Everything Trump and his henchmen do seems to have a degree of built-in cruelty. Kilmar Abrego Garcia, being one of the few real thorns in Trump’s backside, probably earned himself an extra helping or two.
I assure you that I had no special skills when I moved out of the US the first time 🙂 I was a decent but otherwise run-of-the-mill junior software engineer. The only “special” skill I had was being rather good at coding tight assembly - something that was in demand when embedded systems didn’t have gigabytes of disk and RAM and processors that would rival a Cray-I just to flush a toilet or something.
I picked up skills that are quite valuable along the way (I am certified aero QA engineer on the white collar side, and I have a degree in a rather obscure but highly-specialized metalworking sub-field that I shan’t mention because there are so few people working that field on the blue collar side). So it helped to find new jobs for sure.
But the relocating and moving countries was just me wanting to see the world before I was old by living where other people lived for real instead of being a crass tourist for a week, and it didn’t have much to do with my professional qualifications.
Lincicome lists a number of problems with this transaction, including (but not limited to!):
- Intel making decisions for political rather than commercial considerations
- Intel’s board prioritizing government interests over their fiduciary duties
- Other companies being pressured to purchase Intel products, weakening their long-term position.
- Disadvantaging the competitive position of other companies
- Incentivizing the misallocation of private capital
Here’s my biggest problem with the US stake in Intel, that’s not in the list: whenever Intel turns a profit, 10% of it directly finances the fascist Trump regime.
People who want to fight fascism in the US absolutely need to boycott Intel from now on. That mean no Intel processors, but also no daughterboards or laptops with integrated Intel chipsets, or anything Intel-branded.
My outrage is exhausted
That’s exactly what authoritarian regimes like the USSR’s or Trump’s want to achieve by overwhelming everybody with outrageous shit all of the time: people get used to the dystopia and it becomes their new normal.
*attempts to fire
It’s as good as done. She can lawyer up all she wants, ultimately it will be decided by the corrupt Supreme Court and it’ll be in favor of the orange utan.
America becomes a fascist state, jews turn into Nazis and religious nutjobs become the voice of reason.
I must have inadvertently stepped into some really bizarre alternate reality at some point…
it’ll be challenged successfully in the Supreme Court.
And you really think that?
This SCOTUS is a corrupt MAGA outfit. They gave Trump full immunity and they’ve rubber stamped almost all unconstitutional shit Trump has thrown at them. If you think they’ll side with you on that flag burning thing, you’re dreaming.
Also…
why would they bother?
Epstein files.
I wonder if those who fondle the flag should be prosecuted for gross indecency towards national symbols…
In many countries, your best bet is to get sponsored, or otherwise helped by your employer in the country of destination. If they won’t help you, you simply apply for a resident visa.
In Canada for example they have (or at least they used to have, I don’t know if this still applies) a system of points whereby you get x percent for having this or that skills in demand, x percent for speaking both French and English, x percent for having found an employer in Canada already… and the visa is granted automatically if your total is over 80% or something to that effect.
In Australia, I got a visa by proving that I had a bunch of money on my bank account. Again, I don’t know if it still applies today, but at least back then, all Australia was interested in is whether you could take care of yourself financially or if you were a bum coming to leech off welfare. I didn’t really have the money, I asked friends and family to lend me as much as possible to make my account fat enough to enter the country, then I gave them the money back.
As for Europe, I had dual citizenship (not anymore, I gave up my American citizenship). So I didn’t have to do anything to enter the EU country I have citizenship with. Once in the Shengen area, you can relocate anywhere you want without asking permission.
Originally Canada. Then the UK, Australia, then back to Europe where I lived in several EU countries. Currently I’m in northern Scandinavia.
Don’t sell yourself short. You never know… You might have some skills that are in demand somewhere. Or if not, but there are welcoming countries that only require one to be motivated enough.
At any rate, it doesn’t cost anything to look around for the minimum requirements for immigration into the countries that might interest you.
Well, like I said, it’s not for everyone.
Even in the best of times, the United States is a country that requires a background level of stress and paranoia to live in. You realize that when you move to another developed country where you don’t have to lock your door or wonder whether the next person you meed is armed, mentally unstable or up to no good.
Even before this whole fascist shitshow got started in 2001, I considered the US a lost cause that’s not really worth fighting for. Dubya and the USA Patriot Act was the thing that finally pushed me to leave.
I only have a finite number of hours on this dirtball and I fully intend to spend them as best I can with my family and my children, and offer them a good life. I don’t have time to fight for lost causes.
It’s a choice ultimately. Emigration isn’t for everybody. If you want to stay and try to make America better, more power to you. I just want people to know that life is sweeter elsewhere.
I fucking hate it here
I know it’s not for everyone, but emigration is an option. I left the US 25 years ago and never regretted - and that was when Dubya only barely started turning the country fascist, and it was still normal and somewhat pleasant to live in. So just imagine how much better life is outside the US today…
If you have the possibility, you should consider it.
The future is now the present and it is both kinds of dystopias: as in all fascist regimes, the private sector is in cahoots with the regime. The US is no different.