To: Zincman who wrote (79618 ) 10/9/2012 9:57:32 AM From: John 7 Recommendations Respond to of 103300 The problem with moving, although immediately appealing, has a few important negatives. First, the act of moving is actually running away from the problems. However, one can argue that if problems are unsolvable, as are society, demographics, and government in the United States today, it justifies leaving. Second, I do not relish the idea of leaving my country with all that I know. Simple things like Christmas, Thanksgiving, knowing the subtleties of the local vernacular in language, the trees being the right height, people who largely look like me and share my values, etc. However, one can argue that the United States has become a foreign country around us. Still, I can find pockets preserved with normal people from a normal time. Third, the long arm of the world's central banks and the misery and terror that its owners bring to the world through their fiat currency scheme, implemented at gunpoint, exists everywhere. Between multiculturalism and taxes robbed from us at gunpoint by government goons and thugs, normal citizens in the US are fu¢ked 10 ways from Sunday. -nfg- I think the key in the United States is to elect representatives who will (a) return the nation to the gold standard, (b) permanently abolish the central bank, (c) permanently repeal all race-based laws, (c) deport all illegals without exception, (d) eradicate all forms of socialism, communism, Marxism, fascism, egalitarianism, and liberalism, (e) greatly reduce the size of the federal government, and (f) build many more jails, prisons, and execution centers to erase the criminal element. The problem with this grand idea is that as soon as representatives are elected, and perhaps well before that, they are corrupted somehow and completely fail to live up to their pledges and promises. With all of that said, I would love to try living in South Island New Zealand out in the countryside for a while, or perhaps the mountains of Western Alberta.