley with the same grass. or the grass isn’t as good as where you used to live.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  yahright
November 4, 2020 12:31 pm

Or asshole Uncle Sam is coming over the ridge riding a giant mower that will cut all the grass you are enjoying. Escaping the horror that is the US government these days is becoming near impossible, and with the great reset and every leader getting on board, it will likely be even harder in the near future. At least folks in the US have a “pretend” history of freedom and liberty. The rest of the world is sorely lacking in that legacy.

Gomer
Gomer
November 4, 2020 11:59 am

“…you’ll need at least $1,700 per month after taxes, plus $700 for each dependent.” and “…income of at least $2,800 per month.” Bwahahaha Not for a second would I consider leaving. I have said this before and not to sound like some infomercial or rant but I made $8500…last year. No car payments, no house payments no CC…no bills(ok,< 200/mo for car ins, elec. and internet) . My taxes are $240 on 3 1/2 acres and $7 on an old trailer house, that's per YEAR… with miles of space to myself, all in the good ole U.S.A. I have raised 7 children including home schooling all WITHOUT gov handouts…and I don't even have a diploma. I am about as free as one can be…so, if I can do it, anybody can do it…and that means YOU CAN DO IT!!! Sweet Freedom https://youtu.be/SykNSv-1Dks

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Gomer
November 4, 2020 12:38 pm

God bless you!!!

Gomer
Gomer
  Iska Waran
November 4, 2020 1:27 pm

Thank you and yes, I have been.

SeeBee
SeeBee
November 4, 2020 5:30 pm

Years ago, yellow cabs in the city were primarily driven by Russians and Eastern Europeans. And being an inquisitive sort, I’d ask them how they came to drive a taxi and why they were here instead of there, etc., etc.

I was stunned by how many of these drivers were Scientists, Mathematicians, Physicists, Doctors, Artists, Musicians and on and on. I would wonder, from deep down in my soul, how bad does a place have to get for people to leave their homeland. And oftentimes, they left with very little.

Unfortunately, I think I have figured it out.