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I have seen the claim that between eighty and ninety percent of the land in the Bay Area cannot be built on, by a combination of federal, state, and local restrictions. Thailand has Thai Buddhism, which is pretty important to her, and if she doesn’t get to have the high-end medical care of the Bay Area, the medical care available with a private insurance plan in Thailand is a good value for dollar. Receiving countries’ citizens might not appreciate being flooded with (relatively) affluent Americans who don’t work, I think there are likely economic benefits.ġ) Personally, I find the potential cultural mixing that could come out of this aesthetically appealing.Ģ) I could see a lot of marriages coming out of this, and thus new US citizenships, and the government might not like that.ģ) As I briefly touched on above, it seems like this could be done for a lot of things like education and healthcare.Ĥ) Just lest anybody think me entirely heartless in wanting to ship my mom off to Thailand so as to make caring for her easier, she kinda likes the idea. True, many people would complain about their poverty demanding they leave their homeland, but that just seems par for the course people flee their homecountries to pursue better opportunities all the time, all over the world–and they often come in as the lower class not the middle class.
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Then I started to think about it, couldn’t the US provide a lot of resources cheaply to our poor citizens if we were willing to outsource them? I started looking at other countries, and Thailand stood out because of its low cost of living and it’s retirement visa, however she revealed she is not allowed to leave the country on SSI. My siblings are all either unwilling or unable to take care of her, so it’s left to me, and I have been looking into ways to do so affordably (I do not have an exceptional income, and I intend to permanently ordain as a Therevada monk within the next few years).
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My mom is on SSI, and she owns a house in the Oakland which it is possible she will lose due to a complicated mix of a lawsuit and skullduggery. I have a bit a personal background to this. $700/month on SSI won’t get you much in the US, especially in a city, but in Thailand someone could live quite well. Better yet, cut them a check and make arrangements with other countries so that they get visas. Why doesn’t the US export our poor? It seems like if the US wants to take care of someone who is unable to take care for themselves, someone on SSI say, it would be cheaper to do so if we paid for their care in another country.
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