#foreigners

wist@diasp.org

A quotation from Russell, Bertrand

Well, it is part of our emotional apparatus that we are liable to both love and hate, and we like to exercise them. We love our compatriots and we hate foreigners. Of course, we love our compatriots only when we’re thinking of foreigners. When we’ve forgotten foreigners, we don’t love them so much.

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) English mathematician and philosopher
Interview by Woodrow Wyatt, BBC TV (1959)

#quote #quotes #quotation #foreigners #hate #humannature #love #othering #tribalism #UsVersusThem
Sourcing / notes: https://wist.info/russell-bertrand/65824/

aljazeera@squeet.me

Teenager trapped in Gaza slams Canada's lack of help | Al Jazeera Newsfeed

This Palestinian-Canadian teenage girl has been hoping in vain to leave Gaza and cross into Egypt. She tells Al Jazeera that Canada’s government has failed i...#AlJazeera #AlJazeeraEnglish #Canadian #Gaza #Palestinian #Rafah #alJazeera #aljazeeraEnglish #aljazeeralive #aljazeeravideo #aljazeeraEnglish #aljazeeralatest #aljazeeralive #aljazeeralivenews #border #crossing #dualnationals #foreigners #latestnews #newsheadlines
Teenager trapped in Gaza slams Canada's lack of help | Al Jazeera Newsfeed

vna_info@diaspora-fr.org

Make it easier to live and work in Vietnam, expats urge

Expatriates enjoy their lives in Vietnam, but would like the government to do more to facilitate their stay, particularly in terms of immigration policies.

Having coming to Vietnam five years ago to start a business, Dutchman Wouter has many good things to say about living in the country.

“Vietnamese food and general hygiene are pretty good compared to some other countries I have lived in and there is enough work for people with knowledge.”

Given the ongoing inflation worldwide, Wouter said Vietnam remained “extremely affordable.”

However, he said Vietnam lags behind in policies that would make it easy for foreigners to work and live in the country.

“The huge amount of paperwork in general is my largest negative point for Vietnam.”

In an email to VnExpress International, Wouter said he was currently outside Vietnam waiting for a new visa, “despite my investments in Vietnam and my very significant tax contributions to the country.”

“Immigration has been a mess after Covid and I’m not the only one. From visa agents I hear thousands of people are waiting for their resident permits to be processed,” he said.

Wouter said he owned several properties in Vietnam and for one apartment, he has been waiting four years for the ownership papers.

“This doesn’t give foreign investors a safe and comfortable feeling,” he added.

According to an “Expat Insider” survey released in July by InterNations, the world’s largest expat community, 80 percent of expats said they are satisfied with the general cost of living in Vietnam, compared to the global rate of 45 percent.

However, they rank Vietnam very low in administration.

The annual survey asked nearly 12,000 expats living in 52 countries and territories about living and working abroad. If expats ranked Vietnam first worldwide in the index of “personal finance,” they placed the country 51st in the “admin topics” subcategory of the “expat essentials” index, only above Malta.

Expats said they find it difficult to deal with local bureaucracy (66 percent versus 39 percent globally), open a local bank account (41 percent versus 21 percent globally), and get a visa in order to move there (48 percent versus 24 percent globally).

While Wouter wished for more “clarity” and “easy processing of the paperwork” to facilitate foreigners investing in Vietnam, Ross Munro of New Zealand lamented difficulties in communicating in English at government offices.

Having been in Vietnam for 12 years, Munro is married to a Vietnamese woman and the couple have two children.

“What I find particularly baffling is the lack of any information or assistance in English.

“Vietnam had a goal of being an English speaking nation by 2020 and yet seemed to do almost nothing to ensure that goal was achieved. It means that any interaction with government departments, healthcare or legal assistance requires the services of a translator/Vietnamese assistant,” he said.

The InterNations’s survey results also showed expats ranked Vietnam 48th on the “quality of life” index. Over half (53 percent) were unhappy with the urban environment, more than triple the global average.

More than half of the respondents also believed that the government does not support policies to protect the environment (versus 18 percent globally), ranking the country 50th on this count.

An American who did not want to be named said one of the biggest problems in Vietnam now was the trash that he found everywhere.

“This should be a high priority for the government to fix,” he said, adding: “Fixing the trash problem could provide huge amounts of much needed energy to an energy starved county.”

Having spent nearly 12 years either living in Vietnam or coming in and out of the country, the other problems “that seriously detract from Vietnam” are the noise and the traffic rule violations, he said.

“The government must step up and must lead. Surely the government can send the correct people to other places in the world where these problems have been solved, and bring those ideas back to Vietnam and then forcefully implement solutions here.”

Married to a Vietnamese woman six years ago and currently living in Binh Duong Province that borders Ho Chi Minh City, he said Vietnam has done a good job in containing Covid and it should use the same energy and determination to fix other problems.

European Nadine Kegen said cheap prices were still an advantage in Vietnam, but she “would rather pay a bit more for everything and live in a cleaner environment.”

Kegen, who has been working in Ho Chi Minh City for more than three years now, described the environmental pollution in Vietnam as “terrible, because trash is everywhere.”

She wanted the government to firmly handle the task of cleaning up the environment and tackle traffic violations with harder punishments.

The number of expats living and working in Vietnam was 117,800 in 2019, 10 times higher than 2005, and 1.4 times higher than 2015.

By Minh Nga – VnExpress.net – August 10, 2022

#expat #foreigners #vietnam

Originally posted at: https://vietnam-aujourdhui.info/2022/08/11/make-it-easier-to-live-and-work-in-vietnam-expats-urge/

brainwavelost@nerdpol.ch


By Femi Akomolafe for the Saker Blog

Let us not mentioned the truly horrendous masacres in Africa, India and South America by people who claim to be on civilizing missions.

Unlike most cultures that I know, the “free world” #European culture appeared to be designed to engage in perpetual hatred of The Other.

One of the Culture Shocks that I experienced during my sojourn in #Europe was the penchant to #blame #FOREIGNERS for everything that is wrong in society.

Unlike in Africa where we blame our stupid and inept leaders for keeping us pinned down in a neo-colonial state of underdevelopment, Europeans consider the #Immigrant as the #CAUSE of all their #problems.

#Ukraine #Russia #CIA #China #Taiwan

We are in July and while the Russians are not letting up on the grinding of the Ukrainian forces, the West has already lost interest in its latest misadventure.

Many Western countries have already announced that they have no more weapons to spare, and the EU’s powerhouse, Germany, has been reduced to dusting off ancient mothballed tanks to send off to battle against an already defeated Russians!

That’s when German officials are not too busy trying to placate an irascible and ungrateful Ukrainian officials with an obscene and gratuitous sense of entitlement.

Or maybe the Ukrainians should feel perfectly entitled since they were foolish enough to sell off their country for whatever pieces of silver they got!

The question here is: Why are Westerners so dumb that they cannot ask where their leaders who can’t find the money to repair their shattered economies, suddenly find the #money to provide #weapons to Nazis in Ukraine?

Well, I think that Europeans are also just foreigners and not all of them can be blamed for the problems. Anyway, it is worth thinking about his writing.

wist@diasp.org

A quotation by Taylor, A. J. P.

It is always tempting when you have political discontent in your own country to say it is the fault of some other country and not of your own government.

A. J. P. Taylor (1906-1990) British historian, journalist, broadcaster [Alan John Percivale Taylor]

How Wars Begin (1979)

#quotation #quote #blame #discontent #excuse #foreigners #government #protest #suppression

More notes and sourcing on WIST: https://wist.info/taylor-ajp/47490/