Im cutting and running. They gave me a lot of reasons too but i sat down and made a list of reasons to stay in my area and there werent really any. So im putting my shit up for sale and moving to a deep rural area. This will at least buy some time. I guess we will see if critical mass is achieved to change any of this.
It's a good time to sell but a hard time to buy.
Im moving from a bubble area to rural so ill stil come out ahead financially with much more land and a bigger house. Been looking for a couple weeks.
No doubt you will. But the housing market is crazy competitive right now. I had to pay cash on the spot for my mom's house otherwise she would not have gotten it. Family looking at the place as I got there and another coming to see before I was done. Neither could hack a cash deal though.
Almost been a year at our new home in rural, small town america from a semi big city that is starting to get all the big city problems (niggers, faggots, libshits, ect...)
Twice the house, ten times the yard, double stall to a huge shop garage, 10k less than the big city house was.
Things you can't put a price on: quite all times of day, extremely friendly and all White neighbors, seeing the stars at night.
Best decision we've ever made.
I did it a few months ago. Moved 4000 miles from a blue state to a red one. No regrets.
I bought 5 acres small town 40 minutes from a. Ig towm.. probably not far enough but we will see
Sell every thing and buy a home in southern Russia.
How do you move to russia without being a citizen?
You could start by asking for a one year visa to study Russian. I really liked the university in Shakhty. As for business opportunities it's an hour from the port city of Rostov, has an intelligent well educated and enthusiastic workforce. The clothing factory, Gloria was very busy producing women and children's clothes when I visited the showroom. The tile factory had me in their show room that featured well made floor tiles. I went by a closed shoe factory which seemed a shame as most shoes are imported and expensive. Southern Russia seemed odd to me with a strange mix of overlooked business opportunities and well educated people with older Soviet era people barely getting by. It seemed to me a society in transition.
Old customs are still strong, such as hospitality and courtesy while the younger generation are eager to embrace free market values. My visit was 2005 so I'm sure much has changed economically while the people would be more prosperous today. In Moscow at that time most cars had government plates and were cheap Lada but what I see on you tube channel, SADB, now are expensive government cars and young people who've recently purchased their first car, so obviously things are improving.
has deep rural land. You could get paid to settle it for us?
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