Is this a contingency plan?
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Amazing beer in Michigan. Bell's Two Hearted Ale is the beer that began my love affair with IPA.
The Clarkston Union's mac and cheese is damn near worth a trip to The Mitten on it's own. And I'll take a controversial stance and say the Woodshop is a superior BBQ joint to Slow's. Plus, Kid Rock might buy you a drink while you're almost inevitably waiting for a table at the Union and/or Woodshop.
Damn, I'm going to have to go back for a football weekend in the fall of 2021.
I already lived in Michigan for 27 years. No interest in returning.
Canada's kinda tough on legal immigration but soft on illegal. Just sneak in there and claim asylum, they'll never send you back here once you're there.
I had a colleague who is an Indian national who got sick of being held captive by his H1B visa. Green cards have a quota system by country of origin (x thousand per year per country), and there are enough applicants before him that he knew he wouldn't get a green card for decades. He applied for Canadian PR and got it in about six months. Coincidentally (?) he was headhunted by a Canadian company in our industry around the time he got his PR, and has been living there for just over a year now.
My understanding is the PR system is points-based, so the key criteria for him and his wife were:
-high education, with 3 master's degrees between the two of them
-his wife is an engineer (I think, not sure what kind)
-both fluent in English, neither speaks any French as far as I know
-In their mid-30s
-Both professionals, so while I don't think they're millionaires, they weren't a high risk to be living on the street
From my perspective, it seemed much easier / smoother than I expected. The one wrinkle is that at a certain age, I understand you lose points -- just like other posters mentioned upthread, they don't want people that will be heavy users of healthcare, or at least you need to have something else that makes you attractive.
I didn't know Piper Perri was one of Liv2Ski's daughters.
Both my wife and I have jobs that are on "the list" (https://www.immigration.ca/fast-trac...nd-occupations) so that's a plus. To be honest if I moved to Canada I wouldn't want to work as an engineer, though. I'd like to keep my current job until I'm ready to retire, although I realize that wouldn't help my chances. My wife has her own company here and could do exactly the same thing in Canada.
Yes, border guards on both sides of the border can be arbitrary and capricious.
Former business partner was Canadian citizen. Retired Army Colonel, served in CA Intelligence Corps. Came to Houston for a meeting with our investors. Border guy started interrogating him about whether he was trying to illegally immigrate.
He told me he replied along the lines of "Why the fuck would I want to live in this shithole country? If I get sick, or shot in a drive-by I'm fucked, you spend all your tax revenue on stupid wars, and the government here (Bush Jr at the time) is run by a bunch of morons."
That got him a trip to the "Special Area" where they gave him more shit for a couple of hours. Meanwhile I was cooling my heels in the airport wondering where he was.
He vowed never to return to USA.
Yeah, the list seems awfully comprehensive...
edit: the real key is there's a point system based on six factors: English and/or French language skills, education level attained, work experience, age, arranged employment in Canada, and "adaptability." If you score high enough you can then apply through the Express Entry process which uses a separate scoring system.
There is definitely a premium put on those who can enter the workforce in Canada and work for a long time. For age points it peaks at 12 if you're 18-35 and then starts dropping off. You get a bigfat zero if you're 47 or older.
I understand that employment is a sticky issue for Canadian immigration, and I played with one of those websites but there wasn’t an entry for retired people. Anyone know how they feel about retired folks with bomber pension/IRA? Asking for...myself.