Malaysian here. I think we are mature enough to distinguish American and America. As long as you're respectful and understand Asian culture, you will be perceived as a such.
Agree. America is disliked across a large proportion of the globe because of its stance in certain geopolitical issues. However Americans, as you say if they are respectful and don’t enforce their culture on their host culture, and attempt at least partial assimilation then it’s all good. Coming from a Welshman with 7 yrs Malaysia, 20 yrs Asia, countless years on EU continent, 1 yr USA, 1yr Canada, 1 yr Latin America.
yep thats how the local people roll . you show respect in return you get respect , too many foreigners come here thinking it should be how it is where there from , blend into the culture and you will do fine ,
Depending on self development, Malaysia is really wonderful compared to Western culture. We don't need to own much, 1 home, 1 car, food, health, freedom to choose lifestyle according to affordability... Life is temporary anyway. Retirees aren't welcome in more expensive country
Yes asia is not the same anymore, it’s not a ‘free to do anything without repercussions for western people’ as it was in the past. Good foreigners are treated well (as in any other countries), and bad foreigners are looked down upon.
I’d rather rent long term in Thailand, Vietnam or Malaysia than own a house in Mexico, Brazil or Colombia. South east Asia offers so much more for much less than Latin or South America. And it’s actually safe compared to the mustaches in Latin America.
I hate to agree with you but it’s ever so true. I have been kidnapped in Colombia, robbed in Mexico and I don’t even drink or smoke. Many Americans are getting killed in Medellin now 🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️
Yes i from there and still amazes that people still trying to move over in latin america is more expensive the south east asia and less safe. Also if you look certain way or don't share the same likes or way of thinking you would have time over there. Unfortunately they are taking as example the worst traits of the west 🙃
My wife and I are Americans who have lived in Thailand for almost four years. The people here are very kind to us, and we're good friends with a family we met when we first moved here. We've never had any issues with local people.
I have not detected this poster sentiment living in Thailand. People are very kind and as long as you treat them respect with respect and try to learn the language they’re very gracious. On the other hand, there seems to be a lot of issues with Russians, Indians and other Middle Eastern nationalities that are hitting the headlines. Of course, this is a divide between educated and non-educated people who know how to act when their guests in another country.
If you come as a family, a couple or as a single western woman you'll most likely be looked upon favorably. It's different if you come as a single man, locals with suspect you of being a sexpat and look down on you until proved otherwise.
If foreigners can own properties easily, the locals would be doomed. Our land will be more expensive and our people with low income will be homeless in no time.
@@jimw7916Happens now in Canada - especially British Columbia - at the hands of the rich Chinese from mainland China, and a secondary wave of Sikhs from India. Get rid of ‘em before it’s too late.
Your greatly mistaken, it's not Americans or Canadians that are causing a unwelcome feeling in Southeast Asia, it's the young digital Nomads that act like the country they are guests in is theirs and move around Loud and Arrogant!
Off course you have to have restrictions on foreigners owning land. It’s common sense. They have to protect themselves, their culture and citizens. We in the west should learn from them.
@@NomadElite it would be only for foreigners. not citizens. which is fair. i live in canada and the housing market got ruined by foreign investors as well as corporations
And permanent visas are also more restrictive than in most EU countries, no free benefits for (illegal) immigrants, no leeching of the social welfare system... which is pretty non-existent (in Thailand) anyways...
I have a Malaysian wife and Malaysian children. After living in Malaysia over 14 years, I was never given any Malaysian PR (applied 8 years ago). Even the Spouse Visa has been becoming more and more difficult to renew (they keep adding documents to the list) and reduced duration of each visa from 5 years to 1-2 years now. So we left to Singapore as we have business in Singapore. Lived in Singapore for 3 years and our PR application got rejected too. We heard many of our Asian friends PR application has been rejected recently too. So, you are absolutely correct about settling down in SEA. But locals (Malaysians & Singaporeans) are very friendly and our group of friends including me felt no issue at all. I don't agree with this part of your statement.
I find these difficulties to be rather interesting. How do these countries in SE Asia plan to stop the coming population collapse?Singapore for instance has birthrate just over 1 which translates to a halving of the population every generation at some point going forward.
@@markkoehn4016 Singapore is already very overpopulated. Because they have no pension and limited social security, they don't necessarily need alot of young people. The country also draws in many millionaires (usually from China) that will go through an expedited citizenship process, which draws in more wealth to the country and making the naturalization process mainly for very wealthy individuals.
A tip to Americans and Canadians when traveling to south east Asia. Please do not tip, it’s not required there. And also don’t be so loud, Asians hate loud people.
Not sure what you are smoking bro.... I am a frequent traveler to asia. Only Japan fills your statement. Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam etc... those workers expect tipping, as that money feeds them and pays their bills. Perhaps you never actually traveled there.
@@robertstover4665 you don’t need to quit smoking crack, but let the pipe cool down once in a while. In Malaysia there are NO tips. There are no tips in Vietnam. In Thailand they will appreciate if you leave them 60 or 70 baht which is around $2 USD. I’m from Australia and have been to south east Asia more than you’ve been to Mexico or Colombia, you gringo.
@@robertstover4665 for Malaysia, I only learned about tipping recently, and it's mostly for food delivery and e-hailing, even then, it's totally optional, I got tipped when I was doing food delivery and I also tip a bit, but never for restaurants, restaurant workers are paid, so they don't need to earn from tips, plus there's service charge included in the bill.
It's okay to tips. As someone who works in service I really appreciate it and it makes my day even though it's not obligatory. Also, I've seen loud and obnoxious Asian customers.
I'm an expat living in Southeast Asia. The local people here are good people. Foreigners who are undesirable and think they're entitled should leave. Today!
they want to buy land south Asia doesn't want to sell land forever because like philipine we are over populated what happened if ten million people go here think it
The truth is that nationality and sovereignty is critical. If you believe you have a full set of rights outside your home country then you are just plain wrong. I live happily in Thailand with those limitations and quite happily fit into the local culture. If you come to Asia seeking to make it like the west then you will not be happy. It's very different culturally and if you can't fit in you will just become resentful. Wealthy yes but very resentful. So look at yourself and decide what makes you happy.
South East asia is bang on by not selling land to foreigners. Has caused rampant property inflation in the West and that's one of the main reasons for living in S.E.A. A hotel room in Thailand can cost the same as what it did 17 years ago.
The only thing I'd add to your statement is that Asia's Elite owns most of the real estate. The mainlanders park their money in Southeast Asian cities. It's better to have it in real estate than in the mainland!
"A hotel room in Thailand can cost the same as what it did 17 years ago" Yes and it's for one simply reason. Thailand does not run on the USD. IMHO. Forty years ago when I started travelling in Latin America I was amazed how afforable everything was. I kept returning by by the 2000's the latinos got sucked into the USD and Latin American capitalsbig cities, their hotels and meals ended costing the same price as Dallas Texas. The USD is a curse on the world and a bank account to the USA and I say that because it's the truth.
@@NomadEliteYou just look at Bali Indonesian. Foreigners choose to stay now and the price of daily necessities has increased 3 times Suppressing the purchasing power of local people
I'm an American Expat. in Indonesia. Indonesian people treat foreigners very well. They like Americans and Canadians. Alhamdulillah, they treat me like a rockstar everywhere I go. If only Americans treated people the same way.
@@MB-hv4nr major cities, Jakarta, Bundung, Yogykarta would be my picks. However indo is very easy to learn, you will be surprised to learn enough to get you by.. English is being taught in many schools these days, trust me I get questions on grammar weekly lol., and I dont even live there, Yet.
Moved to Cambodia, where I obtained a retirement visa and bought a condo. With a population of only 17 million, the country has so much potential. The government makes it extremely easy for foreigners to make the move, and the Buddhist religion, great weather, welcoming culture make it a great place to move.
As an American who lived the expat (immigrant) lifestyle for nearly 20 years, I noticed that the phenomenon of "not feeling welcome anymore" seemed closely aligned with the expat fantasy (delusion) of greener pastures elsewhere. Shangri-La isn't a destination but a state of mind.
Pick a spot on the planet. Go there and quietly make it your home. Assimilate by trying to learn the local language and by living amongst natives, not expats. That requires a change in lifestyle. The problem with expats in these countries is that now every expat thinks he/she needs to start a YT channel to recruit more expats to move to a place. They go to these countries and want to live like kings, so they build big homes, even though they cannot own the land, and try to turn their environment into their home country all the while complaining about the lack of amenities, hot temperatures, lack of infrastructure, bureaucracy, etc. The point is not to bring America, etc. to your new country, but to live in that new country and learn from it. You will never become Asian if you weren't born Asian, or even if you marry an Asian, but you can adapt to a new lifestyle that might actually be better than what you left.
you got a good bit right but really Thailand is not Thailand anymore if compared to 40 50 years ago… i could write a book about the differences and the pace of life is more hectic than America..the Cities have uncontrolled growth and even my Son is looking toward mediterranean countries rather than Asia… for me the Magic is really gone…progress has done its Job…and it’s a different generation…its bearable..but ya..YT morons do not tell the Truth…no one wants the Truth about the Madness around the Planet..we need complete Economic collapse like 1997 in SE Asia…another Pandemic.. to tame the humans down a bit.
@@rayn3038 i agree with everything you said. what is the root of the problem in your opinion? is it financial sector or bankers specifically, or is it some civilizational or cultural decline worldwide that is the problem? i think it has to do with population growth mostly.
My real experience with an American colleague that came to work in Malaysia. I'll let you decide if you think this is disrespectful. He needed to get a colleague's attention and that guy is sitting a few tables away from him. Instead of being respectful to walk over to his table, this 'American' took the Malaysia coins on his table and throw it to hit that colleague to get his attention. When i told him off, his remarks was 'there's no value to this' (referring to our Malaysian currency). You decide! I am sure not all Americans behaves this way so if you know how to respect others, you deserved to be respected regardless which Country you are from.
Singapore is not a good example of SE ASIA. Yes the native culture is Malaysian yet 75% of the citizens and residents are of Chinese origin. Singapore is more like another Hong Kong.
In the past two years I have spent substantial time in the People's Republic of China, Japan, Thailand, Malaysia (East and West), Laos and Indonesia. I'm middle-class American and get along very well in all these countries. I learn some of the language, learn and respect customs scrupulously, move at their speed and do not assume any exceptional status. As a result I have wonderful experiences. I perceive no looming threat in the region. I bear in mind that in essence I am an accident of exchange rates.
Exactly. Ownership is only a concept, not a reality. I know people in Spain who had their properties taken by the Government. We dont really own anything. Ownership is an attachment that we dont need. I am old.
I don't have any information to confirm nor deny you claims about SE Asia. In the last 14 years I have lived in Latin America, SE Asia and Oceana. I got news for you, Latin Americans don't like foreigners either, unless they can make money off of you. I don't claim to be an expert but having lived with Colombianas, owned a business etc. in Latin America I just tell you that it's not because you are an American or a German or that for the most part; it's because they perceive right or wrong that you are rich and have more than them. 'Celosa' is the Spanish word for jealousy and it's rampant in Latin culture. Some countries like Colombia it is the root of danger often over time or can be instant. You just don't understand Latinos if you ignore this fact. Yes it is possible to own land in about 1/3 of Latin American countries with pretty good property rights. The rest of them? NO, don't buy land in those countries that don't offer equal rights to all owners foreign and domestic, that is the only thing to look for. I don't know of really any country in SE Asia that has any or strong property rights in land ownership. I am not talking about condos. All I wan to get across is that most nationals of most countries absolutely do not really like having you in their country not even Costa Rica. They do want your money, always. People will say I am wrong and that's fine. I've had may say and I've owned land and business in Colombia for instance. I had no legal problems, I just had problems with the attitudes of the Colombianos. I do want to experience El Salvador as not been there yet.
This was a great read. Thank you. Could you be so kind as to list LATM countries that offer fair land ownership to foreigners. I just want a quite retirement property when the time comes.
@@NomadElite they like you way less, they have style u dont have, the asian cultures are dull and submissive and understated. you will not get fake nor real love in greater amounts in latin america, def the opposite. learn to not care.
Parlier: When I spent a month in Costa Rica at the end of '99, the US citizen population was 300,000. The population of CR was three million. I traveled the whole country by bus and was basically backpacking and stayed away from "tourist traps" too. If anyone would want to escape the US why would they even consider a place that has 10% US citizens? SMH!
I'm an expat with multiple citizenships and have lived in different countries for over 25 years. I also happen to be a Cultural Anthropologist. For centuries, the "issue of foreigners" as been a sensitive one. It's extremely important when moving to a new country, to respect local traditions, be kind and do what you can to integrate well. If foreigners are perceived as 'stealing jobs' from local people, driving up the cost of property and living for locals, and are being disrespectful of local people and culture - that is a powder keg of problems awaiting to explode. "Bad behaviour" is never welcomed. I also think that expat communities are really dangerous. When you cut yourself off in some rarefied world, misunderstanding and mistrust build. Embrace living in a new country beyond 'great weather and a cheap cost of living.' It's not always easy, but make an effort to learn a new language, live in places where you get to meet and make friends with locals. Honestly, if we learned to be good neighbors to everyone, we will have accomplished world peace. Thanks for bringing up this issue though. After Sweden I hope to move to Malaysia (and Japan), and I've been wondering when the tipping point of crappy American or otherwise 'disrespectful rich tourist' behaviour (American is one of my citizenships) would become a problem in the region.
Prejudice will always be there no matter how well you try to integrate. If you look and talk different ( even in their own language but with an accent), they will still be prejudiced against you.
malaysian dont have a problem were your from , believe me , they only care ( malay society ) is what is against islam , EG: talking how Isreal is right , maybe would not be a good move ,so respect there culture and religion you will do fine, no matter were your from in the world .
I don't want to sound argumentative as I am not disagreeing with your statements, I just point out that Americans are minor part of tourism in SE Asia as a whole. I run into many more Aussies, Kiwi, UK expats than American. I think Americans get more exposure because most commonly I find Americans abroad also trying to make money whether as gigaworkers/digital normads, ytubers or entrepreurs and thus they are 'out there always mixing and hussling' and I don't men those as derogatory. To our American roots we tend to be talktative an opinionated because it's a part of being American and that does not work outside of America. I've learned through experience to dial it back and keep my effn' mouth shut after 12 years living abroad unless I am sitting with true friends. I am a 'guest' of these countries.
Immigrants from India are flooding into Canada at record numbers. there’s no mistake. They are heavily involved in the gang wars. We currently have going on here, as well as basically taking all the level entry jobs away from the youth of the area. There is a massive housing shortage and skyrocketing rents also linked they’re involved in numerous accidents as they are completely unskilled at that particular job. Hoping the conservative government gets elected in Canada, is the only way to curb this current Crisis
@@Jimbo-v3mso why google microsoft channel adobe pepsi and 100 such big multinationals trusted indians to be their CEOs? May be these companies dont know what they are doing. You should guide them and find trustworthy people for them from australia because 1.4 billion indians are all worthless as per your definition.
People who come to Canada are not indians , they are khalistanis - the sikh separatists like Nijjar who are loved by Jagmeet singh party and then loved by trudeau . They get canadian visa based on a paper saying that they are scared of indian gov. Thats all. General indian (who is not sikh) come to canada only after a grading system based on his higher education and english skill. Check how Indians enter in canada on your immigration website. Indian students pay 25 billion USD to canada each year. They dont come for free. They pay canada before they enter. Check the facts before releasing here your frustration of failure in life. And lastly i liked how you said they are completely unskilled, causing work place accidents still they are getting 10000 cad per month to increase rentals and housing prices to record level.cheap unskilled poor indian labour is disturbing the whole canadian real estate market. 👍🏻 wow.
@@NomadElitehow many rich immigrants or people are there in this world? Do you know that? Not even 1 percent of the world’s population. So in any case or in any country they will have to live among the other 99 percent normal or poor people.
I have been living in Sarawak, East Malaysia for the last 4 years. It is getting better and better. I dont understand how you could have moved from Kuching, its a wonderful place. So pleased that you are discouraging people from moving here. East Malaysia has all its own resources. 78% renewable energy and growing in Sarawak, abundant land and lovely food. The people are so lovely, especially when you speak in your best Sarawakian. And very low violent crime rate.
lots of illegal logging happening in sarawak jungles. crime is on par i wont claim “very” safe. use common sense. if you are caucasian people might treat you better because “all whites are rich”. i am stereotyping but there’s some truth to that historically. westerners always says people are so friendly in asia well that’s because some have the perceptions you are rich and powerful (colonialism). notice east indians tends to use “sir” a lot?
I´m French and lived in SEA for 15 years before moving to South America where I reside now for 17 years. Loved my time in SEA, but I´ll die in South America as I feel like home here!
@@thomasclementz8149 Sounds lovely!! Of the three countries you travel to for business, which would be your preference? I was thinking of Cuenca EC, however they’ve been dealing with not so great infrastructure, leading to lack of water. and electricity. Otherwise, expats and Cuencanos seem to love it there. I’m hoping the politicians get sensible and make the needed changes. What do you think of Peru? I’d like to visit.
In the Philippines there are 2 ways to become citizen. 1. Marry a filipino/filipina and much easy to file for citizenship. 2. When you are already staying long, you can file for citizenship through legislative options though a long process.
@Bornonjuly7052: Having lived there for three years I find the PI to be the seediest place in all of SEA, no matter where you live and no I did not live in Manila or even close to it. Of all the countries I lived in/visited the PI is infested with vermin of all types & categories. Crime and corruption are rampant in the PI too. Just about the caliber of Mexico especially in the border regions and that's just the police. BTW, July, I have a Filipina wife and we don't live there and she doesn't even like it either. She's from a nice small town/village in N. Samar.
@@skipperclinton1087i'm sorry to hear that but you have a point, every other country in Asia is getting their crap together while the PH stays sick. Decades of mismanagement made a country only slightly behind South Korea after WWII into a basketcase at the bottom, overtaken by almost all its neighbors. A lot of the educated have been fleeing and the worse it gets here the faster they go.
Wow! You are saying the exact opposite of my experience. Americans are very welcome and likes. My experience is extensively in the Philippines plus Indonesia and Thailand.
Filipinos love foreigners but foreign investment is restrictive. The law doesn't allow foreign ownership of land and foreign ownership of specific industries beyond certain percentages is also limited. There are also restrictions and regulations on a lot of professions. Before the inflation spiked, the low cost of living (outside of Manila) was a plus
SE Asia isn't really the perfect place to settle down for Westerners who don't have plans to marry locals to purchase and own private residential lands on their behalf. Their foreign investment laws, especially in Thailand and the Philippines, are designed to train their citizens to extract hard-earned equity from Western investors through mandatory joint venture agreements for industries like natural resource extraction and real estate. Thais and Filipinos aren't born to be industrialists, but rather to be landlords and real estate speculators.
Wow. The last sentence is so well put. I've always told people Filipinos are terrible businessmen, but I've never been able to explain it all the way like that.
If you live in a foreign country, you need to be fluent in the local language to feel the connection. As a Khmer Canadian from Quebec, I'm fluent in English, French and Khmer. There are Americans or Canadians who are so fluent in Khmer that the locals treat them like one of their own.
You are not a brang, so you would not know. Khmers are nice for the most part, but the way Cambodia treats you is different from the way they treat the " brang" because our face is different. And definitely Khmers are nicer than the Thais. Having said that, when the Pandemic started, I was in Cambodia and immediately, the locals changed. Many stores adopted a " no borotes"and " no brang" policy. My friends were barred from hotels, shops, restaurants, hair salons, etc. Bang! overnight! Doors slammed in people's faces. They did not blame the Chinese, but it was the " brang" that were at fault for the Covid. I was walking down the street and these youngsters on motorcycles yelled " Korona!"" Korona!" at me. I had a job in KH and I left. I was becoming very, very unfriendly. I may want to go again, but I am hesitant. I went to Mexico after Cambodia and no store barred me from entering. They even had signs that it was prohibited to discriminate against people because of race, religion, etc. I felt relieved.
I formerly lived in a few different places in Thailand for about 6 years. I went to Malaysia many times as well as Cambodia, Laos and Singapore. I'm getting married to my Thai fiancé but have moved back to America. Thailand became an impossible place to live a normal life and be happy. Even my fiancé, who owns land and a condo in Bangkok says the same thing. Covid is what did it for us. We owned a restaurant and I was also a full-time university teacher. The main issue was the Thai government. They never seemed to know what they were doing and there were too many inconsistencies with their immigration policies. However, having come to the same conclusion as this gentleman. I would have rather gone back home to make real money and being a property owner in the US, I had a home that was paid for and property to build on. I actually lost more money by going to Asia and trying to live, than if I just stayed in America for another 5 years and then sold my home and moved. Besides, I was a boat builder and sailor for years and I wanted to buy a nice 40'-50' boat and liveaboard and travel by water, something that was impossible to do in Thailand. I thought about the Phillipines as well, but after a trip to Singapore I realized that I needed real money. Thailand was fine as long as I stayed in Thailand, but whenever I went elsewhere, it cost way more money than I was used to paying. The bottom line turned out to be for me, that the best quality of life and the most money that I could make was back in my home country. I had my fill of Asia anyway. It was a worthwhile endeavor but not sustainable. The U.S. is huge and the Eastern waterways and the Great Lakes and Gulf of Mexico are forever large. It will take years to explore it all and the Bahamas are only 60 miles off the coast of Florida. I'm really glad to be home and back on track.
Was in Singapore last month. Several trips there in the past two years. Anyone who has been to the Marina Bay area (MBS Hotel and Casino, Ferris Wheel etc... is standing on land once underneath the ocean. Reclaiming land from the ocean is an ongoing process there. Amazing
@@robertstover4665 Singapore is the most boring and over policed country (if you can call it that) in south east Asia. Why don’t you travel to Saudi Arabia next? You’d like it there.
@@MEN101boring = safe. I’d rather safe and having peace of mind over excitement. Esp being parents of young children. Not everyone lives somewhere for thrills- that’s a holiday destination for me.
no thanks.. so far south east asia still the most stable and safe compare with other region.. and no war in the last 30 years in the region (except civil war in myanmar).. peace amongs neighbor..
Never take anything for granted. That's the kiss of death! China's growing middle class will require more resources than ever. It's why the mainland is expanding so rapidly.
@@NomadElite : thats for sure.. but i think china wont do it bluntly to take other resources..what i see in south china sea, all china do only posturing gesture, they are not really using millitary weapon.. their culture is trading.. so at the end they wanna ask for a negotiation that lead into trade..
Then you have not noticed their approach to Tibet,Hongkong,the Philippines? In the latter,they’ve taken over our fishing territories,bought real estates there illegally,sent spies there and corrupted our government officials. Hardly a country that engages in ‘trading’ alone.
China uses minimum force, maximum deception, and tough negotiations to succeed. Time....they like to get things done fast, but can play a waiting game too@
Malaysian here went to US. I loved US, the wage is so high! And cost of living is actually very less comparatively as well! Whole chicken just for $5 And lots of cool project to work in! When I went to US embassy in Malaysia, the lines are huge. The interview are actually pretty quick just lots of people want to go to US. I doubt most of Vietnam, Philippine, Singaporean, Malaysian hates American. Some definitely.
As a Singapore citizen, I think most Singaporeans wouldn't want foreigners to naturalize as Singapore Citizens unless they have a child that would be liable for military service or contribute to the country significantly through financial means. Alot of foreigners have National Service as their biggest 'Worry' about getting Singapore Citizenship and try to look for ways to dodge it for themselves or their children, but doing this is exactly why most Singaporeans don't think fondly of them naturalizing. It's seen as trying to reap all the rewards of citizenship without any of the civic duty that comes with it.
I just came back from multiple calendar months in SE Asia and this seems like a bit of an exaggeration lol .. I was treated great as a foreigner it’s all about how you operate as an individual .. There’s things to work around depending on where you go but it’s not impossible .. Maybe it’s a good thing people are sleeping on Asia .. Just found the channel and it’s definitely solid overall
3:27 you say “They make it really hard for you to own property”. Regarding Cambodia , are you sure about that? A $55K USD 1 bedroom apartment in Phnom Penh is comparatively less hard than a similar apartment in a major US city. From my point of view “they” in US make it hard for me to own an apartment… Edit: I can get a 1 year visa for for about $300 USD. As a middle class person myself , I would like to have options. How many options can a middle class person have actually …? Also citizenship is usually way more expensive than just the cost of a property … and idk I lived in Latin America , I didn’t feel as safe there compared to Asia (Korea, Thailand, Japan)
Malaysia autonomy on being neutral and balancing major power is so good and risk calculated. Government did so well not to allow any foreign military base to be established.. especially Western powers.
Most people around the world will treat you at face value. Behave well, get treated well. Behave poorly, get prepared to be booted out of which ever country you are visiting. Golden rule: if you wouldn't do it in your own backyard, don't do it in theirs.
What you list are mostly general considerations any expat should think about. I visit KL and Kuching often, and have never had any issues as a Westerner. Then again, I’m not from North America. Citizenship? Tit for Tat, how easy is it to get a US or Canadian citizenship? You sound like a prepper.
I am from Portugal. I lived 3 years in the UK, 1 year in France, 1 year in Norway, 1:year in Sweden, some months in other places like US, Mexico, Brazil... The last 20 years I have been living in Peru. I got the citizenship. Comíng to Peru was my best decision in life!
As a westerner I live life better in South east Asia than the west , better food better weather cheaper to live and most important the people are more friendly
I lost my job a few months ago after 30 years at the same company in Michigan. For my sudden retirement I have only been focused on Southeast Asia for the excitement, culture shock and low cost of living to make my savings go but as far as possible. I owned enough property in my life and still trying to get rid of some so I don't think I would buy anymore. But you're making me think about the potential desperate need for a second citizenship. Thank you!
Lived in Thailand 2 and half years never felt any of this unwelcomeness you speak of. Loved it there and will go back. Laos was the same too, very nice. You just need to be more flexible and adjust to where you're living more.
Thanks God i have already Malaysia permanent residents and I have too Indonesia permanent resident ,, hopefully people learning one country is never will be enough in this time of the world .
i am not Malaysian citizenship and i don't care about it also . I am only Malaysian permanent resident,, so i can have any many other citizenships or permanent residents as i can got it from this world.
Do you mind sharing where you are originally from? Also, how long did you live in Malaysia for until you were granted PR? Was it hard you get? Thanks in advance!
Thai-Lao American here and I agree with everything you say. Even I who's was born in Thailand and frequently travel to and from Thailand since 1995 is perceived as a foreigner. In knowing this, I do not speak Thai when I am out and about, I also do not let the locals know I understand Thai. Let me be the first to say the slogan "The Land of Smiles" is a false statement and perception of Thais. They do not like foreigners. How many of you have and to pay a "foreigner price" for goods and services? Does this occur anywhere else? If this happened in America, we would be screaming discrimination to the heavens. Thais will smile in your face and literally talk sh*t about you to your face. I've had it happen on many occasions. I love the look on their faces when I respond in Thai and they're shocked that they're caught talking sh*t. This also goes for other countries too not just Thailand. It happens in Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia. Although I don't speak these languages, I've traveled with people that does.
I think we can distinguish between US foreign policy and Americans per se. We are really quite compassionate and well informed and its not in our nature to be rude to foreigners. Welcome all , but yes our laws /path to residency is complicated.
sure but if "exceptionalism" is a trait of certain ppl...then ppl will start resenting it..more and more..bad enough the atrocious foreign policy but when ignorance, arrogance and hubris are also present..it gets a bit much even for the most tolerant of nations like SE Asia times are changing...ppl are fed up with it...respect ppl..try to integrate..be respectful to laws and customs...not just come there to flex and expect the world to be at your feet because you are something by accident of birth or by moving there
I would have to ask where is everyone going? If I look at my recommendations in YT because this video says Leave Sth East Asia, I got a bunch of recommendations with videos saying everyone is leaving Thailand, Malaysia, Canada, Australia, USA. UK, etc. So where are they all going? People migrate all the time, the difference is now we get to see their issues on YT videos because some don't seem to have any filters. So, where is everyone going?
"You want to live in an environment where you... are perceived as someone good If you are perceived as less than, that is not a good foundation to build upon" Congratulations you just described the existence of Black and indigenous North Americans in two sentences!
The biggest problem is real estate speculation when foreigners buy property like in the USA the locals suffer Miami San Francisco and many other cities other countries are just trying to protect their local population weather Mexico or Thailand ects . Property rights aren't always guaranteed anything can happen anywhere just ask people who fled after their property was siezed.
San Francisco native 🌁 here. Owning real estate in this city is for the rich: too many laws, taxes fees. Owning in lesser populated areas is better for the middle class. Renting in my hometown is also expensive: $5k per month for a low end but OK apartment! Pile on utilities and board. That requires a boatload 🚢 of cash 💸! 😭
Positioning safely in Asia amid potential war is tricky. Citizens may have to fight, and China’s dominance could draw in countries with large Chinese populations.
I'm American, married to a Filipina for 10 years. Just retired and moved to the Philippines 2 years ago. We have an 8 year old in school. Everyone has always been friendly and helpful. Way more than in the US. I'm not sure why I would ever want to be a citizen here. We can buy property because I'm married to a Philippines citizen. I think you belong in California. Have fun jack.
I agree that compared to 10, 20 years ago, Singapore has become less welcoming to white westerners. But that's not to say it has become 'racist'. It is also ironic to hear this complaint seeing the right wing movement in the West now complaining about immigration in their own backyard. What they probably mean is that the atmosphere is not the kowtow, down on our knees begging that used to be the case. Let me explain - when my father graduated from university (and he had served national service as a commissioned officer) in the sixties, he got an entry level job in a British company. Several rungs above him was a retired British sergeant (retired from a Singapore posting) who had no concept of management or business administration. It puzzles him to this day why there was this 'superior' in that organisation. My father eventually left, got his MBA and Phd (in management no less) and retired as a C-suite in a major Singapore organisation. I've worked overseas and alongside international colleagues and trust me - Singaporeans square up to everyone else and stand shoulder to shoulder. We graduate from the same schools and have our own strengths (eg military service) and we are no longer in an age where we have to cut special deals to everyone to get them to come - not everyone is Taylor (for whom we did make an exception). So, you need to get sized up to the competition and get treated the same as everyone else, no special favours just because of where you came from and that includes National Service if it is applicable.
"Right wing" good to see you're using the elitist words of division. The problem with illegal immigration to the US is that the politicians use US taxpayer.money to feed house them while allowing our veterans and citizens to sleep on the street. Does SEA allow people to immigrate there and steal the money from their citizens to house them and value them above their own citizens? If so, I will spread that info and there will be thousands on your door step and we will call you "right wing" if you complain. And do you think those in power in the US are encouraging illegal immigration out of the generosity of their pure hearts lol. They could close down the border in a week if they wanted to. Over 80,000 children missing, human trafficking sky rockets, gang violence in poor neighborhoods increased along with deaths from illegal drugs, these are facts that correlate with the numbers of illegal entry encouraging illegal immigration hurts those most vulnerable. Yes there are decent people coming in but why can't we determine who comes in only to let rhe decent people come in with the gangs on their heels, the same violence many wanted to escape from.
Reality is that Singapore's immigration process has become super tough for anyone to naturalize unless you are a 1) Malaysian or 2) Rich Individual from HK/PRC/Taiwan . Reason for this is simple: 1) Singapore wants their population to keep growing but does not want their culture eroded, Malaysians are the closest type of people that are culturally similar to Singapore and can integrate well. 2) The Singapore government has specifically gone on record that their intent is for the 'Ethnic mandate' to be upholded. Because Chinese birth rates in Singapore are significantly lower than Malay/Indian ones, there is a huge emphasis on only naturalizing the rich Chinese people. So yes, your race has alot to do with your PR application.
Ive lived in singapore for 13 years and now looking at Malaysia I havent detected much anti US sentiment, however the mix of expats has changed since COVID..amd also Singapore has become very expensive..but still a great place to live. Malaysia is quite friendly towards foreigners, including expats from UK/EU/ US/ ANZ ..
Citizenship is not important as long as one be given permanent residentship.The good way to live in s.e.a. is to adopt their way of life n im sure they will feel at home n welcome😊
Singapore: Prior to 2010, there were approx 24,000 PRs per year available... After that, it was cut in half or less available. Then, they are divided into allocations, based on your origins.. I have an EP, but I applied for my PR and I was rejected 3 times, so I gave up, and still an EP.. I suspect that the remaining PRs are reserved for the "desirable foreign investors...
It’s true I’m from America 🇺🇸 I lived in Bali Indonesia 🇮🇩 2 years I felt the hate in everyone’s eyes 👀 the smiles where fake 9 times out of 10! 💯in Mexico 🇲🇽 I lived one year same also In anytala Turkey 🇹🇷 same I ended up in Colombia 🇨🇴 and never felt that one time here 1 year now
Living in any part of the world comes with its own unique set of advantages and disadvantages. We are sure to encounter the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of a place. The key factor is whether the chosen location aligns with our preferences; that is what truly matters. No one should impose their choice of residence on us. If we find ourselves dissatisfied with a place, we have the freedom to move on, knowing that someone else will take our place. Different regions cater to diverse individuals, each with their own unique tastes and preferences. Instead of complaining, it is more beneficial to adapt and embrace the local culture, gaining a deeper understanding to smoothly integrate into society. Perhaps the issue lies within us; only through open-mindedness can we uncover the root of the matter.
The demographic of immigrants into SE Asia has changed. More HNW individuals from East Asia e.g. China, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan will move to SE Asia. These individuals don’t mind to purchase properties because of they have deep pockets and properties in their own countries are very expensive. Also, Muslims HNW individuals from developed countries e.g. the UK, Canada, the US, Australia and Europe are also going into SE Asia in droves especially Malaysia. It is basically easy for them to practice Islam in Malaysia. For the west expats purchasing properties for long term and not getting PR are a big “No, No”. May see big exit for this group to other continent e.g. Central and South America.
American here. I have lived in Asia for 25 years and have experienced nothing but respect from locals in the various countries I have lived in. People in general accept you if you are friendly and accept them as equals. A smile melts the differences between cultures. They understand that Americans are not anything like the American government. They have the same in their own countries where the common people are often not happy with their country's leadership. If a major war comes things could change for many expats. It depends on what country you are in. SE Asia is pretty neutral in regards to the world super powers. I see it as a safe place to be if wars escalates in the world.
yes we have changed , its not a free pass no more to do anything without repercussion .You are only here in Singapore because we are Singaporeans and we live it large . WE made it happen and we still are making it happen all day , everyday .So we can decide who suits our live style and who dont init .Reality check yourself on you chat and it says alot about you then both Singapore and Malaysia.
Over a 15 year period I have spent years of my life in Asia (mostly India) and South-East Asia (mostly Thailand) with long visits up to 8 months at a time, and I love it there. But the way they reacted during Covid and the level of government control in places like Thailand has made me very aware that in these times of growing totalitarianism (in the West, but really everywhere) that is not the place I want to be. We left Spain, which had a horrific lockdown with police in the streets checking that people were staying at home (and much more) and moved to Mexico. Asians have a strong collectivist culture and are not necessarily the kind of people that will stand up to tyranny. You only have to look at the social credit system and face recognition in China to see how bad this can get. Mexicans culture is very different in that sense. Much more awareness of how important freedom is.
@JGVD601 For non-confirmists and whiners, better stay put where you are. We’re having enough troubles of our own anyway. Maintaining the status quote is the best way moving forward.
It’s so strange to hear that Westerners are no longer perceived positively in SE Asia. I’ve spent 80% of the last 15 years in Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and the Philippines, and am in Thailand now. People in all these countries are so hospitable year after year and at the present time. I also spent half of the last three years in the United States, where media depictions have almost no connection with everyday life and relationships. People were pleasant as always, friendly, almost no one talked about politics, woman were very inviting to me, etc. This video relects media depictions and doesn’t seem to be connected at all with the reality of relationships on the ground. It’s okay with me because it is the many expat social misfits who had trouble in their own countries, then had trouble in the SE Asia country they ran to. and now want to leave because people don’t take a liking to fat, smoking, shaggy greasy haired, old men wearing sleeveless T-shirts as if they are still 18 years old and shorty pants as if they are little boys. Goodbye to those expats, who, I suppose, are the audience for this video.
Are you in the right paradigm? I agree totally that Boomers need more security, as times ahead appear super risky. But exiting the financial markets for something less risky, like real property, seems vastly more relevant. Boomer money in stocks, or bank deposits, or even pensions, WILL NOT be protected by moving to Paraguay or anywhere else. Whereas if you have a house, bought and paid for, even in a Shit Storm Central location like California, you may still be okay. Yes, you have to raise enough cash for a carton of eggs every week, and pick some fruit from your garden, but life goes on. But If derivatives crash the market, or your deposits get bailed in, or inflation decimates your pension, no matter what country your car is parked in, you will be living in it...
Im Ukrainian and im thinking about where to live, i was thinking about Thailand or Malaysia bc i work remotely. And want to experience a new culture. Is this good option or better choose Usa or staying in Europe? Im 20 btw
I don't agree with you about people not liking me because I am from the USA. Of course I treat EVERYONE with respect. NO ONE is below me. I love everyone especially the poor. No prejudice. "We are the flowers of one garden" Bahai
Singaporean here and we aren’t anti America or anti American. So I’m confused by this chicken little the sky is falling video post. It’s like taking one tiny sample of an opinion and then painting everyone with broad strokes. I think Singaporeans aren’t rude to Americans in general. Unless the person was rude to a local and acting like a local needs to kiss their feet, we are generally a very friendly bunch.
I visited KL in 2023. I didn't feel unwelcome, but I also didn't really associate with people much. I felt highly welcome in stores - no discord. I also spent 6 months in Japan during winter/spring 2022-2023, and although it's not South-East Asia, I observed that seemingly more people were talking behind my back than in the past. I don't really get why, but the people casually talking behind my back about me were all "zoomers" (specifically young adults around 18-22). The comments weren't too bad, but they kinda stick in my memory cuz my brain doesn't like that kinda thing. However, Haneda Airport has the best reception ever, so if I could I would buy an apartment inside Haneda Airport and just live there. Jokes aside, in general, Japan has high taxes and no easy visas. However, attaining citizenship is highly possible and has been possible for a long time already, but fluency in Japanese and cultural adaptation is a prerequisite. I am fluent in the language, but I don't see Japan as my end-game. Right now I'm in Georgia for their 1% income tax, so I'm basically hanging out with Russians and Georgians here in Batumi. Georgia doesn't feel like my final destination, but I don't fear a Russian invasion because the ruling political party is not at all interested in picking a fight with Russia. Once my portfolio is big enough, maybe I'll be off to Uruguay in another 5-10 years! Paraguay seems nice, but just a little too hot, but I'd go for it if I decided that I don't care about proximity to Europe and proximity to Asia. I'm probably still a bit brainwashed with the notion of crime being a big problem in Latin America. I'd totally be OK with a start in Uruguay though, perhaps combining Uruguay and Paraguay for a period of time. Uruguay has a preferable climate for retirement (at age 60+), whereas apparently Paraguay is extremely tax-friendly. I'll finally be out of Norway's evil tax net in 2026, so then I will reconsider things thoroughly and won't have to worry about bilateral tax agreements when deciding on a country I want to live in. I realize language matters a lot when we choose where to live, and I can only learn so many during my limited lifespan. I'm not interested in learning more than at most 2 more languages at this point. I current speak Norwegian, English, Japanese, and frankly I feel like a linguistic idiot here in Georgian, since I don't even speak Russian (the biggest lingua franca in Batumi because of the high number of Russians). While Russian is definitely useful in a significant number of countries around the world, I think I would much rather learn Spanish and learn to thrive in a Spanish-language environment. This strategy would even allow me to retire in Spain in old age, in case doing so happens to make sense in another 20-30 years. Geopolitically and historically I think Latin America is numero uno for avoiding a hypothetical WW3. War never really makes sense, but we've had countless wars in human history...
I get it. I’m in Thailand but think of leaving in the next year or two. The digital nomad hype changed many places :( some places improved and some killed good vibes. As an Arabic woman I feel very welcome however I don’t feel like I can welcome all these people who think bitcoin is everything instead of community and culture ❤
White guy here, born in South Africa. Even I dislike the US Leaders or should I say the Western Leaders. And this is coming from a Western man. I'm with the Asian people here, it's not an issue with foreigners, but the leaders. And yes, some foreigners has the attitude that they own everything and they the best. Bad attitude, I'm talking about a specific country here.
The truth/facts more people have moved to South East Asian than South American countries, due to higher techknowledge and advanced economy, cost of living, dynamic cities/rich natures, safer for foreigners and stable governments, culture richness and opportunities.
The reality is China is the dominant country in Asia and when the expected war erupts between China and America,whose side will the rest of Asia take? Even is America wins which is not assured they will go home and leave behind deep resentment as happened in Europe.
It's not that bad, many Chinese live in new york, California, Canada. I heard America can technically move to china, just not many people do, only about 100,000 in mainland China.
You are probably correct BUT it's not a new problem and Westerners are not the only ones they resent. I have lived in SE Asia and had my share of honest conversations and I don't recall too many Asians in love with the Chinese either. Everyone loves who they make money off of and the day the stop making money they don't like them any longer. I will never be anything but a foreigner to them, I accept that and mind my own business, keep inside my lanes, don't flirt with their daughers and don't fuel any fire of dislike. So far I've managed to project that personal and people in general just leave me alone which I prefer. I'm an interloper, I know who I am in their eyes.
if the war broke.. doesnt matter who win.. whoever win will be broke as hell.. especially if they using nuke attack.. thats also effecting whole world..
Many of China's neighbours are dependent on the Chinese economy. ASEAN was created as a pro American, pro 'west' organization, today its trade with China is almost $1 trillion : the world's largest trading relationship ; there is no way Asean can join a containment policy against its largest trading partner.
Almost every country in Asia will take the side of America, except maybe a few in Southeast Asia who might be neutral. There is absolutely no way Japan, India, Korea, Philippines, Taiwan, South Korea or even Vietnam (despite it's history with the US) will take the side of China. All of them despise China. India has the second largest pure force in terms of military in Asia, and Japan is rearming itself. Both countries aren't really China friendly.
I live in a city in Argentina called Mar del Plata. For years I've been planning to visit Vivoratá but never had the guts to actually go on with it and do it. I guess I'm too old for adventures.
Asia has gotten too expensive, restricted and racist toward white American men. It's the polar opposite of when I lived there three decades ago.... in the 1990s and early 2000s places like Thailand was a literal paradise for Americans.... Nowadays not so much. Yes, the lifestyle is still better than most Western countries, but there's better deals elsewhere.
Well, with Thailand so many farang have made a bad reputation. And the red light industry income has skewed the cost of living for the locals. A lot of them aren't having kids because of the costs. The birth rate has gone lower than 1.5 per woman. I'd rather live somewhere where the foreign money hasn't made locals' lives harder.
Their is absolutely no need for an expat westerner to try and become a citizen of an asian country.. just be who you are and keep your home citizenship.. and be what you are .. a european or of european descent. You arent an asia and font need to become one
Your statement is presumptuous, and your assumption is predicated on that relationships between countries will remain positive. Good times don't continue forever. You better have at least permanent residency or citizenship during a black swan event. That is a fact.
If you want all of the rights that you enjoy in your home country you should stay put. There are no guarantees in foreign countries. Countries often change their immigration laws, like Asian countries have done lately. So, as a traveler, you must be prepared for such changes.
Malaysian here.
I think we are mature enough to distinguish American and America. As long as you're respectful and understand Asian culture, you will be perceived as a such.
Agree. America is disliked across a large proportion of the globe because of its stance in certain geopolitical issues. However Americans, as you say if they are respectful and don’t enforce their culture on their host culture, and attempt at least partial assimilation then it’s all good. Coming from a Welshman with 7 yrs Malaysia, 20 yrs Asia, countless years on EU continent, 1 yr USA, 1yr Canada, 1 yr Latin America.
yep thats how the local people roll . you show respect in return you get respect , too many foreigners come here thinking it should be how it is where there from , blend into the culture and you will do fine ,
Depending on self development, Malaysia is really wonderful compared to Western culture.
We don't need to own much, 1 home, 1 car, food, health, freedom to choose lifestyle according to affordability...
Life is temporary anyway. Retirees aren't welcome in more expensive country
Or speak Malay
@@DaveD4v3 I'm wondering if this is the real complaint here... just an expectation of special treatment
I am a Malaysian and never have any issue with Americans generally. It's the American foreign policies that make Americans look bad.
That's great to hear!
what look bad? they are indeed bad from the very start
Thanks for that u have a awesome country with a fascinating culture
What do you think of cambodia? Its easy to get a work visa and extend it indefinitely plus friendly. @NomadElite
As an American trust me we hate the US policies too.
Yes asia is not the same anymore, it’s not a ‘free to do anything without repercussions for western people’ as it was in the past. Good foreigners are treated well (as in any other countries), and bad foreigners are looked down upon.
good! it's about time
What's a good foreigner?
@@aralsea1one that behaves and respects the country they are in
I still get treated a lot better in SE Asia than I was in my own country.
@@aralsea1 One who gives them money
Singapore isn't all of South East Asia. One client isn't all clients. Move along
It's just one of many experiences shared this year, including plenty of similar experiences from Thailand and Malaysia.
@@NomadEliteNot enough of southeast asia was experienced. Move along
Thailand, Philippines, Cambodia, Vietnam are doing fine, thank you.
Singpaore is full of corrupt Chinese people. Lots of nice people but it's overridden with scammers, cheaters, and liars.
Singapore is the most pro Western ally in SE asia
Singapore is friend to all
Enemy to none
I’d rather rent long term in Thailand, Vietnam or Malaysia than own a house in Mexico, Brazil or Colombia. South east Asia offers so much more for much less than Latin or South America. And it’s actually safe compared to the mustaches in Latin America.
Except for Sarawak MM2H the Malaysia mainland programs now require the purchase of property.
I hate to agree with you but it’s ever so true. I have been kidnapped in Colombia, robbed in Mexico and I don’t even drink or smoke. Many Americans are getting killed in Medellin now 🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️
Yes i from there and still amazes that people still trying to move over in latin america is more expensive the south east asia and less safe. Also if you look certain way or don't share the same likes or way of thinking you would have time over there. Unfortunately they are taking as example the worst traits of the west 🙃
but i have friends from honduras, mexico they havent go to south east asia but they do potrays that SEA regions is not really safe ...
My wife and I are Americans who have lived in Thailand for almost four years. The people here are very kind to us, and we're good friends with a family we met when we first moved here. We've never had any issues with local people.
I have not detected this poster sentiment living in Thailand. People are very kind and as long as you treat them respect with respect and try to learn the language they’re very gracious. On the other hand, there seems to be a lot of issues with Russians, Indians and other Middle Eastern nationalities that are hitting the headlines. Of course, this is a divide between educated and non-educated people who know how to act when their guests in another country.
If you come as a family, a couple or as a single western woman you'll most likely be looked upon favorably.
It's different if you come as a single man, locals with suspect you of being a sexpat and look down on you until proved otherwise.
Us to. No issues.
Us too. No issues.
@@FrankNBeans9 are you a thai or atleast an expat in thailand?
If foreigners can own properties easily, the locals would be doomed. Our land will be more expensive and our people with low income will be homeless in no time.
We've added his name to the description of the video. Thanks.
Most of the land is owned by upper class Thai people who blame foreigners to avoid scrutiny though
thats what happened to Australia. Too many immigrants taking all the houses and raising prices.
However the moment we will forbid your people to own property in our country , you will scream racism and discrimination 🤷♂️
@@jimw7916Happens now in Canada - especially British Columbia - at the hands of the rich Chinese from mainland China, and a secondary wave of Sikhs from India. Get rid of ‘em before it’s too late.
Your greatly mistaken, it's not Americans or Canadians that are causing a unwelcome feeling in Southeast Asia, it's the young digital Nomads that act like the country they are guests in is theirs and move around Loud and Arrogant!
Off course you have to have restrictions on foreigners owning land. It’s common sense. They have to protect themselves, their culture and citizens. We in the west should learn from them.
Wise words. I agree with you - we should start restricting land ownership immediately. I'd pass this bill in a heartbeat.
@@NomadElite it would be only for foreigners. not citizens. which is fair. i live in canada and the housing market got ruined by foreign investors as well as corporations
And permanent visas are also more restrictive than in most EU countries, no free benefits for (illegal) immigrants, no leeching of the social welfare system... which is pretty non-existent (in Thailand) anyways...
@@hiriotapa1983 they don't invade other countries and topple governments so why would they offer benefits to illegals ?
Except Umited States isn't doing same. 😂
I have a Malaysian wife and Malaysian children. After living in Malaysia over 14 years, I was never given any Malaysian PR (applied 8 years ago). Even the Spouse Visa has been becoming more and more difficult to renew (they keep adding documents to the list) and reduced duration of each visa from 5 years to 1-2 years now. So we left to Singapore as we have business in Singapore. Lived in Singapore for 3 years and our PR application got rejected too. We heard many of our Asian friends PR application has been rejected recently too.
So, you are absolutely correct about settling down in SEA. But locals (Malaysians & Singaporeans) are very friendly and our group of friends including me felt no issue at all. I don't agree with this part of your statement.
Singapore should be way more difficult to get PR than Malaysia, unless you are a malaysian😊. We take in Malaysians
You deserve to obtain PR!
I find these difficulties to be rather interesting. How do these countries in SE Asia plan to stop the coming population collapse?Singapore for instance has birthrate just over 1 which translates to a halving of the population every generation at some point going forward.
interesting , it took me 12 years to finally get mine ,
@@markkoehn4016 Singapore is already very overpopulated. Because they have no pension and limited social security, they don't necessarily need alot of young people. The country also draws in many millionaires (usually from China) that will go through an expedited citizenship process, which draws in more wealth to the country and making the naturalization process mainly for very wealthy individuals.
A tip to Americans and Canadians when traveling to south east Asia. Please do not tip, it’s not required there. And also don’t be so loud, Asians hate loud people.
Not sure what you are smoking bro.... I am a frequent traveler to asia. Only Japan fills your statement. Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam etc... those workers expect tipping, as that money feeds them and pays their bills. Perhaps you never actually traveled there.
im vietnamese and i dont know what tips is. maybe sometime but not a must
@@robertstover4665 you don’t need to quit smoking crack, but let the pipe cool down once in a while.
In Malaysia there are NO tips. There are no tips in Vietnam. In Thailand they will appreciate if you leave them 60 or 70 baht which is around $2 USD. I’m from Australia and have been to south east Asia more than you’ve been to Mexico or Colombia, you gringo.
@@robertstover4665 for Malaysia, I only learned about tipping recently, and it's mostly for food delivery and e-hailing, even then, it's totally optional, I got tipped when I was doing food delivery and I also tip a bit, but never for restaurants, restaurant workers are paid, so they don't need to earn from tips, plus there's service charge included in the bill.
It's okay to tips. As someone who works in service I really appreciate it and it makes my day even though it's not obligatory. Also, I've seen loud and obnoxious Asian customers.
I'm an expat living in Southeast Asia. The local people here are good people. Foreigners who are undesirable and think they're entitled should leave. Today!
they want to buy land south Asia doesn't want to sell land forever because like philipine we are over populated what happened if ten million people go here think it
you're an immigrant, not expat
@@ECA2 Maybe they thi k you should leave Today. You sound pretty self entitled to me.
The truth is that nationality and sovereignty is critical. If you believe you have a full set of rights outside your home country then you are just plain wrong. I live happily in Thailand with those limitations and quite happily fit into the local culture. If you come to Asia seeking to make it like the west then you will not be happy. It's very different culturally and if you can't fit in you will just become resentful. Wealthy yes but very resentful. So look at yourself and decide what makes you happy.
I think you should change the title to, "Leave the US before it's too late!" 😂
@@theasianjaywalker4455because usa is not for their people but for capitalism oligarch
South East asia is bang on by not selling land to foreigners. Has caused rampant property inflation in the West and that's one of the main reasons for living in S.E.A.
A hotel room in Thailand can cost the same as what it did 17 years ago.
The only thing I'd add to your statement is that Asia's Elite owns most of the real estate. The mainlanders park their money in Southeast Asian cities. It's better to have it in real estate than in the mainland!
Incorrect. Prices are higher
"A hotel room in Thailand can cost the same as what it did 17 years ago" Yes and it's for one simply reason. Thailand does not run on the USD. IMHO. Forty years ago when I started travelling in Latin America I was amazed how afforable everything was. I kept returning by by the 2000's the latinos got sucked into the USD and Latin American capitalsbig cities, their hotels and meals ended costing the same price as Dallas Texas. The USD is a curse on the world and a bank account to the USA and I say that because it's the truth.
@@NomadEliteYou just look at Bali Indonesian. Foreigners choose to stay now and the price of daily necessities has increased 3 times Suppressing the purchasing power of local people
@@NomadElite Better their own elite owning real estate than foreign elite I guess.
I'm an American Expat. in Indonesia. Indonesian people treat foreigners very well. They like Americans and Canadians. Alhamdulillah, they treat me like a rockstar everywhere I go. If only Americans treated people the same way.
Thank you for sharing you love!
which areas are ok if you speak English only? Is it possible to get by with English?
I can confirm this. My wife are Indonesian, and she and her family respect westerner.
@@budbas thats great to hear
@@MB-hv4nr major cities, Jakarta, Bundung, Yogykarta would be my picks. However indo is very easy to learn, you will be surprised to learn enough to get you by.. English is being taught in many schools these days, trust me I get questions on grammar weekly lol., and I dont even live there, Yet.
Moved to Cambodia, where I obtained a retirement visa and bought a condo. With a population of only 17 million, the country has so much potential. The government makes it extremely easy for foreigners to make the move, and the Buddhist religion, great weather, welcoming culture make it a great place to move.
Korrek
As an American who lived the expat (immigrant) lifestyle for nearly 20 years, I noticed that the phenomenon of "not feeling welcome anymore" seemed closely aligned with the expat fantasy (delusion) of greener pastures elsewhere. Shangri-La isn't a destination but a state of mind.
Undoubtedly, there are places where your money goes further and where you can live a higher quality of life because of weather and things to do.
I think its a sort of nationalism that showed up everywhere that came post-Covid...
Correction for yr video. No we don't hate u the foreigner. We just don't like your leader, especially yr politicians..a bunch of hypocrite 😊
We also do not like our 'elites' ...one of the reasons we're here 😅
who do you not like?
Especially in Canada, so mean to those poor foreigners.
I share your views of my leaders 😉 ... which is also why I am here.
I mean our own Malaysians leaders are also horrible. C’est la vie
Pick a spot on the planet. Go there and quietly make it your home. Assimilate by trying to learn the local language and by living amongst natives, not expats. That requires a change in lifestyle. The problem with expats in these countries is that now every expat thinks he/she needs to start a YT channel to recruit more expats to move to a place. They go to these countries and want to live like kings, so they build big homes, even though they cannot own the land, and try to turn their environment into their home country all the while complaining about the lack of amenities, hot temperatures, lack of infrastructure, bureaucracy, etc. The point is not to bring America, etc. to your new country, but to live in that new country and learn from it. You will never become Asian if you weren't born Asian, or even if you marry an Asian, but you can adapt to a new lifestyle that might actually be better than what you left.
You can’t settle in a country that won’t grant you at least permanent residency.
They have the yt channel because they need the revenue to survive over there. Kinda like a pyramid scheme. 😂
I could not have said it better myself
you got a good bit right but really Thailand is not Thailand anymore if compared to 40 50 years ago… i could write a book about the differences and the pace of life is more hectic than America..the Cities have uncontrolled growth and even my Son is looking toward mediterranean countries rather than Asia… for me the Magic is really gone…progress has done its Job…and it’s a different generation…its bearable..but ya..YT morons do not tell the Truth…no one wants the Truth about the Madness around the Planet..we need complete Economic collapse like 1997 in SE Asia…another Pandemic.. to tame the humans down a bit.
@@rayn3038
i agree with everything you said.
what is the root of the problem in your opinion?
is it financial sector or bankers specifically, or is it some civilizational or cultural decline worldwide that is the problem?
i think it has to do with population growth mostly.
My real experience with an American colleague that came to work in Malaysia. I'll let you decide if you think this is disrespectful. He needed to get a colleague's attention and that guy is sitting a few tables away from him. Instead of being respectful to walk over to his table, this 'American' took the Malaysia coins on his table and throw it to hit that colleague to get his attention. When i told him off, his remarks was 'there's no value to this' (referring to our Malaysian currency). You decide! I am sure not all Americans behaves this way so if you know how to respect others, you deserved to be respected regardless which Country you are from.
what an ambassador of Goodwill a delightful specimen. Sorry you got a "broken" one.
The Guy you’re referring to. The rude one throwing coins. We kicked him out of America. Sorry for your bad luck that he landed in your country.
Many white Americans have never been punched hard in the face.
Thats so humiliating
Oh God, that’s more than rude in any country 😢
Singapore is not a good example of SE ASIA. Yes the native culture is Malaysian yet 75% of the citizens and residents are of Chinese origin. Singapore is more like another Hong Kong.
Singapore is another China .
In the past two years I have spent substantial time in the People's Republic of China, Japan, Thailand, Malaysia (East and West), Laos and Indonesia. I'm middle-class American and get along very well in all these countries. I learn some of the language, learn and respect customs scrupulously, move at their speed and do not assume any exceptional status. As a result I have wonderful experiences. I perceive no looming threat in the region. I bear in mind that in essence I am an accident of exchange rates.
I don’t care about owning land. I come to learn and enjoy a peaceful life.
While you may not care now, you will likely change with age. Give it time.
Only a native gf or native wife of the countey visited wants land ownership. IGNORE AT ALL COSTS. Best to up your 401K in the USA.
@@NomadElite You can't take land and houses to your grave.
The purpose of being a nomad is to not have a home. That way you can live anywhere anytime you want.
Exactly. Ownership is only a concept, not a reality. I know people in Spain who had their properties taken by the Government. We dont really own anything. Ownership is an attachment that we dont need. I am old.
I don't have any information to confirm nor deny you claims about SE Asia. In the last 14 years I have lived in Latin America, SE Asia and Oceana. I got news for you, Latin Americans don't like foreigners either, unless they can make money off of you. I don't claim to be an expert but having lived with Colombianas, owned a business etc. in Latin America I just tell you that it's not because you are an American or a German or that for the most part; it's because they perceive right or wrong that you are rich and have more than them. 'Celosa' is the Spanish word for jealousy and it's rampant in Latin culture. Some countries like Colombia it is the root of danger often over time or can be instant. You just don't understand Latinos if you ignore this fact. Yes it is possible to own land in about 1/3 of Latin American countries with pretty good property rights. The rest of them? NO, don't buy land in those countries that don't offer equal rights to all owners foreign and domestic, that is the only thing to look for. I don't know of really any country in SE Asia that has any or strong property rights in land ownership. I am not talking about condos. All I wan to get across is that most nationals of most countries absolutely do not really like having you in their country not even Costa Rica. They do want your money, always. People will say I am wrong and that's fine. I've had may say and I've owned land and business in Colombia for instance. I had no legal problems, I just had problems with the attitudes of the Colombianos. I do want to experience El Salvador as not been there yet.
This was a great read. Thank you. Could you be so kind as to list LATM countries that offer fair land ownership to foreigners. I just want a quite retirement property when the time comes.
Paraguayans and Argentinians have been amazing to me, much better than anywhere I've been to.. Plus, I get reciprocal civil and property rights!
@@NomadElite they like you way less, they have style u dont have, the asian cultures are dull and submissive and understated. you will not get fake nor real love in greater amounts in latin america, def the opposite.
learn to not care.
Parlier: When I spent a month in Costa Rica at the end of '99, the US citizen population was 300,000. The population of CR was three million. I traveled the whole country by bus and was basically backpacking and stayed away from "tourist traps" too.
If anyone would want to escape the US why would they even consider a place that has 10% US citizens? SMH!
Thank you for this 'celoso' perspective. This is TRUE!. I am disappointed that they feel this way about foreigners but I get it.
I'm an expat with multiple citizenships and have lived in different countries for over 25 years. I also happen to be a Cultural Anthropologist. For centuries, the "issue of foreigners" as been a sensitive one. It's extremely important when moving to a new country, to respect local traditions, be kind and do what you can to integrate well. If foreigners are perceived as 'stealing jobs' from local people, driving up the cost of property and living for locals, and are being disrespectful of local people and culture - that is a powder keg of problems awaiting to explode. "Bad behaviour" is never welcomed. I also think that expat communities are really dangerous. When you cut yourself off in some rarefied world, misunderstanding and mistrust build. Embrace living in a new country beyond 'great weather and a cheap cost of living.' It's not always easy, but make an effort to learn a new language, live in places where you get to meet and make friends with locals. Honestly, if we learned to be good neighbors to everyone, we will have accomplished world peace. Thanks for bringing up this issue though. After Sweden I hope to move to Malaysia (and Japan), and I've been wondering when the tipping point of crappy American or otherwise 'disrespectful rich tourist' behaviour (American is one of my citizenships) would become a problem in the region.
Respect goes both ways!
Prejudice will always be there no matter how well you try to integrate. If you look and talk different ( even in their own language but with an accent), they will still be prejudiced against you.
malaysian dont have a problem were your from , believe me , they only care ( malay society ) is what is against islam , EG: talking how Isreal is right , maybe would not be a good move ,so respect there culture and religion you will do fine, no matter were your from in the world .
I don't want to sound argumentative as I am not disagreeing with your statements, I just point out that Americans are minor part of tourism in SE Asia as a whole. I run into many more Aussies, Kiwi, UK expats than American. I think Americans get more exposure because most commonly I find Americans abroad also trying to make money whether as gigaworkers/digital normads, ytubers or entrepreurs and thus they are 'out there always mixing and hussling' and I don't men those as derogatory. To our American roots we tend to be talktative an opinionated because it's a part of being American and that does not work outside of America. I've learned through experience to dial it back and keep my effn' mouth shut after 12 years living abroad unless I am sitting with true friends. I am a 'guest' of these countries.
Omg you nailed it sis
Been in in Taiwan for 20 years and never feel unwelcome. In fact visiting Canada each summer makes me realize how good I have it here.
Immigrants from India are flooding into Canada at record numbers. there’s no mistake. They are heavily involved in the gang wars. We currently have going on here, as well as basically taking all the level entry jobs away from the youth of the area. There is a massive housing shortage and skyrocketing rents also linked they’re involved in numerous accidents as they are completely unskilled at that particular job.
Hoping the conservative government gets elected in Canada, is the only way to curb this current Crisis
Look at what countries get the rich immigrants. Avoid countries open to migrants that don't need to meet many requirements.
They did exactly the same thing in Australia. they cannot be trusted in the workplace or in business.
@@Jimbo-v3mso why google microsoft channel adobe pepsi and 100 such big multinationals trusted indians to be their CEOs? May be these companies dont know what they are doing. You should guide them and find trustworthy people for them from australia because 1.4 billion indians are all worthless as per your definition.
People who come to Canada are not indians , they are khalistanis - the sikh separatists like Nijjar who are loved by Jagmeet singh party and then loved by trudeau . They get canadian visa based on a paper saying that they are scared of indian gov. Thats all. General indian (who is not sikh) come to canada only after a grading system based on his higher education and english skill. Check how Indians enter in canada on your immigration website. Indian students pay 25 billion USD to canada each year. They dont come for free. They pay canada before they enter. Check the facts before releasing here your frustration of failure in life. And lastly i liked how you said they are completely unskilled, causing work place accidents still they are getting 10000 cad per month to increase rentals and housing prices to record level.cheap unskilled poor indian labour is disturbing the whole canadian real estate market. 👍🏻 wow.
@@NomadElitehow many rich immigrants or people are there in this world? Do you know that? Not even 1 percent of the world’s population. So in any case or in any country they will have to live among the other 99 percent normal or poor people.
I have been living in Sarawak, East Malaysia for the last 4 years. It is getting better and better. I dont understand how you could have moved from Kuching, its a wonderful place. So pleased that you are discouraging people from moving here. East Malaysia has all its own resources. 78% renewable energy and growing in Sarawak, abundant land and lovely food. The people are so lovely, especially when you speak in your best Sarawakian. And very low violent crime rate.
lots of illegal logging happening in sarawak jungles. crime is on par i wont claim “very” safe. use common sense. if you are caucasian people might treat you better because “all whites are rich”. i am stereotyping but there’s some truth to that historically. westerners always says people are so friendly in asia well that’s because some have the perceptions you are rich and powerful (colonialism). notice east indians tends to use “sir” a lot?
Malaysia won't give anyone PR easily, we won't even give to former Malaysian who renounced their citizenship.
Same with Singapore. I’m former Singaporean
So how do you get it
I´m French and lived in SEA for 15 years before moving to South America where I reside now for 17 years. Loved my time in SEA, but I´ll die in South America as I feel like home here!
Hi Thomas! Where do you live in South America?
@@NomadElite São Paulo - Brazil, but I travel regularly to Colombia, Ecuador and Perú for business.
@@thomasclementz8149 Sounds lovely!! Of the three countries you travel to for business, which would be your preference? I was thinking of Cuenca EC, however they’ve been dealing with not so great infrastructure, leading to lack of water. and electricity. Otherwise, expats and Cuencanos seem to love it there. I’m hoping the politicians get sensible and make the needed changes. What do you think of Peru? I’d like to visit.
In the Philippines there are 2 ways to become citizen. 1. Marry a filipino/filipina and much easy to file for citizenship. 2. When you are already staying long, you can file for citizenship through legislative options though a long process.
There is also a permanent retiree visa. Non immigrant, but still quite good.
@Bornonjuly7052: Having lived there for three years I find the PI to be the seediest place in all of SEA, no matter where you live and no I did not live in Manila or even close to it.
Of all the countries I lived in/visited the PI is infested with vermin of all types & categories. Crime and corruption are rampant in the PI too. Just about the caliber of Mexico especially in the border regions and that's just the police.
BTW, July, I have a Filipina wife and we don't live there and she doesn't even like it either. She's from a nice small town/village in N. Samar.
No. 2 is even far from being possible. only a very chosen few are granted with that privilege
@@skipperclinton1087i'm sorry to hear that but you have a point, every other country in Asia is getting their crap together while the PH stays sick. Decades of mismanagement made a country only slightly behind South Korea after WWII into a basketcase at the bottom, overtaken by almost all its neighbors. A lot of the educated have been fleeing and the worse it gets here the faster they go.
@@skipperclinton1087 I heard Samar people is seedy even with local tourist.. 😂
Wow! You are saying the exact opposite of my experience. Americans are very welcome and likes. My experience is extensively in the Philippines plus Indonesia and Thailand.
Filipinos love foreigners but foreign investment is restrictive. The law doesn't allow foreign ownership of land and foreign ownership of specific industries beyond certain percentages is also limited. There are also restrictions and regulations on a lot of professions. Before the inflation spiked, the low cost of living (outside of Manila) was a plus
@@goeyboyif we allow where's the pilipino land after fifty years think of it
SE Asia isn't really the perfect place to settle down for Westerners who don't have plans to marry locals to purchase and own private residential lands on their behalf. Their foreign investment laws, especially in Thailand and the Philippines, are designed to train their citizens to extract hard-earned equity from Western investors through mandatory joint venture agreements for industries like natural resource extraction and real estate. Thais and Filipinos aren't born to be industrialists, but rather to be landlords and real estate speculators.
Interesting
You nailed it. You really do know the Philippines.
Philippines use to be an American colony. They have an allergy to foriegners owning land in the Philippines
Wow. The last sentence is so well put. I've always told people Filipinos are terrible businessmen, but I've never been able to explain it all the way like that.
"Thais and Filipinos aren't born to be industrialists, but rather to be landlords and real estate speculators" - wrong!
The USA makes life hard for everyone on this planet, including for americans, who generally are very friendly people.
Before the USA policing the world, we had mass murders, dictatorships, and nonstop war. I'd say US policies are good.
In what sense they make it hard?
Yes, very much so.
usa govmntn is materialistic
@@Paul-s8j Spending lots of money to promote terrorism, sanctions, backing unpopular leaders
If you live in a foreign country, you need to be fluent in the local language to feel the connection. As a Khmer Canadian from Quebec, I'm fluent in English, French and Khmer. There are Americans or Canadians who are so fluent in Khmer that the locals treat them like one of their own.
Good for you!
Becoming fluent in the local language is a must for integration. Thank you for your input, Tommy.
You are not a brang, so you would not know.
Khmers are nice for the most part, but the way Cambodia treats you is different from the way they treat the " brang" because our face is different. And definitely Khmers are nicer than the Thais.
Having said that, when the Pandemic started, I was in Cambodia and immediately, the locals changed. Many stores adopted a " no borotes"and " no brang" policy. My friends were barred from hotels, shops, restaurants, hair salons, etc. Bang! overnight! Doors slammed in people's faces.
They did not blame the Chinese, but it was the " brang" that were at fault for the Covid.
I was walking down the street and these youngsters on motorcycles yelled " Korona!"" Korona!" at me.
I had a job in KH and I left. I was becoming very, very unfriendly.
I may want to go again, but I am hesitant. I went to Mexico after Cambodia and no store barred me from entering.
They even had signs that it was prohibited to discriminate against people because of race, religion, etc.
I felt relieved.
@vidong: I myself did not experience that C19 behavior except at only one restaurant. "High class" (not) Kymer place on Pasteur St in Duan Penh.
As a foreigner I can never feel 100% fit into their society. They never understand you and always be judgmental towards you.
Americans: *bombs half the world*
Also Americans: "why people no like us?"
You have a second grade level mind.I don't expect you know U.S. history and are a poser
@@DeterminismisFreedom Don't be stupid your whole life.
That was the government. Not the people
Freedom, America has preserved your freedom.
I formerly lived in a few different places in Thailand for about 6 years. I went to Malaysia many times as well as Cambodia, Laos and Singapore. I'm getting married to my Thai fiancé but have moved back to America. Thailand became an impossible place to live a normal life and be happy. Even my fiancé, who owns land and a condo in Bangkok says the same thing. Covid is what did it for us. We owned a restaurant and I was also a full-time university teacher. The main issue was the Thai government. They never seemed to know what they were doing and there were too many inconsistencies with their immigration policies. However, having come to the same conclusion as this gentleman. I would have rather gone back home to make real money and being a property owner in the US, I had a home that was paid for and property to build on. I actually lost more money by going to Asia and trying to live, than if I just stayed in America for another 5 years and then sold my home and moved. Besides, I was a boat builder and sailor for years and I wanted to buy a nice 40'-50' boat and liveaboard and travel by water, something that was impossible to do in Thailand. I thought about the Phillipines as well, but after a trip to Singapore I realized that I needed real money. Thailand was fine as long as I stayed in Thailand, but whenever I went elsewhere, it cost way more money than I was used to paying. The bottom line turned out to be for me, that the best quality of life and the most money that I could make was back in my home country. I had my fill of Asia anyway. It was a worthwhile endeavor but not sustainable. The U.S. is huge and the Eastern waterways and the Great Lakes and Gulf of Mexico are forever large. It will take years to explore it all and the Bahamas are only 60 miles off the coast of Florida. I'm really glad to be home and back on track.
No one can deny south east asia has economic power now. China and usa are putting industries there. 600 over million people.
Was in Singapore last month. Several trips there in the past two years. Anyone who has been to the Marina Bay area (MBS Hotel and Casino, Ferris Wheel etc... is standing on land once underneath the ocean. Reclaiming land from the ocean is an ongoing process there. Amazing
@@robertstover4665 Singapore is the most boring and over policed country (if you can call it that) in south east Asia. Why don’t you travel to Saudi Arabia next? You’d like it there.
@@MEN101boring = safe. I’d rather safe and having peace of mind over excitement. Esp being parents of young children. Not everyone lives somewhere for thrills- that’s a holiday destination for me.
This is ridiculous. I lived in South East Asia for fifteen years and I'm about to move back.
If you behave well and are respectful, you will always be welcomed.
Thank you.
no thanks.. so far south east asia still the most stable and safe compare with other region.. and no war in the last 30 years in the region (except civil war in myanmar).. peace amongs neighbor..
Never take anything for granted. That's the kiss of death! China's growing middle class will require more resources than ever. It's why the mainland is expanding so rapidly.
@@NomadElite : thats for sure.. but i think china wont do it bluntly to take other resources..what i see in south china sea, all china do only posturing gesture, they are not really using millitary weapon.. their culture is trading.. so at the end they wanna ask for a negotiation that lead into trade..
Then you have not noticed their approach to Tibet,Hongkong,the Philippines? In the latter,they’ve taken over our fishing territories,bought real estates there illegally,sent spies there and corrupted our government officials. Hardly a country that engages in ‘trading’ alone.
@@bamabotakyou are wrong! China is already conquering Laos, Cambodia and Burma. They are trying to get Thailand, but it is more difficult.
China uses minimum force, maximum deception, and tough negotiations to succeed. Time....they like to get things done fast, but can play a waiting game too@
Malaysian here went to US. I loved US, the wage is so high! And cost of living is actually very less comparatively as well! Whole chicken just for $5 And lots of cool project to work in!
When I went to US embassy in Malaysia, the lines are huge. The interview are actually pretty quick just lots of people want to go to US.
I doubt most of Vietnam, Philippine, Singaporean, Malaysian hates American. Some definitely.
Thanks for letting us know!
As a Singapore citizen, I think most Singaporeans wouldn't want foreigners to naturalize as Singapore Citizens unless they have a child that would be liable for military service or contribute to the country significantly through financial means. Alot of foreigners have National Service as their biggest 'Worry' about getting Singapore Citizenship and try to look for ways to dodge it for themselves or their children, but doing this is exactly why most Singaporeans don't think fondly of them naturalizing. It's seen as trying to reap all the rewards of citizenship without any of the civic duty that comes with it.
I just came back from multiple calendar months in SE Asia and this seems like a bit of an exaggeration lol .. I was treated great as a foreigner it’s all about how you operate as an individual .. There’s things to work around depending on where you go but it’s not impossible .. Maybe it’s a good thing people are sleeping on Asia .. Just found the channel and it’s definitely solid overall
Thank you!
Because they know you will never be a citizen. That's why they tolerated you. You are a source of income.
3:27 you say “They make it really hard for you to own property”. Regarding Cambodia , are you sure about that? A $55K USD 1 bedroom apartment in Phnom Penh is comparatively less hard than a similar apartment in a major US city. From my point of view “they” in US make it hard for me to own an apartment…
Edit: I can get a 1 year visa for for about $300 USD. As a middle class person myself , I would like to have options. How many options can a middle class person have actually …?
Also citizenship is usually way more expensive than just the cost of a property … and idk I lived in Latin America , I didn’t feel as safe there compared to Asia (Korea, Thailand, Japan)
Malaysia autonomy on being neutral and balancing major power is so good and risk calculated. Government did so well not to allow any foreign military base to be established.. especially Western powers.
Most people around the world will treat you at face value. Behave well, get treated well. Behave poorly, get prepared to be booted out of which ever country you are visiting. Golden rule: if you wouldn't do it in your own backyard, don't do it in theirs.
As a Sporean, I don't think there is a national reaction to Anericans. People can distinguish politics from the ordinary American.
Well said, Terry.
What you list are mostly general considerations any expat should think about. I visit KL and Kuching often, and have never had any issues as a Westerner. Then again, I’m not from North America. Citizenship? Tit for Tat, how easy is it to get a US or Canadian citizenship? You sound like a prepper.
I am from Portugal. I lived 3 years in the UK, 1 year in France, 1 year in Norway, 1:year in Sweden, some months in other places like US, Mexico, Brazil...
The last 20 years I have been living in Peru. I got the citizenship. Comíng to Peru was my best decision in life!
As a westerner I live life better in South east Asia than the west , better food better weather cheaper to live and most important the people are more friendly
Better food ,,, so your definately not in Philippines
@@tilapiadave3234philippine food is better than some westen countries
I lost my job a few months ago after 30 years at the same company in Michigan. For my sudden retirement I have only been focused on Southeast Asia for the excitement, culture shock and low cost of living to make my savings go but as far as possible. I owned enough property in my life and still trying to get rid of some so I don't think I would buy anymore. But you're making me think about the potential desperate need for a second citizenship. Thank you!
Lived in Thailand 2 and half years never felt any of this unwelcomeness you speak of. Loved it there and will go back. Laos was the same too, very nice. You just need to be more flexible and adjust to where you're living more.
Thanks God i have already Malaysia permanent residents and I have too Indonesia permanent resident ,, hopefully people learning one country is never will be enough in this time of the world .
Good to hear that you obtained permanent residency in Malaysia.
By law Malaysians are not allow to have 2 citizenship, I don't know about PR
i am not Malaysian citizenship and i don't care about it also .
I am only Malaysian permanent resident,, so i can have any many other citizenships or permanent
residents as i can got it from this world.
@HazemAbdalla-zh1ju Alhamdulillah 🤲
Do you mind sharing where you are originally from? Also, how long did you live in Malaysia for until you were granted PR? Was it hard you get? Thanks in advance!
Thai-Lao American here and I agree with everything you say. Even I who's was born in Thailand and frequently travel to and from Thailand since 1995 is perceived as a foreigner. In knowing this, I do not speak Thai when I am out and about, I also do not let the locals know I understand Thai. Let me be the first to say the slogan "The Land of Smiles" is a false statement and perception of Thais. They do not like foreigners. How many of you have and to pay a "foreigner price" for goods and services? Does this occur anywhere else? If this happened in America, we would be screaming discrimination to the heavens. Thais will smile in your face and literally talk sh*t about you to your face. I've had it happen on many occasions. I love the look on their faces when I respond in Thai and they're shocked that they're caught talking sh*t. This also goes for other countries too not just Thailand. It happens in Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia. Although I don't speak these languages, I've traveled with people that does.
I think we can distinguish between US foreign policy and Americans per se. We are really quite compassionate and well informed and its not in our nature to be rude to foreigners. Welcome all , but yes our laws /path to residency is complicated.
sure but if "exceptionalism" is a trait of certain ppl...then ppl will start resenting it..more and more..bad enough the atrocious foreign policy but when ignorance, arrogance and hubris are also present..it gets a bit much even for the most tolerant of nations like SE Asia
times are changing...ppl are fed up with it...respect ppl..try to integrate..be respectful to laws and customs...not just come there to flex and expect the world to be at your feet because you are something by accident of birth or by moving there
I would have to ask where is everyone going? If I look at my recommendations in YT because this video says Leave Sth East Asia, I got a bunch of recommendations with videos saying everyone is leaving Thailand, Malaysia, Canada, Australia, USA. UK, etc. So where are they all going? People migrate all the time, the difference is now we get to see their issues on YT videos because some don't seem to have any filters.
So, where is everyone going?
Meal @ US$ 1.
Accomodation US$ 100 per month.
Cellular Internet Service US$ 10 monthly.
Welcome to Indonesia.
Wonderful Indonesia.
It depends on how you want to live. The question is not how much something costs but how much value it brings.
@@NomadElite
It is because you stayed in Singapore.
yep exactly. 👍
It's difficult and complex to own in Indonesia too.
"You want to live in an environment where you... are perceived as someone good If you are perceived as less than, that is not a good foundation to build upon"
Congratulations you just described the existence of Black and indigenous North Americans in two sentences!
The biggest problem is real estate speculation when foreigners buy property like in the USA the locals suffer Miami San Francisco and many other cities other countries are just trying to protect their local population weather Mexico or Thailand ects . Property rights aren't always guaranteed anything can happen anywhere just ask people who fled after their property was siezed.
Where would you like to own property?
San Francisco native 🌁 here. Owning real estate in this city is for the rich: too many laws, taxes fees. Owning in lesser populated areas is better for the middle class.
Renting in my hometown is also expensive: $5k per month for a low end but OK apartment! Pile on utilities and board. That requires a boatload 🚢 of cash 💸! 😭
Positioning safely in Asia amid potential war is tricky. Citizens may have to fight, and China’s dominance could draw in countries with large Chinese populations.
I'm American, married to a Filipina for 10 years. Just retired and moved to the Philippines 2 years ago. We have an 8 year old in school. Everyone has always been friendly and helpful. Way more than in the US. I'm not sure why I would ever want to be a citizen here. We can buy property because I'm married to a Philippines citizen. I think you belong in California. Have fun jack.
It's because of the brash nature of a lot of Americans
Ouch! 😣
And the way certain americans treat local women.
I agree that compared to 10, 20 years ago, Singapore has become less welcoming to white westerners. But that's not to say it has become 'racist'. It is also ironic to hear this complaint seeing the right wing movement in the West now complaining about immigration in their own backyard. What they probably mean is that the atmosphere is not the kowtow, down on our knees begging that used to be the case. Let me explain - when my father graduated from university (and he had served national service as a commissioned officer) in the sixties, he got an entry level job in a British company. Several rungs above him was a retired British sergeant (retired from a Singapore posting) who had no concept of management or business administration. It puzzles him to this day why there was this 'superior' in that organisation. My father eventually left, got his MBA and Phd (in management no less) and retired as a C-suite in a major Singapore organisation. I've worked overseas and alongside international colleagues and trust me - Singaporeans square up to everyone else and stand shoulder to shoulder. We graduate from the same schools and have our own strengths (eg military service) and we are no longer in an age where we have to cut special deals to everyone to get them to come - not everyone is Taylor (for whom we did make an exception). So, you need to get sized up to the competition and get treated the same as everyone else, no special favours just because of where you came from and that includes National Service if it is applicable.
"Right wing" good to see you're using the elitist words of division. The problem with illegal immigration to the US is that the politicians use US taxpayer.money to feed house them while allowing our veterans and citizens to sleep on the street. Does SEA allow people to immigrate there and steal the money from their citizens to house them and value them above their own citizens? If so, I will spread that info and there will be thousands on your door step and we will call you "right wing" if you complain. And do you think those in power in the US are encouraging illegal immigration out of the generosity of their pure hearts lol. They could close down the border in a week if they wanted to. Over 80,000 children missing, human trafficking sky rockets, gang violence in poor neighborhoods increased along with deaths from illegal drugs, these are facts that correlate with the numbers of illegal entry encouraging illegal immigration hurts those most vulnerable. Yes there are decent people coming in but why can't we determine who comes in only to let rhe decent people come in with the gangs on their heels, the same violence many wanted to escape from.
Reality is that Singapore's immigration process has become super tough for anyone to naturalize unless you are a 1) Malaysian or 2) Rich Individual from HK/PRC/Taiwan . Reason for this is simple:
1) Singapore wants their population to keep growing but does not want their culture eroded, Malaysians are the closest type of people that are culturally similar to Singapore and can integrate well.
2) The Singapore government has specifically gone on record that their intent is for the 'Ethnic mandate' to be upholded. Because Chinese birth rates in Singapore are significantly lower than Malay/Indian ones, there is a huge emphasis on only naturalizing the rich Chinese people. So yes, your race has alot to do with your PR application.
Tough for you my guy!
Ive lived in singapore for 13 years and now looking at Malaysia
I havent detected much anti US sentiment, however the mix of expats has changed since COVID..amd also Singapore has become very expensive..but still a great place to live. Malaysia is quite friendly towards foreigners, including expats from UK/EU/ US/ ANZ ..
Citizenship is not important as long as one be given permanent residentship.The good way to live in s.e.a. is to adopt their way of life n im sure they will feel at home n welcome😊
Where can I pay zero taxes in Latin America without having to invest a fortune and obtain residency without breaking the bank?
Literally anywhere… but it won’t be ‘legal’ ;)
Paraguay.
Usually territorial tax countries or those with tax incentives for foreigners. The top one that comes to mind is Uruguay.
Buy a sailboat....
Paraguay!
Singapore:
Prior to 2010, there were approx 24,000 PRs per year available...
After that, it was cut in half or less available.
Then, they are divided into allocations, based on your origins..
I have an EP, but I applied for my PR and I was rejected 3 times, so I gave up, and still an EP..
I suspect that the remaining PRs are reserved for the "desirable foreign investors...
Will you remain in Singapore?
It’s true I’m from America 🇺🇸 I lived in Bali Indonesia 🇮🇩 2 years I felt the hate in everyone’s eyes 👀 the smiles where fake 9 times out of 10! 💯in Mexico 🇲🇽 I lived one year same also In anytala Turkey 🇹🇷 same I ended up in Colombia 🇨🇴 and never felt that one time here 1 year now
I think Philippines is a better option to Move...
Living in any part of the world comes with its own unique set of advantages and disadvantages. We are sure to encounter the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of a place. The key factor is whether the chosen location aligns with our preferences; that is what truly matters. No one should impose their choice of residence on us. If we find ourselves dissatisfied with a place, we have the freedom to move on, knowing that someone else will take our place. Different regions cater to diverse individuals, each with their own unique tastes and preferences. Instead of complaining, it is more beneficial to adapt and embrace the local culture, gaining a deeper understanding to smoothly integrate into society. Perhaps the issue lies within us; only through open-mindedness can we uncover the root of the matter.
Thank you for letting us know.
Lousy comments about Asia. The good the bad and the ugly is everywhere ok!
The demographic of immigrants into SE Asia has changed. More HNW individuals from East Asia e.g. China, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan will move to SE Asia. These individuals don’t mind to purchase properties because of they have deep pockets and properties in their own countries are very expensive. Also, Muslims HNW individuals from developed countries e.g. the UK, Canada, the US, Australia and Europe are also going into SE Asia in droves especially Malaysia. It is basically easy for them to practice Islam in Malaysia. For the west expats purchasing properties for long term and not getting PR are a big “No, No”. May see big exit for this group to other continent e.g. Central and South America.
Everything is fine, life is good in harmony.
That's good to hear.
American here. I have lived in Asia for 25 years and have experienced nothing but respect from locals in the various countries I have lived in. People in general accept you if you are friendly and accept them as equals. A smile melts the differences between cultures.
They understand that Americans are not anything like the American government. They have the same in their own countries where the common people are often not happy with their country's leadership.
If a major war comes things could change for many expats. It depends on what country you are in. SE Asia is pretty neutral in regards to the world super powers. I see it as a safe place to be if wars escalates in the world.
Try Japan. You'll just never be the same no matter your contribution.
yes we have changed , its not a free pass no more to do anything without repercussion .You are only here in Singapore because we are Singaporeans and we live it large . WE made it happen and we still are making it happen all day , everyday .So we can decide who suits our live style and who dont init .Reality check yourself on you chat and it says alot about you then both Singapore and Malaysia.
Over a 15 year period I have spent years of my life in Asia (mostly India) and South-East Asia (mostly Thailand) with long visits up to 8 months at a time, and I love it there.
But the way they reacted during Covid and the level of government control in places like Thailand has made me very aware that in these times of growing totalitarianism (in the West, but really everywhere) that is not the place I want to be.
We left Spain, which had a horrific lockdown with police in the streets checking that people were staying at home (and much more) and moved to Mexico.
Asians have a strong collectivist culture and are not necessarily the kind of people that will stand up to tyranny. You only have to look at the social credit system and face recognition in China to see how bad this can get. Mexicans culture is very different in that sense. Much more awareness of how important freedom is.
@JGVD601
For non-confirmists and whiners, better stay put where you are. We’re having enough troubles of our own anyway.
Maintaining the status quote is the best way moving forward.
It’s so strange to hear that Westerners are no longer perceived positively in SE Asia. I’ve spent 80% of the last 15 years in Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and the Philippines, and am in Thailand now. People in all these countries are so hospitable year after year and at the present time. I also spent half of the last three years in the United States, where media depictions have almost no connection with everyday life and relationships. People were pleasant as always, friendly, almost no one talked about politics, woman were very inviting to me, etc. This video relects media depictions and doesn’t seem to be connected at all with the reality of relationships on the ground. It’s okay with me because it is the many expat social misfits who had trouble in their own countries, then had trouble in the SE Asia country they ran to. and now want to leave because people don’t take a liking to fat, smoking, shaggy greasy haired, old men wearing sleeveless T-shirts as if they are still 18 years old and shorty pants as if they are little boys. Goodbye to those expats, who, I suppose, are the audience for this video.
Are you in the right paradigm? I agree totally that Boomers need more security, as times ahead appear super risky. But exiting the financial markets for something less risky, like real property, seems vastly more relevant. Boomer money in stocks, or bank deposits, or even pensions, WILL NOT be protected by moving to Paraguay or anywhere else. Whereas if you have a house, bought and paid for, even in a Shit Storm Central location like California, you may still be okay. Yes, you have to raise enough cash for a carton of eggs every week, and pick some fruit from your garden, but life goes on. But If derivatives crash the market, or your deposits get bailed in, or inflation decimates your pension, no matter what country your car is parked in, you will be living in it...
Im Ukrainian and im thinking about where to live, i was thinking about Thailand or Malaysia bc i work remotely. And want to experience a new culture. Is this good option or better choose Usa or staying in Europe? Im 20 btw
@sh1sts whatever you do don't choose the philippines. The quality of the country and its people are subsaharan african tier.
What weather do you like?
I don't agree with you about people not liking me because I am from the USA. Of course I treat EVERYONE with respect. NO ONE is below me. I love everyone especially the poor. No prejudice. "We are the flowers of one garden" Bahai
Singaporean here and we aren’t anti America or anti American. So I’m confused by this chicken little the sky is falling video post. It’s like taking one tiny sample of an opinion and then painting everyone with broad strokes.
I think Singaporeans aren’t rude to Americans in general. Unless the person was rude to a local and acting like a local needs to kiss their feet, we are generally a very friendly bunch.
I visited KL in 2023. I didn't feel unwelcome, but I also didn't really associate with people much. I felt highly welcome in stores - no discord.
I also spent 6 months in Japan during winter/spring 2022-2023, and although it's not South-East Asia, I observed that seemingly more people were talking behind my back than in the past. I don't really get why, but the people casually talking behind my back about me were all "zoomers" (specifically young adults around 18-22). The comments weren't too bad, but they kinda stick in my memory cuz my brain doesn't like that kinda thing.
However, Haneda Airport has the best reception ever, so if I could I would buy an apartment inside Haneda Airport and just live there.
Jokes aside, in general, Japan has high taxes and no easy visas. However, attaining citizenship is highly possible and has been possible for a long time already, but fluency in Japanese and cultural adaptation is a prerequisite.
I am fluent in the language, but I don't see Japan as my end-game. Right now I'm in Georgia for their 1% income tax, so I'm basically hanging out with Russians and Georgians here in Batumi. Georgia doesn't feel like my final destination, but I don't fear a Russian invasion because the ruling political party is not at all interested in picking a fight with Russia.
Once my portfolio is big enough, maybe I'll be off to Uruguay in another 5-10 years! Paraguay seems nice, but just a little too hot, but I'd go for it if I decided that I don't care about proximity to Europe and proximity to Asia.
I'm probably still a bit brainwashed with the notion of crime being a big problem in Latin America. I'd totally be OK with a start in Uruguay though, perhaps combining Uruguay and Paraguay for a period of time. Uruguay has a preferable climate for retirement (at age 60+), whereas apparently Paraguay is extremely tax-friendly. I'll finally be out of Norway's evil tax net in 2026, so then I will reconsider things thoroughly and won't have to worry about bilateral tax agreements when deciding on a country I want to live in.
I realize language matters a lot when we choose where to live, and I can only learn so many during my limited lifespan. I'm not interested in learning more than at most 2 more languages at this point. I current speak Norwegian, English, Japanese, and frankly I feel like a linguistic idiot here in Georgian, since I don't even speak Russian (the biggest lingua franca in Batumi because of the high number of Russians). While Russian is definitely useful in a significant number of countries around the world, I think I would much rather learn Spanish and learn to thrive in a Spanish-language environment. This strategy would even allow me to retire in Spain in old age, in case doing so happens to make sense in another 20-30 years.
Geopolitically and historically I think Latin America is numero uno for avoiding a hypothetical WW3. War never really makes sense, but we've had countless wars in human history...
Central & South America: pretty much need to learn Spanish to live there somewhat normally. Not impossible, just worth mentioning.
100%
I get it. I’m in Thailand but think of leaving in the next year or two. The digital nomad hype changed many places :( some places improved and some killed good vibes. As an Arabic woman I feel very welcome however I don’t feel like I can welcome all these people who think bitcoin is everything instead of community and culture ❤
White guy here, born in South Africa.
Even I dislike the US Leaders or should I say the Western Leaders.
And this is coming from a Western man.
I'm with the Asian people here, it's not an issue with foreigners, but the leaders.
And yes, some foreigners has the attitude that they own everything and they the best.
Bad attitude, I'm talking about a specific country here.
There are white still alive in SA? 🤣
if u wanna feel at home, just stay at home
The truth/facts more people have moved to South East Asian than South American countries, due to higher techknowledge and advanced economy, cost of living, dynamic cities/rich natures, safer for foreigners and stable governments, culture richness and opportunities.
I like South America more but most countries there are run by socialists who are creating high taxes
SEA is a safer South America.
The reality is China is the dominant country in Asia and when the expected war erupts between China and America,whose side will the rest of Asia take? Even is America wins which is not assured they will go home and leave behind deep resentment as happened in Europe.
It's not that bad, many Chinese live in new york, California, Canada. I heard America can technically move to china, just not many people do, only about 100,000 in mainland China.
You are probably correct BUT it's not a new problem and Westerners are not the only ones they resent. I have lived in SE Asia and had my share of honest conversations and I don't recall too many Asians in love with the Chinese either. Everyone loves who they make money off of and the day the stop making money they don't like them any longer. I will never be anything but a foreigner to them, I accept that and mind my own business, keep inside my lanes, don't flirt with their daughers and don't fuel any fire of dislike. So far I've managed to project that personal and people in general just leave me alone which I prefer. I'm an interloper, I know who I am in their eyes.
if the war broke.. doesnt matter who win.. whoever win will be broke as hell.. especially if they using nuke attack.. thats also effecting whole world..
Many of China's neighbours are dependent on the Chinese economy. ASEAN was created as a pro American, pro 'west' organization, today its trade with China is almost $1 trillion : the world's largest trading relationship ; there is no way Asean can join a containment policy against its largest trading partner.
Almost every country in Asia will take the side of America, except maybe a few in Southeast Asia who might be neutral.
There is absolutely no way Japan, India, Korea, Philippines, Taiwan, South Korea or even Vietnam (despite it's history with the US) will take the side of China. All of them despise China. India has the second largest pure force in terms of military in Asia, and Japan is rearming itself. Both countries aren't really China friendly.
I love Malaysia as well as the variation and quality of food there must be the best in the world. I love the laksa soup.
Sarawak Laksa is the best for sure!!
@@NomadElite, yes. Breakfast of the gods...as Anthony Bourdain called it.
@@NomadEliteYou got to try Laksa Johore
Best in the world? Please recommend Michelin star eating place in Malaysia. I have tried the Penang Laksa and totally loathe it, sour and fishy!
Do u think its more to do with a huge increase in foreigners moving to SE Asia?
Im a USA citizen and Im not welcome in my own country.
Why?
I live in a city in Argentina called Mar del Plata. For years I've been planning to visit Vivoratá but never had the guts to actually go on with it and do it. I guess I'm too old for adventures.
Entrepreneurs generally know a pitch should be about one thing. Yours is a plate of pasta on the wall to see what sticks.
Asia has gotten too expensive, restricted and racist toward white American men. It's the polar opposite of when I lived there three decades ago.... in the 1990s and early 2000s places like Thailand was a literal paradise for Americans.... Nowadays not so much. Yes, the lifestyle is still better than most Western countries, but there's better deals elsewhere.
@@reyflaco1840 "outside" the Valeriepieris circle
Well, with Thailand so many farang have made a bad reputation. And the red light industry income has skewed the cost of living for the locals. A lot of them aren't having kids because of the costs. The birth rate has gone lower than 1.5 per woman. I'd rather live somewhere where the foreign money hasn't made locals' lives harder.
Yes you can go somewhere else where they worship you just for being americans / white.
I can't imagine a war in SE Asia that would get you stuck in that country for 5 or 10 years. Weird comment you made there.
Their is absolutely no need for an expat westerner to try and become a citizen of an asian country.. just be who you are and keep your home citizenship.. and be what you are .. a european or of european descent. You arent an asia and font need to become one
Your statement is presumptuous, and your assumption is predicated on that relationships between countries will remain positive. Good times don't continue forever. You better have at least permanent residency or citizenship during a black swan event. That is a fact.
If you want all of the rights that you enjoy in your home country you should stay put. There are no guarantees in foreign countries. Countries often change their immigration laws, like Asian countries have done lately. So, as a traveler, you must be prepared for such changes.
Agreed!
Saying it's difficult to return to your home country is absolutely true. To say it is impossible, is not a reasonable statement.