• braxy29@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    please stop with the “Just Leave.” we can’t all just leave and i tire of hearing it. what limitations and obligations keep you where you are?

    and if you genuinely can Just Leave wherever you are, reflect for awhile on your privilege, then try to recognize how many people do not have that option for any number of reasons.

    sometimes i think this sentiment is only a little less tone-deaf than “just have a baby.”

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Have you seen the state of gerrymandering in Texas? They know their positions are unpopular abominations against democracy, so they’ve worked furtively to dismantle democracy so they can get away with this shit.

        Yes, for the love of humanity, VOTE. But never believe that’s all you can or must do. We outnumber them, and they need to be reminded of that in more ways than one.

    • redfellow@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      The people who are saying leave, are the ones seeing you as the frog slowly boiling, but not realizing it until it’s too late.

      Of course it sucks. Of course you might have to build life anew, but a real life beats a kettle that’s heating up.

      All I’m saying it’s not black and white, and many probably already left or are in the process.

      • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Okay, and? That doesn’t change a thing braxy said. What if you’ve been aware for years of the pot getting hotter and hotter and have had every desire to leave but don’t have the ability to? Those that have left were in a position in which they had the means to do so. Those that want to but can’t for any number of reasons (finances, family, health, etc. etc.) don’t have much choice.

        • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Some of us also want to cool down the pot instead. I’d rather swim in my pot than someone else’s.

        • redfellow@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          My take is that there’s nothing wrong in saying leave, or people leaving. But I also agreed that it’s not possible for everyone, or not all want to - until perhaps something is too late.

          I don’t understand why the people who can’t/won’t/don’t want to take offense from it, when it’s a viable option for many.

          • treefrog@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            And your take is at best tone deaf and at worst disingenuous.

            People take offense because no one says, well, if you have the opportunity, and you don’t like it, leave.

            People just say, if you don’t like it, leave. While ignoring that leaving is a privilege for most (how many is many anyway when most are living paycheck to paycheck).

            So, I find your comment offensive. This one in particular. I don’t need to read the rest of the comment thread because this one hot take was plenty enough.

            • redfellow@sopuli.xyz
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              11 months ago

              Are most people honestly living from paycheck to another? I find that quite difficult to believe. Then again I’m Finnish and not American, so that’s probably why I can’t see the big picture from a local pov. Just seems… baffling.

              • treefrog@lemm.ee
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                11 months ago

                The median savings in the US is 5k. The median monthly expense is 4k.

                That gives most people in the US a one month cushion. That’s paycheck to paycheck.

                • redfellow@sopuli.xyz
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                  11 months ago

                  If you make 5k and spend 4k a month, while having 5k savings, that’s not pay check to pay check. Close though, but what the term implies is 0 surplus, all that you make goes before next pay.

                  • treefrog@lemm.ee
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                    11 months ago

                    I mean I hear you I was liberal with the definition when I looked up the savings figures.

                    It’s not enough to move states to avoid right wing oppression. Which was really the point I was making. That most people can’t simply leave if they don’t like the situation.

                  • treefrog@lemm.ee
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                    11 months ago

                    I forgot part of the equation.

                    Median savings 4k. Median debt is around 50k. Median monthly income 5k.

                    Most people are actually worse than pay check to pay check.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        What about the child rape victims who have zero agency? What about the disabled who are completely reliant on others? What about people who have court orders barring them from leaving for whatever reason? What about those for whom leaving would mean abandoning their children to an abusive spouse who has custody?

        I could name reasons that’s not feasible for many, many people, but the bottom line is that may work for privileged people, but our responsibility is to care for all of us, and saying ‘sucks to be you’ is not a solution any of us should accept.

    • 2fat4that@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      If the reason you’re staying is family, then maybe you need to rethink your priorities. Never let blood keep you from doing what you want to do or being who you want to be. You can serve your family better when you succeed at reaching your goals.

      • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        This is akin to saying that you should abandon a dog or child when they’re bleeding immensely. If I can take care of myself, I can take care of people who need me, family or not.

    • Chickenstalker@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Leave, though. If enough people leave, only then will they realize how stupid they are. Your ancestors left the old countries on ships to the New World with only the clothes on their backs. Time for you Americans to emigrate elsewhere.

        • blusterydayve26@midwest.social
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          1 year ago

          I searched quickly, but I couldn’t find anything. If there was like a Patreon or something where I could give $50/mo to help people get the fuck out of shitty states or situations, I’d do it. Know any?

          • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I don’t know any. If you want to help, ask them where to send the money. Alls I’m saying is, don’t just advise someone to “just leave” without offering any resources to help them leave

          • Lifter
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            11 months ago

            There are plenty of organizations helping refugees all over the world. UNHCR is probably the most established, being affiliated with the UN. They would probably help out if you need to flee from your government. https://www.unrefugees.org/

      • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        “It is impossible for me to leave”

        “ThEn YoU ShOuLd LeAvE!”

        Are you illiterate?

        • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          It’s never impossible, you could literally sell everything you own and go anywhere.

          But most people won’t because that’s terrifying.

      • finestnothing@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If it was easy enough for a significant amount of people to leave, the Republicans would love it because they could force out almost everyone that wouldn’t vote for them

      • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        we’re fairly well off but my wifes job is at a university, how do I move several campuses, the student body and the rest of the staff with us?

      • skuzz
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        1 year ago

        No, the Puritans were well-funded twats. Also, Texas isn’t America, I suppose everyone refers to France as Europe?

        What will happen is the few that can’t afford to leave Texas will remain in an oppressive state run by psychopaths with no chance to free themselves. Those that can stay and fight, probably should, but it’s also a huge ask to have people just trying to survive day-to-day also have to fight their shitty government back into the hell-hole from whence it came. They also have to deal with their own Texas neighbors who are too dumb to understand how repressed they are and actually like the direction that state is heading, as their own rights and freedoms are stripped away from underneath them.

        It turns out that moving costs money, the cost of living varies greatly in surrounding states, Texas is huge, and with more than 60% of Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck, the incidental expenses that pop up from a move would be too great for more than 60% of Americans. That’s even if they could find a job on the receiving end.

      • force@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        You clearly don’t know the challenges of leaving a country and moving to e.g. the EU or Australia or something, or any other country for that matter. Countries are extremely selective of who they want in, they likely won’t accept someone unless they work in a specialization that the country is in a shortage of and is in demand. Most of the world has laws that you can’t accept someone for work in a country unless you can prove that they can’t find a citizen of the country to fill the position first, and afterwards they have to sponsor a work visa for you which is a lot of time, money, and paperwork for the company, so they often avoid it. It’s also a lot of time, money, and paperwork for you.

        You can also work as a digital nomad provided you have enough money saved up and can sustain yourself on self-employment (you’re not allowed to work under an employer on these visas), but generally this requires moving between different countries a lot because this is not a path to permanent residency. Some countries have treaties with the US that have a similar, but more lenient, process, for example the DAFT for the Netherlands which basically allows self-employed entrepeneurs to reside in the Netherlands as long as you can sustain yourself the entire time without government aid, and have a spare ~€4500 in a Dutch bank account that you can’t withdraw from at all times.

        The other option is trying to get residence or citizenship by descent if you have a parent within 1-4 generations and meet certain criteria depending on what the citizenship laws of the country are – I’m in the process of trying to do this with an adoptive Slovak/Hungarian great-grandparent and adoptive German great-grandparent right now, and I can verify myself that this is also an extremely expensive and time-consuming process that I’m not sure if I can even afford to continue in the future, and the worst part is I don’t even know if it will pay off because my situation is a little fuzzy and possibly doesn’t count. If that doesn’t work, I’m absolutely out of luck for moving out of the US; I’ve tracked down a majority of my biological ancestors in the past 3 centuries and none of them in the past 200 years are from outside of the US. My ancestry for basically until you get to around the 1500s or 1600s is entirely American, English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish, German, Dutch, Belgian, and French, which I’m pretty sure qualifies me for the most white Anglo-Saxon American here.

        There’s one other viable choice too – attending university at another country. The problem is there are a lot of criteria you have to meet to be elligible for this in the first place (for one you have to be very young, they usually won’t accept people who are past their 20s), often times American diplomas and 2-year degrees aren’t seen as qualifying you for college outside of the US (in Germany they have the “Abitur” as a requirement for university instead of a diploma, which is somewhat more rigorous than an Associate’s degree, and the only way they accept your high school education as enough is if you gained specific credits and pass a few AP tests while in high school, and they don’t count doing those credits in college it HAS to be while you’re in high school), it’s highly competitive, universities are required to only accept foreigners after they’ve accepted all applicants who are citizens; and it can be incredibly expensive unless you’re going to a country which has no tuition costs and cheap student housing, which less and less countries are doing (Norway recently closed off free tuition for new non-European applicants).

        The last options available aren’t viable for a majority of people, but I’ll list them out anyway. For one, you can spend hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars on property in some countries in exchange for a residence visa, a la Spain, Portugal, Cyprus’ Golden Visa programs.

        Otherwise, if you can’t afford that (most people trying to escape the US or poorer countries can’t), you can go through literal hell and join the French Foreign Legion at a chance to ask for citizenship of France after a few years – but this is a TERRIBLE decision for anyone to make, the FFL isn’t just a group of soldiers, their entire training is basically abusing you with the worst conditions they can in order to weed out those who aren’t extremely tough, and the soldiers are put in the most intense, mind-and-body breaking deployments imaginable. It is scary and most people aren’t built for it psychologically nor physically. Plus you’re not even guaranteed citizenship, even after serving the 3-year period a lot of people are denied it.

        TL;DR, the ability to move out of a country/free-travel-area is relatively exclusive and inaccessible to most people, and only gets less realistic as time goes on due to both age and growing anti-immigrant sentiment in many countries. If you’re part of a group subject to a country’s systematic social & economic issues (i.e. not already in a privileged/well-off position where you can already afford to fund your education or have got the education to work in a highly wanted specialization), it’s practically impossible to migrate to one of the countries that you’ll have more opportunities in, even if you are part of the potential third of Americans who might qualify for citizenship by descent. It’s the reason so many people risk their lives and freedom to illegally cross the border into the US and Europe every year, in a place where the system is against you it’s unlikely most people have access to the means to legally move away.

    • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Bus ticket is so fucking cheap, if you can’t leave, it’s not time to whine about others’ privilege, its time to look in the mirror. Or some water in a puddle, whatever.

      • Serisar@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Come on, don’t be disingenuous, you need more than a bus ticket if you don’t live close to the border of a state that allows abortions.

        Your whole trip will most likely take three days or more (getting there, getting the procedure, coming back), so you need at least two days in a hotel/Airbnb. You will have to get off work for those days as well, that is cost as well.

        That could be around 300$ together if you don’t have any vacation/sick days, on top of the cost of the procedure itself. And it’s not like you can save up that money over several weeks/months either, when you need an abortion every day counts. Contrary to some media, those affected don’t want to wait until the last possible day.

        Some people really only have money for the bare necessities. And they are the ones who really should have access to an abortion because a baby wouldn’t improve their situation in the slightest.

        Being poor isn’t a choice in most cases. Learned helplessness might play a role, but telling them “just get a bus ticket, lul” won’t change that.

        • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Ain’t a “might” about learned helplessness. The amount of rationalization in this day and age about people failing so hard of their own accord that they don’t have 300 bucks is fucking pathetic. Like just fucking do something, anything, except continue doing the same thing. Sell some fucking drugs, why not, quick financial.boost and go.

          • Crikeste@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            I hope you’re being sarcastic.

            If not, you should seriously reconsider yourself.

            • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I’ve never defined my morality by what the government says, is why I suggested to something, that something not being theft though.

              • bane_killgrind@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                It doesn’t matter if it’s moral, it’s dangerous. Cash business in a significant volume, that you can’t insure or make meaningful contracts for.

                Your suggestion of doing high risk things to make money is the same as a suggestion to gamble to get money.

                • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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                  11 months ago

                  You fucking people are so risk adverse, it’s no wonder you’d rather be slaves to the state rather than try

          • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Actually I agree, it’s far easier to simply let things continue the way they are than to take a leap of faith.

            My dad had been talking about leaving the country since we were kids, he just said he wanted to wait for us to go off to college first. But nobody really believed him - he was an underpaid college professor with little to no life savings.

            But when Covid hit he sold his house, sold his car, and grabbed a one way ticket to Ecuador. He went down without ever having been, not knowing where he’d end up living, and is now 2 years later living his best life. I visited him and it’s heaven, I’m honestly jealous.

            Edit: For those of you downvoting, his “house” was a shitty condo in Jersey and his car was an old nearly broken Honda Fit. He didn’t get much from either.

            • Nalivai
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              1 year ago

              Hey, if you’re poor, just sell your house and your car, that you have when you poor. Everyone has at least couple of houses to sell, right?

              • theangryseal@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I think my landlord would be pissed if I sold my apartment. But hey, since I’m going to Ecuador maybe I can find a sucker and be gone before he notices haha.

              • weker01@feddit.de
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                1 year ago

                OK maybe not everybody but you can always wait for your inheritance, right?

                Edit: do I really need to add /s? Or why the downvotes?

                • Chocrates@lemmy.world
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                  My dad is more poor than I am, he just signed a 20 year mortgage at 70 and he is much closer to his 5 step kids. I am getting nothing. What next?

                  Edit: He at least was able to get a mortgage so maybe “more poor than I am” isn’t true.

            • weker01@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              A fucking house is “little to no life savings”? Can you hear yourself?!

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        So, like, surely you realize people need homes and jobs and stuff right? You can’t just hop on the next bus to freedom town and hope for the best, that’s a child’s view of emigration.

        • IHadTwoCows@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I did. I even moved 6000 miles away overnight. I shoulda done it twenty years sooner.

          There is nothing keeping anyone anywhere. You arent as important to others as you think you are, and if you are they’ll be glad you did something positive for once.

          And no, I am not wealthy. I didnt have shit either. I just know not to stay and die a miserable death in a fascist shithole.

            • IHadTwoCows@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              Seems like debt would be the reason to leave. Start over somewhere else and that debt disappears after 7 years

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                What do you do in the meantime? Have your wages garnished? Get denied housing because your credit score is too low?

                • IHadTwoCows@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  Work for cash, try to be self-employed, find local support groups and make as many friends as you can. If you’re good and honest (and not naive) you’ll do fine…word of mouth and personal referrals beat credit scores.

                  I never said it was easy; neither is staying where you are and dying. It was fucking terrifying when I made that jump, and for three years minimum it was a steuggle; but I made friends quickly and was straight up with them about what my situation was and why I was here. I asked for housing referrals and cheaper rent. I made damn sure that I kept the place nice and fixed anything that needed fixing myself. Landlords want a trouble-free tenant with good vibes; if they don’t then they’re a bad landlord.

                  Now, I am not a woman so I am not qualified to advise their experience; however, there are two pieces of advice I adamantly insist on: 1- DO NOT GIVE ANY BOYFRIEND A KEY until you have been together long enough to know that he isnt some fucking asshole who punches holes in walls and dashborads and fucks things up for you. If he asks for money the answer is ALWAYS no. Dump him immediately; no dick is worth it.

                  2- NEVER EVER EVER trade work for rent. Ever. You work, you bill for it. The landlord gives you a check; when rent is due you give him a check. There is no situation in which a work trade does not result in devaluing the work or overvaluing the rent. WORK and RENT are always TWO UNRELATED TRANSACTIONS.

                  I hope your situation improves and you can get away from your problems.

        • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I’ve literally done that in the past, when things weren’t so good. I guess I hadn’t been told adults just stay, whine and rot.

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            adults just stay, whine and rot.

            Actually, we usually kill ourselves. Why do you think America has skyrocketing suicide and overdose rates?

            If you literally bought a bus ticket with nothing else to your name and somehow survived, you’re basically just a lottery winner. That’s not a sound financial strategy!

            • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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              If you literally bought a bus ticket with nothing else to your name and somehow survived, you’re basically just a lottery winner.

              Lots of people do this, what’re you talking about? You should honestly try it, it’s freeing.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                Lots of people end up homeless or in prison or or shacking up with whoever will take them in or doing the kind of work they never wanted in their life or dead. This is a shithole country, throwing away your life to go to Dreamsville is stupid af and, honestly, I don’t even believe you.

                If I wanted that kind of freedom I’d just take out my 9mm retirement plan early, rather than my current plan of waiting until I’m too old to work.

                • Sagifurius@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  See, this is exactly the mindset leaves people trapped. I love how you throw “doing work” in with prison, dead, etc.

                  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                    I was more thinking of being forced to do degrading, humiliating, disgusting, or unsafe work. Or, y’know, illegal under-the-table shit. Whatever it takes to get by, no matter how hard it is or how unpredictable the hours are or how much the employerr screws you over.

                    At that point, what was the fuckin point of moving anyway? Out of the frying pan and into the fire 🙄

      • Chocrates@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Bus ticket, abortion cost, food and lodging for the duration, lost wages for the time it has taken. Also what if this is a mother already? Childcare costs while you are gone.

        I am sure I have missed a lot as well.

        You need to drastically work on your empathy my friend.