The famous Dutch Tolerance is a great myth. I had a Turkish guy working with me. Not the brightest candle on the cake but boy could the guy work!! 5 days at the factory then Sat & Sunday he manned his family's market stall selling spices, olive oil and many Turkish delicacies. Well the dutch guys would continiously ask him when he was gonna eff off back to Turkey!! Openly, with a big smile on their smug stupid faces as if it was the joke of the century. I too was subjected to several anti immigrant taunts, but having been born with a big mouth and having developed a sharp tongue along the way, I fortunately could put them in their place most of the time.
The comment about great food made me laugh too. What? French fries with mayonnaise??
The Inuit have about 20+ words for snow, the dutch have 5 words for johnny foreigner!!
Rant over.
Ahem, so maybe you suggest that UK is tolerant? Just check you r newspapers and articles about Polish immigrants now.
Lets face it - WHEREVER you would go outside of your homeland, sooner or later they will call you "f'king immigrant" or something close to that, and it won;t be friendly. That's the human nature.
I think that Caveman just longs for a bit of adventure, for "something else" and then, since he says that English is not an limiting factor, then there are so many places to go and live...
And people will be fine, as long as you are decent too. Simple as that.
As per "socialism" n Europe versus "freedom" in US - well, let's put it that way - in Europe some nations decided that money and/or personal wealth is not the top thing in their lives, so they set up their countries accordingly. In US, from my humble observations, the pressure "TO HAVE" is about 300% more than it is in Europe, where many people prefer "TO BE" attitude.
Yes, they pay more taxes, but they don't need to fret every evening if they will be fired, or if they will have good enough treatment in hospital without additional costs. yes, they will have more expensive fuel, but in the long shot it is a personal question what do you want for yourself - cheaper car with cheaper gasoline and nerves and "rat race" all the time, or the proverbial nissan micra 1.0 and a glass of cheap (albeit good) wine in the evening without worry about your retirement.
Everything is a matter of choice. It is good, when it is informed and conscious choice, though.