15 Ways to Leave the Country if Donald Trump Gets Elected

in travel •  8 years ago  (edited)

 When Donald Trump announced he was running for president, we joked that he’d be done within a few months. Comedians had a field day. He couldn’t gain any serious support, could he? Until he started leading all the polls…and winning primaries. Holy shit. This could actually happen.

 

“If Trump gets elected, I’m leaving the country!”

I know. Everyone says it. But there’s no way to actually do that, is there? OF COURSE THERE IS! You could leave the country in SO many different ways — ways that are 100% legal and ethical. 

 

1) Get a working holiday visa in Australia or New Zealand.

If you’re 30 or under, you qualify to spend a year living and working  in Australia or New Zealand! These are the only traditional working  visas currently available to Americans. In both countries, you can apply for the visa if you’re as old as 30;  you can enter the country within one year of receiving your visa, which  means you could start your year at age 31. Australia also offers the  option of taking a second year if you spend three months working in  “regional Australia” (rural areas and outside the most popular tourist  destinations). Edit: I’ve since learned the second year is not  available to Americans, sadly. Brits and Canadians can take advantage of  this option, however. You could spend your year bartending in Cairns or Queenstown, working  on a winery in the Barossa Valley or Marlborough, working at a  corporate job in Melbourne or Wellington, or taking on a hospitality job  just about anywhere. And those are just a few of the possibilities. For more, check out the Australia working holiday visa site and the New Zealand working holiday site

 

2) Get a job teaching English abroad.

Teaching English abroad is one of the easiest ways U.S. citizens can  get a job working abroad. Most countries only require a university  degree in any field; others also require a TEFL certificate. The most opportunity for Americans is in Asia. South Korea tends to  offer the best packages: a competitive salary plus free housing and free  flights to and from your home country. Many teachers in South Korea are  able to comfortably save more than $10,000 per year and pay down debt  or go traveling afterward. Japan, China, and Taiwan also have great environments for teaching  English with decent benefits. Entry-level teaching jobs in Southeast  Asia and Latin America tend to pay only enough to get by. While many Americans dream of teaching English in Europe, it’s  extremely difficult to work in the EU without EU citizenship and the  jobs are thus few. Eastern Europe and Turkey are a better bet. Options in the Middle East tend to pay the most but have the most  stringent requirements, often a teaching certification and experience in  your home country and/or an advanced degree. This is just the most basic of overviews — head to ESL Cafe to learn anything and everything about teaching English abroad. 

3) Join the U.S. Foreign Service.

Dreamed of working as a diplomat around the world? The U.S. Foreign  Service is your way in. If you’re able to pass the notoriously difficult  Foreign Service Exam, you’ll be eligible to work two-year contracts in  countries around the world. The goal of the U.S. Foreign Service is “to promote peace, support  prosperity, and protect American citizens while advancing the interests  of the U.S. abroad.” Basically, you represent the United States while  abroad. There are several different tracks: Administration, Construction  Engineering, Facility Management, Information Technology, International  Information and English Language Programs, Medical and Health, Office  Management, and Law Enforcement and Security. You don’t get to choose your destination — you could be headed to any  of 270 embassies around the world — but if you work in a hardship  destination, you’ll often get preferential treatment regarding your next  assignment. Like two of my lovely readers whom I met in Mexico last  year — after working as diplomats in Pakistan, they got stationed in  Cuba next. Check out all the details on the U.S. Foreign Service’s website

4) Join the Peace Corps.

The Peace Corps is perhaps the most famous volunteer program in  America, starting in 1961 under President Kennedy. Volunteers are sent  around the world in primarily two-year contracts working in the fields  of Education, Health, Community Development, Environment, Youth in  Development, Agriculture, and Peace Corps Response. You don’t get to choose where you go — you’re sent where your skills  are needed the most. That means if you speak Spanish, there’s a good  chance you’ll be sent to Latin America; if you speak French, there’s a  good chance you’ll be sent to Africa. Most people I’ve known to serve in the Peace Corps describe it as  life-changing. It’s a fantastic way to serve your country and make  lasting contributions toward building a better planet. For more, visit the PeaceCorps.gov

5) Find a job abroad.

I know it sounds daunting to find a job abroad when you don’t know  anything about it, but Americans do it successfully every day! The U.S. State Department has put together a comprehensive list of resources for finding work abroad, no matter what field you’re in. 

6) Study abroad or get another degree.

Are you still in college? Studying abroad will be one of the most valuable (and fun!) things you do in your college career. Here are the lessons I learned from my semester in Florence in 2004. Already have a degree? This could be a great opportunity to get your  master’s abroad! Several countries offer you the option of getting your  master’s in just one year, unlike the standard two years in the United  States. You probably know that several countries offer free university  education to their citizens. Well, several countries offer free  university education to international students as well, including  Americans! Don’t speak the local language? They offer degrees given in English as well. It was big news when Germany began offering free education to  international students in 2014. Other countries include Brazil, Finland,  France, Norway, Slovenia, and Sweden. Many of these countries also offer stipends, making getting your degree infinitely more affordable than in the U.S. 

 

7) If your job has an international office, see if you can transfer.

This isn’t an option if you work for a small, independent, local business. But it could work if you work for a larger company. I used to work for a company with offices in Boston and London,  and plenty of people migrated across the Atlantic in each direction. The  company took care of the sponsorship and all the red tape. Another option: if your company has an international parent company,  see if you can find a job abroad in one of your parent company’s other  companies. 

8) See if you can start working remotely.

If your job is mostly doable online, you may have the ability to start working remotely and set up shop anywhere in the world. Note that this is something best done little by little. Start by  doing exceptionally outstanding work for awhile, then ask your boss if  you can work remotely one day per week. Make that your most productive  day of the week. If it goes well and your company is pleased, keep  negotiating for more time working remotely. If you’re able to transition to working 100% remotely, keep in mind  that you may need to stay within the same time zone or in a destination  where you have excellent internet. Still, that’s a small price to pay  for working from, say, a beach town in Costa Rica! 

9) Look into the German Artist Visa.

Entering the EU long-term is a major challenge for most Americans,  but one of the easiest ways in (aside from getting a student visa) is to  get the German “artist visa.” “Artist” is a relative term here. In this case, it means freelancer.  If you’re able to prove multiple contracts paying you enough to get by,  that may be enough for you to secure this visa and live in Germany. Most people with this visa choose to live in Berlin due to its art  scene, expat scene, and relatively low cost of living (albeit one that  continues to rise). Increasingly popular alternatives are hip  Hamburg and artsy Leipzig. Check out Travels of Adam’s guide to getting the German artist visa or, alternatively, a student visa. 

10) Become an au pair in Europe.

If you love kids, don’t mind living with a family, and want to live  like a local, becoming an au pair could be an excellent option for you.  Many Americans become au pairs by finding a job and family online, then  registering for a student visa to give you a year in the country. The student visa could be for as little as a few hours of language  study each week; some countries, like France, are notoriously lax about  whether you actually attend class and many au pairs decide to ditch the  classes entirely. Being an au pair could be the time of your life — or a complete  disaster. The best thing is to know exactly what kind of experience you  want — how many kids and how old? Living with the family or in your own  apartment? Urban, suburban, or rural environment? Would you be expected  to cook or not? — and finding a family that fits your needs well. Ashley Abroad has a great resource for getting started as an au pair. 

11) Save up, quit your job, and backpack the world for awhile.

Yes. You can absolutely do this. Plenty of people  around the world travel for months at a time — it’s very common for  people from other western countries, but far less popular for Americans. If you want your money to go the furthest, stick to a cheaper region.  Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, Central America, and Eastern  Europe are all great options. You can live in parts of these regions on  less than $1000 per month if you want to (but that amount doesn’t  include start-up expenses like flights, gear and insurance). Here’s how I saved $13,000 in just seven months. That  was almost enough to sustain me for six months in Southeast Asia from  2010-2011, but keep in mind prices have increased a bit since then. 

12) Move somewhere cheap for awhile.

Not in the mood to be traveling all the time? You could just move  somewhere. Many countries have visa policies that allow you to live  long-term by leaving the country every few months and coming right back.  (Be sure to check on your country’s latest visa regulations, as they  can change at any time.) I still think that Chiang Mai, Thailand, offers the maximum value for  a great price. As a solo adult, you can comfortably get by in Chiang  Mai for less than $800 per month, or even less if you’re part of a  couple, and there are plenty of amenities for the many expats who live  and work there. Other popular options for expats? Oaxaca, Mexico. Ubud, Bali.  Bangkok, Thailand. Medellin, Colombia. Lake Atitlan, Guatemala  (particularly Panajachel and San Pedro). If you have the ability to live  in the EU, consider Berlin, Germany; Lisbon, Portugal; Budapest,  Hungary; Prague, Czech Republic; or any town you can imagine in Spain:  Madrid, Sevilla, Granada, Barcelona. 

13) Get a second citizenship based on your ancestry.

Several European countries offer the option of getting a passport  based on your ancestry. I’ve known Americans who have gained Irish,  British, Italian, and German citizenship due to their parents,  grandparents or even great-grandparents being born in those countries. The best part? Gaining EU citizenship means you can move around  freely within the EU, not just the country where you hold the ancestry! I  have an American friend with new German citizenship who’s thinking  about moving to London. That’s totally fine on a German passport. Do research this first — every country is different and has its own  conditions. Some don’t offer ancestry-based citizenship at all. (While  my great-grandfather immigrated from Italy, I don’t qualify for Italian  citizenship because he naturalized before my grandmother was born.) Here’s a guide to obtaining citizenship in European countries. Israel also offers citizenship based on the Law of Return. You must either be Jewish by birth (meaning your mother or grandmother is Jewish) or a convert to Judaism. Keep in mind that this could potentially take years, depending on the country. It took three years for my friend Mike  to get his Italian citizenship. (Then again, as someone who lived in  Italy and visits often, they are not the most organized of nations when  it comes to this kind of stuff. Or anything else, frankly.) 

14) Fall in love with someone from a different country, get married, and move to their country.

I know a lot of people, particularly women, dream of this — meeting a  handsome fisherman on a Greek island, or a brawny Australian at a beach  bar in Thailand, and falling in love and it being destiny and your  friends being so jealous. Well…as someone who has lived in another country for two different  boyfriends, let me tell you that the reality can often be quite  difficult, even if you have a good relationship. Living in a different  country is like fighting through hundreds of cultural differences every  day, and there can be a chasm in your relationship if you’re struggling  while your partner is surrounded by everything he knows and loves. It’s  much harder if you don’t speak the local language or you’re living in a  small town. Whatever you do, make sure you have a strong support system on the  ground. Make sure you have interests, activities, and a social circle  outside your partner. Most importantly, make sure your partner  understands how challenging it is for you to be there, even if you’re  happy most of the time. Make sure he makes an effort to travel to  America, too. You’re the one who is sacrificing here. Even if you were excited to  move there. Even if he supports you financially. Even if you work online  and have the freedom to live anywhere.

15) Just move to Canada!

Everyone says they’re moving to Canada if a candidate they hate is elected. Well, this guy actually moved to Canada when George W. Bush was elected. That link gives you an overview of ways for Americans to move to Canada today. 

But in all seriousness…

I know this is a tongue-in-cheek list, but I seriously hope you’re not voting for Donald Trump.  (I know I’m preaching to the choir here. The kind of person interested  enough in other countries to read a travel blog is not the kind of  person who would support a xenophobic presidential candidate.) Please do  everything you can to keep him from being elected. But there’s something else I want to say. In the past six years, I’ve met many American travel bloggers who  have said something along the lines of, “I just don’t like it in  America. I don’t want to live where I could be killed in a random  shooting or where I could be bankrupted if I’m hospitalized. I don’t  like it here anymore, so I’m leaving.” I get it. I was like that. Parts of me still feel that way. But not anymore. I recently moved back to the U.S. after more than five years of travel. There were many reasons. One is because I am sick of doing nothing. I want to be here and fight to make my country better. And I’m getting started. All of us can run away. Believe me — there’s stuff about America that  keeps me up at night. Frequent school shootings and a Congress  that refuses to pass any kind of reasonable legislation like closing the  gun show loophole. Black Americans, including children, being killed by  the police for no reason at all. The racism, both overt and subtle,  that our president receives on a daily basis. Out-of-control elections  and candidates supported by corporations. The possibility of a religious  ideologue being appointed to the Supreme Court. So why do I even bother? Because when you choose to be inactive, you’re giving power to the opposition. If you choose to travel, or to live abroad, that’s wonderful! But don’t use it as an excuse to check out of America completely.  Donate money to causes that will make America better. Donate your time  to causes and see if you can help online. Get absentee ballots,  familiarize yourself with candidates in every race, and vote in every  election. These things really can make a difference. 

Would you leave the country if Trump was elected?

  

Thanks for visiting. have a nice day :) Kate McCulley 

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Good work here Kate but leaving the country could apply if Hillary is elected as well. She is a proven war monger and liar. There isn't any real choice here in this election as it's either Coke or Pepsi.

yeah that is so true they are just the same
the only differently just because one man and one woman
and I do not know how Bernie Sanders can be lost from cllinton ( i'm not bernie Supporters )

Bernie lost because it was rigged. They have planned for Hillary to be president since before this began. It's actually in some of the emails and the DNC cooperated with the plan. When they didn't she was complaining about it in email.

EDIT: for clarification... I am not a Bernie Sanders supporter. Though I'd take a random woman off the street before Hillary. So I'd take Bernie before her too.

@dwinblood
I apologize if you are offended by my words this was a democracy everyone has a different idea once I apologize if I have said something that is not good for you to hear,
when problems clinton say we 've never had a woman president hit me feel annoyed because when I compare what campaigned bernie so is much different when its bernie pronounce policy when compared clinton speech was bernie not deserve to lose
so I apologize if I interrupt your friends

You did not offend me at all. I am just having a discussion and sharing. If I seem overbearing I apologize. I've spent a lot of time researching these guys. Going on about 9 years for some of them. So I can be pretty passionate. YOU did not offend me. If people bash Trump and Hillary I tend to be silent as I can see they realize both of them are corrupt. If they pick only one then I usually make some kind of comment. They are both bad choices. We actually may be facing some of the worst choices we've ever had.

And actually this isn't a democracy. It's a republic. They like to use that word but I can't find any Democracies in the world. Sometimes the term Democracy is used in lieu of Democratic Republic but that is kind of redundant.

We are supposed to elect representatives. Sadly it's hard to do that when they have us convinced we must be either red or blue. :)

Bernie was very different. He even attacked Hillary as a criminal and he was right when he was running. I am VERY disappointed in the fact he endorsed her. If she was in fact a criminal as he stated he should have refused to endorse her. That is the correct thing to do. He did do what a career politician would do though. So while I did like Bernie more than Trump or Hillary I lost a lot of respect for him when he endorsed someone he stated and knew was a criminal.

EDIT: And as far as friends... I've never spoken to you or anyone else I was just talking to before. I do have a few friends on here that I've spoken to before. @kaptainkrayola, @kidsysco, @timendainum, @theanubisrider, @kellywin21 - I think that's it for the people I know from outside of steemit.

@dwinblood
thank you my friend
well, I also wonder why would bernie endorsed Clinton when he had said repeatedly clinton is criminal when he said it would be endorsed clinton no pressure at all on her face,
I am very happy discussion and sharing of experiences but I am also scared if I make other people hurt

I feel bad for bernie because I think bernie so much nicer than clinton from all aspects but we can not do anything at least bernie already struggling
but why clinton always say in all events
"We 've never had a woman president" sometimes disgusted to hear

Hillary like many of today's candidates just want to appeal to the emotional side of the voters...using gender, race (obama), fear and leaving policy as an after-thought.

I think it would be cool to have a woman president. However, there is only one time where gender should matter. If your choices are equal more or less across the board and one was male and one was female, I'd vote for the female as the tie breaker simply because we haven't had one. We haven't had one though is a dumb reason to vote for someone who can potentially have a huge impact on your life. I KNOW you are not like this. I'm just ranting at no one in particular. You got me started. :)

EDIT: I saw you mention Obamacare a little below this... but it was at the nesting limit so I couldn't respond to you there.

I want Obamacare gone by the way. That hurt my family more than any policy ever has. Prior to Obamacare I could buy insurance with good coverage for my entire family. Now I can only afford crappy insurance for myself and I actually make more money than I ever have before. In Washington the TITLE of the bills these days is usually the opposite of what they actually do. "No Child Left Behind", "Patriot Act", "Affordable Healthcare Act". I actually almost filed bankruptcy last month and my attorney I spoke to thought it might be a good idea, but I have some stock options with the company I work for and they may sell soon and if they do I'll make a bunch of money. If I filed bankruptcy I'd lose that option. So we're trying to tough it out... WHAT IS MY POINT? Bankruptcy is 100% due to two days my wife was in the hospital last year for a big kidney stone. Obamacare like I said truly screwed my family and I over. We're not alone. It may give people that didn't have insurance insurance now. It did so by making it so people like me who had good insurance can't afford it anymore. I also make too much to get it for free like those people. So it gave some people who couldn't afford it insurance, and some of us in this border zone are stuck in a situation where we can't afford it and we can't get it for free. That bill needs to go away. It isn't HEALTHCARE anyway. It is HEALTHCARE INSURANCE and there is a big difference. Universal Healthcare wouldn't require a middleman in the form of an insurance company.

Haha nice @dwinblood. They rigged it in many states. Here in California a day before the state primary the Associated Press announced her as winning the delegates needed for the CA nomination. Mind you, they weren't to vote for another couple months.

if trump win 100% obama care is gone but i think clinton will also do it too
yeah clinton use the emotional voters for making him win this elected.
and it is very disturbing to hear him always saying " we 've never had a woman president "

They rigged it months before that and intentionally miscounted votes in eastern states. A lot of which was caught on video, but they got away with it anyway.

She is above the law.

Sign up for flight deals from http://flightcanvas.net! Yes this is a shameless plug and it's my site but there are amazing deals every day. Just today I sent out $282 to Sweden round trip.

Hi, kateadventure! Glad to see you

hi to friends nice to meet you !

You know in 2000 all sorts of celebrities and what not threatened to leave the country if Bush got elected. Sadly most if not all did not follow through:

http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/outrage/leave.asp

Well that's the case when sometimes the beginning is not like she would hate it but when you're more familiar may be better obvious : D

It would be sad if we became refugees

hahaha "refugees" im laugh so hard

Beautiful playas xD

yeah so Beautiful right my friends :)

I really enjoyed your article when you said that you moved back to the US because you wanted to help fix things that are broken or wrong. But I will say this, we should look at the problems in the US and apply solutions that are based on facts, not emotions.

What you say is true of all things must be done in a positive and open mind
although sometimes it was hard : D
thank you for reading my article :)

If you're afraid of Trump being elected you should be afraid of Hillary more. At this point Trump is an asshole and all WORDS. Hillary has corruption and ACTIONS while in office and going all the way back to Watergate and 1974. So if you are preparing to leave based upon Trump's WORDS since politicians almost never actually DO what their WORDS are, then I'd say go ahead and book your ticket because we know Hillary is going to be bad. We have no clues about Trump really other than he will frequently put his foot in his mouth. Most of what people are afraid of about him isn't even a presidential power.

Though you do have alternatives. Gary Johnson of the Libertarian Party, or Jill Stein of the Green Party, or not voting. You truly only waste your vote when you vote for someone who doesn't represent you. :)

that is true they are just the same
the only differently just because one man and one woman
and I do not know how Bernie Sanders can be lost from cllinton ( i'm not bernie Supporters )

Because it was rigged. Hillary was chosen before any of the process began. I knew it, and had been following it. I saw them pull some shady stuff against Bernie.

I am not a Bernie supporter either. I'd take him or a random woman picked off the street before Hillary. I don't actually consider Trump as bad as Hillary, like I said he is all words. In my research I think Hillary may be the most corrupt candidate we've ever had in U.S. history and I don't say that lightly. Perjury, things that should have had her disbarred, removal of evidence, likely drug dealing, conning elder people out of their homes, murder, taking huge campaign contributions from outside of the country, vote tampering, EMAIL SCANDAL THAT IS IN THE NEWS (actually kind of small compared to some other stuff she has done). If you don't like the corruption in the government.... Hillary is neck deep in all of it with her slimy tentacles going off in all directions.

I don't believe in voting for the lesser of two evils. I do believe Trump is a demon to Hillary being the Devil. She stomps his ass into the ground when it comes to corruption. Virtually everything he has done (including Trump U) Hillary has had similar investments. It's actually crazy. She should be in jail many times over. Definitely should not be eligible to be president.

She actually has me concerned. Trump is an unknown to me. So far all he is is STUPID WORDS. Not actions. And WORDS are meaningless in elections. That means I truly have no clue how he would do. I do know he'd say a lot of stupid things. :)

I do think there are far better candidates in Gary Johnson and Jill Stein. People will say they are unelectable. Once people start doing their job and voting for a representative that best represents them instead of a TEAM then this whole "unelectable" thing will go away. That is our job. Vote for a representative for US, not for a team. You're an individual. Who best represents your ideals, and desires for the nation? Regardless of who wins that is whom we should always be voting for. A representative. We do have a representative form of government (Republic) which only works if you're actually electing representatives. They've got it rigged so people think we must pick team A or team B. That is not representative.

yeah this is election , but not many are interested of the two candidates because they are all the same
I think this time I would not pick anyone not least when they create problems on I did not feel guilty
what about you ?

Many great options to choose from here! :)

Great post! I think I would move to Canada asap. ;)

hahaha good luck to you my friends :D

Interesting article!! :)

haha thanks mate :)

I'm from New Zealand and I feel for you guys! I agree that either here or Australia would be a good option though :P

but not for spider phobia hahaha

I know there are some nasty spiders in Australia. How bad are they in New Zealand?