Tell me about Florianopolis, Brazil. I want to know everything there is to know about it, cost of living, weather...

Tell me about Florianopolis, Brazil. I want to know everything there is to know about it, cost of living, weather, transportation, jobs, etc.

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trabalho.gov.br/trabalho-estrangeiro
g1.globo.com/rs/rio-grande-do-sul/noticia/2016/12/familia-de-argentinos-esquece-filha-em-posto-de-combustivel-no-rs.html
patadata.org/maparacial/
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

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will learning portuguese help me get a brazilian gf?

Just say you're from Germoney, they'll be all over your knob.

want to know this as well

Yes;
The problem is keeping them. Brazilian women love easy D, not so much long term relationships.

is this true as well

bump
REPLY TO MY THREAD REEEEEE

Yeah we don't know how to speak english and your language are going to dead in few years

please tell me about the city

You don't want a monkey as a gf. Our IQ is low as hell

It's a shithole.

self-hating chimp.
you are the macao.

The city is great OP, Santa Catarina is a beutyfull state, but it is the capital of there, we are a third world country after all, so be smart.

sorry but I live in São Paulo

do you want to know about são paulo?

yes, i love brazil in general and want to know more about it, i am a brazilaboo i guess you can say

Yes it will, the german accent in portuguese sounds very cute, of you dont look like a monkey shitskin you will have a brazilian qt

what about the midwestern american accent

>cost of living
Expensive. Almost double the price of the countryside.
>weather
cold on winter, very hot and humid on summer
>transportation
terribad. only buses - no subway, surface train, ferry... few bycicle paths. on summer you cna take 3h to go to and come back from beaches
>jobs
mostly commerce, public services and IT. on summer, tourism rises

i like brown girls

>Expensive. Almost double the price of the countryside.
Relative to Brazil, I'm assuming? If I had a remote job that payed around $1500 USD a month, how far would that go?
>weather
About what I expected.
>transportation
How big is the city? Can you walk to most places or is a car/motorbike necessary? (Side note, how common are motor bikes in Brazil?)
>jobs
IT? Really? I wouldn't have guessed that.
Other side note, how hard would you say it is to move to Brazil? Not necessarily citizenship, but if I wanted to move there for like a year or two, how would I go about doing that?

That's the idea, yes, Hans.

florianopolis is argentine clay

they look nice

>jobs in brazil
>gang member
>monkey soup composer
>a monkey
>collecting bananas

chill, brazil is nice.

>jobs in croatia
>child trafficking smuggler
>dead bosnian soup composer
>a dead bosnian
>collecting shiny things from rubble

>jobs in usa
>professional school shooter
>CIA regime changer
>mart sharter
>live police target
>professional detroit survivor

>a dead bosnian

>Relative to Brazil, I'm assuming?
Yes.
>remote job
Do you mean like working from home but living in the city? Anyway, 1500$ USD per month in Brazil is good. You can live easily but you can't do much.

While 1500$ USD is way more than what the average Brazilians earns, he will still have to live relatively limited, specially for an American and also depending where he decides to live.

Bump

>$1500
not bad (that's almost 5000 reais in direct conversion) if you don't have a family. If you live in nearby cities (São José is our New Jersey), you'll have severely less housing costs

>big
The city isn't that big - most of it is in an island (54km x 18km). However, stuff is far from each other, so you'll need a car or suffer the buses (pic related, happened last month in São José)

>move here
We have a lot of foreigners working here, so I might guess it's not that had. Getting the citizenship is very hard, I've heard.

Anyway, this is the legal aprt of it (sorry, didn't find it in English. May Google Translator help you!)
trabalho.gov.br/trabalho-estrangeiro

You may send an e-mail to [email protected], it's the official one regarding this stuff.

I can give a tip: teaching English will be your easiest job to get. Language schools love to advertise they have native speakers of their courses

Also, i advise you to take some Portuguese classes. MIddle class and upper people will be able to have a conversation with you, but the lower classes (including supermarket workers and small merchants) will hardly understand whatever you say in English.

Ah yes, during summer north Florianópolis and our malls become Argentine territory.

>El ArgentiniANO wants to speak with someone
>'hola que tal?' (hello, what's up?)
>'hola' sounds like 'rola' (nickname for 'penis' in Portuguese)
>Brazilian person understands 'rola, que tal?' (what about penis for you?)
>El ArgentiniANO either gets spanked or laughed off
>complains about Brazil, but returns next summer

oh, and also...
>forgets kid at the gas station
g1.globo.com/rs/rio-grande-do-sul/noticia/2016/12/familia-de-argentinos-esquece-filha-em-posto-de-combustivel-no-rs.html

Argentinians want to dump their unwanted kids here. What a heartless people! Sad!

It's pretty easy to immigrate to Brazil.
You can:
>Marry a Brazilian people (no matter what sex)
>Have a decent resume (yes, our emigration agency expect you to have a Curriculum Vitae)
>Open a business here (must prove that you will hire at less 6 people in few years)
>Retire in Brazil (if you receive x from the government in your home country, you can retire in Brazil (get citizenship) and then pass the citizenship to your kids)
Those are the "laws", but we accept any expat to become Brazilian.

Use this map to chose the best city or town.
patadata.org/maparacial/