Contact us to find out how we can help you: nomadcapitalist.com/apply There are only four free countries left: ruclips.net/video/QxIJQF6gEpY/видео.html
I left America 15 years ago and no plans to go back. Just got to find a citizenship somewhere else. It’s hard when you’re not a high net worth individual
That’s absolutely true to be in a free country means to have privacy, it’s sad that people get offended instead of becoming aware. Your privacy is part of your freedom and rights.
Cameras are also in your phone, tablet, probably under the screen. My cameras are blocked on my devices. If I take my eyes off the screen, or close my eyes while watching RUclips, a commercial will come on about 70% of the time.
I know you've talked about Mauritius in other videos, and you would think that a tiny island off the coast of Africa would have no interest in mass surveillance . . . but they do have a "Cyber City" in this country (Ebene), unfortunately.
Loving the new term “legacy brand country”. It’s new to me anyway. The world is now much more awash in appealing countries to live in and do business in. It’s not so truncated as it historically has been.
I am more bothered by the fact that it's the corporations which have us all profiled according to politics, shopping and item preferences, race, age group, income bracket, gender and so on.
Your priorities are misplaced. Certainly 'corporations' (woke-speak for businesses) profile us, because they want to sell us stuff; we can buy it or not, as we choose; governments profile us to control our behavior, and we don't get to pick and choose whether we want to do what they want us to do. Worry about the latter rather than the former.
Just got my American passport replaced. It has an RFID chip. There was no RFID passport when I had it last. U.S. Department of Homeland Security > Transportation Security > e-Passports
@@lulumoon6942 subconscious ploys to convincingly manipulate human behaviour reducing individuals agency and autonomy.. In psychological trials subjects must give their consent beforehand. Who has consented to being manipulated by the government?
@@humanbeing6933No one but let’s face it, people get the government they deserve. Saying you’re too busy trying to make a buck isn’t an excuse for being unaware of what’s been happening for decades on Capitol Hill. I’m just as guilty as most of us are. Hopefully, something will wake us up and change this paradigm, if it’s not too late already.
That stuff a 7m:50s is gold guys! Far too often, Western people that haven't really known other countries (their people and environment) won't know this... I know this becasue I've really been there in the dust and dirt. "I've been there," they say... Means nothing unless you've sat around the camp fire in your sodden, muddy boots with these people, sheltering from storms under trees with these people, met their wife's, met their sons and met their daughters. As a westerner, it's easy to think everyone's like you and all is well... Well, they aren't and it isnt! 😂
I was in St. Lucia in the 1980s when there was a port worker's strike and there was a worker murdered by police. Britain still had a colonial presence that controlled the banana and spice farming. Don't know if they are still meddling like we meddle in Haiti.
Re: satellite technology. There's a couple confounding factors that limit the image quality and resolution of earth observation satellite (EOS) images. 1. Launch vehicle cowling diameters - 2.5m. That restricts the size of the mirror used to collect the images. Yes, the James Webb telescope gets around this by using multiple mirrors, but there are no EOS satellites using that tech. NASA was gifted an unused "spy" EOS by NRO years back. It had a 2.5m mirror. Long story short, 4"/px resolution is the max until someone develops a wider rocket. Picture 4" squares on a person's face....about 6 pixels - far too few to identify an individual - and that's assuming they are lying flat on the ground. The "read a license plate from space" thing is not true. 2. Atmospheric conditions. Water vapor/clouds obscure observation, and typical atmospheric mixing distorts imaging. What you need to worry about is drones that can loiter for long periods, while continuously sending imagery to the watchers AI, as well as the Stingray cell skimmers. Those are death for privacy - along with NSA gathering all your electronic traffic.
@@ZaneConnor I think you mean hyperspectral. That's generally captured by aerial platforms, although USGS has a hyperspectral satellite. Resolution is coarse...like 100 meters/px. One thing to know is that on EOS platforms only the greyscale band is the quoted/highest resolution. The other bands in a multispectral sensor are half as detailed (red, green, blue, infrared, etc). The RGB images you see are created by digital marriage of the grey band with the colored bands, which also introduces errors/artifacts. Due to collection issues, image quality issues, and price satellite imagery is rarely used by non-federal actors anymore, except for large, landscape scale collections - think Alaska.
There is a way to bypass VPN blocking if your ISP is the one blocking it. You can hire a server overseas like an Amazon web service hosting and install a VPN on that server or create your own private connection to that server that functions just like a VPN
Hi Andrew, I enjoy listening to you on i-Heart Radio and one of your podcasts (I can’t remember exactly which one) I was not permitted to listen to this particular podcast of yours “in my country.” 😮 Go figure……
Unfortunately, the government is not the biggest threat to our privacy. The problem is the government doesn't enforce privacy laws and doesn't protect us from violations of our privacy. They're also happy to make it seem like they're not capable of doing so.
I agree completely. I'm growing older and have a hard time maintaining privacy. Im very capable and the USA in certain states just wants to watch me and control me. I hate this and I want my latter years to be happy, not controlled and anxiety ridden.
I have a family that anchors me to the USA. I am very aware that good medical services are available in various countries. How can I find these opportunities?
USA will have to continue to allow legitimate commercial VPN access to employees for work purposes. For example, the US-based company one works for, as a remote software employee, likely requires remote employees - regardless of employee location - to login to a VPN to do their work. This is not for surreptitiously visiting banned sites or masking location to other countries, etc. Rather, it's for corporate security purposes. This is basic CS101 stuff.
Better ask who builded them first?.... I HAVE FKUND CIA AND OTHER 5 EYES BASTARDS COUNTRIES BEHIND MOST WITH BACK DOORS IN THEM... I ROFL I checked them out, And CIA LITTLE FINGERS.. LIKE SHEEPOEPLE THINK FOR IS GREAT OK EVERYTIME I I LEAN COMPUTER OUT THEN USE FOR THEN CLEAN OUT AGIAN... OK LOTS LESS THAN GOOGLE... BUT STILL ARE SOME LIKE CIA AND LIKE LITTLE ZIONIZTS STASI STATE I MID EAST
You can't, but governments easily can. Just by passing a law that makes say, any site that makes sales - verify the customers age via a government issued ID.
The joke about the new Dutch prime minister Schoof goes he was the perfect candidate because "he listens to every citizen". Schoof was president of AIVD (Dutch KGB).
The langauge is broad? The language in the 1st and 2nd Ammendments isn't broad at all. It's very specific. But that doesn't stop them from trying to do away with both
Banning a VPN doesn't work. Best they can do is have them removed from the App Store and Play Store. But jailbroken devices can still get them. Or if your iCloud or Google account uses an email or prepaid SIM card from a different country, then you've circumvented any ban. What you're talking about is basically the 'vig', but for that to work, there needs to be more give than take.
@sun-groupecommunications1331....Switzerland has a looooong way to go before it becomes like the US but I know what you mean. A few referendums are coming up soon that will hopefully keep the country on the right track.
@@lazapololapolo9824 By 20 years of experience, referendums give an impression of democracy, but the health insurances lobbies, as well as the banks and pharmaceutical lobbies have unlimited amounts of money to undermine People's power, at least since the people voted mandatory health insurance for everybody, then the price grew from 30 CHF to 650 CHF per month. What a democracy. Check the numbers, all true.
@@lazapololapolo9824 20 years of experience as an adult in Switzerland showed that referandums are deception, they can always reverse it slowly with series of small laws...
I thought the same thing! The sound and the cadence of his voice are much like Carlson. I was thinking that they were raised around the same area, but not the case. 🧐
+1 for properly pronouncing Pakistan, Andrew. Which is how Afghanistan should be pronounced as well; i.e., all the "a"s are pronounced as the one in the word _father._ Also, the money isn't "impacting" anyone; it's _affecting_ them. Finally, Tanzania is pronounced "tan-za-nee-ya", not "tan-zey-nia".
Can you recommend a reputable company that can help someone who hasn't acculmulated enough wealth yet to qualify for your company's services, by chance? I'm watching your channel avidly, reading and learning alot- but alas, I am not a seven- and eight-figure entrepreneur. Yet :)
Thanks for your interest! While our services are tailored for high net-worth individuals, you can attend our annual Nomad Capitalist Live event. It's a great opportunity to gain valuable insights and network with like-minded individuals: bit.ly/3TE0iPm
@@Johnnie-d9b Unfortunately this is true. Everyone in the world needs to know this if they don't already, and never forget it. Oh if you only knew, if you never lived there. The United States government can and has circumvented any and all constitutional amendments simply by using executive order as an excuse, and sometimes not even that. They will even get around the courts because the courts are corrupt, full of loopholes, etc. What they do in darkness can fill whole books. Do not even think of assuming the United States will play fair. And right now they are angry, and arrogant, that more and more speak out about these matters, and would dare to question them.
@@ARUchannel1 Actually they are. Freedom has risks and only the safety you can provide for yourself. If you're not allowed to use firearms to protect yourself in self-defence, if you can't legally use anything in self-defence, then you are NOT free - you are a subject/ward of the state. Safety is having mummy government control your life, what you can and can't do whilst telling you that if you so much as strike anyone in self-defence you will go to jail. You have either freedom or safety - you can't have both. If you don't understand this, you deserve neither. Freedom is more important.
The government was watching me with that satellite and blamed the Chinese for invading usa's airspace. In return, I was watching them with a $150 telescope, who is smarter?
I enjoyed reading your piece, and agree with some of your points; especially the global assessment of freedom during the pandemic having moved around Europe and the America during that period. Andrew is my idol, yet I cannot help feeling like the freedom of movement in most countries were incomparable to the States 🗽...
@@Johnnie-d9b Five over 30 years, so far. None in Latin America, as far as I know. Of course, over decades, things change, and usually not for the better.
You can't naturalize anywhere without being fingerprinted. Also, want a professional licence, a licence of basically any type (i.e. not just for firearms or security but marine, truck, bulldozer, liquor, etc.) and you have to be fingerprinted. In this current time, the main biometric you should never give a govt is an iris scan as laws already exist that enforce guilt the moment an security system registers an iris scan match. Avoid, USA, Japan, the Middle East, etc. who require iris scans.
@raulthepig5821 Congress passes a bill saying so, I have this problem where special operations watches me in the shower while I am traveling around the world right now. Less of that would be nice.
@user-uq4qe2om5y so you could use both but since I'm partial rocket science/rap god terrorist I mean tourist/ al jizzeri porn star / 420 activist and I know how to play the greatest musical instrument know to man, the radio. I used the word median
Statistically not true? Quantitatively not true? You can't just add random buzz words like that, it's Trump-style stating something is so without making the actual argument, it works with stupid people but I don't think it will land with the rich well-educated audience you cultivate. Really it all depends on the metrics used. The US in some important ways, most notably the extent of legal protections for free expression and firearm ownership, remains the freest country in the world. There's actually no other nation on earth that offers protections for free expression and firearms that are so strong as the US first and second amendments, protections which have stood the test of time and multiple assaults via the court system by capricious governments at various times, and most importantly unlike many places they cannot be changed by simple legislation. New Zealand, Cananda, the UK and Australia for example were all lauded from these angles as "just as free but better" in a way, but then when COVID hit and Auntie Cindy and Uncle Justin etc decided they wanted to take inspiration from Xi Jinping's government style for a moment, it turned out the total freedom of these countries had quite a few quiet *** attached and lurking in the background all along; turns out the formalities of the whole constitution thing turned out not to be just formalities after all. Stuff happened in NZ that would NEVER happen in the United States. Well, maybe in commiefornia, but the US has 50 states to choose from at least lol. Don't get me wrong as a kiwi I love my country and in a lot of ways I prefer it to the states, but having lived all over the world, in some very real ways the US does remain the freest country on earth, especially in the red/swing states. America has its problems but most of them are about the fact it sucks to be poor in the US and that because the governance is so multilayered there are some grossly incompetent city and state level administrations in the USA that make terrible decisions, but the US problem is not a lack of freedom at the country-level, it's mostly state/municipality issues in places like CA and NY as well as the forever looming military industrial complex, but civil life in places like GA, AZ, TX and FL is humming along just fine and IMO better than many places. The word freedom is really far too nebulous for you to claim that it either is or isn't in such firm terms, every nation has ups and downs. I dislike this way you say "I'm not picking on the USA, I just don't like how people insist it's the best", because really once you peel back the spin actually you are in fact picking on the USA, which is why you just laid in to the narrow Tik Tok ban as if its roughly comparable to China while quietly ignoring the raft of insane intervention, mass surveillance, great firewall, etc in China that's like two orders of magnitude more extensive, the great firewall and many other things has NO real western or US equivalent. Basically you have two standards, one for developing nations you constantly give many free passes to or at least downplay things or rush to give the benefit of the doubt, often talking "its not really so bad as people make out" and alluding to the good things while minimizing the bad, while with the USA you focus on the bad things only while ignoring the good. Developed nations besides the USA are perhaps where you shine as giving a more balanced unbiased view, in my opinion, but the developing world and USA I think you are quite biased. This is not actually a huge problem, it's your job to convince people to become nomads, so in a way this is part of your marketing, but I do wish you could do it without the slightly more negative angle you picked up recently, I liked the positive pro-nomad stuff more than this anti-anglosphere angle all the time that started recently, it just seems a little bitter honestly though I can't see why you would be so. At any rate simply saying "you're not focused on XYZ" doesn't make it so; for better or worse, you are focused on America quite a lot, and its pretty much always negative, and really I think you have to own that reality, it's not really the end of the world it just is what it is. It's the same with how you insist you're not political when you are very obviously an extremely political person, you can't just like make it true by saying that, you have to back this assertion up with actions, you can't just say that then make a bunch of politics content and expect people to take the assertion seriously. Why not just own it anyway? Rather than playing this strange angle where you try to win the game by pretending you're not playing it while still constantly producing content that shows you still are.
He is from the USA. It's his country to some extent. Many immigrants are like that. They like to talk against their countries that they left behind. It happens with immigrants to the West. It happens with the immigrants to the developing world.
This topic is a double edged sword I heard of a guy driving his SUV 100 mph Onstar called him and asked why was he driving 100 mph? Privacy issue or safety issue? If the SUV was stolen Onstar can shut down the car and save it If the driver is needing medical attention they can get help But if they are joy riding then they are endangering themselves and others on the road? So while it is an invasion of privacy it’s also safety If someone going 100 mph and wreck into me they will probably run and leave me for dead So like I said a double edged sword
Contact us to find out how we can help you: nomadcapitalist.com/apply
There are only four free countries left: ruclips.net/video/QxIJQF6gEpY/видео.html
"The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws."
- Tacitus
Also the more vague. That way they can nail you on pretty much anything they want.
I left America 15 years ago and no plans to go back. Just got to find a citizenship somewhere else. It’s hard when you’re not a high net worth individual
@ZzXZ636 not in China , also I have no desire to be a Chinese citizen.
@@TheDividendNomad can u tell me the bad side of china?
why are you living in China then?@@TheDividendNomad
Never under any circumstance underestimate the power of stupidity.
They brainwashed the youth
That's why elections are so scary!
As an Eritrean taxi driver from Ssn Diego, I'm never giving them my 2%!!
From my understanding, if you don't pay your taxes to Eritrea they torture your family members. Is that true? How do you handle that?
I prefer freedom than security.Freedom of the individual is everything.
freedom and security are NOT opposites
freedom to own weapons is security
@@ARUchannel1 you are another feminist Marxist
@@benjamingouchie6379 spot on!
"freedom" is cheaper than cheap.
We only know about the cameras that we're told about
@@RebeccaPerry-Piper-u8x lol in absolutely believe it
There are satellites that see you
Yep dictatorship of Canada same 😡🇨🇦😡
Yup.
And gulag Australia
Already have surveillance in homes when you welcome in Alexa etc.
You’re great at what you do. We can tell you love your career; the info is always helpful 🔥
That’s absolutely true to be in a free country means to have privacy, it’s sad that people get offended instead of becoming aware. Your privacy is part of your freedom and rights.
Thank you for all the information you have provided on your channel Andrew
They could see plates from space since the 70s.
Very informative and enlightening video, Andrew. Thank you! 😃
So much meat in that video to chew on I wouldn't know where to start! Thanks, Andrew!
Thankyou Andrew, this subject is so important.
Cameras are also in your phone, tablet, probably under the screen. My cameras are blocked on my devices. If I take my eyes off the screen, or close my eyes while watching RUclips, a commercial will come on about 70% of the time.
Are they physically blocked?
@@kotenoklelu3471 yes
Freedom is an illusion
Well done.
I know you've talked about Mauritius in other videos, and you would think that a tiny island off the coast of Africa would have no interest in mass surveillance . . . but they do have a "Cyber City" in this country (Ebene), unfortunately.
I seen cameras everywhere there!
When I'm rich I'm reaching out to you and your team! 🤗
We will be happy to serve you! ☺
Me too. ❤
LOL!!! I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE!!!!!
Sadly there is not time to get rich in Gulag Australia for example.
@@christianmagno984 I'm afraid it is the same here in the People's Republic of Canada, me dear southern friend.
Police state
The only kind of state there is.
How about the Country of Texas?
Texas is a state not a country
Loving the new term “legacy brand country”. It’s new to me anyway. The world is now much more awash in appealing countries to live in and do business in. It’s not so truncated as it historically has been.
I am more bothered by the fact that it's the corporations which have us all profiled according to politics, shopping and item preferences, race, age group, income bracket, gender and so on.
Your priorities are misplaced. Certainly 'corporations' (woke-speak for businesses) profile us, because they want to sell us stuff; we can buy it or not, as we choose; governments profile us to control our behavior, and we don't get to pick and choose whether we want to do what they want us to do. Worry about the latter rather than the former.
Somebody always in the know where stuff is gonna broke up. Someone is making bets in the stock market.
Once you are born, you lost your privacy
even in your mother's womb there's no privacy left. They come and disturb you every once in a while to count your fingers and see your sex(iness)😂
Just got my American passport replaced. It has an RFID chip. There was no RFID passport when I had it last. U.S. Department of Homeland Security > Transportation Security > e-Passports
I had mine replaced in late 2021; I think mine has a chip too.
Use magnets.
Foucault’s panopticon: people don’t know when they are being watched, so always behave like they’re being watched…. Ie behaviour modification
Very dismayed to see how much of my useless uni studies is now this modern world. 😮💨
@@lulumoon6942 subconscious ploys to convincingly manipulate human behaviour reducing individuals agency and autonomy.. In psychological trials subjects must give their consent beforehand. Who has consented to being manipulated by the government?
@@humanbeing6933No one but let’s face it, people get the government they deserve. Saying you’re too busy trying to make a buck isn’t an excuse for being unaware of what’s been happening for decades on Capitol Hill. I’m just as guilty as most of us are. Hopefully, something will wake us up and change this paradigm, if it’s not too late already.
That stuff a 7m:50s is gold guys! Far too often, Western people that haven't really known other countries (their people and environment) won't know this... I know this becasue I've really been there in the dust and dirt.
"I've been there," they say... Means nothing unless you've sat around the camp fire in your sodden, muddy boots with these people, sheltering from storms under trees with these people, met their wife's, met their sons and met their daughters.
As a westerner, it's easy to think everyone's like you and all is well...
Well, they aren't and it isnt! 😂
Like the intro BTW... Beginning, middle and end.
I was in St. Lucia in the 1980s when there was a port worker's strike and there was a worker murdered by police. Britain still had a colonial presence that controlled the banana and spice farming. Don't know if they are still meddling like we meddle in Haiti.
Surveillance ; ie thieves & bullies !
Re: satellite technology. There's a couple confounding factors that limit the image quality and resolution of earth observation satellite (EOS) images.
1. Launch vehicle cowling diameters - 2.5m. That restricts the size of the mirror used to collect the images. Yes, the James Webb telescope gets around this by using multiple mirrors, but there are no EOS satellites using that tech. NASA was gifted an unused "spy" EOS by NRO years back. It had a 2.5m mirror. Long story short, 4"/px resolution is the max until someone develops a wider rocket. Picture 4" squares on a person's face....about 6 pixels - far too few to identify an individual - and that's assuming they are lying flat on the ground. The "read a license plate from space" thing is not true.
2. Atmospheric conditions. Water vapor/clouds obscure observation, and typical atmospheric mixing distorts imaging.
What you need to worry about is drones that can loiter for long periods, while continuously sending imagery to the watchers AI, as well as the Stingray cell skimmers. Those are death for privacy - along with NSA gathering all your electronic traffic.
Hypospectral ?
@@ZaneConnor I think you mean hyperspectral. That's generally captured by aerial platforms, although USGS has a hyperspectral satellite. Resolution is coarse...like 100 meters/px. One thing to know is that on EOS platforms only the greyscale band is the quoted/highest resolution. The other bands in a multispectral sensor are half as detailed (red, green, blue, infrared, etc). The RGB images you see are created by digital marriage of the grey band with the colored bands, which also introduces errors/artifacts. Due to collection issues, image quality issues, and price satellite imagery is rarely used by non-federal actors anymore, except for large, landscape scale collections - think Alaska.
There is a way to bypass VPN blocking if your ISP is the one blocking it. You can hire a server overseas like an Amazon web service hosting and install a VPN on that server or create your own private connection to that server that functions just like a VPN
Or just get multi hop or quantum obfuscation
typical tunneling can be detected
That’s literally a proxy. Very easy to detect.
I give you advice to open a branch of the Nomad capitalist for low income/low networth individuals!
Laugh as much as you want, we have a lot more freedom and privacy in México than in the US or many European countries.
So are the cartels……freedom is a double edged sword. Freedom only works where there is a righteous and educated populace.
Hi Andrew, I enjoy listening to you on i-Heart Radio and one of your podcasts (I can’t remember exactly which one) I was not permitted to listen to this particular podcast of yours “in my country.” 😮
Go figure……
Thanks for listening
Andrew, could you create a 'pauper' division in your company to serve clients who are not rich?
We created our live event to help with that: www.nomadcapitalist.com/live
Unfortunately, the government is not the biggest threat to our privacy. The problem is the government doesn't enforce privacy laws and doesn't protect us from violations of our privacy. They're also happy to make it seem like they're not capable of doing so.
I agree completely. I'm growing older and have a hard time maintaining privacy. Im very capable and the USA in certain states just wants to watch me and control me. I hate this and I want my latter years to be happy, not controlled and anxiety ridden.
Yay! panopticon for everyone! Praise the party!
Never mind tiktok.
Time to understand what bioconvergance means.
Canadas “policy horizons “?
Well said!
I Robot not far behind
I have a family that anchors me to the USA. I am very aware that good medical services are available in various countries. How can I find these opportunities?
The definition of Freedom has been lost.
USA will have to continue to allow legitimate commercial VPN access to employees for work purposes. For example, the US-based company one works for, as a remote software employee, likely requires remote employees - regardless of employee location - to login to a VPN to do their work. This is not for surreptitiously visiting banned sites or masking location to other countries, etc. Rather, it's for corporate security purposes. This is basic CS101 stuff.
Expand on this, please.
You cant stop VPN use
Better ask who builded them first?.... I HAVE FKUND CIA AND OTHER 5 EYES BASTARDS COUNTRIES BEHIND MOST WITH BACK DOORS IN THEM... I ROFL I checked them out, And CIA LITTLE FINGERS.. LIKE SHEEPOEPLE THINK FOR IS GREAT OK EVERYTIME I I LEAN COMPUTER OUT THEN USE FOR THEN CLEAN OUT AGIAN... OK LOTS LESS THAN GOOGLE... BUT STILL ARE SOME LIKE CIA AND LIKE LITTLE ZIONIZTS STASI STATE I MID EAST
You can't, but governments easily can. Just by passing a law that makes say, any site that makes sales - verify the customers age via a government issued ID.
@@ianmcnamee1652 MY ISP DOSE BETTER THEY BLOCK ADS AN D WILL BLOCK CIA ... ANYWAY VPN ... HOW TO YOU THINK THEY MAKE CASH .....THINK THINK
The ISP knows the ranges, they operate on so yes they can throttle or outright block
You know your VPN is watching you, even if it is not, and you have Google on your machine, Google is.
The joke about the new Dutch prime minister Schoof goes he was the perfect candidate because "he listens to every citizen". Schoof was president of AIVD (Dutch KGB).
Industrial espionage is far better than Government. Much more lucrative.
Tis is the dammed truth, it's happened to me
Thank you Andrew
You’re welcome
I'm probably safe since there's almost always clouds where I live 🤷♂
The langauge is broad? The language in the 1st and 2nd Ammendments isn't broad at all. It's very specific. But that doesn't stop them from trying to do away with both
Problem is that so many countries have large amount if immigration leading to criminality which justifies surveillance in ways it didn't do before.
Love you show bro you should do the caricom all the carribean countries that have benefits now like an EU with better weather
We love you, too.
In 🇦🇶 Antartida.....
I have a georgian citizenship, living in germany. Should u get german passport ? I kind of have worries about war, thats my only issue
Why not?
Banning a VPN doesn't work. Best they can do is have them removed from the App Store and Play Store. But jailbroken devices can still get them. Or if your iCloud or Google account uses an email or prepaid SIM card from a different country, then you've circumvented any ban. What you're talking about is basically the 'vig', but for that to work, there needs to be more give than take.
Expand if you have the time and interest, though likely you do not. Thnx for this much.
Tik Tok is not banned in Pakistan as of 2024. Previously imposed bans were temporary.
Switzerland is becoming like the US and it is more worrying as it is a small and easy controllable country, scary !
You're right, they are going headlong into WEF propaganda and agenda...
@sun-groupecommunications1331....Switzerland has a looooong way to go before it becomes like the US but I know what you mean. A few referendums are coming up soon that will hopefully keep the country on the right track.
@@lazapololapolo9824 By 20 years of experience, referendums give an impression of democracy, but the health insurances lobbies, as well as the banks and pharmaceutical lobbies have unlimited amounts of money to undermine People's power, at least since the people voted mandatory health insurance for everybody, then the price grew from 30 CHF to 650 CHF per month. What a democracy. Check the numbers, all true.
@@lazapololapolo9824 20 years of experience as an adult in Switzerland showed that referandums are deception, they can always reverse it slowly with series of small laws...
What a load of BS😂
All the tech mentioned is old news and already in use.
Ok, did anyone tell you that you sound very much like Tuker Carlson?
Maybe they have wisdom in common.
I thought the same thing! The sound and the cadence of his voice are much like Carlson. I was thinking that they were raised around the same area, but not the case. 🧐
Haha true
True, true... having Tucker interview Andrew would be a powerful video!
He is on the right
India banned Tiktok four years ago. India is not a legacy country, but they are the world's largest country and democracy.
+1 for properly pronouncing Pakistan, Andrew. Which is how Afghanistan should be pronounced as well; i.e., all the "a"s are pronounced as the one in the word _father._ Also, the money isn't "impacting" anyone; it's _affecting_ them. Finally, Tanzania is pronounced "tan-za-nee-ya", not "tan-zey-nia".
You’re right about these things, but you miss the root of the problem.
There are still privacy minded apps out there.
Can you recommend a reputable company that can help someone who hasn't acculmulated enough wealth yet to qualify for your company's services, by chance? I'm watching your channel avidly, reading and learning alot- but alas, I am not a seven- and eight-figure entrepreneur. Yet :)
Have hope, I've been of lifetime modest means and there are ways and means for the non-rich to succeed, but be prepared to fill-in forms.
Thanks for your interest! While our services are tailored for high net-worth individuals, you can attend our annual Nomad Capitalist Live event. It's a great opportunity to gain valuable insights and network with like-minded individuals: bit.ly/3TE0iPm
3:13 I never thought of that but now I'm even happier that Elon has an alternative for the rest of us
No more private Lifes and freedom
Science turns profits is getting out of hands.
India banned TikTok long ago too.
Lol, The Hinterlands
They don’t need install cameras, because we carry them on our person 24/7
In siberia.
Simple.
Us needs a constitutional amendment that protects privacy from government for all citizens
@@Johnnie-d9b Unfortunately this is true. Everyone in the world needs to know this if they don't already, and never forget it. Oh if you only knew, if you never lived there. The United States government can and has circumvented any and all constitutional amendments simply by using executive order as an excuse, and sometimes not even that. They will even get around the courts because the courts are corrupt, full of loopholes, etc. What they do in darkness can fill whole books. Do not even think of assuming the United States will play fair. And right now they are angry, and arrogant, that more and more speak out about these matters, and would dare to question them.
*SAFETY OR FREEDOM*
hahahahah both are not opposites
@@ARUchannel1 Actually they are. Freedom has risks and only the safety you can provide for yourself. If you're not allowed to use firearms to protect yourself in self-defence, if you can't legally use anything in self-defence, then you are NOT free - you are a subject/ward of the state. Safety is having mummy government control your life, what you can and can't do whilst telling you that if you so much as strike anyone in self-defence you will go to jail. You have either freedom or safety - you can't have both. If you don't understand this, you deserve neither. Freedom is more important.
The government was watching me with that satellite and blamed the Chinese for invading usa's airspace. In return, I was watching them with a $150 telescope, who is smarter?
Sarcasm really doesn't make sense to you does it?
@@cristianomarinelli3252 sarcasm is a way to intimate me
I enjoyed reading your piece, and agree with some of your points; especially the global assessment of freedom during the pandemic having moved around Europe and the America during that period. Andrew is my idol, yet I cannot help feeling like the freedom of movement in most countries were incomparable to the States 🗽...
What top three countries should my wife and I have kids in?
Why the US allows Elon Musk to send 44,000 satellites to monitor earth.
So that they can spy on their citizens!
National Security doesn't trump the Constitution
🏆
George Orwell 1984… fuck em all
Whenever they claim to be the free, democratic liberty, etc...
It just looks like a marketing message hahaha
Eritrea? Isn't Somalia close to invading Eritrea?
Who told you that?
VPN are all honey traps
The litmus test for any place concerning this subject area is very simple. DO THEY WANT YOUR FINGERPRINTS?
@@Johnnie-d9b Five over 30 years, so far. None in Latin America, as far as I know. Of course, over decades, things change, and usually not for the better.
You can't naturalize anywhere without being fingerprinted. Also, want a professional licence, a licence of basically any type (i.e. not just for firearms or security but marine, truck, bulldozer, liquor, etc.) and you have to be fingerprinted. In this current time, the main biometric you should never give a govt is an iris scan as laws already exist that enforce guilt the moment an security system registers an iris scan match. Avoid, USA, Japan, the Middle East, etc. who require iris scans.
First
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Apatzingán, Michoacán, Tultitlán... oh, wait; that means Méxicostán...?
Not anymore maybe...
I feel that surveillance is needed but also not needed. If surveillance was monitored and not overused, there could and would be a happy median.
But you know that won't happen.
No.
@raulthepig5821 Congress passes a bill saying so, I have this problem where special operations watches me in the shower while I am traveling around the world right now. Less of that would be nice.
@user-uq4qe2om5y so you could use both but since I'm partial rocket science/rap god terrorist I mean tourist/ al jizzeri porn star / 420 activist and I know how to play the greatest musical instrument know to man, the radio. I used the word median
@@gutsandgrittv5076 yes..
This man only wants you to move from your country and you should become his customer😂😂😂
The more customers the merrier.
Actually..this guy gives you lots of free information and time that is valuable. You should be grateful
Statistically not true? Quantitatively not true? You can't just add random buzz words like that, it's Trump-style stating something is so without making the actual argument, it works with stupid people but I don't think it will land with the rich well-educated audience you cultivate. Really it all depends on the metrics used. The US in some important ways, most notably the extent of legal protections for free expression and firearm ownership, remains the freest country in the world. There's actually no other nation on earth that offers protections for free expression and firearms that are so strong as the US first and second amendments, protections which have stood the test of time and multiple assaults via the court system by capricious governments at various times, and most importantly unlike many places they cannot be changed by simple legislation.
New Zealand, Cananda, the UK and Australia for example were all lauded from these angles as "just as free but better" in a way, but then when COVID hit and Auntie Cindy and Uncle Justin etc decided they wanted to take inspiration from Xi Jinping's government style for a moment, it turned out the total freedom of these countries had quite a few quiet *** attached and lurking in the background all along; turns out the formalities of the whole constitution thing turned out not to be just formalities after all. Stuff happened in NZ that would NEVER happen in the United States. Well, maybe in commiefornia, but the US has 50 states to choose from at least lol.
Don't get me wrong as a kiwi I love my country and in a lot of ways I prefer it to the states, but having lived all over the world, in some very real ways the US does remain the freest country on earth, especially in the red/swing states. America has its problems but most of them are about the fact it sucks to be poor in the US and that because the governance is so multilayered there are some grossly incompetent city and state level administrations in the USA that make terrible decisions, but the US problem is not a lack of freedom at the country-level, it's mostly state/municipality issues in places like CA and NY as well as the forever looming military industrial complex, but civil life in places like GA, AZ, TX and FL is humming along just fine and IMO better than many places.
The word freedom is really far too nebulous for you to claim that it either is or isn't in such firm terms, every nation has ups and downs. I dislike this way you say "I'm not picking on the USA, I just don't like how people insist it's the best", because really once you peel back the spin actually you are in fact picking on the USA, which is why you just laid in to the narrow Tik Tok ban as if its roughly comparable to China while quietly ignoring the raft of insane intervention, mass surveillance, great firewall, etc in China that's like two orders of magnitude more extensive, the great firewall and many other things has NO real western or US equivalent.
Basically you have two standards, one for developing nations you constantly give many free passes to or at least downplay things or rush to give the benefit of the doubt, often talking "its not really so bad as people make out" and alluding to the good things while minimizing the bad, while with the USA you focus on the bad things only while ignoring the good. Developed nations besides the USA are perhaps where you shine as giving a more balanced unbiased view, in my opinion, but the developing world and USA I think you are quite biased. This is not actually a huge problem, it's your job to convince people to become nomads, so in a way this is part of your marketing, but I do wish you could do it without the slightly more negative angle you picked up recently, I liked the positive pro-nomad stuff more than this anti-anglosphere angle all the time that started recently, it just seems a little bitter honestly though I can't see why you would be so.
At any rate simply saying "you're not focused on XYZ" doesn't make it so; for better or worse, you are focused on America quite a lot, and its pretty much always negative, and really I think you have to own that reality, it's not really the end of the world it just is what it is. It's the same with how you insist you're not political when you are very obviously an extremely political person, you can't just like make it true by saying that, you have to back this assertion up with actions, you can't just say that then make a bunch of politics content and expect people to take the assertion seriously. Why not just own it anyway? Rather than playing this strange angle where you try to win the game by pretending you're not playing it while still constantly producing content that shows you still are.
Did you even listen to the video, or are you too busy writing your MAGA novel?
He is from the USA. It's his country to some extent. Many immigrants are like that. They like to talk against their countries that they left behind. It happens with immigrants to the West. It happens with the immigrants to the developing world.
This topic is a double edged sword I heard of a guy driving his SUV 100 mph Onstar called him and asked why was he driving 100 mph? Privacy issue or safety issue? If the SUV was stolen Onstar can shut down the car and save it If the driver is needing medical attention they can get help But if they are joy riding then they are endangering themselves and others on the road? So while it is an invasion of privacy it’s also safety If someone going 100 mph and wreck into me they will probably run and leave me for dead So like I said a double edged sword
CCP shill! Very disappointed.
I will be calling.
😁