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Not clear what the connection is between Canadian pension and US disability assessment.wollam11 wrote:I am looking to immigrate to someplace in Europe but I don't know where to apply.
I am 100% disabled, as rated by my government (the United States). I have been deemed PERMANENTLY disabled and have been collecting disability benefits for the past 19 years. My government will pay me these benefits no matter where I live in the world because I became disabled during my military service for my country. So, I could live anywhere and not require one penny of help from the Canadian government for the rest of my life. And I do not pose any risk for unemployment (and collecting those benefits from the Canadian government) either. I am a gay veteran who served during the first Persian Gulf conflict (1991), with ultra left wing politics. I would like to move out of the country because I just do not like the general way my fellow citizens hold themselves -- bitter, selfish, suspicious, uptight, etc. In short, UNKIND. I find myself unhappy most of the time and unable to make friends. Though, my travels internationally have always resulted in the opposite. I fear what the U.S. will become in the future, especially if Donald Trump and his movement of hate is validated through his election to the office of President. No doubt the climate will be worse.
Given all of that, this leads to my question. Which is: Under what provision could I immigrate to a European country? Which country would be best for me to apply? If it matters, I am descended from French Huguenots who lived in southern Germany for a couple hundred years before moving on to the Americas. On my mother's side, I am descended from Ireland.
Have you followed up on Irish ancestry? Checked out Eire on requirements nationality through heritage?wollam11 wrote:Any else know of any countries?
Unrealistic.wollam11 wrote:Isn't Ireland pretty conservative?
What about countries like Greece, Bulgaria, Montenegro, and Slovenia? Those countries have poor economies. Surely they would welcome my $30,000 American dollars a year?
noajthan wrote:Unrealistic.wollam11 wrote:Isn't Ireland pretty conservative?
What about countries like Greece, Bulgaria, Montenegro, and Slovenia? Those countries have poor economies. Surely they would welcome my $30,000 American dollars a year?
How will you get in? You can't just go as a visitor and decide to stay on.
There's much more to it than choosing a tolerant country and buying a ticket.
And $30K may not go so far in some of these countries.
These countries are not banana republics.
Some are in the Schengen zone - you need a visa to get in (some of them) & then a visa to stay there and reside on some basis.
UK ofcourse is not in Schengen so UK is a different story (quite apart from cost of living).
Its only Union citizens (Europeans) who have 'free movement' around Europe.
So you need your Irish ancestry to tun into Irish citizenship.
It doesn't necessarily mean live in Eire, it means you are then a Union citizen and could live anywhere in the Schengen area - thanks to feee movement rights.
(You would still need health insurance to qualify as a self-sufficient person).
Ireland is best bet and first port of call.wollam11 wrote:I realize I can't "just go as a visitor and decide to stay on". I understand that there is a process. The reason I am asking is I was hoping I wouldn't have to research all 40+ countries immigration policies before I start with the first step somewhere.
Presumably, after a few hundred years, they were actually German nationals by the time they immigrated to America - how long ago was this?wollam11 wrote: If it matters, I am descended from French Huguenots who lived in southern Germany for a couple hundred years before moving on to the Americas.
400 years agoALKB wrote:Presumably, after a few hundred years, they were actually German nationals by the time they immigrated to America - how long ago was this?wollam11 wrote: If it matters, I am descended from French Huguenots who lived in southern Germany for a couple hundred years before moving on to the Americas.
Italian and Polish citizenships are some of the other citizenships that can be inherited over multiple generations outside the home country. You may wish to explore them as alternatives.In practice, anyone with an Irish citizen grandparent born in the island of Ireland can easily claim Irish citizenship. His or her parent would have automatically been an Irish citizen and their own citizenship can be secured by registering themselves as in the Foreign Births Register. In contrast, those wishing to claim citizenship through an Irish citizen great-grandparent would be unable to do so unless their parents were placed into the Foreign Births Register. Their parents can transmit Irish citizenship to only those children born after they themselves were registered and not to any children born before registration.
This does not make sense. Most Huguenots left France in the late 1600's (including a branch of my family tree). Even if your ancestors left France in the 1500's, then lived in Germany for several hundred years, they cannot have immigrated to America 400 years ago.wollam11 wrote:400 years agoALKB wrote:Presumably, after a few hundred years, they were actually German nationals by the time they immigrated to America - how long ago was this?wollam11 wrote: If it matters, I am descended from French Huguenots who lived in southern Germany for a couple hundred years before moving on to the Americas.
ALKB wrote:
This does not make sense. Most Huguenots left France in the late 1600's (including a branch of my family tree). Even if your ancestors left France in the 1500's, then lived in Germany for several hundred years, they cannot have immigrated to America 400 years ago.
What I am asking is: how many generations ago did your ancestors arrive in America? Was your father still German when you were born? If not, was your father born before your grandfather naturalised as American? Or was it earlier than that?
Do you know who among your ancestors were the most recent to migrate from Europe to the US and when did they migrate? A paper-trail that proves their identity and their nationality at that point would be necessary to have to prove your claim to nationality via descent from them.wollam11 wrote: Both wings of my family tree have been in America at least 120 years.
In any case, that's too long ago for claiming German citizenship, so no easy in from that side.wollam11 wrote:
Both wings of my family tree have been in America at least 120 years.