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IKR1_994 t1_ixc2ubb wrote

Thats actuall imigration you'll have to go to either the US embassy or Consolate in Athens to start the process if I remember correctly, also that is not a short process by any means but good luck.

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alexkourtis OP t1_ixc8q2q wrote

im a libertarian... ive always wanted to come to the US as far back as i can remember... and i chose NH when i was 17-18... now im 24.... its always been one of my dreams : )

you are very lucky you are americans

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glockster19m t1_ixcco68 wrote

Ehh, official statistics say about 76 thousand across the southern border and 57 thousand across the northern, although if you count the 26 thousand people that cross illegally from the US into Canada as well I guess it's more

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Foreign-Concept t1_ixcdb7p wrote

You can apply for a school transfer (UNH, SNHU etc), school will give you a student visa. "Forever" a big commitment, the visa will give you a chance to live here and see if you like it.

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alexkourtis OP t1_ixcdeo3 wrote

Yea i know what you mean actually... I'm not full on libertarian tbh ... I believe in the importance of the state... but generally speaking i want to live in a freer place.. Greece is unfortunately an extremely Communist society and not in the good way like north Europe.. I feel my heart's calling telling me to leave this place and go somewhere where i belong...

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powpowpowpowpowp t1_ixcgml3 wrote

While I don’t know that any legal path to immigrating here is easy, coming here as a graduate student might be a good start. Graduate programs are often more heavily focused on job placement which could help get you set up with employment in NH after school. That being said, I knew a number of international students with graduate degrees from Dartmouth that couldn’t find sponsorship and had to move back, so it’s not a guarantee.

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Low-Head-1493 t1_ixckcg0 wrote

Because we are tired of libertarians thinking that they can move here, use tax payer-funded roads, vote to gut public services, and tell everyone that they are libertarian every chance they get.

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iamthepandaman t1_ixcn6rk wrote

US immigration is difficult. Honestly if you don’t have a career that makes you eligible for an H1B visa I don’t know what options you have coming from Europe. Even with an H1B eligibility, it can be difficult. Unlike most places, in the US you need to first get a job and then apply for the visa, all before actually coming here to work legally. Most countries are the other way around, where you get the work visa then apply for a job

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overdoing_it t1_ixcn8mw wrote

Marry a citizen that's the easy way in.

Gay marriage counts now too.

Instant green card, 3 years to citizenship.

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whatisgoingon007 t1_ixcpaxc wrote

What do you plan on doing for a living? That will probably be the most important factor. If you’re a barista then the US probably won’t let you in but if you’re a doctor then you probably have a good shot.

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TheMobyDicks t1_ixcq9tu wrote

Two things.

#1 Research the Free State Project before calling yourself a libertarian. The movement here is erratic and useless. I think you just want to live in a "free-er" state, which New Hampshire absolutely is. So, if you can pull it off, good on ya.

#2 We have a massive workforce crisis in this state, so getting a job shouldn't be as difficult as others are espousing. H1B is the way. Success all depends on what field you aspire to. What are you currently studying? Once we know that we may be able to make specific suggestions.

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vscduebr t1_ixczfq2 wrote

No one on reddit supports anything but extreme left wing thinking, atleast on these smaller subreddits comments like yours and mine will last a few hours before they get downvote bombed. Like another comment mentioned, they cant handle seeing someone trying to escape out of the policies they are trying so desperately to convert our ‘free state’ into.

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thenagain11 t1_ixd1976 wrote

our tax structure simply relies too heavily on property taxes which is slowly strangling all but the rich and upper middle class. You could raise everyone's wages and all that would happen is taxes and property values would rise with it. We need to reform the way we fund our towns and state infrastructure. We can't afford it as it is and it's going to kill our economy in the next 10-15 years without change.

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Rizingfire t1_ixd40pi wrote

If a libertarian id suggest going more South & find a red state where you can enjoy freedom without always being on the verge of losing it.

Besides our Governor, we just re-elected some of the worst anti-freedom pieces of garbage to represent our state in the House & Senate...they just spend millions on campaigns of lies to trick stupid people & it works...

Plus the weather can be challenging up here...

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timecrash2001 t1_ixd53a6 wrote

Canada is easier - and just as cold! But NH is doable - have gone thru the immigration experience and can give you a lot of advice. AMA!

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pahnzoh t1_ixd53v5 wrote

If you look at your property tax bill, you'll see the the vast majority of it is itemized to schools.

Sort of problematic if you don't have kids or don't plan to.

You're being forced to pay to school other people's kids. I get that this is the way it's worked for sometime, but I don't think this is exactly ethical. You have the kids, you should pay for their schooling. You don't have kids, you don't have to pay.

That way you're not forced to pay exorbitant property taxes if you don't have kids.

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PracticalSouls5046 t1_ixd9hc9 wrote

Find a job that will sponsor your H1B visa, fly over, find a place to live. Stay for a few years and apply for residency and eventually citizenship if you really like it. Larger corporations generally have the resources to support paperwork more easily.

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Relative_Election_81 t1_ixdbd23 wrote

Canada is an extremely authoritarian country that's run by a guy that's right on the verge of being a dictator, why would somebody flee the authoritarianism of Europe just to go to Canada and experience the same problems, but worse lol

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Relative_Election_81 t1_ixdbzrr wrote

Part of the problem was that we had garbage candidates running against them, Hassan definitely would have been fired if her moron Republican opponent hadn't falsely accused a libertarian of assaulting him and alienated half his base in the process

*Edit: fixed typos resulting from speech to text

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Relative_Election_81 t1_ixdcouv wrote

Libertarians are not opposed to the state existing. That would be an anarchist. Libertarians are basically just liberals from 20 years ago, before that label was co-opted by alt-left authoritarian extremists.

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Relative_Election_81 t1_ixdcvnv wrote

Without borders you don't have a nation, without a nation there is nothing to protect the rights of the people from authoritarians. "No human beings are illegal" is an asinine statement that intentionally misses the point, stop being dishonest by playing semantic games.

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4ever48 t1_ixdd6bk wrote

No. The free-staters are a political force here. In Nashua, NH we have a greek orthodox church you might want to contact. St. Philip at 500 Hollis Street. I'll bet someone there could help you.

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alexkourtis OP t1_ixddea4 wrote

Aggree. But basically i felt like saying that word basically lures opposers for a straw man fallacy where they go like: "oMg So YoU ThINk eVeRyThING sHoULD bE PraivAtELy oWnED just because youre privileged and don't experience the problems of capitalism first hand? Basically they just assume you are some hardcore ancap.... Which I'm not tbh

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Happy_Confection90 t1_ixdgs3c wrote

I looked into this a few months ago and it seems that if we had the same income tax and state-averaged property tax rates as MA, homeowners would need to make well over 50k before they paid more in combined taxes than we do just in property tax now.

And that's as a single earner, it'd probably be even less regressive for dual income families who can "share" the property tax bill between their incomes.

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linuxnh t1_ixdhlcg wrote

It’s already been mentioned but several people have moved from abroad to NH due to the free states project - that’s another realm you could look into and ask

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mackerdoots t1_ixdiutk wrote

Let’s enter into a gay asexual marriage and open up a pizza shop. Or you can try to marry yourself and say that your other self identifies as a US citizen and NH resident

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[deleted] t1_ixdk382 wrote

You're an EU citizen. You have NH at home. Try Austria or Finland. If it's a politics thing, I hear Hungary and Poland are just as reactionary as the US.

Contrary to popular belief, it's extremely difficult to immigrate to the US. Your best bet is to find a US citizen to marry for a green card.

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A-Do-Gooder t1_ixdll6o wrote

You should consider coming here with a study abroad program. This will allow you to have a taste of what NH has to offer for a few months without needing to make any long term commitments. I did a quick search, and here are the schools in NH that have study abroad programs:

  • New England College
  • Keene State College
  • University of New Hampshire
  • Plymouth State University
  • Dartmouth
  • Southern New Hampshire University
  • Franklin Pierce University
  • Granite State College
  • Rivier University
  • Saint Anselm College
  • Manchester Community College (NH)

You can also explore doing an internship in between semesters. There are lots of places that offer internships in NH! Some places that I know of are DEKA, Texas Instruments, BAE Systems, WMUR, Merchants Fleet, VHB, and so many more!

Good luck!

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Low-Head-1493 t1_ixdlrjm wrote

It’s so cute when you guys get angry and bust out flatlander as an insult.

I can walk out my door and access trailheads to a 4,000 footer without even driving… have been lucky enough to live in several parts of this state over the years where I could do so… but go off!

Btw it’s a purple state politically… maybe some day you’ll be able to grasp that concept without blaming Massachusetts?

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PM_Me_Ur_B1MMER t1_ixdqxdj wrote

Tell me you're a troll post without telling me you're a troll post.

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theCatch_man t1_ixe6dtz wrote

This is bad logic. Better schools for anyone’s kids is better for all of us in the long run. Better for the economy, better for society as a whole.

We also pay for plenty of things we don’t use, like anyone under 40 for social security and everyone paying for Medicare even if we don’t use it. We should pay, because social programs are good for the entire population in the long run, and just because you don’t have kids doesn’t mean you won’t benefit from a well educated population.

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pahnzoh t1_ixeamk7 wrote

It's not bad logic. I want good schooling too. Through voluntary market exchange like the rest of the products and services I buy. Pay for what you use, and don't pay for what you don't.

I just don't want to use violence and extortion to pay for it.

I would dissolve those socialist programs as well as they are intergenerational extortion.

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Arthur-Morgans-Beard t1_ixees9t wrote

Because, attending public school and benefitting from its teachings only to turn around and say you shouldn't have to fund it as an adult is the ultimate "fuck you, I got mine". I don't like the property tax rate either, but others paid for me to learn and give me the opportunity to turn myself into a functioning adult, so I should pay it back. Unless you have some other brilliant idea on how to do it, it sounds like you think we don't have to educate future generations, or more likely, just the poor kids.

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theCatch_man t1_ixefusf wrote

Again, if I don’t use the highways should I not pay taxes for infrastructure? If I never see a penny of social security should I not pay any income tax? This logic just doesn’t make sense, we can’t just say that since we don’t use something we shouldn’t pay for it.

What about the police or fire departments? My house has never set fire and I’ve never been robbed, but we can’t just tax people who use those services!

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pahnzoh t1_ixehf6u wrote

It is hard to come up with a perfect ethical solution when we are born into social systems that have relied on debt financing, political corruption, extortion, taxation, forced governance, and the like.

I don't see any problem with use-based payments for infrastructure. We already have them, they're call tolls. It's just a different way of funding things.

All of these services can be performed by the private market by paying for them. I understand that's not the way we've done it, but you can certainly do it without the government middle man.

It's completely logical, you just haven't heard of it because it's not taught in schools or discussed in media.

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Drivedrivefff t1_ixej5nn wrote

Don't worry about what anyone on reddit says regarding politics or libertarianism. As soon as you stray from repeating the leftwing talking points of the day it's just strawmen and hate.

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theCatch_man t1_ixejbvn wrote

I can definitely see where you are coming from better now. It makes sense, but I still don’t think that’s the right way to view these issues.

I think use-based systems won’t work unless there’s a clear way to tax people fairly. For consideration, think if a billionaire pays $0.50 for a toll versus someone getting paid 7.50/hour. The billionaires’ tax burden is significantly less for that toll than the min. wage worker.

I also don’t think the private market should be a way to pay for roads, infrastructure, and education. I think time and time again, when you let capitalism run rampant, it hurts the working and middle class while benefiting a fraction of the wealthiest people. If all schools were private and looking to increase profits, I don’t understand how that could benefit the common person. I think that may lead to more corruption than in the government. The free market idea needs to be very well regulated, and the government should take on costs that won’t be explicitly profitable (schools, roads, etc) but are either a necessity or provide economic value down the road.

As a side note, I have no idea what “forced governance” you mean.

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movdqa t1_ixfeub6 wrote

Fastest way would be to come on a tourist visa, meet someone, decide to get married and apply for a change of status. If you go the fiance' route, you have to remain in your own country for some period of time before you can emigrate. The whole process is long, involved, and complicated though.

There is the H1-B visa route but you have to have skills such that an employer would sponsor you. These are more common in scientific fields like software and electrical engineering, biotech, etc. I've heard that some school districts have programs to hire teachers where they can get around the H1-B caps. I do not know if any NH districts do that.

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Relative_Election_81 t1_ixq7weg wrote

I'm aware of what you posted, your confusion stems from the fact that you appear to be unaware that your post was a complete non sequitur. I'm talking about people, not parties. If you think party platforms are an accurate reflection of what people who support that party actually believe, or even an accurate reflection of the beliefs and actions of the politicians in that party, then you haven't been paying attention.

But let's talk about parties. 20 years ago the Democrat Party was not opposed to freedom of speech. Now they are. You don't get to be opposed to the most basic of all human rights, the very underpinning of liberalism, and pretend that you're a liberal.

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Relative_Election_81 t1_ixq8bdx wrote

"your reality" that right there is a perfect example of why independent voters and moderates have been fleeing the Democrat Party in droves. People don't have their own realities, there's just reality and not reality. The alt left is completely delusional.

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