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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 30th, 2022

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  • nemesis@lemmygrad.mltoAsk Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    1 year ago

    Not a Russia expert by any means but this is how I understand the situation:

    • The Eastern Orthodox Church gained influence after the fall of the USSR and used it to spread anti-LGBT sentiment
    • Russian leadership are conservative reactionaries and the KPRF, the largest opposition party (and only nominally communist), is also quite reactionary
    • Due to the way the US weaponizes the concept of human rights, being anti-queer is seen as being anti-imperialist in many countries outside the West, including Russia

    I had another point that I forgot while I was typing this up because I’m trying to function on 3 hours sleep lol. If I remember it I’ll update





  • Yeah about that… I’m also from the US and poor and my partner is disabled. We’ve looked into emigrating to China, and unfortunately the chance of success is basically zero for your average person.

    There are only a few ways to become a permanent resident of China (that I’m aware of):

    1. Be the spouse of a Chinese national
    2. Have permanent employment in China
    3. Be a dependent of a Chinese citizen/perm. resident
    4. Be an investor

    Out of these, #1 is the most feasible for your average person. Of course, there could be a quite few ethical problems in this scenario depending on how it plays out.

    #2 requires the person to be deemed highly-specialized and irreplaceable in their sponsored work visa job in order to be considered for permanent employment. These are usually tech, engineering, etc. Basically specialized jobs that are in demand in the US will likely also be in demand in China.

    #3 doesn’t apply.

    For #4, I think the minimum investment is $500k USD. So that’s a no go for most people.

    And on top of this, you have to provide your medical record and I’m not sure how a disability would affect your ability to become a resident.

    And of course, in all these cases, this only applies to you personally. I’m not sure if there is a feasible way for your grandparents to emigrate to China.

    Also, most of this is pretty similar to most countries I’ve looked into so you’ll continually run into the same problems. I’ve more or less resigned myself to my fate in this fascist shithole.