books:
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Getting Out: Your Guide to Leaving America (Process Self-reliance Series)
Mark Ehrman
Process
, 2006 - 320 pages
average customer review:
based on 12 reviews
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highly recommended
Good resource, but I have a couple issues
This book is pretty interesting. As an
America
n who has lived abroad for over eight years (Germany), I find it interesting. The book has all kinds of information. The only point I would make is, I find the idea of "fleeing" the U.S. a bit much. The U.S. is not exactly collapsing, economically (if it were, the net immigration would be reversed and more people would leave than enter our country).
Regarding Germany, to me, the chapter on that country reflects typical thoughts one has in the first 5 years of living there. It personally took me ab
out
5 years to lose the "Germany is more social than the U.S." thing. After 5 years, at least for me personally, some of the negatives began to come through: I got sick of the overcast, drizzly days. I got tired of people smoking absolutely everywhere (when I returned to Dallas, I marvelled at how clean the air inside the Dallas airport was, compared to Frankfurt). Unless you like cigarette smoke, don't move to Germany. I thought it was interesting that the woman mentioned that German restaurants are not as sugary-friendly as in the U.S. On the other hand, in the bars I used to frequent in Germany, you can go in there for 10 years in a row, and the bartender will pretend he hardly knows you. In the U.S., on the third visit, you have a new friend. It is much easier to meet people in the U.S. than in Germany. I also got sick of paying 47 % tax (I pay 27 % in the U.S.), and paying things like: radio tax, East German solidarity tax, church tax, etc. German store hours are horrible (they used to close at 4 PM on Saturday and stay shut all weekend). I remember being sick and attempting to find the one lone open pharmacy in Heidelberg. It took me about an hour to find the one that was open. Get the picture ? Yes, Germany does have its nice side: landscape, nice biking paths, great infrastructure, great architecture. You can walk or take the tram almost anywhere. Older people bike (unlike in the U.S.).
I kind of question some of the crime stats in the book. They list the U.S. as the nation with the 5th highest violent crime (assault) rate. I highly doubt that. We are above Columbia, Brazil, Mexico, and Venezuela ? I highly doubt it. Not sure where those stats come from. I personally saw more interpersonal violence in Europe in 8 years, than I have in 25 years in the U.S. The book has a table with terrorism rates, and they list Nepal higher than Pakistan or the West Bank. I personally have not read a lot about those Nepalese terrorists who supposedly are running around.
I still think the book is very interesting and useful, and despite these minor criticisms, will be a very good resource to anyone wanting to travel and live abroad.
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All the info.
I spent a couple of weeks just skipping through different parts of this book, and I don't regret it. It's like cruising through a buffet of food that you really like. Then I sat down and read it cover to cover. I learned a lot, I appreciated the many web resources that it presented, and I am much more prepared for my future move. A good tool for those of us that love our country, deplore our government, and need the best chance at survival for us and our families.
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Pretty good, but more like an appetizer instead of a meal
I'm surprised this book has been rated so highly. It's quite decent, but five
out
of five stars? Not in my opinion. Giving it three was a bit charitable, but 2.5 wasn't an option.
The author has some nice little diatribes, not even really thinly disguised, against the current administration. I firmly agree with them, but that's not really why I read this book. Those considering moving abroad for such reasons will definitely enjoy the subtle rants, though. There are some good little mini-bios from current expats, including a lengthy one from a young Los Angeles woman in Chengdu, right in the heart of the earthquake mess in Sichuan province, China, so I couldn't help but wonder, "Is she still there?" and "I wonder if she made it through okay?"
For me, it didn't include anything whatsoever on the country to which I am moving (Malaysia), apart from a blurb on how strict it is about drug trafficking. There actually wasn't very much substance on ANY country in SE Asia. Witness this fascinating insight into Thailand: "Infrastructure: Needs improvement." Seriously, that's all it says. I also took slight issue with it referring to Bali, Indonesia as a "Pacific paradise." Bali is in the Indian Ocean, not the Pacific. You can expect this sort of information "bullet point" treatment of all nations covered, which is only fifty to begin with.
The book definitely has some value, and is at least enjoyable to read for, if nothing else, the personal anecdotes compiled from expats around the world. There is some very useful information scattered throughout the book, but again, most of it is in abbreviated "bullet point" style. The book is probably most useful for its compilation of various websites, but I had hoped for a meatier compendium with more substance and less fluff. Even though it's a bit over 300 pages, discounting the website references, you can quite literally exhaust every scrap of this book's usefulness in a couple of hours' time. It's long on cute formatting and tables and lists (and in fairness, is presented appealingly), but short on depth and clarity.
I think this is a decent book, but a not great book, and it may well be more useful for others than it was for me. Malaysia is admittedly not the most popular destination for expats. (Yet the book includes countries such as Estonia, Cambodia, and Morocco, so go figure.) This is definitely one to look for at the library before plunking down any real money on it.
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So Informative
This book was written so well. It covers everything you will need to know ab
out
getting
out, most importantly, legal issues and taxation. The educated and intellectuals of
America
are smart enough to realize what is going on - and they are GETTING OUT.
reviews
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page 1
,
2
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3
Had enough?
Whether you find the government oppressive, the economy spiraling
out
of control, or if you simply want adventure, you're not alone. In increasing numbers, the idea is talked about openly: Expatriate.
Over three hundred thousand
Americans emigrate
each year, and more than a million go to foreign lands for lengthy stays.
But picking up and moving to another country feels like a step into the void. Where to go? How to begin? What to do?
Volume 2 of the
Process
Self-
Reliance
Series
, this smartly designed two-color
guidebook walks
you through the world of the expat: the reasons, the rules, the resources, and the tricks of the trade, along with compelling stories and expertise from expatriate Americans on every continent.
Getting
Out shows you where you can most easily gain residence, citizenship, or work permits; where can you live for a fraction of the cost of where you're living now; and what countries would be most compatible with
your lifestyle
, gender, age, or political beliefs.
So if you've had enough of what they're selling here and want to take your life elsewhere-well, isn't that the American way? At any rate, it's not illegal. Not yet, anyway.
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