Moving from the UK to the USA

Anybody have any tips on getting a visa or getting an employer to sponsor me? It's getting harder and harder in the past years and I've been spam applying online with no success.
I have to escape this collapsing shitehole immediately and Eurostan's no better.

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  1. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    Preferably a coastal state in New England. I like Boston

  2. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    >Eurostan's no better.
    did you even look at the image you posted?

    • 9 months ago
      Anonymous

      Apply for the green card lottery. Who knows, maybe you'll get lucky? Although, from the UK, only Northern Ireland counts... so I guess you're fricked if you aren't from there. Maybe check back next year.

      Otherwise, it's difficult to get a visa if you aren't going for school and/or have a graduate degree. Good luck.
      Eurostan is also actually better, as anon pointed out

      • 9 months ago
        Anonymous

        No it's not Europe sucks. US citizens have some fantasy of Europe. There is a reason so many Euros left it filled up a country 3x the size.

    • 9 months ago
      Anonymous

      Apply for the green card lottery. Who knows, maybe you'll get lucky? Although, from the UK, only Northern Ireland counts... so I guess you're fricked if you aren't from there. Maybe check back next year.

      Otherwise, it's difficult to get a visa if you aren't going for school and/or have a graduate degree. Good luck.
      Eurostan is also actually better, as anon pointed out

      Easier to immigrate but I'd triple my salary in the US and have been to the states and liked it

      • 9 months ago
        Anonymous

        if you think it's likely that your salary will triple just by moving to the usa, then you are probably a professional or in a fairly skilled job and should be able to substantially increase your salary in the uk
        you are not going to find an employer who will just randomly sponsor you unless you have a special skill in IT or similar and can find an h1b sponsor. there are sites online that have lists of companies that will do this. however the h1b market has largely been cornered by pajeets who basically collude with each other to keep others out. but you might get lucky.
        the most likely path is for you to get a job with a big IT company in the uk e.g. Amazon etc and then get transferred to the usa somehow once you are within the company. i have known several people who have done this
        but if the chart you posted is remotely relevant to you, then you are probably some low-pay unskilled pleb with no real prospects anyway

    • 9 months ago
      Anonymous

      poor people points, americans are poorer than western euros beside nothing is free in america unlike in europe where nobody pays for education or healthcare, just to survive in america you need to have 10 different insurance packages, thats why nobody can collect acutal wealth.

  3. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    border's wide open but that's for shitskins only

  4. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    A friend of mine that works on implementing 5G got over here on a Visa. I think you need a lot of education of your belt and work for a niche industry that can hold your green card over your head to pay you less.

    He ended up marrying some desperate girl to get the green card and stay.

  5. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    >be me
    >German/US dual citizen
    >too lazy to move to US despite better salary
    >mfw

    • 9 months ago
      Anonymous

      What field do you work in? If you're in tech then move already moron. If not, then it might not even be a bad idea to stay in Germany.

      • 9 months ago
        Anonymous

        Online/Digital Marketing

        • 9 months ago
          Anonymous

          stop being rarted, get a USA job

  6. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    stock up on food

  7. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    Easiest is to work for a company with offices in both places, work there for a year and then transfer to their US office.

    Otherwise, get a remote job for a US company, then ask them to move your role to the US later.

    All this requires some long term planning and time, even then, you need to show education/experience and a good work history.

    You may just want to find yourself a remote role and then work remotely in the US, leaving and then re-entering. The US fortunately doesn't have a 90 days in every 180 days rule or anything like that.

    I never had an issues doing that, in fact I got through immigration easier the more stamps I had.

  8. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    Will the UK ever even be eligible for the green card lottery?

  9. 9 months ago
    Anonymous

    Student visa and network your ass off while you’re here.

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