Why People are Leaving Canada, Top 5 Reasons Why People Leave

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 มิ.ย. 2024
  • Become a nomad in 3 months: calendly.com/anomadsdiary/30m... Subscribe to my weekly newsletter for weekly writeups: angelwen.substack.com/
    I left Canada about 1.5 years ago to travel the world and here are some of the top reasons why I left. I give a lot of my own personal anecdotes as someone who has lived in canada for over 20 years.
    This video represents my personal opinion about living in canada and why I prefer to live in Asia or other countries.
    The main reasons. why people are leaving
    1. High living costs creates a low standard of living, especially in Vancouver and Toronto.
    2. Lack of infrustructure for transportation which means you need to have a car in order to get around
    3. Brain drain and lack of opportunities because most talent go to the states
    4. Lack of medical healthcare because most people can’t find a family doctor or are finding it difficult to find one
    5. Not much social life /activities for young people, most stores close at 6pm
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    What are your thoughts? Leave a comment below and let me know!
    #canadaimmigration #movingtocanada #vancouverrealestate #canadacosts #homelessness
    00:00 Introduction
    00:37 Rent
    01:51 Cost of Living
    02:33 Lack of infrustructure
    03:42 Homelessness
    04:37 Healthcare
    05:40 Brain drain
    06:47 Weather
    07:40 Why it's worse for single people
    08:42 Nightlife
    09:10 Who i would recommend canada for
    10:05 Transportation
    10:41 Conclusion

ความคิดเห็น • 4.8K

  • @shubhmehra9015
    @shubhmehra9015 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2568

    I am from Toronto, Canada and fully endorse whatever she is saying on this video. Everything she’s saying is 100% true. Canada is not the same as it used to be.

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      Tax 29 percent is not high if you can earn 10 time your net earning 29 percent will become 2.9 percent that is simple mathematic

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      If you can earn quadruple 29 percent tax will become approx.8 percent you won't feel it at all amazing

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      If all you canadian are moving out I think it is impossible searching green pasture is not an easy way ofcourse you can travel if you have money but it does not have assurance you can get rich in foreign land be contented for what canada have to offer it is your land and your people if they are not friendly even a wild dog can be make tame,so unfriendly is not an issue

    • @internationalmotame636
      @internationalmotame636 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I don't know she will see this or not but I wish she will, here in Egypt on average young man gets 3500 egyptian pound while renting a room costs 600 egyptian pounds in students share flat. Besides transportation maybe up to 500 pounds. One kilo meat costs 400 pounds so you will never eat meat and just lokal worst cheapest food which most here eat. Then till now accordingly 600 P rent, 500 transportation besides at minimum cost at least 1000 P on cheapest food according to this you pay 2100 for rent and going to work and foos. Now still 1400 P Let alone if your trousers are cut or your shoes and if you need medicament and mobile internet or see your friend on a coffee shop. Now it has become a dream to marry haha lol fuck Egypt and fuck the day I born Egyptian so I consider she a person who has first world countries's problems and all that even if she thinks disadvangeous we still dream about that and if she shared a room in any city in Canada all their problems will vanish. By the way we here have homeless people and drugs all around as well. I think she is only spoiled baby who is touched by the lightest breeze.

    • @ObaOrisha
      @ObaOrisha 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +152

      @@fab1817It’s not true. The more money you make, the higher your tax bracket. If you are making $500k, your tax bracket will be around 50%. How would you feel if on paper your salary says $500k and in reality, you only make $250k? So the lady is right because there’s no incentive for people to work harder knowing you would be taxed to death.

  • @davidproctor2092
    @davidproctor2092 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1135

    Yes I voted with my feet 40 years ago and moved to Australia. Last year the wife and my 2 adult children visited Canada for the first time in 26 years. Both of our kids have Canadian citizenship and they had both considered living in Canada for a number of years to broaden their professional work experience. Both were shocked with the poor wages, cost of living, taxes, and the huge drug street problems. I am self employed in the medical field. I was stunned at how poorly the Canadian medical system operates compared to when I was a boy. The sad part about all of this is I think all western democracies are on a backslide to hell. Here in Australia we are on the same path not as bad as Canada Yet

    • @olyl3859
      @olyl3859 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      Hello, I’m a Canadian here who live almost 40 years here. Pretty much all my life. Sorry, but Canada is great and for me, still the best country in the world (I visited many places). That being said, Toronto and Vancouver are not Canada for me and most people in this country (we are 40 Millions). This 2 cities are an exception, where everything is crazy expensive and where there’s big social problems. Btw, our medical system is not as bad really, yes there’s long waiting list sometimes, but most people who are Middle Class or obviously Upper Class can pay to go on the private sector where there is no waiting time. Have a nice day !

    • @Goodman849
      @Goodman849 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +104

      Paying taxes to fund the health system then having to pay to go private is like a double tax for health care !

    • @biggiedii4889
      @biggiedii4889 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

      @@alinorooziNYC Australia's not as bad as Canada but is heading down the same path.

    • @Seanmirrer
      @Seanmirrer 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      I’ve lost so much in the past 8 months from failed economy and banks,Real estate crash,depressions,stocks,dividend,you name it
      What a terrible year it is...

    • @AnnaKrueger809
      @AnnaKrueger809 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Thank you for sharing your experience. Your coach was simple to discover online. I did my research on him before I wrote to him. He appears knowledgeable based on his online resume.

  • @Usernamesdonotmatter
    @Usernamesdonotmatter 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    I'm leaving this hellhole as soon as I can. The Canadian health system murdered my partner of a decade with the 18 month wait. He was a young, healthy man with a chance of survival from his surgery that had a fatality rate of 1.2 percent. There's zero opportunities because all the decent jobs are impossible to get your foot in. The government lies to educated immigrants who find themselves working minimum wage jobs because of all the hoops you have to jump through just to get recertified. I worked in a Safeway deli next to an Indian immigrant who was a pharmacist in India. We worked together for months! There's no worker shortage. It's a shortage of desperate people working minimum jobs that can't pay the rent. Landleaches bought up everything, so there's no way to even survive. If I have to get on a migrant raft for freedom, I will. That's how garbage this country is.

    • @manashapost1218
      @manashapost1218 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Agreed! My close friend died recently after waiting for life-saving surgery for 3 years.

  • @eyesurgeon69
    @eyesurgeon69 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    Born and raised in BC, Got my medical degree at UBC, living and practicing as a surgical specialist in California, the type that people wait a year or so to see in Canada. I can tell you why it's so hard to get a doctor in Canada, it's because I can and do make much more here in the US and practice outside of a repressive punitive (for providers) health care system that treated me like I was part of the problem, and enjoy just an overall higher quality of life. Vancouver isn't a real city, it's propped up by foreign investment in real estate, the actual business and industry there is more like what you would find in a much smaller US city. I love Canada, breaks my heart to see what has happened to it.

    • @Angelnomad
      @Angelnomad  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Thanks for your input! That’s sad to hear but gives me some insight into why there’s a shortage of doctors here. Hope you’re enjoying California!

    • @davidhoughton4791
      @davidhoughton4791 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well thats why you live in CA. Got into the medicine BECAUSE you want Money lots of it. So live in filthy overpopulated crime ridden dirt. enjoy

  • @johnboy8211
    @johnboy8211 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +336

    My wife and I are very old Canadians and often wonder how the youth of today can survive here. We talk about it a lot. Housing , transportation and food are out of reach to most young people. You seem like a wonderful young lady and Canada would be sad to see people like yourself leave. All the best to you and people like yourself in the same predicament.

    • @johnboy8211
      @johnboy8211 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Yes my feeling exactly.But where can run to?

    • @Angelnomad
      @Angelnomad  8 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      Thank you so much! It is sad to be leaving a place I spent my childhood and teenage years. I wish you the best as well ❤

    • @ugmangdamlag7328
      @ugmangdamlag7328 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      ​@@johnboy8211, try Asia, Thailand, Vietnam, etc. Philippines is an English speaking country.

    • @arfnog12
      @arfnog12 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      All true, it's worse than some third-world countries. It's time for a revolution if it's to get better, and that will never happen. Canadians get mad about the state of the country but never band together to fight to make it change. When they have the government steps in to crush the will of the people. Canada's my home, but Canada I grew up in is long gone. Canada is now just a name on the map to describe a land mass. Should be renamed liberal land of the lost!

    • @Redneckboy991
      @Redneckboy991 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@johnboy8211 I subscribe to "The Nomad Capitalist". He has a channel on TH-cam where he lists all kinds of countries with much less restrictions and a better quality of life. I'm 58. Been saving and investing for retirement for 40 years. Trudeau is pushing people like me who want a decent retirement out of the country. Sad part is anyone who takes their wealth out of Canada will be spending that money elsewhere which will lead to Canada becoming a 2nd or 3rd world country.

  • @jimgardner5129
    @jimgardner5129 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +617

    I'm 60. Born and raised in Canada. Lived here my entire life. And there's not much I can add. You've mostly covered everything. My city of Halifax is trying so hard to play with the big boys, to be something it's not, that we too now have loads of locals living in tents on public land while our government happily provides immigrants with subsidized housing. Whatever happened to, "Charity begins at home?"

    • @duantunes9871
      @duantunes9871 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +60

      A couple of issues with your xenophobia-colored statements, but I'm not here to try to (re)educate a first world citizen, I'm just gonna say that the vast majority of Canadians living in tents on public land are drug addicts and/or people in need of mental health treatment (which can be offered but not forced), while immigrants are nothing but students and hardworkers arriving to inject money into the Canadian economy and to pay (lots of) taxes so these people in need can have access to the services they need and 60 yo gentlemen can enjoy a peaceful retirement without relying on those who can't/won't work to do so.

    • @LetsGetitBoah
      @LetsGetitBoah 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why the fuck do you all keep voting for Trudeau then?

    • @jimgardner5129
      @jimgardner5129 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +117

      @@duantunes9871
      Thank you for suggesting I'm a gentleman. I'm not. Thank you for the fond retirement wishes of which I won't experience. I fully expect to perish at my desk.
      I see no xenophobia in my statements. And to what mental health-care services are you referring? It can take 12-18 months to see a mental health provider in this messed up country.
      What patient wants to spill their guts to a newly landed doctor that speaks English as a third or fourth language, and then judges you based on their cultural upbringing? (There's the xenophobia. And the judging happened to a female friend of mine.)
      As for those in tents: some can be youth that fled an abusive environment and have zero ID to either prove they are who they say they are or to land any kind of employment. I know the 20 or so tents I walk by every morning are not the same folks because the tents change, the count changes, and the locations of the tents change. Not all drug addicts, some got reno-victed by money-hungry landlords and can't find affordable housing in this maniacal little city. Our mayor, in an interview, had the gall to say that we need to find more green space for tents. Newly landed immigrants aren't living in tents, guaranteed.
      Again, "Charity begins at home."
      Immigrants, mainly East Indian, are working, studying and thriving in Halifax and outlying areas. They're bringing their cultural attitudes with them, which includes, but not limited to, a lack of respect for the rules of the road and a lack of respect for the values of others, which includes property.
      Halifax is fast becoming New New Delhi. I'll go out on a limb to suggest that our population is now pushing 20-25% East Indian. Please don't call me a xenophobe for noting the obvious. I got on a bus one day a few months ago and, of the dozen or so passengers on board, I was the only white among East Indians. The face of my city has changed drastically in the last two years and it can't keep up.
      I pay taxes for services that are now extremely difficult to utilize. If I visit a walk-in clinic, there may be upwards of 50 people ahead of me, with 95% being immigrants. Hallelujah! Don't even bother visiting a clinic after noon because they'll be full and you'll be refused. But hey, willing to bet neither Turdeau nor my mayor have long wait times, and their doctors likely also speak their language of choice.
      But hey, I'm a xenophobe for noting the obvious, being pissed off by it and wanting better. How dare I.

    • @artlover7934
      @artlover7934 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      I guess this is a global thing

    • @Caroline-rj8wt
      @Caroline-rj8wt 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      J Trudeau happened

  • @jefftaylor844
    @jefftaylor844 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +101

    Hello from Vancouver, Canada. I was born and raised in Vancouver. Everything this young lady is saying about the cost of housing is 1000% correct. Regarding the drug problem , it's everywhere and becoming worse every year. The transit shortcomings she talks about are absolutely true. Sadly, everything she points out about things such as culture, making friends, etc, is also 1000% true. If it wasn't for the ocean, mountains, parks, etc, it would be a total write-off as a city. So, if you like the outdoors, Vancouver is probably the city for you. However, if you're looking for a place to live well and advance in life, STAY AWAY FROM VANCOUVER, CANADA.

    • @daniellamarinucci5475
      @daniellamarinucci5475 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      everything she said relates more to Vancouver than all of canada. The not making friends things is Vancouver issue. Ontario and the maritimes dont have that issue and drugs is more of a Van issue. Born and raised in Toronto and drugs are night and day compared to Van. Its not discussed in workplaces the way in Van lawyers take drugs on the regular and jk about it in offices.

    • @jefftaylor844
      @jefftaylor844 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @daniellamarinucci5475 ... I also lived in Toronto. To say that drugs are night and day when comparing Vancouver to Toronto isn't really all that accurate. Regarding your drugs and lawyers part of your comment, you lost me there ;) ;)

    • @gordkost3027
      @gordkost3027 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Right on brother.

    • @naraseefuji5290
      @naraseefuji5290 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi, so where do you advise us to live? Many have said the best is Calgary. Is this true?

    • @jefftaylor844
      @jefftaylor844 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @naraseefuji5290 Calgary has been experiencing rent increases. Food is expensive EVERYWHERE in Canada. If possible , even with the problems in the US, there's much more opportunity and lower cost of living in the US. CANADA HAS EXTREME TAXES !

  • @alessandroconstantini5941
    @alessandroconstantini5941 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    This is the most concise summary of my issues with Canada I've seen so far. Ive lived in Toronto for 12 years and am actively looking to just move back to Perú. Even 12 years ago Toronto was still expensive but it was manageable and you could plan for a future; that dream is dead. Bad healthcare, drug addiction, closed-off social groups, bad transportation...I'm sick of it all. 1st world price tags for near 3rd world standards of living.

  • @nbarealtalker
    @nbarealtalker 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +576

    I’m from Vancouver and literally every time I drive to the US, people are dramatically nicer and more friendly. Vancouver definitely does not meet the criteria for friendly Canadian stereotypes. It’s basically like high school shoved into a metropolis.

    • @luv.3398
      @luv.3398 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

      Drive further west in Canada and people are very friendly and nice. Vancouver is known to be very cliquey. I lived there for a year for work and it was very hard to get into said groups. Coming from Toronto it was very strange to me.

    • @Angelnomad
      @Angelnomad  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      Haha good way to put it ! 😂

    • @nbarealtalker
      @nbarealtalker 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

      @@luv.3398 you mean east? Lol….west of Van is China. Though they’re probably friendlier there too 😂

    • @luv.3398
      @luv.3398 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@nbarealtalker 😂😂😂😂thank you, yes that is what I meant!!!

    • @supah_sonic9979
      @supah_sonic9979 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      USA would be the least friendlier place I can describe. Do a 3 point turn on someone’s driveway or knock on a wrong house and u get shot and killed 🥹

  • @cutynobi21
    @cutynobi21 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +348

    I am an immigrant in Canada, and Toronto's living cost has been inflating so much. I am originally from Japan, and When I landed in Canada in 2006, the cost of living in Toronto was way cheaper than in Tokyo. But now, the situation is flipped over.
    Even the " Canadian free medical system," my Canadian friends told me that their system is already collapsed .

    • @dustinherk8124
      @dustinherk8124 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      find work in Saskatchewan, our housing is much more reasonably affordable. (especially Regina which currently has the national lowest housing market) Or Alberta, which has some higher rent and housing prices, by comparison to Saskatchewan,but outside of Calgary and Edmonton, in moderately populated cities such as Red Deer, Medicine Hat and Lethbridge, housing is far more affordable. condos still sell for under 200k. smaller 900-1000 sq/ft homes around 275-325k.

    • @sergeant64
      @sergeant64 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

      Let me give you one name: *Trudeau*

    • @aminkhorsandi5648
      @aminkhorsandi5648 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Is Japan not good?

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      And Tokyo is a notoriously high cost of living area, especially housing costs...but much of Canada now has higher costs than Tokyo?! 😮

    • @dustinherk8124
      @dustinherk8124 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      @@EyeSeeThruYou Canada has no excuse. Tokyo has almost 4x Canada's population, and significantly less space for housing development. its pathetic

  • @Martini923
    @Martini923 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I have a sister who was nurse in Vancouver, she lived there for two years hated the place, the hospital she worked in was begging her to stay on, and offering her a contract. She said most foreign nurses couldn’t wait to leave, Canada, British Columbia needs nurses advising in Ireland and UK that how she applied, it was her biggest mistake, most go to USA or Australia. Weather plays a huge factor. Wages wasn’t much different in Canada to UK or Ireland. Tax very high, she said Canadians are a bit reserved.

    • @matthachireth4976
      @matthachireth4976 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Life long 12 hours night shift. I had been in Down town Vancouver. The night couldn't,sleep because too much siren, Ambulance,

    • @ashchow8888
      @ashchow8888 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@matthachireth4976 A strong civilization grow where the weather is good. Only dumb people tries to create empire in icy cold place. Sooner or later all those empires fall miserably.
      Why Rome Ottoman Greek Egyptian Islamic Empire Able to Survive for 100 of thousand of years it's because weather plays an important role.
      All the Nomad Eskimos couldn't survive cause half of their life they had to battle winter

    • @ashchow8888
      @ashchow8888 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@matthachireth4976 Come and visit New Zealand you will be amazed.

  • @romankovalchyk3620
    @romankovalchyk3620 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Thank you for the truth! I was living in Canada during almost 9 years, and I can confirm everything what you have said. I have left Canada for Russia a year ago, and I am very glad!

    • @manashapost1218
      @manashapost1218 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Правильно сделал!

    • @romankovalchyk3620
      @romankovalchyk3620 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@manashapost1218 Не пожалел ни разу, что из Канады уехал. Как говорят все знакомые из Канады, жизнь там за последний год только хуже стала.

    • @davidhoughton4791
      @davidhoughton4791 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Great ! You have a Ruler that wants a WAR so great !

  • @bernl178
    @bernl178 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +225

    I am a born and raised Canadian and to be honest with you. It has gone ridiculous completely ridiculous.

    • @XerxesAudio
      @XerxesAudio 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@GimlinPatter And don't get long term or serious illnesses unless you are super rich.

    • @bevaltihani3269
      @bevaltihani3269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I totally agree with here in every single thing she said, the same thing in Montreal, already 4 of my friends already left.

    • @joannewilson6577
      @joannewilson6577 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bevaltihani3269 They left to go live where it's two time worst so who care...like SF where my friend live or Toronto or Calgary or Vancouver...what a joke!

    • @bevaltihani3269
      @bevaltihani3269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@joannewilson6577 2 times worst, who told you that?

    • @joannewilson6577
      @joannewilson6577 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@bevaltihani3269 You are right it's three time worst at least! Experience! I have friends all over the world and very few country have it better than were i live!
      Canada is by far in the top 10 best country in the world and were i live is the best social net in Canada and always been lower cost for buying a house or renting and Toronto and Vancouver the worst.

  • @ingot95
    @ingot95 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +174

    I spent six years in Vancouver and immigrated as a skilled IT worker. When I arrived in summer of 2009, everything was very appealing, particularly the natural environment. But over the years, you get to learn the massive downsides of living in Vancouver. And it's not just the crazy high rental and food prices, but also the fact that the local culture operates in a "if I don't need you, I just drop you" way. It was mentioned in the video how people stick around in their own little groups of childhood and college friends, and I found that to be true. Canadians are nice people, no doubt, but I always found it hard to develop true friendships and also struggled with relationship partners. Maybe that is a West Coast thing with the superficiality and hustling that you can find in places in America even more. I lived in the downtown West End because more modern places like Yaletown were just not affordable; at the same time, I did not want to live in the East, Burnaby, New West etc. because it would have been a struggle with transportation. The Skytrain is jam packed during peak hours and crime is a thing the more you travel east of downtown. It is often played down as "gang crime" that would not affect everyday people but that is a blunt lie, the money has to come from somewhere, right? Drug involvement in the general population is as much of a problem as a very limited job market (there are hardly any mid-size companies in the Vancouver area). And the weather (9 months of rain and cloudy skies) will wear you out if you struggle with mental issues. If you want to travel somewhere, you always find yourself at YVR airport, most likely flying somewhere in America on the West Coast or maybe Hawaii. And that all costs money which you might not be able to make enough of. I had an adventurous time in Vancouver, in my early 30s, but I would not recommend anyone to start building a life there as a young person. You are most likely to live in poverty and shared accommodation forever, unless you bring an amazing skill set. Also, be prepared that the Canadian government is sloooow in processing immigration papers, as is the CRA (tax agency), and most banks. It was also correctly mentioned in the video that getting specialized healthcare is a big issue, I can attest to that. I once phoned a dental office which came recommended and I wanted to become a new patient. Talking on the phone with the receptionist was like conducting a job interview... she literally asked me how I heard about the doctor and what I liked about him. WTF?

    • @hellofromdave
      @hellofromdave 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      The medical here is nuts. I went to the doctor in March, the doc said he would refer me to 2 specialists. In September I still hadn't heard anything and I'd been away for a few weeks so I called the doc office to see it I'd maybe missed a call from the specialists. The receptionist checked and told me that one of the specialists didn't reply to their request at all and the other one had replied in July ( 5 moths later) to say it would be at least another 5 months! WTF and I'm in my 60's. I dread to think what it will be like when I'm old as to be easily confused. Canada is a mess.

    • @rowenaperez9085
      @rowenaperez9085 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      So true

    • @tonya.1697
      @tonya.1697 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      the fact that the local culture operates in a "if I don't need you, I just drop you" way.

    • @KrazieSevin
      @KrazieSevin 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      lmao the medical care system is nuts if you have anything major or surgery requirements, lmao my foot healed itself before the surgery date of March 19 2024, why t.f. would i want it cut into now for no reason.....coughs or colds or if you have young kids that need medication its fine going to the local clinic but anything that requires a specialist you're fucked

    • @KrazieSevin
      @KrazieSevin 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "but I would not recommend anyone to start building a life there as a young person. You are most likely to live in poverty and shared accommodation forever, unless you bring an amazing skill set"....very true statement, this is also true for Toronto, and even with an amazing skill set you're so much better off making and saving more in some low tax state in the U.S., now if you have young kids this is where the benefits out weigh the cons of living in Canada, families with kids are still benefitting and retired folks, everyone else is getting screwed hard. There is absolutely no point of wasting your earning prime, that is around 25-55 years of age living in Canada unless you have kids or fall into a special sector that is highly sought after and paid well here such as doctors, lawyers, nurses, personal care workers, upper management a service business owner etc. or you are a new immigrant trying to get a citizenship otherwise it makes no sense at all, Canada will give you the illusion of a good life but keep you uncomfortably lower middle class forever, perhaps if you make it to 100 years of age you would have availed the retirement benefits you contributed for during your earning years, otherwise you're getting ripped off

  • @mattnarayan6147
    @mattnarayan6147 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

    Thank you so much for saying this, especially as a young working adult. As a person in their 40s who grew up in Vancouver, you are 100% right on every single point. I am saddened at this new reality but I am encouraged that more intelligent, young working adults like you are seeing what life is like outside Canada and discovering this for themselves. Young professionals leaving Canada may be the only thing that wakes ppl the f*ck up and force the gov't to change its course. Because the Canada I grew up in and went to University in 20 years ago is completely different today, and for the worse. To add to the point about healthcare, all my friend's in the healthcare field in BC say a lot of the new grad nurses and MDs are actually leaving immediately after graduating to work in the US or UK, as the pay, benefits, and work environment are much better. I don't see the healthcare system getting better anytime soon, and they are even talking about importing and fast-tracking MDs and Nurses from other countries that may not have the same standard of training (Scary!) As I'm close to retirement myself, and have lived in Asia (Japan) for 2 years, there is zero chance of me wanting to retire in Canada the way it is today. The benefits, quality of life, healthcare, food, cost of living, public transit, etc. is 50% or less in Asia, and you get so much more benefit from your $. Ex. if i went to see a doctor about an issue today, I would get to see a specialist in 1 day with a scan and results in 24 hours. I'd have to wait more than 1 year for that in Canada. Just crazy!

    • @user-gs1rz9wk9z
      @user-gs1rz9wk9z 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think most of the points made are valid…the only issue not brought up was that these problems exist in/because of the huge population concentrations in Canada’s 3 main cities. For whatever reasons you have to/like to live in huge cities, you will be plagued by lifestyle deficiencies. I have never lived in a city larger than 10K and have found Canada to be a great place to live

  • @edgarbenjoseph3879
    @edgarbenjoseph3879 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    In Montreal, I could survive pretty comfortably with 14-15$ an hour. I could go out, get grocery and even use Uber Eats. 50$ of groceries could last me 2 weeks. I wasn't rich, but I could get by. Rent with roommates was between 200 to 450 per month and alone was between 685 and 850$ for decent sized apartments. I came to Vancouver in 2021 and with a job at 24$ per hour, it become hell to make ends meet. Food price is through the roof. 50$ of groceries can last me a few days. I have a small room now in the basement of a house for 800$. It was one of the cheapest and reasonable places. I see shared rooms, two strangers sleeping in the same room, for 500-600$. I see a walking closet for 700$. I see staying in a living room for 900-1000$ downtown. It's absolutely insane and I 100% want to leave. Don't get me started on how distant people are and how difficult it is to make friends in Vancouver. Everything is calm and tidy in Vancouver, but there is no warmth, no culture, no vibrancy. It's just cold, even in the summer.

  • @kayceemolly8831
    @kayceemolly8831 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +250

    As a 21 years old Canadian from Montreal who recently relocated to Ottawa I completely agree with everything that was said & I started realizing that right after college. As I was applying for university & looking for a place to stay, I couldn’t find anything under 1,2k for rent. I then decided to stay with family where I would give 500 a month cause it would be cheaper than getting a place by myself. Then I also realized how expensive was everything else is general like gas & groceries. I had to get a second job & take a break off school, cause there’s no way I could’ve afford living expenses while being a full time student. Now working two jobs, I seriously started thinking about moving to another country after I graduate university & save enough money by then.

    • @olyl3859
      @olyl3859 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Hello, I live and grow up in Mtl, sorry but you can find way cheaper then 1200 in the city. Come in the East and you'll find $700- $800$ close to a metro station.

    • @mahdavimail
      @mahdavimail 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@olyl3859sérieusement?! 😅
      One can go and live in the cave and pay zero. Would you go there?! 🤔

    • @ExaltedXPinapl
      @ExaltedXPinapl 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@olyl3859bro i can barley find a single bedroom for rent less then 1k a month unless you rly want to slum it

    • @Ferdrew
      @Ferdrew 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      College money that can help ?! 🙂

    • @jeanbolduc5818
      @jeanbolduc5818 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Montreal has always been the best city to live in Canada unless you are xenophobic and speak only english with no Canadian values and culture

  • @saramelle
    @saramelle 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +119

    As a 27 year old Canadian who has lived in Quebec all my life I have to agree with what she says. Life was way less stressful back then. Now pay way too much for food, taxes and other things like electricity and permits. It is becoming ridiculous.

    • @southerncross86
      @southerncross86 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Happens when it comes leftish to the power, subsidyizing crazy things out of taxpayers

    • @nekononiaow
      @nekononiaow 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The people in power in Quebec aren't exactly leftish though, rather the opposite.
      And increased prices are not the result of politics but of oil prices and those won't be going down anytime soon

    • @saramelle
      @saramelle 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@nekononiaow exactly. The person who's in power now in Quebec is FAR from the left lol

    • @dobrenkijbog8805
      @dobrenkijbog8805 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Gun shooting
      Drugged Homeless people
      Free drugs from government
      Inflation
      Unaffordable housing
      Coercive vaccination
      No body autonomy
      Your body is someone's property
      Sexualization of children in schools
      20 percent below poverty level
      No medical privacy
      No rule of law
      Corrupt court system
      Unemployment
      No money in pocket
      Crimes
      No safety for wealth and life from police
      Khalistan
      Gang leaders
      High petrol price
      Poor government
      Less infrastructure development
      Poor health care system
      HST and other taxes
      High rent
      Canadian dollar value is nothing to the US
      No freedom and liberty
      Frozen bank accounts

    • @Old-biker
      @Old-biker 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@nekononiaow Now only if we had our own oil refineries and pipe lines out there.. Hmm wonder why

  • @melissagrice
    @melissagrice 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +76

    Managing money is different from accumulating wealth, and the lack of investment education in schools may explain why people struggle to maintain their financial gains. I personally benefited from the market crisis as I embrace challenging times while others tend to avoid them. Well, at least my advisor does too, jokingly.

    • @Florencecoxx
      @Florencecoxx 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I keep wondering how people earn money in financial markets, i tried trading bitcoin on my own made a huge loss and now I'm scared of investing more.

    • @melissagrice
      @melissagrice 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Personally, I would always advise getting a professional help so they can steer you through the choppy market.

    • @Florencecoxx
      @Florencecoxx 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I’m Glad i stumbled on this. Please, if its not too much of a hassle for you, can you drop the details of the expertise that assisted you and how to get in touch with him.?

    • @melissagrice
      @melissagrice 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Florencecoxx I get guidance from *Mr Gary Mason Brooks* . Most likely, the internet should have his basic info..

    • @zombie15ish
      @zombie15ish 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sheilajensen This is the Fourth time I'm seeing someone talking about Gary as there are lot of testimonies about him on Facebook. Do you know him ? if yes , did you work with him.?

  • @arian12300
    @arian12300 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    As an Iranian who has lived in Vancouver for nearly two years, everything she said is true. I consider the people there to be the most stuck up I’ve ever came across (I don’t blame them, it really sucks to be there…) on top of that, the place absurdly expensive and without culture and identity…

    • @damionkeeling3103
      @damionkeeling3103 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It's a bunch of random people from around the world, of course it has no specific culture or identity.

  • @edgonzalez229
    @edgonzalez229 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +248

    I moved to Vancouver 🇨🇦 two years ago with my family, and I agree with all that she has said. 😢 The cost of living and housing crisis are out of control. On top of that, there is a lack of job opportunities, even in the IT field which is where I work. I’m planning on moving back to my home country already. It’s a shame. 😔

    • @northloo
      @northloo 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Where are you from?

    • @ZZ-ou7gp
      @ZZ-ou7gp 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Work remotely especially if you work in IT.

    • @user-rd3rn5hg7k
      @user-rd3rn5hg7k 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Where are u from?

    • @anthonydowling3356
      @anthonydowling3356 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@user-rd3rn5hg7k Calcutta i believe .

    • @safeandeffectivelol
      @safeandeffectivelol 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@ZZ-ou7gp Not all companies allow remote work, especially from another country.

  • @mariadavis3797
    @mariadavis3797 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +113

    I’ve lived in Canada most of my life and still find it hard to make friends. Lived in Europe for 10 years and probably because of proximity and better weather it’s much easier to meet people.

    • @asadb1990
      @asadb1990 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Even in university most of the "friends" only lasted the semester. Others completely alienated me after graduation. And finally the last couple drifted away after i left town. I literally have no friends except my wife and her siblings. Im now considering sponsoring her family which we were gonna do anyways and call them all here so we have a social group.

    • @erichorrobin431
      @erichorrobin431 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Yes, Canada is really hard to make friends.

    • @asadb1990
      @asadb1990 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @erichorrobin431 agreed and the immigrants in canada are the most isolating. Here in usa, everyone in general is much friendlier. especially the locals in phoenix.

    • @DoBap_
      @DoBap_ 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@asadb1990I had that exact same experience. Back when Canada was still a middle-class country, it was really different. Now everyone is just stressed out, and working their hearts out just to barely make ends meat.

    • @asadb1990
      @asadb1990 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @DoBap_ yeah i don't get the work at 100% mentality. Because at the end of the day that becomes the employers standard. And when an emergency comes (which will) the employer is gonna expect you to work even harder. The ideal is to work at 15-20% while making employer happy. And then ramp up slowly for next few years until you decide to leave.

  • @user-rs4gi3lo5x
    @user-rs4gi3lo5x 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As a Jamaican who immigrated here in 2010. People in Canada were more social in the early 2010s. People were still using Blackberrys, and it was normal to have a genuine conversation with a complete stranger back then. The country was more vibrant and friendly. I think the smart phone and cost of living has ruined this country that I onced loved as much as how I loved my home country. Now i am planning on moving back to Caribbean or Africa in the near future.

  • @janet23578
    @janet23578 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

    The incompetence and corruption that runs through this administration are getting more ridiculous. I feel for people with disabilities not getting the help they deserved. Thank you Beatriz, imagine investing $1000 and receiving $4,300 in a few days🇬🇧

    • @janet23578
      @janet23578 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      SHE MOSTLY INTERACT ON TELEGRAM!

    • @janet23578
      @janet23578 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ms_Beatriz

    • @elishaperez1429
      @elishaperez1429 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Investing is more better than saving, when you invest rightly, it helps you bring more money in the nearest future.

  • @relaxwithme3266
    @relaxwithme3266 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +114

    I have cried more than once over the state of my homeland. I cannot recognize this country which used to be so amazing. I spent most of last year in fear for my family going outside. The homelessness and crime has become so high that many people don't like going downtown anymore. The cost of living is so high, I have no idea what to do for my children. I'd like to consider moving somewhere else, but have no idea how to do so at my age. I urge young people to think long term about every decision they make.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Crying? Is that the best you got? Not oh, voting out politicians who are indifferent to your needs? Or maybe instead of clinging to the past, find out what future possibilities exist for your children, (instead of factory labour). The 60's are gone.

    • @warrentilley1210
      @warrentilley1210 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Come to south africa.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@warrentilley1210
      Why? You can't keep the lights on FFS.

  • @sooheart
    @sooheart 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +72

    I am glad that I am not alone in my feelings about living in Canada. My daughter decided to leave Canada for the same reasons you have mentioned. People seem to live in their own bubbles in Vancouver.

    • @MarcusDaGrand
      @MarcusDaGrand 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Not just in Vancouver. It's like that in every big city in Canada.

    • @robsan52
      @robsan52 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I wonder if it's the weather somehow? Both Portland and Seattle are the same way. People are nice but reserved and stand offish.

  • @na27000
    @na27000 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I could add that it's hard and expensive to travel withing Canada. It's a huge contry, distances are long and on top of that, domestic flughts are super expensive. It is better to go to the Caribbean all inclusive than traveling within the country. Insane!

  • @Larry.Roberton
    @Larry.Roberton 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    So well said. Thank you!

  • @abomb6046
    @abomb6046 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +142

    As a Canadian from the west coast myself, she is spot on with all of this.
    People in Vancouver are not very nice, they're scared of new comers

    • @JeffCave
      @JeffCave 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The other coast has a similar story. Nova Scotia had a Governmental report on its population being so hostile to "Come From Aways" that it was effecting economic growth.

    • @Redneckboy991
      @Redneckboy991 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      To be honest, I thought many Vancouverites are new comers. The last time I was in Vancouver, a good portion of the people spoke with accents.

    • @jperez007
      @jperez007 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      How can people in Vancouver be scared of new comers? Half of the city is pretty much that! As per StatCan: "Vancouver had the second-largest proportion of immigrants, at 41.8%. Within the large urban centre of Vancouver, immigrants accounted for three-fifths (60.3%) of the population of Richmond and half (50.4%) of Burnaby's population."

    • @sjmusicforlife4638
      @sjmusicforlife4638 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Its inferiority complex for vancouverites that causes insularity. They wanna think their city is all that, but theyre living cheque to cheque knowing the city they think is "it" is bleeding em dry.

    • @hellopaule
      @hellopaule 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@jperez007 Because everyone is new and trying to build a life, there is an environment of competition. The people that have made it into Canada want their road to be closed behind them. The truth is that Canada took too many immigrants in too fast. There is a large infrastructure over a huge land mass and the existing population was small. Growth needed to be small and incremental. Now we are taxed to death trying to play catch up and areas like our medical system are crumbling under the added weight.

  • @nyerling5723
    @nyerling5723 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    It is the same around much of the world, it is all relative.
    I was born and raised in (yes, in the City) of San Francisco. It is unrecognizable do to the incredible costs of and for everything.
    The natives of 45 years ago are gone and replaced by materialistic empty souls.
    Crime, inequality and homelessness abounds.
    Sadly, it is the same throughout all major cities in America such as Seattle, Los Angeles, San Jose, Houston, Chicago, Atlanta, New York City, Dallas Denver, Washington DC.
    Everything you have said about Canada can apply to all these cities as well. This includes most of the 30 counties I have visited or lived in.
    Thailand is inexpensive but for the majority of Thais your complaints about Canada are theirs complaints about Thailand; Again it is all relative.
    Life was never meant to be easy for anyone and it is your mindset that can and will make your life a little of Heaven or a little of Hell on this earth.
    To everyone, I wish you all to create your own little Heaven wherever you live, it is all up to you.

  • @d4v3s1220
    @d4v3s1220 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Yup, you hit the nail on the head, especially for Vancouver. I grew up in Vancouver but moved 26 years ago. I came back for 3 months last year and it was exactly as you described it, the image, the problems and all. Canada is definitely between a rock and a hard place when it comes to living. Canada suffers greatly from revenue that it needs to generate in relation to the amount of land (country size) it needs to maintain. It simply just doesn't have the population or investments to generate that. One of the ugliest solution to this problem was and still is deregulating a lot of things, but also not "managing" the deregulations. On top of that, the obligations it has to the international community AND to England adds to it's demise. It's so hard I almost feel sorry for the Canadian Government. One comparison in this video that I found unfair is to compare Canada to Asian countries (and cities) or any other country, the Grab thing was really off. Geography, culture, government, laws and regulations are very different from country to country, so I thought it was a very unfair comparison. Aside from that, everything else is spot on.

  • @Madzguy007
    @Madzguy007 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I'm an immigrant who came to Canada 10 years ago.. This country has gone down the drain.. If you are from a middle income country, stay where you are.. My family back home have more money left in their pockets after expenses each money than I do. I make more money but still have nothing left.. Canada is good for people leaving war torn countries and those very poor slum like countries like Africa and India..

  • @danamather3669
    @danamather3669 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +103

    She is exactly correct. Canada was a great place to live 30 years ago but something went terribly wrong. I moved to South Korea 20 years ago and love it. My rent in Seoul is about 400 % less than it would be in Toronto. I'm not exaggerating. In Seoul I can see a doctor, dentist, or optometrist within minutes of having a problem.....not a month later like in Canada. Koreans funny enough think Canada is great place to live and don't understand why I left. Oh....by the way, she failed to mention that Canada has the worst and most expensive cellphone service in the world. Oh Canada.....what the hell happened to you??

    • @GlorefyeXO
      @GlorefyeXO 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Koreans think Toronto is a great place to live in Because they think Canada is less dangerous than America, and has easier living but they fail to realize that Canada is just as depressing as Seoul. we just have a housing crisis, korea has a baby crisis and housing crisis and a number of other things that isn’t as prominent in Canada but are still issues

    • @BlackDoveNYC
      @BlackDoveNYC 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Telecom services are crazy expensive in Canada and not even that good.

    • @philippeeaston
      @philippeeaston 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Immigration cause by politicians thinking multi culture is a good thing seen this coming 35 years ago complete disaster mostly the last 8 yrs.

    • @SeenQuick
      @SeenQuick 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Korea has the highest suicide rate of all so called first world countries.
      Young people see very little hope of a good life there and for good reasons.
      Lots of issues in Korea. Let's be real.
      VS Canada, Canada is better for just about anyone.

  • @littlethings8331
    @littlethings8331 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +196

    I agree with you on most of the points 100%. I moved to Canada from the US due to the notorious H1b visa. I had to say the life quality decreased dramatically. Not only we make much less in Canada doing the same job but also we pay more for almost everything: housing, transportation, phone, internet, clothing and the list goes on. The obsession of this country on real estate and immigration is unbelievable. Now I’m considering to leave and researching my options even though I’m making around 140k a year here in Toronto. Like you mentioned, I do not want to pay half of my after tax salary for rent or buy some ridiculously overpriced home here.

    • @awesomekj5812
      @awesomekj5812 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Where you would go besides US though ?

    • @littlethings8331
      @littlethings8331 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@awesomekj5812Europe or Asia

    • @prashantdamn
      @prashantdamn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      then why don't you move back to your home country if Toronto is that bad? I think you're lucky to have relocated to Canada and many people don't so please don't whine like this. Leave Canada if you hate it so much

    • @afs-drew9644
      @afs-drew9644 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      ​@@TheJlee28Congrats ! Very smart. Sadly even this route is disappearing fast as new wealthy immigrants have been buying up rural around me in BC.

    • @ericdams
      @ericdams 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Same here, but came from France, same conclusions, looking to go somewhere else now.

  • @ThangHuynh10
    @ThangHuynh10 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I am from Vietnam and currently in Singapore. What u say in the video is exactly my impression about Canada. I lived in the US for about 6-7 yrs before also.

  • @yavormilanov4507
    @yavormilanov4507 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Nailed it! Nothing to add, it is great to see honest and experienced opinions. This one totally matches mine.

  • @Dma712
    @Dma712 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    Excellent analysis. Im a life long Canadian at 61 years of age. Living week to week takes everything i make.

  • @Romabuk
    @Romabuk 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +82

    I live in Greater Vancouver and this lady is very accurate. Canada is a very hard place to live due to the very high cost of living, medical, transportation etc. It is brutal....

    • @Freeeeeeeee27
      @Freeeeeeeee27 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yup, not to mention the bureaucratic tape they’re adding every year to the housing market. Gas is $2.15 a litre and food prices be damned.

    • @geodarnodan6750
      @geodarnodan6750 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      When i hear it's negative degree in winter, i know this is not the right place for me as i experienced such weather for 6 years in russia.

    • @lanlanny3602
      @lanlanny3602 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Vancouver does not represent the whole Canada, just so you know. You are living in the most expensive area in Canada and then complain.

    • @leopoldpoppenberger8692
      @leopoldpoppenberger8692 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@lanlanny3602 suggest living in a small town in Ontario west of Toronto

    • @bevaltihani3269
      @bevaltihani3269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I totally agree with here in every single thing she said, the same thing in Montreal, already 4 of my friends already left.

  • @Whtsnowflakes
    @Whtsnowflakes 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    OH MY GOD
    FINALLY SOMEONE TO VOICE MY THOUGHTS!
    I came here in mid August and it has been hell for me ever since! I cannot wait to get out of here.
    I lived in Seoul for 3 years and it was heaven compared to Canada. I 100% agree with all your points 🙌🏻

  • @joseledesma4776
    @joseledesma4776 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The weather alone will drive you crazy (5 to 6 months of cold weather) let alone the cost of living. I totally agree with this video. Best of luck from Calgary.

  • @raff1584
    @raff1584 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    people becoming less friendly is one of the consequence when they are financially strained so much just to survive that it takes a toll on their energy and mental health to stay positive

    • @classicdufferin8739
      @classicdufferin8739 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well said

    • @TEMUJINARTS
      @TEMUJINARTS 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I strongly disagree. People have been unfriendly for a long time. I'd say from 2000s

  • @kuyasam208
    @kuyasam208 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +102

    Shocking to hear that Canada is going down the drain! I worked for 35 years in Dubai and am now happily retired in the Philippines! I was planning to send my son to Canada after he finished college here but now am having serious second thoughts! I appreciate your video and wish you all the very best living down in SE Asia!

    • @garyfrancis6193
      @garyfrancis6193 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Don’t do it. I left that cess pit 30 years ago.

    • @FreedomSoldiers-rp2kl
      @FreedomSoldiers-rp2kl 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Don't send him, it is a major rip off! Think any other country besides Canada, our colleges and universities are 75-95% Punjabi Indians and they have absolutely ruined everything for young people. 99% of immigration to Canada is Kalistani-Punjabi indians and they are according to the news reports all incredibly poor and steal from food banks. This just happened to my great country since Trudeau obliterated it forever. What country takes 1.6 million poor, uneducated immigrants from one region a year? Canada is now India, it makes me want to cry.😢

    • @Desmondidae
      @Desmondidae 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      If your family doctor retires in Canada, you will have a hard time finding a new family doctor since there is a major doctor's shortage in all of Canada. This means that if you get sick, you are almost shut out of the medical system to see a specialist for your ailment. If your son is a new resident of Canada, it will be very hard for him to find a regular family doctor. This situation, plus paying almost half your salary for shelter, and high government taxes makes Canada a harder place to live in sadly for new immigrants or poor or even middle income class Canadians.

    • @jaysonsalvador9115
      @jaysonsalvador9115 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Hello kuya! Turning 7 years na dito sa Montréal from Pasig and I'm telling you, don't send your kids here. We are actually working our way out na dito to US or Australia. No work-life balance at baka ika-depress lang ng mga anak mo. Insanely cold weather it's almost impossible to live here during the winter. God bless!

    • @letun100
      @letun100 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What did you do in Dubai ? What did you have job?

  • @SolespireMarcus
    @SolespireMarcus 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I’m from Vancouver and you’re spot on with everything. I moved to Europe in 2021 and haven’t returned since, not even for a visit.

    • @MelinParis1
      @MelinParis1 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Where are you now? Dont you miss Vancouver? I guess the grass is always greener on the other side.

  • @user-ug2xm9jv8i
    @user-ug2xm9jv8i 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    That’s why I am so greatful and feeling blessed to my employer here in NL providing me a place to live and working place is just 4-5 minutes of walk and my boss as well provide me some groceries and foodstuffed at home. It saves me so much money right now. That’s WHY I STILL PREFER TO LIVE FOR A LIFETIME HERE IN CANADA AND NO PLAN TO MOVED FROM OTHER EMPLOYER. Stick to one❤❤❤

    • @numen44
      @numen44 หลายเดือนก่อน

      are you a migrant worker?

  • @simonbaush6200
    @simonbaush6200 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +196

    I was born and raised in Quebec and left for Brazil many years ago, in most part because of the unbearably cold and depressing weather, and the distance from the beach/ocean. Many things that Ms. Nomad said are true, in regards to inaccessible healthcare and the difficulty of making friends. However, here are some important considerations:
    - Insane rent prices and cost of living is not a Canadian issue, but a global one. Everything is much more expensive than it was a couple of years ago, no matter where you go.
    - The comparison with South Asia about eating out/hobbies is questionable, for one simple reason: she is likely a digital nomad. It’s very easy to eat out and have hobbies when you earn in dollars and live in third world countries like Thailand or Brazil. To be valid, the comparison must be made with the purchasing power of locals earning in the local currency. The minimum wage in third world countries is miserable, and most people can’t afford to live on their own.
    - If work/studies opportunities are low in Canada, they are abysmal in third world countries, where infrastructure is inefficient or non existent, and good education is only found in private schools that only the wealthy can afford.
    That being said, I still enjoy visiting Canada, but I don’t think I would live there again. I still think there is something for everyone. I know Brazilians who have been happy Canadian residents for years and have no intention of moving back.

    • @ivanjoelsanchezsantana2306
      @ivanjoelsanchezsantana2306 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I can't agree more with your comment, I'm from DR if we compare with the locall power acquisition is non-existent. You can barely make a living in a third world country

    • @peterwilliams7335
      @peterwilliams7335 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      I would not compare Brazil and Asian countries. So many of my American and Canadian friends have moved to Asian countries for short term and long term. They are so happy they found better places in Asia than their own home countries. They enjoy the advanced transportation infrastructure and friendly people in Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, Malaysia, South Korea, and Japan.

    • @ghassanjneinaty4421
      @ghassanjneinaty4421 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@peterwilliams7335Any of these countries provide permanent residency for digital nomads?

    • @ghassanjneinaty4421
      @ghassanjneinaty4421 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Do you recommend moving to Brazil? If yes please state your point of view in details

    • @samuel_LNDITL
      @samuel_LNDITL 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      As a Brazilian I can tell Simon is right. I never visited Asian countries, but I thing they are great places. Here we have small towns were is good and safe for living, but bigger places are dangerous. I like were I am from, the south part of the country. The latin america is in general violent, Asian looks better

  • @taylorle1206
    @taylorle1206 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +161

    EVERYONE should watch this video before moving here. Well done girl - really well done. This is so honest and so concise and sadly so TRUE. I live in Toronto and we are trying to get out.

    • @anthonyburrell8524
      @anthonyburrell8524 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Is it that bad in Canada make you want to leave?

    • @tomgold5646
      @tomgold5646 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      the freedom of speech and democratic governmetn of canada will soon remove it in the name of free speech and canadian values and other crap lies.

    • @Noworries-PU7ye
      @Noworries-PU7ye 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@anthonyburrell8524let them leave we don't need their kind😮

    • @ShadoHHR
      @ShadoHHR 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes ... we Canadians who actually like it here don't want you to be unhappy - so move, leave, immigrate post-haste somewhere else PLEASE ... because if you do, you will be freeing up housing, resources and space on here (because you won
      't ? be complaining about the 'new' place you don't like,while we who stay will try (as usual) to make things better for those remaining here.

    • @uday5412
      @uday5412 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ShadoHHRyeah, get ready to work an extra job per person too when all the immigrant tax dollars that are cushioning your entitled backsides are gone.

  • @antoinelaurin
    @antoinelaurin 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I'm born in Canada and I am actually 25. I feel the same about making new friends.. it has been a big struggle for me since I stropped studying, even tho I speak French and English. The social life mostly turns around "small talk" discussions and there is a big "stay at home" lifestyle -which is not mine and probably unhealthy when we are young. Plus, I feel as an artist, that we are not a society which possesses a rich general culture about the World and it's boring artistically...

  • @LightLadd
    @LightLadd 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Very true. I lived in the lower mainland in the 90's and vowed to never go back... ever!. Hard and soft drug use that was way out of control, couldn't go outside without smelling burning cannabis, or seeing dope sick heroin addicts everywhere, a terrible political/social environment where everyone is hyper liberal and hyper feminists with large portions of young single women filled with an outward hatred for men and then wondering why they were always single, and last but not least... I couldn't believe how many people there were with outward mental illness, and even more with what I'd call 'functional mental illness' where you meet them and they seem fine but weeks later I'd eventually find out that they were being medicated for some kind of mental problem... Genetic inherited mental disorders are a deal breaker when it came to finding a future wife prospect.
    It's sad that nothing has changed there, beautiful land but terrible people.

  • @MickySupreme
    @MickySupreme 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +119

    Watching this from my cubicle is making me cry. 😥 It's a painful reality I've come to suffer. Many of us young, vibrant and brilliant are silently suffering in Canada. It's hard to get ahead.

    • @ishadhar21
      @ishadhar21 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Then why don’t u guys leave? Are u bonded labourer there?

    • @FreedomFighter485
      @FreedomFighter485 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Try to get out of the big cities into a rural area, quality of life in Canada can be amazing. You're just not going to find it in the big cities.

    • @ericdams
      @ericdams 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@FreedomFighter485 you don't understand that going in a rural area will be even harder for entertainment and finding friends... It may be cheaper but it will cost more for your mental health.

    • @FreedomFighter485
      @FreedomFighter485 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I moved out to a rural area about 5 years ago and found the exact opposite of what you've stated. It has done absolute wonders for my mental health. I'm way more active in the outdoors and have found plenty of like minded people. @@ericdams

    • @lous.1548
      @lous.1548 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Hopefully you can move somewhere else where life is better

  • @jacobsoltanpour1274
    @jacobsoltanpour1274 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +186

    I immigrated to Canada in 2002. Back then the prices were low and there was no competition to buy houses. Things have changed gradually, specially since the pandemic. There were more job opportunities and you probably had to pay 20-30% of your salary to mortgate. Nowadays, you usually have to pay 60-70% of it. If you already have a house (or better, multiple properties), Canada is heaven. By renting out only two of your properties, you don't have to work. If you don't have a house and you are a skilled professional, Canada is not for you. Basically you will be slave for banks and have to work even after retirement to pay off your mortgage. That said, Canada is appealing for many others. If your country is war thorn, deep in poverty and or you are not able to work, here you can have a minimum life by goverment subsidies. I know a family of 4 who recently escaped from a war in europe and came to Toronto, is getting $8,000 in total in govertment grants. Food, school and housing are all covered. None of the members of the family have been working since they are here. They actually don't need. In contrast, me, an IT professional, is getting $6,000 a month by working hard everyday. And when I loose my job I have to live with EI's $650 per week! So basically, nowadays, Canada is not good for working people. You have to be so rich or so poor to come here. In both cases, you don't have to work here, if you know what I mean!

    • @owenready7043
      @owenready7043 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      So which countries would you suggest young (me 19) working class people work elsewhere?

    • @sarahfranco6802
      @sarahfranco6802 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@owenready7043 same

    • @333halfangel3
      @333halfangel3 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Canada is luring EUROPEANS.

    • @danielhagara1442
      @danielhagara1442 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@owenready7043 Well, anywhere in Europe. Not in France or Sweden because I doubt about those countries being safe by European standards. Sweden is still okay, but has had downhill trend for quite a while. Sorry Sweden :)
      If you like cold, then consider Denmark. Netherlands has also always been popular. I wouldn't recommend South due to higher unemployment, but otherwise Spain/Portugal/Italy would be great countries to live. I'd go Central - Vienna. It has been the best city in the world for quite a while. Or Prague which is suffering from huge housing crisis, but if you are smart and already speak English, then you can negotiate nice salary due to lowest unemployment in Europe. Then I guess Poland or Germany would be good choices. Or French speaking part of Switzerland if you speak French. There are also other good choices like Ireland or Finland, but the weather is not great. Or go Asia - Japan/Taiwan. Don't be afraid to leave your home country, you can always return.

    • @owenready7043
      @owenready7043 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@danielhagara1442 Do you recommend other continents outside Europe like South America etc. You mentioned Japan/Taiwan, do you also recommend Hong Kong or China? I can only speak English, I prefer warm but not too hot climates like UAE for example. I don’t really like the cold. I don’t have much in my education outside of just secondary school. If I were to do education I would do it outside Canada somewhere where it’s really cheap. I do have an EU passport but I am also considering non European countries.

  • @budyen
    @budyen 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    You do have many valid points but I can't imagine living anywhere else. I have traveled and lived in many other countries and in spite of these problems, the downsides of living in most Asian, European, South American, African countries and the US are much worse. And as someone else pointed out, these issues are happening in most Western countries. You mentioned brain drain to San Francisco and New York but housing prices there are ust as bad if not worse than here!

  • @ctva2719
    @ctva2719 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Video gets to the points quickly. Thanks!

  • @princedjaba4626
    @princedjaba4626 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    Seriously, 95% of people living in Canada are suffering. Most of them end up with serious health crisis and mental health issues. The work life balance is very bad due to high cost of living. People are overworked, mistreated by bosses....... etc Canada is ideal for tourism and vacations...... but not a place to settle down at and live......

    • @zacatkinson3926
      @zacatkinson3926 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      why 95%? do they talk about it?

  • @johnandrewmunroe
    @johnandrewmunroe 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +92

    I was born in Toronto but first came to Japan in 1981 and have lived here full time since 1992. During that time I've seen Tokyo go from being one of the most expensive and difficult places to live to being one of the cheapest and most interesting. How times change. Thanks for the great video!

    • @lappinmba
      @lappinmba 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      I agree. Living in Tokyo since 1990 and it is super reasonable now, safe, my healthcare is basically free because I retired.

    • @BenWeeks-ca
      @BenWeeks-ca 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      is it possible to work there if you only speak english though?

    • @tokyonomad6389
      @tokyonomad6389 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@BenWeeks-cayes, all the foreign companies are also there

    • @jeffgifkins7684
      @jeffgifkins7684 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      How many immigrants a year does Japan allow 7?

    • @steezeeeeee
      @steezeeeeee 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      8.5 actually@@jeffgifkins7684

  • @fluttergrrl
    @fluttergrrl 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I immigrated as a student in 1998 and I completely agree with your points. I came to Toronto where friendship circles do tend to be hard to break into. Yes, I am single, but I expected to be paid a decent wage and also to be able to afford a home. After all, I have multiple degrees. I wasn’t able to achieve this. The healthcare system right now is very tragic. The lack of family doctors has such a negative ripple effect on individual health and emergency room departments being inundated. And yes some waiting times can be quite long. There is even a shortage of veterinarians, so good luck if you want to have a pet for companionship.

    • @chrishayes5755
      @chrishayes5755 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      there's no shortage of veterinarians. you can call up 100 within a 50 mile radius, probably 20% of them will take you as a client. the problem is the costs are absolutely retarded. dog has a minor ligament tear? oh that's anywhere from 6-15k depending which scammer you want to pay. dog swallowed a toy? oh we can fix that 5-6k. dog has cancer? lets just not mention they have 0.0001% chance to live another year and offer a 15k surgery with $300/month of drugs to follow up.

  • @keepitreal1547
    @keepitreal1547 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +114

    100% agree, it's sad that Canada is this way, it's forcing it's younger generations out & in my opinion, no country should ever do this.

    • @alonzorodriguez8878
      @alonzorodriguez8878 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Well said 😢it really force young people to live

    • @mezzuna
      @mezzuna 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They'll just import young people from the 3rd world with the false hope of a new life outside poverty

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's why young Europeans want to take job opportunities in the US but can't get visas because of "demographics."

  • @racsito39
    @racsito39 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +60

    As I watch videos like this and read comments from Canadians, it's hitting me hard. I've been considering a move to Canada for quite some time for a better quality of life through one of its provincial immigration paths. But seeing this, I'm truly amazed and it's making me ponder deeply. Starting from scratch in a new country isn't a decision one can take lightly.

    • @ickster23
      @ickster23 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I've lived here all my life and I can say that there is nothing you can do that isn't regulated to death. I always challenge my fellow Canadians to list 10 things they can do without government regulating it at some level.

    • @Saturn7747
      @Saturn7747 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Canada is a country for rich people only now.

    • @elizabethrosemary8238
      @elizabethrosemary8238 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ickster23it’s called tyranny

    • @garyfrancis6193
      @garyfrancis6193 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It’s all true. I was born and grew up in British Columbia. Left Canada in 1990 and have watched it deteriorate for ove years. It’s nothing like the country I once lived in.

    • @ickster23
      @ickster23 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@elizabethrosemary8238 I call it "soft Totaltarianism", although they have been imprisoning more people recently.

  • @soisvejai8771
    @soisvejai8771 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thankyou for the info 👍

  • @veronicabocaney6510
    @veronicabocaney6510 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I do feel all these points you talked about, I have been living in Canada since 2017 and I notice a huge difference in a economic, social, and mental way, sadly! I hope this can change.

  • @Larimarc
    @Larimarc 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +56

    Thank you for your video, well done. I'm a Canadian expat living in the US now for 23 years. I was hired as a software engineer on a temporary basis and eventually my wife and I decided to stay here. I recall that things were not so good in Canada back then either. My effective income tax went from 40% down to less than 10%, while my salary increased by over 50%. Not to mention the much lower sales tax in the US. In the US we are able to deduct mortgage interests from our income taxes. Our house is paid off now, but for us this was a big deal at the time. I could go on and on. Sadly, from what you describe it seems that things have degraded even more. Keep in mind that the US isn't all rainbows and sunshine either. Particularly San Fransisco, where the drug, housing, cost of living and homelessness are also pretty bad. Good luck!

    • @Mulovita
      @Mulovita 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You're an immigrant in the US, not an expat. And good for you to have left that shithole and those nasty cold people up there and moved to a better place.

    • @olyl3859
      @olyl3859 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hello dear Canadian expat, sorry but Canada is by far the best country is the world (I travel in many countries btw and speak 3 languages). I’ve been living here for almost 40 years and I visit US many times. Actually, as a teen, I wanted to move there. Now the reality hit me in the face when I finally travel there by my own (I was always visiting nice places with my parents as a kid) in 2008. Do you remember the crash? I saw a lot of people sleeping in there cars in public parking in New England, New York and Detroit (not a poor a area), people loosing there jobs, the violence also and the drug crisis… Unfortunately, it’s still the case. America is a horrible countries in many ways, but more on the human side where the country spend so much money on is army and so little on is poor people. I like the US, but I totally dislike the huge inequalities.
      Did you know that the Canadian Middle Class is now richer then the American Middle Class ?

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I want to cut all your story in a country there is good and bad side everyone is free to leave if you think you cannot cope up with the condition

    • @Mulovita
      @Mulovita 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@olyl3859 Reality is talent, skills, entrepreneurship isn't valued in Canada; mediocrity is. The educated, creative, those expecting only the best do much, much better and feel much more at home in the US, or some other countries in Europe and East Asia. Canada simply can not satisfy but either those who've never seen better, or are coming from most undeveloped countries and never experienced life comforts and really seen the best of the world. Tells you all you need to know that Ukrainian middle and upper class who came as refugees recently are packing up and going back to a country at war because Canada is subpar to quality of life and lifestyle they had back home. And there's a reason Canada's best and brightest flock to US and elsewhere. Canada is just a closed-minded, irrelevant, backwater and also it's getting even worse by the day. Other than a huge ego, bragging how they're so nice, amazing (100% bs) and better than everyone else, they got nothing in reality to back it up.

    • @theymaycry9725
      @theymaycry9725 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@olyl3859 who’s protecting this massive North Atlantic border if we didn’t spend that much in our military

  • @tarayacoob3198
    @tarayacoob3198 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    I agree 100%. Please parents not to send your children to Canada to study, unless you can afford a bachelor apartment for $1,700 monthly + food is very expensive. I'm 63th. No choice of my own came to Canada 1975 with my parents. Canada is work, work, work, pay bills and very cold. House prices ridiculous, wages not going up and we are tax to death.

    • @payat4417
      @payat4417 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Agreed with you

    • @bay9876
      @bay9876 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      A health Care tied to a budget (as long as it's what everybody else has you're OK) and any deviation, you're on your own.

    • @debuthunter5389
      @debuthunter5389 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Don't move to Vancouver or Toronto. That's the moral of the story.

  • @carlostdw
    @carlostdw 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I'm from Brazil and Canada right now makes me feel like living in Brazil at the time I left it because of corruption, violence and economic issues...

  • @mariatee2775
    @mariatee2775 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank You for report... it is first voice in my experience that touches some of the realities of life in this region ..and it's well articulated..Thanks..

  • @dwaynedeck5408
    @dwaynedeck5408 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

    I have lived in Canada for 55 years my entire life. I feel Canada is the best country in the world to live. It seems so many people think Canada is only Vancouver or Toronto as this young lady has been talking about. There is so much more to Canada so much space and many other amazing places to live and visit. I'm not here to criticize her comments I'm only talking with my experience in living and going to different places. I never had much money in my life and I have always been happy it's all about what you make in life that unlocks that key to life's adventure 😊

    • @dwaynedeck5408
      @dwaynedeck5408 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@manhcuongnguyen365 I can't really recommend a place to go... to be honest it depends on where you would like to settle. I have only lived in two provinces in my life Saskatchewan and Alberta. I hope you can find what you want to do and can be fulfilled in your adventures.

    • @Orielle1000
      @Orielle1000 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@dwaynedeck5408I am from Saskatchewan and so far so good!

    • @bevaltihani3269
      @bevaltihani3269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I totally agree with here in every single thing she said, the same thing in Montreal, already 4 of my friends already left.

    • @simoc24
      @simoc24 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Well said 👍 as Canadian I avoid Toronto or Vancouver like a plague. Canada is wonderful outside that 2 cities

    • @simoc24
      @simoc24 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@manhcuongnguyen365Alberta, both have great city life yet much cheaper than Vancouver or Toronto

  • @davisurdaneta1426
    @davisurdaneta1426 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +62

    I moved here 15 years ago (6 years in Calgary and 10 in Toronto), the situation back then was a lot more conducive. In the last five years I already started realizing that Canada has changed in many ways (politically and socially). Then the pademic happened which made the situation much worst. Rent and living cost skyrocketed while lacking of decent paying job opportunities. I know a lot of people that are living on the edge. Public safety in Toronto now is a major concern. I've encoutered discriminations in the last 3 years than the last 13 years combined. I am now at point re-evaluating my situation if it's still worth living. I difinitely don't see myself retiring here. It's really sad to see how quality of life in Canada dwindled in just a matter of years.

    • @Nanw23
      @Nanw23 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is all because of falling crude/gas prices during 2020-22. Canada will have super economy, if Crude stays consistently above 80 USD/ barrel. During COVID pandemic, travelling down, crude crashed and Canada suffered. Sooner or later situation will improve. Canada is a socialistic economy and hence u will spend more for the welfare measures of the Govt.

    • @ay14286
      @ay14286 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Nanw23 I wonder how the electric wave in Asia gonna play out for Canada or even the middle east. Economies highly dependent upon oil may have to make a beverage out of it

    • @sjv9147s
      @sjv9147s 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Nanw23Kinda tragic for Canadians then on frail balance of just how much Crude sells. What a fundamental that takes up the major portion of that decision to abode there!

    • @freeborn204
      @freeborn204 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is exactly what we found after moving to Northeast Asia we found that when we visited Canada we could see it going down with every visit and then Trudeau hit and it bottomed out. Because I speak up and voice my opinion and truths.. and saying something that is true was bad these days.. my niece told me not to come back to Canada because I would be in jail within 6 months. Freedom of speech is not something Canadians enjoy anymore not even freedom of access to news reports that aren't government sanctioned. And with the new bill coming into effect you've lost more freedom in Canada and bit by bit you are becoming nothing more then a third world dictatorship. But people had it good in Canada for so long that they are blinded and refused to see the truth.

    • @KrazieSevin
      @KrazieSevin 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ay14286 Saudi Arabia is fine, they have been moving away from oil dependency towards creating infrastructure that doesn't depend on oil, everything is booming there, the IT industry, finance industry, construction industry etc., their government is not lack luster like ours, unlike our government that will tax us to the gills for everything, they dont have any income tax, I was there for a month in 2018 and everyone is way better off there, the cost of living is so much cheaper than here its insane, families are happy and its safer than major cities in Canada, I can guarantee you they've already prepared for oil production to drop. The same can't be said for all oil producing countries but KSA is one forward thinking country that is labeled as being backwards by the media, people are free to believe what they want but I'm seriously considering moving there for a few years to earn and save as much as possible even over a place like the U.S. or UAE for that matter since Dubai has also gotten super expensive and its not the hidden gem it once was.

  • @brianbell3417
    @brianbell3417 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I left Canada over 30 years ago. I feel a little strange going back now. It's clean, pretty. My family are all still there, but this video locks in the reality that I'll never return to live there. My life is a peach here in Mexico!

  • @mrx-vx4wr
    @mrx-vx4wr 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Totally agree! I came to Vancouver in 2009, and now 14 years later I am asking my self a question why the heck I always wanted to come in here. I've been financially struggling since day one, but back then when I came the rent was a little bit easier. I've been renting extremely small studio (300sqf) for $1200 a month and that is because I never moved out. I was already several times thinking about going back to Europe, but Europe has it's own problems now too. I'll stay here a little longer, I guess I believe things are gonna get better.

    • @jackfrost8600
      @jackfrost8600 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Rents ridiculous now $1200 for studio back in 08 I had a place was paying $1300 for a 700sqf condo was nice and spacious and now I bet that place would be going for $2k easily

    • @pierinopegy9239
      @pierinopegy9239 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Take it easy move out of big City.. We found the best location at Niagara region St. Catharines. Happy to live here. Close to US border big lakes and even great skiing in Holiday Valley, pass Buffalo. Living partially in Europe, we realized that Canada still one of the best country in the World....😀❤

  • @carolb7939
    @carolb7939 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    You are so right. I grew up in Canada, have lived in all the provinces, but when it came time to retire I left...went to Spain, and will never be back because of all the reasons you mentioned. Life here for me, on the Canadian dollar, is so affordable, the weather hot but always sunny, people from all over the world, great healthcare, I could go on, but just to say that when I left Canada, people thought I was crazy, that Canada was the best place to live in the world, that was all you ever hear on the news, but definitely not true....!!!

    • @dianadelgado5708
      @dianadelgado5708 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It is cheap for you not for the Spanish. In fact, because of people like you, Spain, Mexico, Portugal, etc. are being gentrified. And the people who live in that country will soon no longer be able to live the way they used to. So what is very good for some is not very good for others.

    • @debuthunter5389
      @debuthunter5389 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Of course you should move where your dollar stretches further, and enjoy some warmer weather, when you no longer need to work.

  • @jeffinous
    @jeffinous 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +91

    I can't agree more with you. I almost emigrated to Vancouver. However, two weeks in November made me realize the weather is totally different from summer! At the same time, at twilight, I see so many young homeless camping outside of the stores... So, I remained in Southern California. Your video made me realize that I didn't make the wrong decision and that was a time you weren't even born yet.

    • @jorgebellidolavado6382
      @jorgebellidolavado6382 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      As long as you don't move to a places like lima Perú (most of its districts are not as safe as they should like Miraflores. We have el tren de Aragua living here XP)

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Sounds like you'd just be trading one apocalyptic area for another. Wow. 😮

    • @jasminealixandranorth
      @jasminealixandranorth 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Southern Cali and Northern Cali are also in the proverbial toilet as far as drugs and homelessness are concerned.

    • @jeffinous
      @jeffinous 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@jasminealixandranorth i agree but la is still more livable than sf

    • @bevaltihani3269
      @bevaltihani3269 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I totally agree with here in every single thing she said, the same thing in Montreal, already 4 of my friends already left.

  • @weifan9533
    @weifan9533 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Yes I immigrated to Canada when I was 13 with my father, now I'm 31 and I've been thinking of leaving the country for a few years now. Even though I currently have a rather comfy and stable job I still constantly worry about my future and the rising cost of living, not to mention the other pts you talked about (lack of infrastructure, less opportunities, drug crisis, the weather, high taxes, etc.). Another point that I wanna mention is Canadians aren't that friendly to immigrants at all, especially not where I live (Quebec). Of course it's rare for someone to tell me straight in my face "Go back to where you come from!", but I can definitely sense it from their looks and expressions when I talk to them. And not to mention the Loi 96 that has recently passed, stripping Quebec even more of its diversity. And yes it's hard to make friends here too, people tend to stick within their own group.

  • @finleyinfinland4360
    @finleyinfinland4360 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I came to Canada for university, and I became bored with this place after a week. Because there’s nothing to do! And every time I tried to go to an event, or join a club, ppl are just going there with friends not to make new friends, which really frustrated me a lot. Some of my friends seem to enjoy their life here, and they are all ppl who are enjoying the stable life, and want to some day get married and have kids and probably already thinking about retirement. Which I don’t really want. And I hate it so much. I got diagnosed with depression and anxiety and adhd lol, that says a lot, Canada has taken a toll on my mental health, and now I’m considering leaving, but I find it hard to do so.

    • @ElectroSharpTurtle
      @ElectroSharpTurtle 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @finleyinfinland4360
      I totally agree. It's very challenging to find friends or dating/relationships here in Canada and I was born and raised here. 😥

    • @jonz753
      @jonz753 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Don't delay any longer and leave, seriously, this is the most depressing country on earth. You won't regret it a single minute.

  • @noiseshapes
    @noiseshapes 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    agreed with lots of points, but just a few things I see differently. I am from Toronto, and lately we don't get that much snow, maybe 3 big snowstorms a year. It's also not that cold here, not like Calgary for sure. We get -10 for a few days, but that's about it for lows usually. There is lots to do in Canada if you like outdoor activities: hiking, mountain biking, skiing, fishing, boating, camping, but you should really love these things to come here. If you are good with building and or maintaining homes, I think Canada is a great place, because people are obsessed with real estate, and there are not enough handy people around, and they make probably better money here than in other places. I have a family so I'm stuck here. Not too bad, but life quality is going down. I can't really go out much because I refuse to pay the ridiculous prices for what is being offered...2 beers and a few strips of chicken 50$ (after tax and tip). Also, if we talk about the US and the homeless apocalypse, I think San Francisco or Seatle or many other 'liberal' cities, especially west coast are way worse. People come in bands to shoplift there, and they have guns too, so I would not want to move to US if I think about safety.

    • @yukiyu6241
      @yukiyu6241 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Not so many snow storms but we have a hell lot if Chem Trails., every day., just look at a sky and try to see something aside of your cell phone!! And then try to understand the effect on climate, food, water, air...,

    • @yukiyu6241
      @yukiyu6241 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@TheJlee28 Do some research and you will find out.,

    • @yukiyu6241
      @yukiyu6241 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheJlee28 just bcs you have lazy brain?? things around you do exist and the entire world is aware of them., except for you!!

    • @luv.3398
      @luv.3398 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TheJlee28 😆🤣

    • @michaelrmurphy2734
      @michaelrmurphy2734 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The "liberal" cities are the rich ones that have stuff to steal. No one steals in conservative cities in America.
      Because they are all dirt poor! No Rolex or Mercedes in West Virginia or Mississppi!!!

  • @gillybertviernes2599
    @gillybertviernes2599 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    When I was young, I always dream of living in Canada one day. I tried to apply for visa to migrate in Canada but the process is so slow that it took ages before being approved. So I tried other options, like New Zealand. I was lucky that I was approved, and now a New Zealand citizen. I did realized that New Zealand is so beautiful, and the people are so amazing, kind and and friendly. I think Kiwis are the most amazing people in the world. So friendly, so inclusive, so considerate, not so racist. The culture is so friendly and laid back. The government is so kind, they are the least corrupt in the world. The climate is temperate, not too cold and not to hot, it was the best. The nature is so beautiful and there's no dangerous animals like snakes, bears, tigers, wolves, etc. It's a paradise in short. I was so fortunate that I moved here, and I'm a New Zealander now. It was the best decision in my life to move here. New Zealand is so underrated. Not much people in the world know much about New Zealand, because Kiwis are so humble. I can say NZ is the best country in the world.

    • @bobsaturday4273
      @bobsaturday4273 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      its all wonderful if you don't mind the fascist forced toxic vakxine on the people

    • @RanenPo
      @RanenPo 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It'll be ruined in less than 20 years too as people with money to burn look for places to dump money into real estate

    • @krobinsonization
      @krobinsonization 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Most migrants and many Canadians dream of the USA, Canada is just a very poor compromise.

  • @Ridgewood460
    @Ridgewood460 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Hi, this is a great video!
    I live in Ontario Canada and I’ve word in the forestry industry my whole life with long days and a lot of weekends just to get ready for retirement. The cost of living is outrageous here. I don’t know how the younger generation is going to do it.
    Thank you for the video

  • @ZeAmigosUnited
    @ZeAmigosUnited 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

    Good on you for leaving. I left Canada almost 3 years ago and I have zero regrets. Stress levels have decreased substantially, quality of life has increased monumentally, and overall happiness is through the roof. I visited Canada a few weeks ago and it was a sad feminder that the country I grew up in is very much on the decline, and has been for a long time.

    • @Boags
      @Boags 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Where did you move to?

    • @ZeAmigosUnited
      @ZeAmigosUnited 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Thailand@@Boags

    • @debuthunter5389
      @debuthunter5389 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Bet you took/earn western currency, and don't earn/rely on the local Thai economy for your living?

    • @ZeAmigosUnited
      @ZeAmigosUnited 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I do both. I have an online business and I also have a local business here in Thailand (a cannabis shop)@@debuthunter5389

    • @yaiqabsupplanter1252
      @yaiqabsupplanter1252 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@debuthunter5389well thats the idea...

  • @afs-drew9644
    @afs-drew9644 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +169

    Excellent vid. As a middle aged Canadian I definitely have witnessed the points you've brought up. I'm very saddened that our incompetent government(s) have created such a mess for the younger generations. If I was 20 .. I would focus on getting out. The fix for Canada will take decades.

    • @y.cschmidlin8172
      @y.cschmidlin8172 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      There is no fix to be made. It is beyond repair

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Govt is not incompetent it is the weather which cause incompetent

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@y.cschmidlin8172 it is beyond repair so but new one

    • @fab1817
      @fab1817 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      As a canadian accept everything good or bad in canada

    • @wongjefx980
      @wongjefx980 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It really Canadians and their leaders don't know what Canada should be.... America-lite or Texas-lite as Alberta wants, France-lite as Quebec wants...the entire Canadian identity sits in a void between The US and Europe. They want to be a G7 power but might be better off thinking more like a Nordic country or NZ and Australia....it can't play like US, Russia, China and India.

  • @arminwagner7031
    @arminwagner7031 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I tried to emigrate from Germany to Canada in late 2022 and already left again after 3 weeks when I experienced the mentioned reasons. Yes we have higher taxes in Germany but the inflation with groceries and rental is less high and I also appreciate the social security system in Germany more again. Videos like yours help me to confirm my decision and close that chapter. I prefer to visit friends in Oregon/USA during vacation as North America experience.

  • @hasanghodrati7326
    @hasanghodrati7326 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I totally relate to you and 100% agree with what you said. I am in the process of leaving Canada for good too!

  • @dianahossfeld4728
    @dianahossfeld4728 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    I agree Canada has changed from when my parents first immigrated here. I grew up in Montreal and the nightlife was amazing and I had so many friends. I did move to Calgary for better job opportunities. It was a very hostile environment for people from central Canada. I eventually moved from Calgary to the outskirts of Edmonton, people here are so much friendlier but Alberta is not a place either for single people I would say. I visited Vancouver in June and I also could not believe what I saw in the downtown core., I spent a lot of time in NorthVan. I have never understood why people move to Vancouver or Toronto when everyone knows it is so expensive to live there.

  • @calvinchung2036
    @calvinchung2036 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

    Unbelievable! We always think Canada is a big ,rich, friendly and beautiful country! Thanks for sharing your experience!

    • @bizzman4u
      @bizzman4u 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @ calvinchung2036 she is exaggerating as rents in New York or London England or Tokyo are higher. Come see how many wealthy people there are here, funny how she never mentions any of that

    • @Vikingdescendent
      @Vikingdescendent 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It is. It all depends on you.

    • @hellopaule
      @hellopaule 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@bizzman4u There are wealthy people here but the middle class is disappearing. The gap between the rich and poor has grown much larger. If you are just starting out, don't expect to break into a richer part of society. Everything runs on nepotism. The rich give the good employment positions to the children of their cronies.

    • @katierose1893
      @katierose1893 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Definitely a poor country. Healthcare is inacessible and it's overwhelmed with mass immigration. Third world.

    • @leopoldpoppenberger8692
      @leopoldpoppenberger8692 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      the way it was.

  • @user-tk2fg2re2g
    @user-tk2fg2re2g 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    In terms of the high costs of housing, the same story in Hong Kong, Singapore, Shenzhen, Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Seoul, Tokyo, etc. or probably even worse. Let me tell you, there is more than the high costs of living to worry about. I used to live in our own detached house in Toronto so I know what is going on there, even since I left Canada for good for greener pastures. To me, the high rate of taxation really bothers me. Taxes, altogether, deprive us of more than 60% of our annual gross income for use as net disposable income for our family. This kind of tax load is simply unrealistic and not acceptable. Today's Canada is a far cry from the days we lived there, where the cost of living is much more affordable and life in general was much more pleasant. It was a very good place to raise a family in those days. We are now in our 70s and 80s, and we have no plans to return to Canada as residents anytime soon. Here in Asia, a dollar (or any currency) can buy a lot more than we can buy in Canada, and the quality of life here is similarly good as well, if not excellent.

  • @mikeadder7796
    @mikeadder7796 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I remember older people from Yugoslavia back in 70 ties and 80 ties that used to say that Canada was extremely cheap at that time and very affordable for living although weather is bad, humid, cold etc but you could earn a lot of money during lifetime. Now only bad weather remains.

  • @mercurius6352
    @mercurius6352 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +68

    All i can say is that it is not easy in any country, you are bound to come across struggles, that's because no where is perfect. The same home crisis you mentioned exists in lots other countries and not Just Canada. USA for instance, places like san Fransisco, you'd see people sleeping in there cars and on the Street because they can't afford rent or buy a house.
    Cost of living also varies depending on the country you are in, though I feel inflation is something that is rampant across most countries these days if not all. Not even the UK is exempted from high cost of living, people work 2-3 jobs over there just to keep up.
    Heck Australia which we termed as one of the most safest countries, we had experienced a car theft with stolen debit cards.
    Not tryna tell y'all to remain in Canada or anything, all am saying is that just because you come across struggles in Canada dosen't mean you wont come across it in other countries, the perfect country dosen't exist, everyone of those countries has there own flaws. That's Just how the world works.
    Cool video btw 👌❤

    • @gauthapandith
      @gauthapandith 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      With opening flood gates to international students, Canada is heading for a one heck of a nightmare in its efforts to outsource the population boosting venture, no other country is same, come on please. BTW people in the USA do not cross the border to Canada to pump in gas , take it , if you really wanna compare Canada with USA ( > 10 times population with almost the same land area you are guaranteed find a affordable place to live - unless you suffer from craving for upstate NEW YORK )

    • @mercurius6352
      @mercurius6352 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@gauthapandith “You are guaranteed to find an affordable place to live except you suffer for cravings from upstate New York” on what basis did you generalize such conclusions?? Just because USA has a larger mass area dosen't guarantee shit. Not just newyork but I've been places like Texas, the minimum wage falling under $7/hr makes it difficult for a family as low as 4 to keep up with the living expenses, you think housing is the only thing that makes up your cost of living, taxes, groceries, utilities, phone bill etc it's not a matter of being affordable here, when they can no longer keep up with the living expenses they decide to cut some things short, that why you see people living on the street or in there cars. you think cravings for New York is what makes people homeless in USA?? Dude pls don't be biased, I have actually lost count on how thr several amount people that live on the street and in there cars in San Francisco, Texas, Virginia, if houses were affordable or living expenses were cheap, why were they homeless, this is why you gotta think before leaping into a random reply and you think you justified. You can choose to be biased towards USA and I don't mean to defend Canada but as one who has experienced bothh countries, I can indeed day the struggles in Canada also happens in the USA. Common now Just because USA has a large land mass that limits home crisis, you think that Justifies for other expenses people experience in there daily lifes?? Let's not be dense pls

    • @mercurius6352
      @mercurius6352 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@gauthapandith I don't know if you biased but I really don't care. “with opening flood gates to international students” but dude Canada isn't the only one that opens it gates to international students, that's Just cap. A lot of countries with lower land mass opens there borders to int'l students every season and you think international student are the cause for population increment and housing crisis, did you do the calcs on those with work Visa, torist visa. Dude international students in Australia even pay as high as $50-$60k for tuition fees that is to show how much struggle they go through than intl in Canada, the only school in Canada that would request to pay as high as that is the University of Toronto, most schools in Canada usually perked at $20k on average for international students and worse Australia request you even pay half of the tuition deposit, meanwhile Canada schools offer way better funding, schools in Australia for instance provide most of there funding services to Australian students, for Canada you'd pay as low $2k for tuition deposit, Trust me I schooled in both so I know, people choose what they can afford for schooling in such countries with the characteristics they seek so I don't get what you salty about, Canada isn't the first one to open borders worldwide for into students and it isn't the last. The only way it gets tricky for intl students in Canada is the cost of living and it in the same in Australia except you have a well paying Job, well Canada prefers to employer there own with Canadian work experience but you'd find it almost the same any other place.
      “No other country is the same, come on please” excuse me have you been to every single country out there in the world that you are saying this authoritatively and confidently because I don't understand.
      Canada only has a population boosting venture because it has one of the easiest part to citizenship, for US it takes triple the time get a green card than you would have gotten PR in Canada, that's why most people are Immigrating there due to the easy part to citizenship. Peeps have there reasons for coming, some just wanna have the benefit of the passport seeing it a real strong one.
      For New Zealand I experienced difficulties as a foreigner, Jobs are freaking hard to find here if you are foreigner but not impossible opening a bank account as a foreigner is almost like saying you wanna punch the shadow of the moon and on top of that you still have the high cost of living to meet up with. Canada may not be perfect but it still excels in some specific areas in comparison to other countries, the same way those countries also Excel in there own known areas way more than other countries. I still find it funny that you think International students are the reason for population increment, maybe other countries that does it are Shadow of Canada, LMAO(Joke of the year) for Ireland you need to have paid tuition from your home country before you even enter the country on a study Visa and did I mention how much you need to show for proof of funds on Ireland, let's not even go down that road??, for Canada you'd only pay for an academic year with POF way lesser than Ireland and lots other countries and you have the benefit to work 20hrs/week.
      I don't think you guys have been outside north America before so you Just experience difficulty in Canada and are quick to assume it the worst place to live in 😂😂 maybe when you try European and Oceania countries you would finally know it isn't easy or perfect in anyplace you choose to live in, I rest my case, if you know you know and if you don't, tough nuggies.

    • @gauthapandith
      @gauthapandith 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mercurius6352 You never think about the mushrooming boutique schools in Canada that exploit international students ( hence the flood gates), issuing crappy certificates not even worth a penny !

    • @Traveltheworld1818.
      @Traveltheworld1818. 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Move to Iceland or Finland perfect countries.. Luxembourg, Netherlands,

  • @JanBanJoovi-ol1qv
    @JanBanJoovi-ol1qv 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +54

    Many of my friends are telling me Canada isn’t perfect but it’s better than being in a struggling third world country. I asked them how lonely it could get in there. They said they never felt lonely at all. However when I contemplated, I realised they’re all married; hence their lives are concluded and they’re settled. Therefore they will never understand the point of view of a single person as regards to feeling lonely in such a cold not so much populated place.

    • @johnmorelli3775
      @johnmorelli3775 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      In the 1980s=90s I struggled with loneliness for almost 20 years in Toronto before I finally got lucky and got married. The social life sucks.

    • @nightrider12soul
      @nightrider12soul 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      There are no third world countries any more.
      In Thailand,Cambodia people don’t sleep o the streets like in some parts of US.

    • @spark300c
      @spark300c 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      it depends of average income of of the third world country.

    • @KaiserHooray
      @KaiserHooray 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      "Third world" is so condescending. I know for a fact that many infrastructures in those countries are better than those in Canada.
      Your friends claimn it's "better" in Canada because they have no other option given that they are already chained to Canada, by being married and settled.

    • @chilcotincabin
      @chilcotincabin 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well it depends on the corruption level and crime level of the country. In some counties like the Philippines the poverty is way worse than anything in Canada but tourists and foreigners just turn a blind eye to it.

  • @techgene4531
    @techgene4531 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for the information I learn something.

  • @Tomorrowwas
    @Tomorrowwas 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    May I ask how you got a residency status in Asia? Vietnam I am assuming? Also, Thailand taxes are even higher than Canada, so after tax income would be significantly smaller.

  • @samgomolka6260
    @samgomolka6260 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    Agreed. I just moved back to Europe. Sold everything I had in Vancouver. I am very lucky to have my EU passport. Also spend winters in Asia. I am never going back to live in Canada. I love being back in Europe.

  • @domjohnson2579
    @domjohnson2579 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    I'm Canadian and I would be the first to tell you Canada is all hype and all disappointment! No hyperbole here. Why someone would bet on coming here is beyond me. It has been taken over by socialists which have destroyed this once amazing place.

    • @kenfernanadez3110
      @kenfernanadez3110 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @domjohnson2579 There is NOTHING socialist about the corrupt waterboy and his cohorts who masquerade as prime minister, ministers, and an "opposition" figure who props up this regime.
      It is PURE fascism - the public purse finances criminal pharmaceutical companies who made BILLIONS of dollars off our backs; ditto for the corrupt doctors and social workers, and ditto for the banks. Basically the government takes our tax dollars and doles it out LIBERALLY to corporate interests, while puttingnus increasingly conditions worthy of any dictatorship

    • @erichorrobin431
      @erichorrobin431 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Fully agree about the socialist take over. It has ruined a once great country.

    • @marcusleja7133
      @marcusleja7133 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They're socialists who make it hard to work for a living, or develop your business.

    • @MrRambee
      @MrRambee 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Agreed…

    • @wongjefx980
      @wongjefx980 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Not sure what you mean by destroyed by socialist....Canada is slightly socialist country....been that way for generations. Even Conservatives in Canada are not Conservative...they blaming the Liberals for lack of housing...a real Conservative would say too bad... supply and demand and government should not own that.

  • @hennyd.9963
    @hennyd.9963 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    What that lady said it’s totally true, tax are crazy, healthcare collapsed, lack of infrastructure, everything expensive, I am from BC and moved to South East Asia for good, Thank God

  • @angeljakeeomma
    @angeljakeeomma 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    thanks for your honest insights

  • @jorahkai
    @jorahkai 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Left in 2014 for an amazing job in China. Life for the last decade has been amazing traveling the world, publishing books and living well. Just miss my Canadian family.

  • @Mozzermarr10
    @Mozzermarr10 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +119

    Left Canada in 2001 at the age of 29, for Asia. Been in Thailand for past 12 years and love it. Canada has fallen: woke politics, drugs, the extortionate price of housing, overrated healthcare, far too much immigration, brutal winters and the high cost of groceries and things. Get out if you can!

    • @XAUCADTrader
      @XAUCADTrader 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      What do you do in Thailand? Are there high paying jobs vs. living expenses? Smart move btw...

    • @Mozzermarr10
      @Mozzermarr10 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@XAUCADTrader I work as a teacher in a uni and I also do a few other things that are related to the education field. The cost of loving is really low, esp compared to the west (I have a 55 sq meter condo with a pool and excellent facilities) and I pay $600 CDN for rent. It's not a huge apt, but it does 2 of us. The food is cheap here, eating out is reasonable, and the healthcare is exceptional. I had a procedure done last week that I would have waited for in canada. Now, my healthcare is trying to not pay me back, but even so, it cost $1700 CDN. I had the procedure within a few days of my docs appt. Dental is amazing here as well, as you can get anything, and at good value. If you're smart with money, Thailand is prob the best place in the world to live. Oh, you can get a retirement visa once you are over 50, and all you need is 30 grand CDN in you bank ( and jump through a few other hoops). The weather is good, although its mentally hot at times, but it's a great life, for the most part, over here. Oh, sorry, i forgot to answer you high paying job question. Yeah, I guess there are, in some sectors, but its more about what you'll be saving in food and housing costs, plus low taxes, in comparison to Canada and the UK.

    • @gekkogordon
      @gekkogordon 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@XAUCADTrader open your mind. work from home

    • @gekkogordon
      @gekkogordon 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      you are 100% percent right mozzermarr10. It should be great moving out. It does not make sense living in the cold dark paying for others needs who are not producing anything and living from welfare.

    • @jamajama8221
      @jamajama8221 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Im 30 years old Canadian, I agree with you and I must find a way to get out of this country!!!

  • @SM-cz5od
    @SM-cz5od 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very informative and helpful video.

  • @jordanthedoge535
    @jordanthedoge535 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This lady speaks the truth. Been living here since 2002...

  • @chrisatanasov2808
    @chrisatanasov2808 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    I totally agree with you. I faced exactly the same issues. I left Canada for good in 2010. The high prices and the weather were the top reasons to leave Canada.

  • @lucia6117
    @lucia6117 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    I left Vancouver (lived there for 10 years) and can resonate with a lot of what she's saying, especially about making friends. I moved to Toronto 5 years ago and I definitely prefer it here. Rent is insane too, but you have higher wages, more opportunities, more stuff to do and to try all year round. Parades, parties, theaters, film festival, sports teams, diversity in food, etc. Toronto is a really diverse city so you get to meet so many different people. I made a lot more friends after moving here. Weather wise, it is colder, but it's more sunny. I didn't like Vancouver weather because it was gloomy a lot of the times even though it was warmer. But I would take sunny cold days over gloomy days every time.

  • @AbroadInThailand
    @AbroadInThailand 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video!

  • @glennelliott708
    @glennelliott708 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So, after all the mudslinging, where would you consider is the best place to permanently live.?

  • @gemox3225
    @gemox3225 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    It was hard to find a family doctor or a GP in Canada 30 years ago. I lived in Montreal from 1993 to 2000. I finally found a young GP who was terrible and couldn't diagnose anything. I moved back to the US and they diagnosed me correctly within a few minutes. Of course this was just my personal experience; others may have had a better experience with Canadian healthcare.

    • @gauthapandith
      @gauthapandith 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Actually there is nothing called free health-care in Canada, migrants with no jobs end up in hospitals after years of depressed lives - so health-care is heavily taxed to the point of no return.

  • @aint_just_whistlin_dixie
    @aint_just_whistlin_dixie 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +72

    As an American, I'm truly sorry to see these things happen to Canada, which has always been a great neighbor to us. I was particularly shocked by your comments about healthcare. US healthcare gets a bad rap, and in some ways it's deserved. But I've moved a few times in my life and have always been able to find a primary care physician within a few weeks of arrival in my new home. I can typically get an appointment within a week to see them or a P.A. to get checked out, or I can go to one of 3 urgent care facilities within a mile of my home and be seen the same day for minor stuff. Wait times for surgeries are typically 4-8 weeks unless it's urgent. I hope you guys are able to fix things.

    • @craigh.9810
      @craigh.9810 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      From anti-American Canadiens we are told that their healthcare system is so much better than ours. They don’t mention the wait times or the lack of primary care doctors etc.

    • @jeffgifkins7684
      @jeffgifkins7684 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Like or hate private healthcare there is some benefits. A system based on prices will allocate doctors to where they are most needed (I.e where the profits are at) as signalled by prices and supply and demand. This is why you don’t see as large as wait lines in the USA compared to Canada which has basically a central command economy in terms of healthcare they can’t react as quickly as a private free market would

    • @fluttergrrl
      @fluttergrrl 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      My long term family doctor moved from Canada to the US two months ago. I was lucky to find a replacement this month. However, this Family doctor makes new patients sign a form saying we will not go to a walk-in clinic. The doctor’s rationale is she loses money when her patients go to a walk-in clinic. Yes, she tries to prioritize urgent visits but the result is my new Family doctor spends five minutes per visit.

    • @davidanderson8469
      @davidanderson8469 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Ditto here. I have very competent healthcare in the US. I've had several critical surgeries performed and was amazed at the expertise of everyone involved. It needs improvement for sure but darn good in my experience. I don't want socialized medicine here.

    • @FishyFun57
      @FishyFun57 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I’ve had to wait 5 weeks for an appointment to see my family doctor. Now she retired her family practice, to just work in ER and the cancer clinic. I’m in an Alberta town of 10k, 3 hrs west of Edmonton. I now am left with a Walk In Clinic 3 days a week, which operates out of the 1 medical clinic. They can only handle the first 16 people Mon-Wed. The alternative is the ER at the hospital. I’ve been on opioid pain meds since 2003. My pain specialist left the Healthcare insurance plan Jan 2023. I’ve had 15 orthopedic surgeries in 61 years and was supposed to have a second spinal fusion last year. Now I’m without a medical team. I live alone and don’t drive. It’s very sad to see my country become 3rd world status, since 2015 under Trudeau. In my town there’s people waiting over 3 years for a family doctor. I was told I’d be put on a waiting list, as current doctors are full.