Born in Belgium 46 years ago and i still love it here... I have traveled to many countries that have fantastic things to offer that Belgium doesn't have. What we do have though is an ubeatable sum of many small parts that makes the quality of life very high. I wish the many fellow Belgians who are complaining all the time would realize that and appreciate and help sustain it more... Thanks for sharing your positive perspective!
As a Belgian that travelled quite a bit and loves to learn about other cultures, I know that we don't have it that bad compared to a lot of other countries. But I do think people should speak up on where we can still improve as it can still be better and if people keep their mouth shut nothing changes and nothing will get better. So I am actually happy when I see people getting in the streets to make demands to change things to make things better.
Nice to hear positive things about Belgium. There are a lot of things that can be better here but it is refreshing to here the "good" points. I was born here 63 years ago and we sometimes seem to forget what a great country Belgium is. Thanks !
Thanks for the kind words! I truly love your country and I'm happy to be living here ☺ You have some real gems here like the beautiful Lier, Dinant, of course Brugge and Ghent, and the list goes on and on!
14:59 besides green everywhere there is also good food everywhere. Such as this icecream van in the middle of a park. During colder days they probably switch to waffles.
Begian food is not just about sweet treats. Belgian has a refined culinary tradition and most Belgians are gourmets (they're also often knowledgeable about wine). In particular, the country has hundreds of types of cheeses. All of this is way too little known and rated abroad.
@@TheTruthAboutMigration Like day and night. It really is a different culture. The main thing they share is their language. And even then; Flemish is quite different from Dutch. The Netherlands still has this kind of parochialism. Belgium has much more of a subdivision mentality. Dutch love to follow the rules. Since Belgium has só many governments, they are mainly reliant upon themselves, breaking the rules when they deem it fit for purpose, without upsetting the neighbours (because then the rules might get applied). On the other hand; The Netherlands is wáy more progressive than Belgium, in many things. Also, the preservation of architecture. Belgium is full of wonderful churches, buildings & castles. Much less so in the Netherlands. etc. etc. 😀
@@timotheusvanesch3959 As a Belgian from the province of Limburg, I must say that Maastricht is my favorite city! Nothing like it in Belgium, so much nice stores in a close proximity with very friendly and social people in a beautiful pitoresque city, I love it there! And Valkenburg is my favorite city around the Christmas period, the city center has all these nice old yellow buildings and gates with beautiful scenery from the Geul river flowing under the bridges and everything is decorated in Christmas theme around the entire area with Europe's biggest and most beautiful underground Christmas market in marl cave and again everywhere you shop, eat or drink there's very nice and happy radiant people up for a small or a long talk (depending on how busy it is with other customers). Went to Amsterdam aswell a few times but didn't like it that much, friendly people aswell though but the city isn't my cup of tea.
@@TheTruthAboutMigration It is! The Netherlands is way more straight-forward. "rechtlijnig" in Dutch. For me, Belgium and the Netherlands are completely different cultures. The only thing they share, is the language (well, half of Belgium at least). The architecture, the mentality, the "I don't care" mentality: Belgium is kind of the "I don't want to be best in class, I just want to live" part of the ex-17 provinces.
@@timotheusvanesch3959 thanks for sharing; that is very interesting to hear! I do wonder about what you say regarding mentality. I sometimes feel like there are lots of missed (business) opportunities that Belgium could have grabbed but didn't. E-commerce is one of them, when I moved here, there was no Amazon Belgium, and instead of starting something up, we use the Dutch Bol.com. Not sure if that has to do anything with mentality or if it's hard to push through a good initiative here?
Saying this as an Italian, don’t skip it. It’s a gorgeous country. I visited it several times with my parents as a kid and since I turned 18y we come back for Tomorrowland and stay a week to visit. The only negative thing is the weather. It can be extremely hot or it can rain the entire day. Belgians joke about this and say you can have the 4 seasons in one day.
Hey love that you are or were in Belgium! I’m a Belgian from Antwerp who used to be an expat as well, and I hope you’re still happy being an expat even if you haven’t made any vids in a bit. Good luck out there. :)
I don’t know if you knew this about ecocheques but you can actually buy food with it too! Just check for a ‘bio’ label in any major supermarket and you will be able to pay for them with your ecocheques :-)
Hát, Magyar vagy? Én Belga vagyok, s imádom Magyaroszágot, a magyar városokat, müvelödést, identitást, nyelvet. Szívböl köszönom a kedves szavakat az országomról!😊
@@TheTruthAboutMigrationhave you been to Tomorrowland? We have been 2 years in a row now from Italy. It’s so insanely great that I will be returning every year.
I’m watching all your vids on Belgium and I’m sorely tempted to scout it out as an alternative to the US, at least for a few years. You’ve got Margaret Atwood on your bookshelf, you highlighted the good beer, and you captured some of the most beautiful shots of the country. It reminds me a bit of my time in Switzerland but even more stunning.
Before my retirement i worked for more than 20 years in Kringwinkel Antwerpen, and workers there are no volunteers. I was well payed for my IT job there . The money they make goes to pay the workers and to get the show running.
@@lukkask I see! Still, we are grateful for your and your ex-colleagues' work, I think I speak on behalf of all immigrants when I say we found kringwinkels extremely helpful! ☺
Thanks for posting the video. I must say that I am amazed on how slight misalignment in your understanding of Belgian society can lead to misunderstandings on how this society works. Anyway keep trying and I’ll keep grinning when following your videos. I raise my hat to you!
Thanks for posting this, it is full of the reasons why we would love to live in Belgium but thanks to Brexit that is now very difficult😢! I did like your reference to Belgium not having extreme poverty and wealth ... unlike another country🤫 ... spot on! All ten reasons seem great to me and I'd add an 11th ... excellent cycling infrastructure.
Hey David, this might be interesting for you but I think Belgium has special arrangements for people from the UK. I am an Italian Erasmus student and even if the UK isn’t part of Erasmus anymore, British can still study in Belgium with Erasmus. In our Erasmus WhatsApp group I know several Brits who recently move to Belgium. One of my Scottish friends who studies in Leuven, he’s family moved 4 months ago. He said that it’s very easy to find a job for English speaking people and I think that’s the only requirement. There are FB groups of British living in Belgium who could help you with it.
@@GianniDN Wow, thanks for taking the time to reply with all this help. We're older and looking more to spend time in retirement rather than studying or working. Belgium understandably likes younger people who are more likely to contribute to overall system. We will dig deeper and get advice from an immigration specialist. Good luck there, have a great time and enjoy your studies.
If you can speak the language, it's easy to find a job. The northern parts wants you to speak Flemish, the southern part speaks French. If you don't speak the local language, but only English, people will probably not hire you, since you will have to be able to communicate with clients or collegues to understand the orders.
I don't agree with your view on taxes. Too many people end up in the highest tax bracket. People with average salaries already end up in the highest bracket, so the system is broken.
maybe do again research about those taxes , they are high but mostley for the working class , not for the riches , and i schould know , living here for 52 years now raised and born , but for the rest it's true it's a good country
Luxembourg is even worse 😂 public servants are king. Not my thing. Entrepreneurial dynamic enthusiasts have to move out. Gonna escape soon. But thanks for the report 😊
Haha all the best with your escape! I heard a lot of bad things about Luxembourg from expats, but according to surveys it has been improving in the past year
All this greenery i nice untill a storm makes a tree hit your car, block the road or when during fal/autumn the roads, sidesteps and front yards are covered in leaves and then it rains and it's all messy and gutters get cluttered. Not very pleasant at all.
One of the most sold and read history books in Belgium ever is a very elaborate, well written and critical study of Belgium's colonial past in Congo and of Zaïre / DRC after the independance. The main museum on Belgian colonial history in Tervuren has over the past couple of years been completely overhauled and reinstated to better explaining the realiteit of our colonial history. People do know. But as in everything other country there are people who will deny the light of the sun. Generalisation leads to easily avoidable misunderstanding and mistrust, it fuels division rather than solve anything, no matter who does it...
I do feel it is discussed a lot more than other countries do, for example how schools in Britain teach about the former colonies... I guess there is always room for improvement.
Nah man not at all. We talk about it and know what happened there… we teach about it. I as a teacher teach my pupils about it in a non whitewashed way. They need to know the dark part of my country… don’t be obnoxious
Yes thats our whole history especially since all 12 million Belgians went to the Congo to chop of hands. Its still our national sport to this day chopping off african people their hands. We do it every saturday morning while having a waffle and sipping beer... Ah we should write a book about it: "The Belgian peasant with the cleaver of justice". Maybe we should legalise this then the prisons wouldnt be full cos its hard to be a criminal without hands. So mainly peoples mood change when u ask about the Congo is becos only the few had their hands in that cookie jar. Ow yes u saw what i did there. So yeah very whitewashed Leopold has his private colony where very few Belgians actually profitted from it and he used it to build Brussels a place that we avoid cos its now called new Africa and the title of the movie: "Brussels the failure of multiculturalism". Ah the peasant life for me...
Born in Belgium 46 years ago and i still love it here...
I have traveled to many countries that have fantastic things to offer that Belgium doesn't have. What we do have though is an ubeatable sum of many small parts that makes the quality of life very high. I wish the many fellow Belgians who are complaining all the time would realize that and appreciate and help sustain it more...
Thanks for sharing your positive perspective!
I completely agree, love the quality of life here and indeed, people here should appreciate what they have, because it really is great here ❤️
As a Belgian that travelled quite a bit and loves to learn about other cultures, I know that we don't have it that bad compared to a lot of other countries.
But I do think people should speak up on where we can still improve as it can still be better and if people keep their mouth shut nothing changes and nothing will get better.
So I am actually happy when I see people getting in the streets to make demands to change things to make things better.
Nice to hear positive things about Belgium. There are a lot of things that can be better here but it is refreshing to here the "good" points. I was born here 63 years ago and we sometimes seem to forget what a great country Belgium is. Thanks !
Thanks for the kind words! I truly love your country and I'm happy to be living here ☺ You have some real gems here like the beautiful Lier, Dinant, of course Brugge and Ghent, and the list goes on and on!
Except for weather it's a gem. Love from anIndian in Belgium ❤
Even for a Belgian the weather has been lousy
14:59 besides green everywhere there is also good food everywhere. Such as this icecream van in the middle of a park. During colder days they probably switch to waffles.
Begian food is not just about sweet treats. Belgian has a refined culinary tradition and most Belgians are gourmets (they're also often knowledgeable about wine). In particular, the country has hundreds of types of cheeses. All of this is way too little known and rated abroad.
Lóve it!
Ghent is my favourite city as well! ❤️ So glad you love it here 😊 Is it a lot different from the Netherlands?
@@TheTruthAboutMigration
Like day and night.
It really is a different culture. The main thing they share is their language. And even then; Flemish is quite different from Dutch.
The Netherlands still has this kind of parochialism. Belgium has much more of a subdivision mentality.
Dutch love to follow the rules. Since Belgium has só many governments, they are mainly reliant upon themselves, breaking the rules when they deem it fit for purpose, without upsetting the neighbours (because then the rules might get applied).
On the other hand; The Netherlands is wáy more progressive than Belgium, in many things.
Also, the preservation of architecture. Belgium is full of wonderful churches, buildings & castles. Much less so in the Netherlands.
etc. etc. 😀
@@timotheusvanesch3959 As a Belgian from the province of Limburg, I must say that Maastricht is my favorite city! Nothing like it in Belgium, so much nice stores in a close proximity with very friendly and social people in a beautiful pitoresque city, I love it there! And Valkenburg is my favorite city around the Christmas period, the city center has all these nice old yellow buildings and gates with beautiful scenery from the Geul river flowing under the bridges and everything is decorated in Christmas theme around the entire area with Europe's biggest and most beautiful underground Christmas market in marl cave and again everywhere you shop, eat or drink there's very nice and happy radiant people up for a small or a long talk (depending on how busy it is with other customers).
Went to Amsterdam aswell a few times but didn't like it that much, friendly people aswell though but the city isn't my cup of tea.
@@TheTruthAboutMigration It is!
The Netherlands is way more straight-forward. "rechtlijnig" in Dutch.
For me, Belgium and the Netherlands are completely different cultures. The only thing they share, is the language (well, half of Belgium at least).
The architecture, the mentality, the "I don't care" mentality: Belgium is kind of the "I don't want to be best in class, I just want to live" part of the ex-17 provinces.
@@timotheusvanesch3959 thanks for sharing; that is very interesting to hear! I do wonder about what you say regarding mentality. I sometimes feel like there are lots of missed (business) opportunities that Belgium could have grabbed but didn't. E-commerce is one of them, when I moved here, there was no Amazon Belgium, and instead of starting something up, we use the Dutch Bol.com. Not sure if that has to do anything with mentality or if it's hard to push through a good initiative here?
I wouldn’t even have thought about Belgium as a destination to visit, but your video has me intrigued. Nice work!
Happy to hear that! Belgium really is a beautiful country 😊
Saying this as an Italian, don’t skip it. It’s a gorgeous country. I visited it several times with my parents as a kid and since I turned 18y we come back for Tomorrowland and stay a week to visit. The only negative thing is the weather. It can be extremely hot or it can rain the entire day. Belgians joke about this and say you can have the 4 seasons in one day.
Hey love that you are or were in Belgium! I’m a Belgian from Antwerp who used to be an expat as well, and I hope you’re still happy being an expat even if you haven’t made any vids in a bit. Good luck out there. :)
I don’t know if you knew this about ecocheques but you can actually buy food with it too! Just check for a ‘bio’ label in any major supermarket and you will be able to pay for them with your ecocheques :-)
Hát, Magyar vagy? Én Belga vagyok, s imádom Magyaroszágot, a magyar városokat, müvelödést, identitást, nyelvet. Szívböl köszönom a kedves szavakat az országomról!😊
Check out all our festivals... I think basicly every town has one
Thanks! I've been to some pretty great ones, but I'm always happy to receive suggestions ☺
@@TheTruthAboutMigrationhave you been to Tomorrowland? We have been 2 years in a row now from Italy. It’s so insanely great that I will be returning every year.
I’m watching all your vids on Belgium and I’m sorely tempted to scout it out as an alternative to the US, at least for a few years. You’ve got Margaret Atwood on your bookshelf, you highlighted the good beer, and you captured some of the most beautiful shots of the country. It reminds me a bit of my time in Switzerland but even more stunning.
Thank you very much for the very beautiful words.
My pleasure, and thank you for the lovely comment!
16:05 Kringloop Winkel 😊 The money goes to the municipality where it stands. The workers are volunteers.
Ah that's great, I had no idea! Now I love them even more 😊 Thanks for sharing this info!
Before my retirement i worked for more than 20 years in Kringwinkel Antwerpen, and workers there are no volunteers. I was well payed for my IT job there . The money they make goes to pay the workers and to get the show running.
@@lukkask I see! Still, we are grateful for your and your ex-colleagues' work, I think I speak on behalf of all immigrants when I say we found kringwinkels extremely helpful! ☺
Thanks for posting the video. I must say that I am amazed on how slight misalignment in your understanding of Belgian society can lead to misunderstandings on how this society works. Anyway keep trying and I’ll keep grinning when following your videos. I raise my hat to you!
This channel deserves more subs❤
Dank u wel, mevrouw :)
Graag gedaan ☺
And the Dardenne brothers, thanks .
Thanks for the update
I am interested in Belgium
How can you help me move to Belgium
Thank you
Hi, nice information
You forgot the most famous belgian singer : Jacques Brel; even Terry Jacks made a cover of the song "le moribond" called "seasons in the sun"
So true, he is a legend!
Thanks for posting this, it is full of the reasons why we would love to live in Belgium but thanks to Brexit that is now very difficult😢! I did like your reference to Belgium not having extreme poverty and wealth ... unlike another country🤫 ... spot on! All ten reasons seem great to me and I'd add an 11th ... excellent cycling infrastructure.
Hey David, this might be interesting for you but I think Belgium has special arrangements for people from the UK. I am an Italian Erasmus student and even if the UK isn’t part of Erasmus anymore, British can still study in Belgium with Erasmus. In our Erasmus WhatsApp group I know several Brits who recently move to Belgium. One of my Scottish friends who studies in Leuven, he’s family moved 4 months ago. He said that it’s very easy to find a job for English speaking people and I think that’s the only requirement. There are FB groups of British living in Belgium who could help you with it.
@@GianniDN Wow, thanks for taking the time to reply with all this help. We're older and looking more to spend time in retirement rather than studying or working. Belgium understandably likes younger people who are more likely to contribute to overall system. We will dig deeper and get advice from an immigration specialist. Good luck there, have a great time and enjoy your studies.
You can buy anything you like with the ecocheques, you just have to buy something ecological with it. For example a LED lightbulb😅😁
Sorry, we have a mountain in Antwerp: de Wezenberg... (wezen means orphans and berg means mountain!!)
Is it hard to get a job in Belgium?
If you can speak the language, it's easy to find a job. The northern parts wants you to speak Flemish, the southern part speaks French. If you don't speak the local language, but only English, people will probably not hire you, since you will have to be able to communicate with clients or collegues to understand the orders.
If you are willing to learn the language there's no problem, they even pay for lessons where I work. English is tolerated in between.
I don't agree with your view on taxes. Too many people end up in the highest tax bracket. People with average salaries already end up in the highest bracket, so the system is broken.
maybe do again research about those taxes , they are high but mostley for the working class , not for the riches , and i schould know , living here for 52 years now raised and born , but for the rest it's true it's a good country
Luxembourg is even worse 😂 public servants are king. Not my thing. Entrepreneurial dynamic enthusiasts have to move out. Gonna escape soon. But thanks for the report 😊
Haha all the best with your escape! I heard a lot of bad things about Luxembourg from expats, but according to surveys it has been improving in the past year
How to say I don’t want to pay taxes without saying I don’t want to pay tax.
All this greenery i nice untill a storm makes a tree hit your car, block the road or when during fal/autumn the roads, sidesteps and front yards are covered in leaves and then it rains and it's all messy and gutters get cluttered. Not very pleasant at all.
🥱
I live in Belgium for 20 years. SHIT HOLE OK. IS BAD. I MOVE TO THAILAND. BEAUTIFUL LIFE.
I live in Belgium and find it is a country with a racist mentality
Tu n'habiterais pas en Flandre par hasard ?
@@jndelbauve bonjour, non à bxl, les francophones pareil que les néerlandophones, souvent cousins, et aussi des exceptions de chaque côté
Belgian history *in* Belgium is very whitewashed. Ask a few people about the Congo and see the mood change.
One of the most sold and read history books in Belgium ever is a very elaborate, well written and critical study of Belgium's colonial past in Congo and of Zaïre / DRC after the independance. The main museum on Belgian colonial history in Tervuren has over the past couple of years been completely overhauled and reinstated to better explaining the realiteit of our colonial history. People do know. But as in everything other country there are people who will deny the light of the sun. Generalisation leads to easily avoidable misunderstanding and mistrust, it fuels division rather than solve anything, no matter who does it...
I do feel it is discussed a lot more than other countries do, for example how schools in Britain teach about the former colonies... I guess there is always room for improvement.
Where are you from MalusGaming?
Nah man not at all. We talk about it and know what happened there… we teach about it. I as a teacher teach my pupils about it in a non whitewashed way. They need to know the dark part of my country… don’t be obnoxious
Yes thats our whole history especially since all 12 million Belgians went to the Congo to chop of hands. Its still our national sport to this day chopping off african people their hands. We do it every saturday morning while having a waffle and sipping beer... Ah we should write a book about it: "The Belgian peasant with the cleaver of justice". Maybe we should legalise this then the prisons wouldnt be full cos its hard to be a criminal without hands.
So mainly peoples mood change when u ask about the Congo is becos only the few had their hands in that cookie jar. Ow yes u saw what i did there.
So yeah very whitewashed Leopold has his private colony where very few Belgians actually profitted from it and he used it to build Brussels a place that we avoid cos its now called new Africa and the title of the movie: "Brussels the failure of multiculturalism".
Ah the peasant life for me...