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purpose=RantTypes.Advice;
preferredReaderNationality="American";

Hey! Here's my problem: I am a german guy with pretty fluent english. When I will be done with my bachelor's (or master's, depending on my preference in 3 years) degree, I've decided I'd like to live/work in america; if that is at least somewhat easily possible. Ofc I'd have to get someone to hire me first, but I'll probably find at least something (what kind of company would be best? something like google? a start up?)

I tried googling how to become a citizen, how to work, how to live in america etc. but it's just so many different requirements and statuses and rules and forms that I would have to spend a very large amount of time, which might be wasted. So I thought I'd ask you guy's whether it's possible. /r/america (or similar, it was quite some time ago) didn't respond to my questions.

What do I need to know? What do I need to own? What do I need in terms of skills? What would help my chances? How long does this normally take? Is being a white male german a benefit? How much? Could I stay there permanently or would it be a stay-as-long-as-you-have-a-job sort of scenario?What kinds of precautions can I take?
Is it advisable to go there? If not, what are good english-speaking alternatives? What are non-english alternatives (e.g. I thought about sweden; they seem to have great laws, people, internet, scenery)?

Comments
  • 0
    I frankenstein'ed a few sentences in there by changing too much... I just want to know how, if, when, and if not why not, to go to america
  • 1
    Learn to speak Indian fluently, and print your degree out on moldy cardboard.
  • 1
    American here. In order to work, you would have to apply for a green card as an immigrant worker. This might be the hardest part, and mostly comes down to how successful and educated you are. It will be much easier if you have a master's degree rather than just a bachelor's. That's only the first step in the 5-year path to citizenship. Can't say much about the process because I was a citizen by birth.

    Also a student in Sweden. Beautiful country, I live living here. You can easily get by in daily life with just English, but some locals tell me it's harder to get a job without knowing Swedish, and that there have been a lot of immigrants in recent years.
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