Ask me anything you want about immigrating to Argentina

Ask me anything you want about immigrating to Argentina.

I'll give you real advice about how to move here or getting citizenship.

I don't care what country or ethnicity you belong to, nor am I encouraging you to move here. I'm just answering questions, just ask whatever you want

Other urls found in this thread:

nytimes.com/2017/02/04/world/americas/argentinas-trump-like-immigration-order-rattles-south-america.html
youtube.com/watch?v=xcDaNW26cuc
twitter.com/AnonBabble

how do i become an honorary Argentinian?

Post some Argentine hotties. And how easy are they

Vorwarts mit unserem Rommel!

Where can I join the secret society Plus Ultra.

>immigrating
>to Argentina.

**crickets**

they're whiter than the USA

Do I have to learn the local language?

Is it still a socialist hell hole or is it improving?

Cross the border and request citizenship

That's not a question.

Ich nicht sprache deutsche

I have no idea

That's not a question

What is the meaning of life?

How do Argentinians view the Pope?

That is a question. How easy are they?

Hows uncle Adolf doing?

Yes

Slowly improving step by step

>improving
Fantastic.

I have no idea

They care only to boast about him. A lot hate him because he neglects Macri

Hard as italian women. Low class are easier

He's already dead

How is crime and poverty? Jobs?
How rampant is social degeneracy?
Do you enjoy it there?

What are your thoughts on Argentina? To me it seems like the only bearable South American country.

...

No

>crime and poverty
Crime is mostly focalized to certain areas, mostly the surrounding towns of greater Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires is no different than any major european capital, crime is located at ghettoes and shitty neighbourhoods. Exercise common sense as in any big city. City of Rosario has higher crime because drug production.

Crime and poverty zones are virtually the same

>jobs
Jobs are more numerous in cities of course but not limited.

>degeneracy
Social degeneracy is almost on european levels in Buenos Aires. Outside there is far lower

> Do you enjoy it there?
I'm indifferent really.

This country's society is very, very similar to Italy. A bit tamer in some aspects

If immigration is this easy, whats stopping Argentina from becoming like the rest of South America?

>Ask me anything you want about immigrating to Argentina.
>about immigrating to Argentina.
>to Argentina
>to
wat

It actually became very much like the rest since the 90s due to the 1-1 dollar rate and then open border policies that reached their peak during the Kirchner's era.

Macri is trying to revert it. A law to deport people from specifically Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay passed its first step on the congress. Immigrants protested to no avail.

nytimes.com/2017/02/04/world/americas/argentinas-trump-like-immigration-order-rattles-south-america.html

Ok how do i get in. Get a job and a place.
Hows cost of living and pay for whatever jovs

How high are the living costs? How is the criminal rate in cities and rural areas?
Do you need to have a job to get in there or can you just come and stay as long as you provide for yourself?

family lives in salta, what do I have to do to get gun s and or gun rights there

I have no idea

Unless your country have a free transit treaty here and so you simply enter, the easiest way to legally enter and staying is enrolling at whatever university (it's free) and moving with a student visa. Just enroll at one or two courses, it doesn't matters if you fail or not.

There are tons of foreign companies im Buenos Aires and Patagonia, if you speak english you can find a job easily.

Housing is cheaper outside Buenos Aires. Prices of things are also cheaper outside there. Southernmost provinces have higher salaries due to living conditions (cold and snow), lack of qualified workers, less people living there and transport of products.

The living costs are high in Buenos Aires. See above.

Crime is lower outside greater Buenos Aires and in towns, see previous replies

You don't need a job as a requisite to get in here. You can come and stay

Gun rights are like in Europe, specially in Buenos Aires and big cities. Having a weapon as a civilian requires a lot of paperwork and grants you no defense, in legal terms.

There's a black market for guns though

It's not uncommon, however, in rural areas for people to carry rifles or guns both for hunting and protection as there is not much enforcement there.

Hey m8. Hispanic(Ecuadorian/Puerto Rican) living in the good ole US of A. I need myself an Argentinian Waifu. How do I get one? Can I impress roasties over there with my superior education and way of life? I know you guys wanna be American like me. Help a brother out user.

Is this "Alex?" If so, I'm sure you know who this is. Greetings

>Can I impress roasties over there with my superior education and way of life?
It depends what you are looking for

Not the Buenos Aires upper/middle class ones. If you are not 1)in or above their socioeconomic level 2)white 3)dress good 4)Chad, your only card is being yourself. Not even having a swiss passport will give you advantage.

Other regions/social strata, yes, more likely

I don't think the name is/was Alex. Maybe I'm wrong

According to manosphere hardest nation next to dry zone aka india middle east shitholes.....but fuckin hot rivaling brazil n Colombian girls

Wow nice.....take ot with canuk passport is easy.
How good are jobs for english speakers

I met an Argentinian 6 or so years ago. I believe last I heard he was studying astronomy or astrophysics. Great guy. Showed me TGSNT and looking back it had a big impact on my path. We had pleasant conversations, he felt like a lost brother thousands of miles away. His surname was Garver.

Do they speak in English at uni? I ain't gonna speak Spanish

Is Argentina freer than the U.S? What is the climate like? Is it growing or stagnating?

what do you call tacos and burritos in Argentina?

I like em ugly and vulnerable so I guess I'll stick to the lower class. I'm talking village girl type.

I don't think that there are major restrictions for canadian immigrants. The article 25 of the constitution explicitly privileges western (european/north american) immigrants who want to settle.

There is always job for english teachers, more at university/superior institutes and american companies

Sorry, I misunderstood your post. I don't know anybody like that

No. Some private universities might have english courses/degrees (I'm guessing MBA/commerce or something like that).

All instruction is in spanish except for bilingual schools

> Is Argentina freer than the U.S?
What do you mean by freer?

As stated before is slowly, step by step being fixed by Macri after the mess left by the Kirchner. Of course nothing can be done from night to morning

Tacos are called tacos. Burritos look similar to arabian shawarmah and people might be more familiar with the later.

Mexican cuisine is a novelty here

Would I find it more difficult to find Argie friends / gf because of my flag?

>not allowed to bring my guns

Sorry, maybe next time.

I'd rather try outside Bs As, like in Mar del Plata, Cordoba or Bariloche.

Lower class in BA city means mostly foreigners (bolivian/paraguayan/etc)

you're listening to coast to coast am?

Could I gain entry by enrolling in a university to study Spanish, and if I am a licensed attorney in the U.S., how difficult is it to get licensed to practice in Argentina, or could I simply advise a company on American law?

No. See above replies.

Poor people brainwashed by the Kirchners and welsh argentines are the only ones who can actually get mad because the Falklands conflict and I highly doubt you are going to interact with them

There are english descent argentines (not much but there are) and none of them seem to have problems

Not now but I know it

> Could I gain entry by enrolling in a university to study Spanish
Yes. It's full of institutes that teach spanish to foreigners in Buenos Aires.

But as stated above I doubt there are major restrictions to american people. A friend of mine is married to an american citizen and he had no problems moving here.

>and if I am a licensed attorney in the U.S., how difficult is it to get licensed to practice in Argentina, or could I simply advise a company on American law?
I don't really know. On one side the law here is different (roman law/canonical law) but I don't really know if foreign lawyers can or can't exercise their profession, maybe there is a way but I'm not sure. On the other side law is a heavily saturated market, specially in Bs As. There's almost 50 lawyers per every engineer.

Now, working as a lawyer for an american company or a local company that works with USA seems very likely.

As a funny note having an university degree and argentine citizenship, even if you never resided here not even a single day, it automatically enables you to join the diplomatic service. I know one case of a foreigner who did successfully such a thing

Thanks, user, it's a back burner inquiry/fantasy anyway. Good at the moment, have my own practice, parents and in-laws still alive, raising kids, etc... But one day, who knows? Maybe retirement, or teaching, when I get tired of being a trial dog.

easiest way to get visa?
jobs?
relative cost of living of different areas or regions of it?
gun laws?
internet laws?
personal freedoms?
good laws in general?
bad laws in general?
ease of buying land/property/buildings/houses?

How does one immigrate there?
How expensive is land there? Is it a very developed country or is there lots of wilderness I could hypothetically live in?
Can I keep muh guns?

What is the freshwater fishing like there? Are there mountainous regions in Argentina? These are important to me.

> easiest way to get visa
>jobs
> relative cost of living of different areas or regions of it?
> gun laws?
> internet laws?
Almost none. You can browse virtually every website and do whatever you want. For example all the videos that are blocked in Europe are available here. Only a documentary against feminism and children custody laws is blocked but you can see it by downloading it from youtube lol

Not a single website is banned or blocked as far as I know

> personal freedoms?
In what sense?

> good laws in general?
I'm not well versed in law so I'm not sure

> bad laws in general
But this one I can answer, child custody for sure. The law sides always with the mother. Anything related to women is on their side by the default

> ease of buying land/property/buildings/houses?
Surrealy expensive in Buenos Aires. Easier/cheaper in other provinces or outside the city.

>This country
>Improving
>Ever

See the quoted replies here for guns and immigration

(Sorry a bit annoying having to write it all again)

> How expensive is land there?
Raw land with no building nor anything is relatively cheap the more it is far away from cities (specially Buenos Aires).

>is it a very developed country or is there lots of wilderness I could hypothetically live in?
No. It's more wilderness than anything. Just check a map, it's kilometers and kilometers of absolutely nothing, pure raw land with only roads that connect small towns in bumfuck nowhere and the cities. The more you go away from the coast or the Andes, the more deserted it becomes. This place is heavily underpopulated, specially in the Patagonia which accounts for more than 50% of the territory yet it has barely 5% of the population

> Can I keep muh guns?
Legally no, specially in cities. But as stated before is not uncommon in rural areas to have rifles and stuff

I'm not versed on fishing but it's very big in the coast and places with lakes and water bodies. Even in Ushuaia which is almost the South Pole (give me a sec, I have a vid related to fishing there) Like San Luis province which is in the center of the country but has lakes and stuff

There's tons of mountains. Both in the cold Patagonia and the warm North. All the Andes and some others in the interior parts. Cordoba has an infamous mount known for UFO sightings

I don't know who's telling you these lies, but they best cease.

>But why should I trust an alien?

Like a 3rd world immigrant

>easiest way to get visa?
Crossing the border and saying you want to vote for someone is enough to get citizenship. In a matter of days if elections are near.

>jobs?
Kek,

>relative cost of living of different areas or regions of it?
The further south you go the more expensive it gets.

>gun laws?
They are ok, however the self defense laws are really shitty and you may even face jail time for kiling an armed person who was in you own home unless he fired first.

>internet laws?
Not many, but they will start taxing us for using online services starting next year, that includes anything from Netflix to AirBnB.

>personal freedoms?
Good on the social freedoms, really shitty on economic freedoms.

>good laws in general?
Divorce is not as painful as it is in America since alimony is based as a percentage of your income, so you won't face jail if your income becomes zero.

>bad laws in general?
A lot of shitty socialist laws that give rights to workers that more often than not mean that you have to keep up with the bullshit of really bad employees because you can't afford firing them.

>ease of buying land/property/buildings/houses?
Hard, buying any of those means that you will have the tax authorities on you ass for a long time trying to find dirt on you. Also after your first property you have to pay extra taxes for them.

youtube.com/watch?v=xcDaNW26cuc

>A lot of shitty socialist laws that give rights to workers that more often than not mean that you have to keep up with the bullshit of really bad employees because you can't afford firing them.
Sick. Works for us here, though we are eroding workers rights and lo and behold! Flooded with Chinese and Indians who work for a pat on the back and housing is becoming unaffordable and healthcare is dying and education is unaffordable and we are losing every major city to filthy third worlders

>What is the freshwater fishing like there?
I live on the coast so most of my knowledge is of saltwater fishing, however i have some cousins that are into that and they love to presume their Dorados.

>Are there mountainous regions in Argentina?
Not sure if serious... We have The Andes and the Aconcagua that is the highest mountain in the Americas.

9/10 would move there after the US goes to shit. Isn't 10/10 because I would need to learn spanish.

That has nothing to do with worker rights, It's just your politicians betraying you to provide cheap labor for big companies.

This kills the job market.

>Only a documentary against feminism and children custody laws is blocked

Do you need engineers in your country?

>expect an interesting discussion about extra-terrestrials

>it's just some shitty argie thread

How much would a room cost in house with other young people??

what are the requirements when im from ermany?

i want to leave this muslimhole

i wanna also replay the travel of adolf hitler to argentinia

>im serious to laarp this

A risk premium for anyone under 12