Posted on 03/28/2010 7:15:31 PM PDT by Nodems2000
I have seriously been thinking of leaving the country. My hope is pretty much gone that we can turn any of this around. Who would I be staying for....to support the people who ride in the cart and don't contribute and hate this country? I'm too old for all this and if the immigration bill goes through, I totally believe all is lost. How can we pay VAT, Tax and Trade, Healthcare, Local sales taxes, income taxes, etc., etc. and survive? So overused today, but it's "non-sustainable"
you are dreaming...it will all be passed before Nov...
Si.
46% of the populace still think the muzzie in chief is doing a fine job.
Nothing that happens at the ballot box is going to deal with that problem.
Until the right to vote is reserved to veterans and taxpayers only, the slide to the end is inevitable, and that’s not going to happen through the electoral process
We are discussing a recon trip to Panama this year to look at real estate.
Washington had a back up plan if they lost the war.
Hell I’m even in Michigan and I intend to stay and irritate the liberals into surrender.
“They are in front of us, behind us, and we are flanked on both sides by an enemy that outnumbers us 29:1. They can’t get away from us now!”
- Lewis B. “Chesty” Puller, USMC
“We’re staying to fight.”
Like the people staying in California....
They will leave — I won’t.
My family has been here 300 years — that’s longer than the leftists.
my daughter, son in law and grandson live in the UK. if we move any further to the left, England will be to the right of us and i will go and move there.
When the Marines were cut off behind enemy lines and the Army had written the 1st Marine Division off as being lost because they were surrounded by 22 enemy divisions. The Marines made it out inflicting the highest casualty ratio on an enemy in history and destroying 7 entire enemy divisions in the process. An enemy division is 16500+ men while a Marine division is 12500 men.
We will too!
YES..While I left in 2005 for central Europe, I have now, at age 65, settled in my final place, The Philippines.
It is home to many older expats. I am now 65.
While I respect those of you who keep the stiff upper lip
and think that America will return to greater days, you are just whistling in your britches.
The good days are “Gone With the Wind”.
Until you get into the overpriced food....having been in the biz for my career, it's a laugher throughout the industry; a few noodles, a bit of fancified "sauce" and you're broke, yet wondering why you're still hungry.'
It's no secret why "Pizza" is such big business. Think about it. Nothing "Italian" should cost more than a Big Mac.
Sister has been spending time in Guatemala and really likes it. 3rd world isn’t for me.
I hear ya, patriot preacher. I agree.
Right now, I go back and forth between the US and El Pino. In fact, I’ll be going back next Monday for a while. The electricity is free because the government supplies for almost all that you would need to use (keep in mind, you’re in the Caribbean, so you never need to turn on the heat — and since El Pino is in the Pico Bonito foothills, a fan is more than sufficient to keep cool).
High-speed internet is excellent. And since I use MagicJack, phone calls to the US are free. By the way, my 120 cable channels cost me about $20 a month.
No way
I should have made my last statement clear, that I would not stay there forever. haha. just long enough to regroup.
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