Immigrated to Canada many years ago as skill worker in the engineering field, and there were no opportunities in that country, Canada just needed laborers to fill out factories and people to do the jobs that the Canadian born did not want to do. I ended up working in my field in the USA, and salaries and opportunities are much better in this country. Americans are very practical, they just want someone with the right knowledge. When applying for jobs in Canada, employers were very obsessed with Canadian education and experience, but in my opinion, that was an intentional way to block immigrants. In the USA I was never asked for American education or experience, the interviews were very straightforward, very technical, they just wanted to verify technical knowledge. In conclusion, if looking for professional opportunities, the USA is much better than Canada, but legal immigration as a professional to the USA is extremely difficult.
yes canada sucks right now. I am so glad I was able to dump that stupid country and come back to Europe where finally everything is so much better and the cost of living is by far cheaper. I had no idea that the canadian government could be to xenophobic. It's awful.
@@mrofnocnonwalking three days in the burning sun and three nights in the blackest dark with drug wars going on is not easy. I would die if i had to walk to mexico from the USA.
American here who spent three glorious years in Canada (Montréal) for university. I fell in love with the country and have visited all ten provinces and one territory. I desperately wanted to stay in Canada and was so emotional that I literally cried when my student visa expired and I had to return to the States. Fast forward 40 years, I've had a pretty good life here in the States and was able to retire comfortably at 55. I hesitated to watch this video because I thought it would make me feel bad about my situation, but I think it (and the comments) actually made me feel OK with how my life turned out. I now realize that no place is perfect -- not even Canada.
Thanks for sharing your experience! It sounds like you’ve had a great life and something tells me you would have made a great life for yourself no matter where you are!
I spent most of my life in Montreal. I found living in Florida suits me much more than if I had stayed in Canada. But, I do recognize that here it's survival of the fittest. And if you have the initiative and the drive to succeed you'll do very well. In Quebec, it's as if initiative and drive is punished with disincentives like insane taxes, onerous rules and laws and forced dependency on government services. That's only good if you like socialism.
What I hate about Canada is the winter season and the snow. I want to move to the US for the reason that some places rarely get snowfall but I'm hesitant because I feel that its not as safe living in the US compared to Canada but it all really boils down to location
U.S is the largest economy in the world . California state alone economy is larger than the entire economy of Canada. I immigrant myself have lived in both countries, In term of job opportunities ,U.S way better . In term of safety and crimes Canada is much safer. Both countries in big cities have huge homeless population.
Well, I'd choose lower paycheck over higher homicide rate than Iran and less paid vacation than Kenya... Safety & time with family > Money, hence Canada > US
@@milansvancara It's only dangerous in certain areas. So if you have decent money and understand the problem, virtually all crime can be avoided in the US. There is an international misconception that the US culture is homogeneous when it's vastly different from place to place. The crime problem is mainly cultural, where over 50% of it is committed by a single demographic and is located in the largest US cities. It's a sad fact but true. The suburbs and countryside are very safe. But everyone has a different value system, so it's definitely not for everyone.
And the U. S economy might be larger than Canada's economy but you don't benefit from it since it's all private entrepreneurship. While private fracking companies and their billionaires owners destroy your health and environment you in the end get nothing in return or maybe some kind of proudness of living in the 1st economy even if your quality of life index is in the range of 3rd world poopholes. Maybe you're overdue for a visit to San Francisco Bay area
Thanks for your video; very well done! Immigrated to Canada 15 years ago, and I, too, experienced the problem with Canadian labour experience to get a job in my field even after make some studies here, but in the end, I made it. Finally what made me stay here was not job or making-money opportunities, it was Canadian values, culture, landscapes, less crowded cities, life quality and quietness. I love this country. I like USA to visit though.
The biggest pro about Americans IMO is their willingness to befriend complete strangers. It is very easy to make friends with Americans whereas speaking as a Canadian you generally need an invite to a group to make friends.
I moved to Canada (Alberta) as an American 4 years ago. It is literally impossible to make friends up here. Canadians are polite but less friendly than their American neighbors. But I still love it here just hope to make some friends someday lol! COVID did NOT help!
@@keithpalmer4547 😂 Yeah sure, and if you’re really an American as you claim to be, then let me tell you that you’re not going to last there for long and it’s not just because of the cold!
To make it more balanced because realistically, I have lived in the US for more than 7 years and now a Canadian who lived here for 11 years. 1) I disagree with the discrimination part. I think you have discussed "silent discrimination" in one of your videos. The US should be given .5 higher and Canada zero. I used to live in Ontario, and you can feel the "silent discrimination" of this province next to its neighbour (Quebec, we all know how this province treats outsiders), which I think has no difference in attitude towards new immigrants. When I used to live on the west coast in the US, I didn't feel discriminated at all because there is more diversity in this part of the US (of course, it is a different story if it is middle America). 2) Americans do take out their shoes before entering the house. I don't know where you get this idea that they don't. 3) I agree with health care. Both countries are entirely different. In one country you have to fall in line, and the other no line, but you have to pay more. As simple as that. 4) In the US, there is no discrimination on how to apply for a job in terms of a resume or cover letter. There's no need for the "Canadian experience." They regard an MBA face value, a well-educated person. On the other hand, Canadian employers want immigrants to go back to school and see a Canadian school on their resumes. This is why if you have the money and want to open a business, a school is big business here in Canada. Every corner you see all kinds of schools. Canadians asked so much more from these highly educated immigrants but well in fact can you tell how many Ivy league schools are there in the US as compared to Canada (only 1 of each in Toronto, Vancouver & Quebec). 5) In the US there's low internet fees (as well as airline fees) because of the number of competition as compared to oligopolistic nature in Canada. 6) Banks are stable in Canada, which translates to a more stable economy and financial markets. This is the best part about Canada. And of course, the TFSA. This is one reason why I moved to Canada. 7) Canada has less cosmopolitan cities hence more provincial in nature. 8) US is used to diversity hence more variety of food, and a lot more. In Canada, it is hard to find the items and other things you want that you need to overseas to find one. In correlation to this, Canadians are always playing safe and risk-averse. And should I say Canadians need to travel more to different countries other than the UK or anywhere in Europe to be well more rounded (why not travel to Asian countries or other continents to open your eyes on what is out there)? 9) In terms of safety issues, I agree we are safer for now. I also agree with parental leave as well. With the immigration policy, well there's no comparison; it is straightforward in Canada. In the US, all your salary and savings go to your lawyer to stay legal. The immigration system in the US will never change because there's no political will among the politicians and lawmakers. 10) Regarding pots, it will always stinks. Homelessness and drug issues (leading to mental health) are more apparent in the streets of Canada. 11) I have more friends (and diverse at that) in the US than in Canada. Americans, even if they're loud and confrontational are friendlier. When issues are discussed, ill feelings end in the discussion table. With Canadians, there are still lingering feelings of hurt. Truth hurts.
Thanks for this, I enjoyed reading your comparison..as one intending to move to Canada, will I be able to save money and perhaps buy a house someday. I want to move to a country that will be rewarding in years to come. Would appreciate your reply, thanks
@@camillaamadi5210 really depends on which city/province you choose to immigrate. If Toronto/Ontario and Vancouver/BC, housing is very, very expensive and it will be increasingly difficult for you to save and buy your own house. Other provinces are definitely cheaper and better, though do your research on the economy of each province and what career opportunities are available to you. Hope this helps
@@camillaamadi5210 If I am still younger (in my twenties or thirties) I would stay in the US or move to Switzerland or Sweden. The "Canadian Experience" is ridiculous really. It is better to have a orientation of the Canadian workplace so to speak. Healthcare is getting worst. Canada's banking system is better than the US. Canada is more on "who you know" thus networking is important (and paramount) while in the US skills is important. One of the easiest job is HR (pretty much the ATS machine takes care of the HR job) as long as you get your CPHR designation. For me the HR profession in Canada is a disservice to immigrant professionals who worked hard on their education and work experience to be disrespected and hire on the basis of "soft skills" alone or majority of this reason. Give me a break, if there is situation it is the HR's job to mend the broken communication or misunderstanding between employees. Top of mind should always be technical skills first then other skills after. Goodluck Camilla. It is not all roses living in Canada. The world is huge, there are other places worth living for.
A better weather isn't accurate. Some cities in the US has a much worst winter than Canada. The Summer in Canada is very nice. Moreover, US has many fire issues in California area. I would say that Canada has much better quality of life. There is no poverty in Canada. If you see some homeless in Canada is because they are people with addiction problems or mental illness, still Canada has many good programs for them but many homeless refuse those programs because of their mental illness or addictions.
@@marthaeugenia8179 No poverty in Canada? Bwa-ha-ha-ha! One state alone, California or Texas is richer than Canada. US is not perfect but for people that are NOT lazy, they can make much more and pay less taxes, buy groceries for less and also houses are 40% cheaper in US in general. The poor and homeless in US get free medical care MEDICAID and free dental care, free phone, free housing and free food(EBT card). Some refuse govt housing but so they can use drugs and alcohol but they accept the money and food stamps(EBT card). Fire issues in California? I have never seen a fire and I live in California. California is huge with 40M people like Canada. You believe the liberal media too much on TV and online. LOL. For IT professionals, weather is much better in California, Arizona and Texas where US tech industries are mostly located. You freeze, we don't. LOL
I will forever appreciate this channel, you’ve helped me and my family a lot, your videos, advice and lessons are inspirational helpful to us, I now earn every week. You’re such a blessing to this generation, we all love you
Great video! What could be added though is personal taxes, job market and career opportunities. Also, it all depends on individual situation- education level, health and occupation
This was a very educational video. I’ve been considering moving to Canada when I am old enough and am trying to do as much research as possible. I’ll update you in several years.
Hi, I’m a Canadian living in the USA. Pros and cons for each. For hard workers and entrepreneurs,you will undoubtedly have success- USA is where most of the big companies have started, and small businesses do well, too. Americans work very hard and not everyone is suited for that type of lifestyle. My second point may be a little controversial. As a retiree we have Medicare which covers major medical- hospital and doctors at a rate of 80%. The additional must be paired via private insurance that is optional or out of pocket. We have chosen a good supplemental policy that allows us to make our own referral to specialists- with a waiting period < 2 weeks. The point is that you can choose what you want. No waiting!I know that people in Canada who wait a year to see a doctor in a non emergency situation! You will say that it is expensive,but people choose not to prioritize medical care and instead purchase luxury items etc. what I like is the choice. I don’t want to not be able to see a specialist when I feel I need one!! I like Choice!
Yep..if you truly EXPECT your fellow countryman to fund YOUR HEALTH, STAY IN CANADA. If you take responsiability for your own health & life style the US is best. Plus, the US has many options for health care coverage. " Socialized" medicine is paid by someone, somehow( usually taxes), so in the end everyone pays ..it ain't free!! The costs of medicine just gets passed down. The bigger question becomes...do you EXPECT YOUR FELLOW COUNTRYMAN TO PAY FOR YOU(& YOUR LIFESTYLE) OR DO YOU FEEL THOSE CHOICES ARE YOURS?
@@shirleybalinski4535 True, I agree. I like having choices as I am healthy. I do not want the government running and regulating my Healthcare. Life is precious snd health is the most important that is why I live in US and prefer the US Healthcare system. It is more efficient and innovative, the latest medical equipment and medications mostly are created in US. The best doctors and surgeons are mostly in US because they are well-compensated, same with nurses. NHS in UK and the Canadian Healthcare systems are a mess and have long waits, some people cannot even find doctors. In US, we already have govt run Medicaid for the poor and Medicare for 65 and older, I do not want govt hands in rest of USA's Healthcare. Period.
@@paengguin9381 Healthcare is controlled by Provincial governments. Trudeau has nothing to do with healthcare. It's crazy to see how many Canadians have ZERO understanding of our political system, but yet are allowed to vote and give their opinion 🤦♂️ And by the way, I don't like Trudeau as well, but he has nothing to do with healthcare, not now, not in the past, not in the future either.
Great video…loved it! My perspective is a bit different…I grew up in Canada, I lived 4 years in Toronto, 1.5 years in Waterloo, 14 years in Ottawa and 3.5 years in Calgary…overall, just little over 23 years in Canada. I graduated from University of Waterloo and Masters from University of Ottawa. I have a strong educational foundation from Canada, which I am very proud of. I moved to Houston, TX in 2016 and my last 8 years of living in US has nothing but AMAZING!!! While living in Canada, i was never able to save any money. In my last 8 years of working and living in US, I am 90% done paying off my mortgage on a very nice 5800sq feet house in Sugarland, TX. I owe very nice 2024 Lexus and 2023 Mercedes SUV that I can only dream of in Canada…so Canada is good in so many thing (I do have a soft corner for Canada in my heart as I grew up there) but when it comes to opportunities and life style to its full potential…USA is way ahead of the game.
I’m late to this video but I just wanted to correct y’all by saying that the school shootings that happen in the US are NOT accidents. They are terrible tragedies that should be preventing but we find ourselves continuously dealing with them. There’s a lot of people in the US that have experienced gun violence or know someone who has & to say that it’s some “accident” is unsettling
In Vancouver you can’t get a shack for less than a million. That $550,000 figure is heavily skewed by the house prices that are in the middle of nowhere.
I am leaving Canada as i live after 4 years , i wanted it after three but covid was a serious disturbance. By the way all my friends are moving out of Canada too.
That’s what I hear too. Cost of grocery in Canada is double the US and the pay is about the same. I hear some people there are skipping meals! I’ve seen lots of videos on Canada. It’s a good country, aside for the guns, I prefer the US. And did I see something like it’s a place to have one kid or none? What in Gods name is that? I have a coworker who lived in the UK, Canada and now lives in the US and likes it best here. I guess it depends on what you want. What I hate about the US is the gun violence. It will be a much better country if it wasn’t for lack of gun control.
What surprised me the most is that even with nearly half the population being 1-2gen immigrants, the barrier of Canadian experience is still so high for newcomers.
We have faith things will change soon. Canadian job vacancies are at all times high and some employers will have no choice but become open to newcomer talent
Go to USA where pay is much higher, taxes are lower, and goods are cheaper. There are 50 states to choose from, there are states with no income tax and low sales tax. No carbon tax, Canadians are being taxed to death by Trudeau and his elite minions.
My wife and I spend much of our time in Fremont and El Cerrito. We are both retired and in our seventies. We are well settled and comfortable. Most of our extended family (26 in all; family of 4 moving to Texas permanently next month) moved to the U.S. at different times. We too have US permanent residence status, but find it difficult to make a permanent move, especially after a life time of working in Canada. Besides, the Canadian dollar trading at 74.01 US. If we move, all our assets will dwindle 25% in a flash; We are completely debt free, and don't intent to be in debt to banks. 😁 Had we left 30 - 40 years ago, we could've done much better in the U.S. as my children, brother and extended family have done; some spectacularly! And the American weather and people are wonderful. Then again, the U.S. economy is a 26 trillion economy; Canada is only 1.84 trillion and ranked in GDP ( PPP measure) at 17th Globally. India ranks at number three. (in much more accurate PPP measure). It's self evident why young, disappointed, professional Indians are leaving Canada in droves. If they cannot get to the U.S. they are much better off in India, at present, the fastest growing large economy. So, Canada in any measure cannot be compared to the U.S. or for that matter, India. Best Wishes to you both. Incidentally, approximately 12,000 Canadians took up U.S. citizenship in 2020. That includes my children.
Amindra,thanks for the fair assessment. You can't compare USA to Canada. As you said,America is the largest economy, has various climate differences in its territory that you can select.Canada has no choices.There are more opportunities here than in Canada.With regards to health care,I think we have a decent health care,and we have most advanced technology when it comes to Medicine.So many Canadians who live in the boarder with the US,come to us for treatment. The main thing here is,high taxes in Canada and expensive commodities which is a killer.
At the end of the day I think Canada and the US share a lot of common ground in a lot of areas. The major difference in my eyes between Canada and the US is the competitiveness of each economy. The US is far more competitive and innovative than Canada. Canadians are more risk averse and seem to want to work for the government or a big company whereas Americans are more confident in themselves and would prefer to work for themselves and try to start a business for themselves - and importantly - want to have it become a large business. As a Canadian I wish I would have moved down to the States and tried it out when I was younger. I'm too old to move there now... Canada still isn't a bad place but it is nowhere near as prosperous for the average person, or I should say the average worker, as it used to be. And Canada's economy seems to be deteriorating rapidly and being usurped by newly developing countries whereas the economic future of the US seems brighter due to the powerful innovation in the US. However the social situation in the US seems to be deteriorating more so than in Canada.
Great comment and analysis, I agree. There are way too many Canadians working in the public sector, many come here for all the socialist benefits, but don't realize its gonna cost you with high taxes on everything.
Canada is where you can struggle and pretend you’re having a good life in a first world country and the US is where you can make money and actually improve yourself
Lol, so true in words!!! I left when they started advertising Canada as "the best place on earth". , I knew then something was afoot and everyone sold stuff on the side to make ends meet and pretended that it was whilst they waited for a loved one to pass and cash in and turn on their own siblings to move into luxurious brand new 400sq ft cubicles for $800k. I thought Japan, Singapore or Switzerland were supposed to be more expensive?!, Well, at least they think that their Canadian healthcare is free, lol.
Money is not only improvement dude when you're not respected based on your wealth. That's what canada offers when you're treated well and leading a short love that's good what's wrong in it. Just have a lot of money and no real friends and having rivals. That's shit dude.
The difference in cost of living (Canada being higher) I think has become a problem. Also, everyone in the US doesn't have to live in NY or LA, so we can decide on a more affordable city to live in. It might not be as cosmopolitan as NYC or TO, but at least you can afford a home. My Mom was born in Ontario in the 20's, and migrated to the US in the 40's for lack of work. In the 80's, I would have loved to have moved to TO... even had girlfriends there, but doors just wouldn't open. Get in if you can, but if you take away the epidemic of U.S. gun violence (wish we could...), then America is still a good place to live and is still a magnet destination for the world. Great video!
Id perfer to pay for it, 20% of canadians dont have a Doctor. Go to the ER room and its over a 10-12 hr wait. Lose half a pay cheque to taxes to collapsing healthcare system.
@@macdee8837 Do you know how many Americans don't have a doctor and do the same thing, or wait until they are basically dying to see someone? MUCH higher than 20%. An ER wait in the US is just as long and then you might get put in a hallway and wait another 2-4 hours to see a nurse or doctor for anything other than vitals.
Well, we just had our second, in two weeks "code red" lockdown in North Carolina. This is when a suspected mass shooter enters a school building. This is happening all over the US on a weekly basis. I suspect that Canada does not have this incessant problem. If you're sending kids to any school in America, this conversation significantly changes. Btw, there are some amazing people in the US. There is opportunity for sure. Healthcare is outrageous here and yes it can also take months to see a specialist here too. Incarceration rates are absurd. Education is unaffordable. My son's school just sent out an email stating that "emergency food is available for anyone who needs it". Food insecurity is real here. Conservatives are loosening gun laws adding fuel to an ongoing crisis. Racism/sexism/anti-lgbtq is very real with close to half the country. But yeah....in some places it's warm. 😐
Firearms are not the problem its a culture problem and its now happening in Canada. Society has grown lazy, alot of people want the easy money and drugs can make anyone rich and money, or lack there of is the root of most societal problems. Its a hard truth, but not all cultures are the same. 1950's America regardless of ethnicity, people had guns racks in their trucks, no one stole anything, no lootings, no gangs, no thugs, no mass violence. Motor city Detroit, blacks were living middle class like everyone else, now look at Michigan, its a run down state. I think the government is the biggest threat to American's freedom. As someone said "There are no blacks who own planes who are shipping in the cocaine into America" The CIA introduced powder cocaine and crack cocaine into urban areas of L.A. and NYC in the 80's to destroy impoverished community's. YES, there still are people who discriminate and hate drives violence and you can see the division still in all parts of the United States. People should watch the movie with Tom Cruise "Made in America" it breaks down the roll the CIA had with cocaine. That's my two cents.
USA is the largest economy of world, there are plenty of jobs and opportunities here, only the size of the economy of Texas State, where I live, is equal to the total economy of Canada.
One more factor to compare (even though it was mentioned under 'gun control') - is the crime level. In Canada, although rising, it's still pretty low - on par with the rest of the developed world. The crime situation in the US is way worse with one of the highest share of imprisoned population in the world
The crime rate depends heavily on where you live, the crime rates in places like LA and Chicago drive up the national rate, but they will have zero effect on you if you’re living in Iowa for example.
In Egypt you don't need a training to get a license driver. you just go to the convenience store to get your license driver without to pass an exam and you are good to go! free for all! there is no driver rules in Cairo with 20 millions of peoples. Everybody arrives from all directions even from the sky!
US is far better for individuals who wants to grow and work on themselves. I lived in US for 2 years and I got the best education learned a lot and met one of the most ambitious people. I always was motivated to do more. US boosted my education and career. Unfortunately I couldn’t stay there due to immigration issues. I moved to Canada and I am here for almost 5 years now and I am still struggling just to make ends meet. Every day I am looking for ways to get out of here back to US or elsewhere. Legalization of drugs, prohibitably expensive housing, poor access to health care, lack of availability of well paying jobs, massive intake of immigrants, overtaxation and fewer businesses opportunities. Canada was great place to live back in 1990s and early 2000s. Everything is going downhill after 2018. Immediately they need to fix immigration, taxation, healthcare, housing, drugs, and support small businesses.Else, Canada will continue to be the place of broken dreams.
Strongly agree with you , it’s to hard to live in Canada now specifically rent, also health care is “free” but let’s talk about what’s behind so poor quality I’m agree that Canada is a great country but they need to fix a LOT of things!
Healthcare is drastically behind most 1st world nations. For example, to see a specialist in Canada it can be up to 8 months, in Germany its 1 day. Weather is dreadful 6 months of the year, cost of living is unattainable in 2024. The average Canadian will NEVER be home owner and rent is over $2,000 CAD/month. The trudeau name was a curse on this nation. Both trudeaus, Pierre and now Justin have done nothing for the benefit the Canadian people.
Lol funny how you think that. I’m starting to think you don’t live in either because you got it mixed up big time. Canadians are really welcoming and friendly. but the nerve of some people in the USA There’s nice people don’t get me wrong but if you go downtown Manhattan, New York and calmly wave at someone you’ll get a 🖕🤬🫵 happened to me many times and I’m sure it’ll happen more
Love the video. I like that even though there was a winner, you let viewers know the winner is up to them and what is more important to them. I’m convinced to stay in 🇨🇦
I live in Buffalo, Toronto born. I got a spousal green card based on marriage to my late wife who was a dual citizen though she was US born.. Western NY is very friendly and very supportive, at least to me it is. And yes I live close to the border-I come up often. I became a USC in 1993 btw.
You forgot to say Canadian live on top of each other like a roommate cant rent a house by yourself all the houses like hotel 10 people live in them 🤣🤣🤣 I know a lot of people move to the USA
Haha we did mention the housing prices in the video and alludes to that. I’m just not sure how good of a quality of housing you can get for the same price in the US - this includes quality of life, the overall neighborhood safety and demographic and dependence on driving.
@@MakeThatChange sure you may get more space in the US but it comes with the added expenses of having to drive everywhere, $$$ to upkeep your car for daily use, $$ and time for maintaining the house/garden, etc. Stack me in a tower in Canada any day .
I do like Canada 🇨🇦 and USA 🇺🇸 USA is great for business Canada is great for life It is probably better to start in Canada because immigrants are really welcome here but personally I am very tired of high taxes and very expensive homes I wish I could generate profit in US and live in Canada during summer months ONLY:)
I was born in California, lived in New York and Travel the USA for business for 28 years and have moved to Canada and lived in various Provinces (BC, Alberta, and Ontario) for 15 years. The last 8 years I have seen Canada start to die. This country has become a land of broken governments, and broken dreams and the only thing holding it up are the awesome but naive people of Canada. I don't say this with any joy. I wanted to retire and die in this country but not feel like I have no choice but to leave. In fact I'm not the only one. Canada right now is experiencing a major brain drain, especially immigrants that came to Canada. Think about it. People who left Ukraine or Syria who came to Canada to avoid a war, are leaving because of how unaffordable it is here. It's not uncommon to have a doctor, nurse, engineer or any professional with a masters degree come to this country and work at a coffee shop or do Uber eats just to make a living. Most Canadians are $500 away from being bankrupt. We are taxed to the point of being demoralized and even if you work harder, you are taxed harder. You might say, "well at least you have free healthcare". and I will have to back hand you. IT'S NOT FREE! It's fine for small things and emergencies but not for long term care. If you are a person with a broken back, they will stabilize you but expect 6 months to 2 years to see a doctor and end up in this sick socialized medicine hell. Even simple stuff you will need to wait 2 to 4 hours to see a doc. I have family that work in the healthcare system in Canada and the situation is grim. Nurse are burning out and doctors feel there is no future in Canada. This also contributes to the brain drain in Canada and makes our system getting worse. THE WORST PART is even if you have money, you can't go to a private health care hospital. At least in the USA you have options you have public health care (25% of the total use system and free to the public), private/public hospitals (need insurance or government support plans), and fully private (rich bastards LOL). I will skip politics just because its a can of worms up here, but is a less free country than the USA. C11, C18, gun grabs, no recall vote ability, etc. Just watch the daily House of Commons news feeds to watch these politicians and you will feel sick to your stomach. In the last 6 years the drugs and homeless problem has reached every major city in Canada. We are not talking small level. I'm talking Skid Row levels. Law enforcement has their hands tied even in violent crimes. You are not allowed to protect yourself during an attack. Drugs are now given by the government, and sold to kids Last and obvious one. NO FUTURE. You kids will never own a home. They will have a future with massive government interference. Try buying raw land in the middle of absolute no where in BC. If you move far north you might be able to buy something, but 40% of your build will be government nonsense before you even get permission to start building. It took me 4 years to build my own home using my own labour and it was a nightmare compared to building in the USA (California and Texas). If you are a parent, what future do you honestly see for your kids in Canada in 2023? No home, no car, no saving and even if they have six figures in the bank, they are still functionally poor in Canada. I am sick of what Canada has become and I'm not alone. I talk with the cashiers, doctors, software engineers around me and the same sadness. I am angry how this great country is now a Ponzi scheme. I used to proudly say how much better Canada was than the USA. I can't anymore and it's more evident as you get older in Canada. If you are getting older, you will find Canad to be hostile to the old vs the USA.
Hi dear as An African immigrant currently living in the UAE (Dubai) and would like to change not only my life but also my family's back in Uganda which of the 2 countries would you recommend me to migrate considering everything
This is everything I’ve come to know of my Canada. I can’t wait to leave for the USA. More freedom and opportunity. I love what you said concerning children’s opportunities. They literally have nothing to look forward to here. Are there any states you’d recommend?
@@D33Lux Even when Trudeau is gone it won't fix much. The issues are structural, cultural and run deep. Bottom line...your kids won't have a future worth living in Canada. Move to the States. Or abroad.
NYS has upskill and workforce development. I also went to school here in America. Took out student loans and paid them back. Later for my Bachelors, I took advantage of tuition reimbursement through work. That said, I think I did pretty good for myself through the years here as a Canadian expat.
I came to Canada back in 2021 from Mexico to pursue an MBA in Vancouver. All in all, I definitely have a lot to thank Canada for: a new career, new friends, and better work/life balance, to mention a few. I was supper happy to land in tech after graduating and working as a Product Manager for a Vancouver start up. Career wise, though, I sometimes am a bit thrown off with just how more competitive are salaries, jobs, and overall career advancement in the U.S. On top of that, the current housing situation Canada-wide is unbearable for Canadians and newcomers alike, and I frankly don't know whether I'll ever be able to save enough money for a down payment. I wonder what your stance is in regards to continuing on a career as a PM, especially coming from Anastasia. How has your journey in Canada looked like? Did you ever reconsider moving to the U.S. for broader career opportunities? Would love to hear from you guys soon. Btw, kudos for the cool video!
Environment safety in the US is relative to where you live. I live in VA and we don’t even lock our doors and have never had any issues with crime. Any big cities will have crime.
Yeah, it's something that people from the outside often need help understanding when they look at national statistics. Most crimes can be avoided by avoiding certain bad cultural areas. So although crime can be terrible in certain US cities, the suburbs, and small towns are typically very safe. It's nothing like how the US is portrayed in the international news. For example, I haven't encountered theft or violence in 30 years! I am saying this as someone who lives in the suburbs of Metro Detroit.
@@scratchpenny they watch the news and look at statistics and automatically assume that the entire US is dangerous when it’s not the case AT ALL😂 I live in a small town in Delaware and I’ve NEVER witnessed a single crime or even heard a gunshot
I wanna give my two cents as a Jamaican who lived in Canada,Germany and the us for me i wanna see the us is better interms of making money. It's better to get around , open business, hustle it's have that go-getter capitalistic mentality, Canada and Germany are similar. In Germany its haaaard to get anything done and bureaucracy will end you. Canada is a bit better and less bureaucratic. The us is a play ground filled with variety of everything and did I mention how easy it is to make money. Canada and Germany habe similar health system but in Germany things get done quickly, the us system is good if you have money. Racism is in all three but Germany and Canada are kinda not in your face, Americans will be in your face though, to me i prefer the america racism at least i know who to be aware of but in CA and ger you don't know who your enemies are because they will smile with you while not liking you. For kids it's like this , i would raise my kid in Germany because they have the kids are so well mannered and well behaved but i will let them experience american high school . Canada is waaay more peaceful , Germany cleaner. The bottom line is if you are a young ambitious Person the us is for you, but to retire I'll choose Canada but let my kids grow in Germany.
I don’t know if it was a joke and I’m giving the reaction that was expected, but I am an American and can attest nobody here is wearing shoes to bed. I don’t even like wearing socks when I’m at home.
My cousin from NYC wears shoes in the house and has fallen asleep on the couch with his shoes on, but they were hanging off the edge of the couch. I don't see how people could be wearing shoes all the time indoors, its good to take off your shoes and put on flip flops and relax your feet.
If you want to be an entrepreneur and make things that change the world. then USA is better like for Engineers and Entrepreneur etc. In Canada is more for peoples who want take the benefits and get out of there after they have the Canada passport, bachelor degree and educate there childrens. Somebody with a brain will not continue to pay so much tax and huge cost of living and end up no saving and broke like in Africa. Also extreme weather, not enough sun etc. and no social skills.
Just finished the educational cost part : the provincial government of Quebec is currently discussing about a project to give extra benefits to international student if they agree to certain conditions such as "if they study in specific area" and "if they work in the province for a certain period of time" (these specific areas are usually the kind of studies that would give them jobs that the province need the most at the moment).
My father moved to Canada as a five-year-old shortly after WW2… shortly after that, when he was 12, he moved to the US with my grandparents to make more $$.. shortly after that, Vietnam broke out and believe it or not people in the country on work visas, children got drafted…so my father went to beautiful British Columbia where I was born.. and thank God my dad disobeyed American orders or I wouldn’t exist…☝🏼🧡🇨🇦
@@MakeThatChange my father moved to Canada in the late 60s from New York be ause he refused to go to Vietnam and met my mother in Toronto for decades he refused to go back to america
I'm Canadian, I was born here and I'm 46 years of. In my opinion, free health care is not all it's cracked up to be. We may pay nothing for healthcare but you get what you pay for wink wink. There are thousands of Canadians that don't even have a family doctor, and most hospitals in Canada are extremely under Staffed.
I find it hostile here in Canada as you get older. I have to get blood work for my aging parents and they have to wait 2 hours. Actual treatment can mean waiting 6 months to 2 years. The kicker is we have money and would gladly pay for a private option if we were allowed.
Canada's healthcare is not all that. Atleast in Ontario. There is no dental coverage, no eye coverage. But its good for people who old or have critical illnesses since its all covered. Canada also has a very weak job market than the U.S. There is almost no opportunity for highly skilled labor. The U.S is a world leader in technology and industry and has more rewarding opportunities for talented people. As a Canadian who has lived in the U.S. I must agree Americans are more willing to be friends with strangers. I also think the U.S is far more culturally diverse but better assimilated. The U.S is a better place if you are talented and hardworking. Canada is a better place if you are a min wager.
By " minimum wager " you are referring to people working in factories and farms? How I'll that be better if they are going to spend whole that on housing!?
I love how you tried to give a positive twist to the unfortunate job situation in canada where highly educated people are forced to driver uber due to lack of opportunities!!
Well the country only has 38 million people so there are fewer employment opportunities. What's America's population? I worked in healthcare and often met lab techs, doctors and well educated immigrants who had to jump through hoops or clean house for a living. Are you suggesting that Canada's lab techs, doctors, electricians and so forth would be welcome to immigrate and set up practice in their foreign country of choice without challenging exams? I think not, I think Canadians would be driving cabs and Ubers.
What these RUclips peeps failed to mention is that since 1990, and in particular since the recession of the early 1990s, the job market has been horrible in Toronto-it never fully recovered. Two problems, too much in way of businesses has left the city and second too many newcomers have gravitated to Toronto making the job market extremely competitive. The pandemic only made things much worse. Because of all this, long long commutes are common-that is if you have a job and it is assumed you are not working from home.
I’ve been thinking about moving to Canada for years. There are many advantages and disadvantages to America and Canada. I just want to make sure it’s not a ‘ The grass looks greener on the other side of the fence’ situation and then find out a ‘ I never thought of that’ situation.
As an American, this seems heavily biased towards Canada. There's a wide variety of states that are much much better than Canada it seems, while others are worse.
It was obvious right from the start that this was just a set-up to make Canada look better. It came across as biased to get the desired outcome. I like Canada and Canadians but you do love to pat yourself on the back. I've lived in 6 places in the USA including Alaska and have been to Canada many times and have Canadian friends and neighbors here in the Arizona where I live now. Despite what you hear, most places are very safe here. All in all, I would still prefer to live in the USA.
You took the words out of my mouth. Watch videos about Canadians leaving their country and others. Yes America has violence and it’s getting the reputation that it’s not the place to raise children, Despite the violence in some areas there’s so many places ten times Canada where it’s extremely safe and people continue to have children and raise them safely in every part of the country. The myth that Canada is a better country has been exposed all over the media. They’re running here to the US and actually have better quality of life here. Any have left their country for Mexico and other countries. I’m not one to want to bash another country, but these ladies are saying what they think is true but they’re not aware of the reality of both places. People who love welfare and handouts love Canada. The more ambitious love the US, though there’s welfare and handouts in the US too, no one brags about such things. America is such a huge country, I don’t know why it even gets compared to a country the size of Texas. In population. The US has states with better economy than Canada. Compare Canada and Australia or Switzerland or something. Not with the Big Dog!
For me, I live in Vancouver, but when I'm done college, I'm hoping to find a job in Seattle and immigrate there. They recently opened up a Pokemon HQ there, Nintendo's hiring, Seattle's the HQ of Bungie, the maker of the Destiny games and much more! I feel like it's easier to find a job in the US than in Canada. In fact, my college instructor said so. There's more jobs there than in this small town. I'm heading towards SFU and I'm hoping to land a few coops, including one in Seattle to see if I like it there. And no, I do not care about healthcare, mass shootings or politics. The chances of you randomly being shot is about the same as getting ran over by a car. For healthcare, it's usually provided by your employer. But otherwise, you can buy it yourself as there's many options to choose from. Some of them are really good, but people are just overgeneralizing everything. My hope is that employment will eventually lead to permanent residency. Then, I can go buy a house in Texas, Florida or Colorado where it's much cheaper than Vancouver
I used to live in Seattle and have family there. Seattle is dying. Better to take a remote job in the USA and move someplace else in Washington. STAY AWAY FROM PORTLAND OREGON! There are lots of places in Washington that are stunning and close to Seattle.
@@didemakpinar1154 It's where all the jobs are. I need some place where there's lots of jobs in my field and where there's lots of jobs, the chances of one company being willing to sponsor my visa increases. But also that it's closer to home and I can visit friends from time to time until I move someplace farther. Then I won't be able to see them that often anymore.
@@SSingh-nr8qz I cannot take a remote job because I first need a visa sponsorship and companies I don't think are willing to do that if they don't even require you to show up in person
Floridas housing is NOT cheap.. just to let you know.. I live there and prices are going thru the roof. Insurance is difficult now as well because of hurricanes with insurance companies leaving the state.
I live in Atlanta, GA, USA, and I have called 911 like 7 times since I’ve lived here (3 years). Each time I have called it has taken the police about an hour and a half to come to my house. Crazy!
Born in the USA to one American parent and one Canadian parent, so I am (was) a dual citizen. Moved to Canada in the early 80's with my Canadian parent when they split up and while I missed the USA at first, Canada quickly became my new home and earlier this year, I renounced my US citizenship to become 100% Canadian. The USA is (was) a great country, but no longer aligns with my values, especially over the last 6-7 years. It has become a very mean spirited nation that I no longer wanted to be associated with. To me the choice is clear. Canada isn't perfect, but it's a much better place to live than the USA and in most categories the data backs that up. -Canada ranks higher on the Freedom Index than the USA does, so according to the Cato and Fraser Institutes, we're more free in Canada -Lower violent crime rates -Lower murder rates -MUCH lower gun crime rates -Better access to health care -Longer life expectancy -Higher quality of life -Lower infant mortality -Lower maternal mortality -Greater reproductive rights and healthcare for women -No crazy far right wingers But the pizza is better in the USA, I'll give you that.
Healthcare is terrible here, everything is taxed and taxed some more, infrastucture is way behind for that taxes we pay, housing crisis, immigration. I wish i had dual citizenship lol
@@macdee8837 Our healthcare is actually pretty good. It's a better system than what the Americans have. Could it use improvements? Absolutely, but again, it's better than south of the border. Taxes are always gonna cause complaints, but it's been proven that Canadians get better results for the taxes they pay than Americans do, especially with regard to healthcare. There's a housing crisis pretty much everywhere Immigration? What about it? Care to elaborate?
From my traveling experience… i can tell Americans got more spending power than canadian… most of the time i met canadians at hostels and cheap hotels 😂 Americans pay with powerful us dollar, tip well, don’t bargain !Canada still good country but don’t compare it to the states … not yet 😊 !!! Canada has too much taxes ,cheap public services, less opportunities, six months of depression 😅 bureaucratic system
I am so thankful to Ottawa for making Canadian immigration much easier for skilled workers. Living abroad is literally a dream for so many Indians including me.
Everything outlined in the video is A-O-K with me. The segment about Canada's sane, civilized and responsible approach to firearm ownership is alone, enough for me to drop everything and live there!
In the US, I only was allowed 5 weeks off after having my baby, because I took off about 4 days before my baby was born due to Early Labor!! I also was only paid HALF my salary. They wanted me to return to work while I was still in pain, my daughter was having swallowing difficulties which continued for 3 years, and I was having PPA! It is awful. We are moving to Canada this year for many reasons but maternity leave, childcare costs, and safety are some of the most important reasons!
Sorry to hear you're given so little time off for maternity, especially concerning a sick child. You get a year in Canada for maternity leave. This amount can be divided by the couple, however they like. I believe both parents are able to take 6 months at the same time.
@@HiDefi Could you pick a more, unrealistic, example? How many millions do Meg and Harry have and how many millions does the average American struggling have?
@@Pucciniscottage not sure what you mean? But you don't get a lot for your money in Canada as you would in say either USA/UK. An average detached house about an hour away from 1 of the only 3 cities (2 if you don't speak French), costs about $2m. It's impossible, unless your family bought one years ago and you've inherited it.
I don’t think the point you gave to Canada for education is fair. Sure a lot of Uber drivers are lawyers and doctors, but they did not study IN CANADA. They studied in their respective home countries before immigrating to Canada and so it should not reflect on how educated Canada’s population is. I don’t think that was a fair comparison. I also wouldn’t give points to Canada for healthcare, or I’d give an equal point to the US. Work-life balance should have been followed by “growth/wealth building opportunities” and the US will win points on that. I’m a Canadian btw.
Long ago, things might be different I think. My sister was given a job as secretary in oil company Exxon in Canada about 40 years ago. She came back to Malaysia after 5 years, and she can go back, but she did not, maybe because of the cold weather. She never complained of anything in Canada, so I think it was good at those times.
Yes, but sadly Canadians cannot leave and live anyplace cheaper and retire .. they will live the rest of their years alone in hospice or a family's basement dwelling
What about us retirees? It used to be a $1500 a month min. Income to live there. Grew up un Alaska, spent a lot of time in Rupert and Terrace, thinking of moving ther from WA state US.
Fuck those traitors. I'm an immigrant to this country, and love it here! Couldn't ask for better opportunities, friendlier people, openness, and nature. I have so many family members who would love to come here, that whenever I hear some white asshole complain with a threat to move, I always encourage them because it's freed-up space that can hopefully be occupied by a family member who will be appreciative of the country
These two are Canadians so they are showing you the flowers garden of Canada and the sewage in US. Nobody should consider this as their immigration advice. You need to find an immigration lawyer and do your own research before making any serious decisions. Canada’s tax and unemployment rates are much higher than in the US. It is also freaking cold in general and they have extremely long winter which means you will be locked inside your house for the majority of the year especially if you are a senior citizen.
Canada works for me because I love snow a lot. It’s one of my favourite things aside from thunderstorms and tornadoes etc. I’m quite introverted so I wouldn’t mind staying indoors for the most part. I’ve read that healthcare is free in canada but honestly, the one thing that is making me not want to move to the us (used to be obsessed with USA… until now) is the insane crime. I no longer feel safe at the thought of just… being there. I see lots of body cam videos and some people kill just because from what I’ve seen. In canada, I understand there’s definitely crime, but it’s not as much
Canada was great up until the 90's. Those born here in the 40's or 50's had a great life, safe, good economy, hunting culture, affordable housing...etc. The nail in the coffin for Canada was Pierre Trudeau and the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms. That dummy actually put "enjoyment of property" so essentially changing the BNA and magna carta so people don't essentially have property rights. 2024 major city's have high crime, rampant drug use, safe injection cites in big cities, gang violence, home invasions. Toronto has become car theft capital of Canada and I was told by retail cell phone stores there is robbery because criminals know Canadians have dreadful self defence rights. The trudeau name is a curse on this nation.
@Snowyturbo it all depends on where u live. Some cities are more dangerous than others. Research each place and use common sense. That's all you need to be safe.
My impression living in both places is that for most of us there is no clear winner and many people on both sides of the border tend to think it's better on the other side.
Housing in Canada is in the millions [limited ground space] 2-3m for the land alone...USA, you can buy a new house with a pool for $255k. Canadians, you can keep your free (not free) health care system and I would choose USA. I lived in Canada for 40yrs yet all my longtime, close relationships were Americans. I moved to the UK as we Canucks are not allowed to leave (just retire in usa for only 6mos). However, London is not British anymore and so you get a lot of reverse racism here, buts it's about 6x cheaper than Canada. Summary: Nowhere is perfect.
At the end of the day I think it is difficult to say which country is better---lets just say they are different and which is better for an individual depends on their risk tolerance and objectives in life. Life in Canada and most European countries is much more laid-back than living in the US. However, it is much more improbable that you will ever become really wealthy or have the the number of career opportunities in Canada that you might have in the US. Instead, it's pretty easy to live a decent and comfortable life. The US in return is made for entrepreneurs and the truly ambitious. If you are a high performer and you have that kind of "Protestant work ethic", the US might be the better country for you. Canada might have attracted someone like Elon Musk in his youth but they couldn't keep him---he went on to the US for his university education and from there to Silicon Valley. People with bold new ideas rarely come to Canada or Europe and if they do, stay there---they go to the US because they will find an ultra-capitalistic playground with people willing to finance their ideas plus a government that gives them maximum freedom. Companies like SpaceX or Tesla could have never been invented in Canada or Europe. Of course, the flip side of all that is that not every American is or can be a super successful entrepreneur, so you have a lot of people struggling with their lives, having two or more jobs and still not earning enough to have a decent lifestyle. Canada and Europe have much deeper social safety nets with universal health care, pensions, longer vacations, and less expensive higher education, but these are paid for with higher taxes and lower salaries. The US has a much bigger population than Canada, a more developed and diverse economy and the geographical advantage of a more temperate climate. Culturally Americans are for the most part not fans of big government and can be described as more individualistic, conservative, patriotic, religious and with strong but diverse political views that vary by geography and the urban/rural divide.
Yep..good perspective. Too many people have too high expectations, are not willing to sacrifice, expect most " desires" to come easy or at little cost.
With the much higher cost of housing in Canada it is no longer the case that it is easier for the average person to have s more comfortable life in Canada
@mlml8018 I agree. I'm American and moved to Ontario to be with my wife. I couldn't believe that the cheapest apartment we could find in a small town was $1400 a month. Looking forward to moving back to US in a couple years.
I think you got it wrong with giving the point to Canada for healthcare. I lived the majority of my life in Canada paying punishingly high taxes fir our glorious “free healthcare “🙄 You know the one where you wait for 9 months to get a cat scan and then another 5 to get it analyzed. Here in the USA as a working professional I pay a modest buy up fee to my employer’s healthcare provider and actually get to see a doctor in a timely manner and have standard procedures done quickly. Not the case in good old Canada.
I live in the US but I really want to visit Canada! Some people do wear their shoes in the house in America as I’ve seen it but I can’t stand putting shoes up on furniture, especially my bed! To me, that’s disgusting. I’m glad most Canadians don’t do that!
You are very biased. For some owning a gun might be more important than having gov. decide if you should. You also didn't look at weather and geographic variation which US would win in no time. What about infrastructure, travel, and food cost, cost of living in general? US would take all of those. What about pension systems (Canada might be ahead on this one)? That lame half a point is just that, it's lame. US has some real sore spots: racial tensions, healthcare, weak labour laws, inaccessible higher education. But we pretty much get beat at everything else and I am Canadian.
We would need to make a separate video to uncover the points you've mentioned as they are highly variable. Weather and geography depend on personal preferences. Infrastructure would depend on province/state/city. Cost of living would depend on income. And so on and so forth.
Both countries have great educational systems! I was educated inCanada and my child in USA. My parents placed a high value on education, I passed that on to my child. Children who have high expectations with support will do well, no matter the country. ( barring illnesses, disabilities etc) No excuses!
taking all the shoes in the house is a individual homeowners choice in America is like half you cannot just go walking in people house I do service work and everytime I go to the house and asked if I should take off my shoes
I'm currently living in USA and visited Canada back in 2019. I loved my time in Canada overall and it felt more racially diverse, safer, and cleaner than my home country. However, both countries have similarities in vibe, topography, background and culture.
I have lived in the USA all my life. First in New York then in California. Now I am a writer and book illustrator. I enjoyed visiting Canada but as I am a senior I am not welcome to move and live there from more then six months at a time.
I'm American. The half a point for sleeping with shoes on I don't think is accurate. The only exception to that I can think of is if someone passed out drunk. I did agree with some of their points especially around education. Having a lawyer being an Uber driver should be looked at as a problem though unless it's purely their choice. I work about 70 to 80 hours a week and took three days vacation last year which is no life at all. Not feeling like I can afford to educate myself here gives no end in sight and if i save a dollar today it's worth 50 cents in ten years so retirement is also very hard here in the states.
@@MakeThatChange our education is only expensive because the government backs the student loans, universities can charge whatever they want because the government will pay the loan.
Immigrated to Canada many years ago as skill worker in the engineering field, and there were no opportunities in that country, Canada just needed laborers to fill out factories and people to do the jobs that the Canadian born did not want to do. I ended up working in my field in the USA, and salaries and opportunities are much better in this country. Americans are very practical, they just want someone with the right knowledge. When applying for jobs in Canada, employers were very obsessed with Canadian education and experience, but in my opinion, that was an intentional way to block immigrants. In the USA I was never asked for American education or experience, the interviews were very straightforward, very technical, they just wanted to verify technical knowledge. In conclusion, if looking for professional opportunities, the USA is much better than Canada, but legal immigration as a professional to the USA is extremely difficult.
U just like USA because they let illegal things go on with no punishment or care.
yes canada sucks right now. I am so glad I was able to dump that stupid country and come back to Europe where finally everything is so much better and the cost of living is by far cheaper. I had no idea that the canadian government could be to xenophobic. It's awful.
Are you still working in the USA? How's it going?
Yet you can walk across the border from Mexico with little difficulty.
@@mrofnocnonwalking three days in the burning sun and three nights in the blackest dark with drug wars going on is not easy. I would die if i had to walk to mexico from the USA.
American here who spent three glorious years in Canada (Montréal) for university. I fell in love with the country and have visited all ten provinces and one territory. I desperately wanted to stay in Canada and was so emotional that I literally cried when my student visa expired and I had to return to the States. Fast forward 40 years, I've had a pretty good life here in the States and was able to retire comfortably at 55. I hesitated to watch this video because I thought it would make me feel bad about my situation, but I think it (and the comments) actually made me feel OK with how my life turned out. I now realize that no place is perfect -- not even Canada.
Thanks for sharing your experience! It sounds like you’ve had a great life and something tells me you would have made a great life for yourself no matter where you are!
I spent most of my life in Montreal. I found living in Florida suits me much more than if I had stayed in Canada. But, I do recognize that here it's survival of the fittest. And if you have the initiative and the drive to succeed you'll do very well. In Quebec, it's as if initiative and drive is punished with disincentives like insane taxes, onerous rules and laws and forced dependency on government services. That's only good if you like socialism.
What I hate about Canada is the winter season and the snow. I want to move to the US for the reason that some places rarely get snowfall but I'm hesitant because I feel that its not as safe living in the US compared to Canada but it all really boils down to location
Imagine if you were Mexican 😅, i visited dallas and i was sad when i came back to my beloved country, things here are hard
Agreed.its what you make it.
U.S is the largest economy in the world . California state alone economy is larger than the entire economy of Canada. I immigrant myself have lived in both countries, In term of job opportunities ,U.S way better . In term of safety and crimes Canada is much safer. Both countries in big cities have huge homeless population.
Well, I'd choose lower paycheck over higher homicide rate than Iran and less paid vacation than Kenya... Safety & time with family > Money, hence Canada > US
@@milansvancara It's only dangerous in certain areas. So if you have decent money and understand the problem, virtually all crime can be avoided in the US. There is an international misconception that the US culture is homogeneous when it's vastly different from place to place. The crime problem is mainly cultural, where over 50% of it is committed by a single demographic and is located in the largest US cities. It's a sad fact but true. The suburbs and countryside are very safe. But everyone has a different value system, so it's definitely not for everyone.
I’m in the USA and canada seems awesome. But….I’m a freeze baby and need it a little warmer and with a longer growing season.
There's probably 10 times more homeless in San Francisco than in entire Canada.
And the U. S economy might be larger than Canada's economy but you don't benefit from it since it's all private entrepreneurship. While private fracking companies and their billionaires owners destroy your health and environment you in the end get nothing in return or maybe some kind of proudness of living in the 1st economy even if your quality of life index is in the range of 3rd world poopholes. Maybe you're overdue for a visit to San Francisco Bay area
Thanks for your video; very well done! Immigrated to Canada 15 years ago, and I, too, experienced the problem with Canadian labour experience to get a job in my field even after make some studies here, but in the end, I made it. Finally what made me stay here was not job or making-money opportunities, it was Canadian values, culture, landscapes, less crowded cities, life quality and quietness. I love this country. I like USA to visit though.
Thanks for sharing!💕
Canada is the goat
Canada hits different
Everyone likes to visit the USA. Kind of annoying but I guess that’s just what happens when you’re amazing
@@wtfdidijustwatch1017dont be childish. Usa has worst problems that tourists.
The biggest pro about Americans IMO is their willingness to befriend complete strangers. It is very easy to make friends with Americans whereas speaking as a Canadian you generally need an invite to a group to make friends.
@@terrancemockler5907 Really? That is surprising. Sorry to hear that. I guess it varies state to state. The statement is a generalization.
I moved to Canada (Alberta) as an American 4 years ago. It is literally impossible to make friends up here. Canadians are polite but less friendly than their American neighbors. But I still love it here just hope to make some friends someday lol! COVID did NOT help!
@@keithpalmer4547 😂 Yeah sure, and if you’re really an American as you claim to be, then let me tell you that you’re not going to last there for long and it’s not just because of the cold!
@@keithpalmer4547 As a Canadian that travels to the USA a lot I have to agree with you!
Nonsense
To make it more balanced because realistically, I have lived in the US for more than 7 years and now a Canadian who lived here for 11 years. 1) I disagree with the discrimination part. I think you have discussed "silent discrimination" in one of your videos. The US should be given .5 higher and Canada zero. I used to live in Ontario, and you can feel the "silent discrimination" of this province next to its neighbour (Quebec, we all know how this province treats outsiders), which I think has no difference in attitude towards new immigrants. When I used to live on the west coast in the US, I didn't feel discriminated at all because there is more diversity in this part of the US (of course, it is a different story if it is middle America).
2) Americans do take out their shoes before entering the house. I don't know where you get this idea that they don't.
3) I agree with health care. Both countries are entirely different. In one country you have to fall in line, and the other no line, but you have to pay more. As simple as that.
4) In the US, there is no discrimination on how to apply for a job in terms of a resume or cover letter. There's no need for the "Canadian experience." They regard an MBA face value, a well-educated person. On the other hand, Canadian employers want immigrants to go back to school and see a Canadian school on their resumes. This is why if you have the money and want to open a business, a school is big business here in Canada. Every corner you see all kinds of schools.
Canadians asked so much more from these highly educated immigrants but well in fact can you tell how many Ivy league schools are there in the US as compared to Canada (only 1 of each in Toronto, Vancouver & Quebec).
5) In the US there's low internet fees (as well as airline fees) because of the number of competition as compared to oligopolistic nature in Canada.
6) Banks are stable in Canada, which translates to a more stable economy and financial markets. This is the best part about Canada. And of course, the TFSA. This is one reason why I moved to Canada.
7) Canada has less cosmopolitan cities hence more provincial in nature.
8) US is used to diversity hence more variety of food, and a lot more. In Canada, it is hard to find the items and other things you want that you need to overseas to find one.
In correlation to this, Canadians are always playing safe and risk-averse. And should I say Canadians need to travel more to different countries other than the UK or anywhere in Europe to be well more rounded (why not travel to Asian countries or other continents to open your eyes on what is out there)?
9) In terms of safety issues, I agree we are safer for now. I also agree with parental leave as well. With the immigration policy, well there's no comparison; it is straightforward in Canada. In the US, all your salary and savings go to your lawyer to stay legal. The immigration system in the US will never change because there's no political will among the politicians and lawmakers.
10) Regarding pots, it will always stinks. Homelessness and drug issues (leading to mental health) are more apparent in the streets of Canada.
11) I have more friends (and diverse at that) in the US than in Canada. Americans, even if they're loud and confrontational are friendlier. When issues are discussed, ill feelings end in the discussion table. With Canadians, there are still lingering feelings of hurt.
Truth hurts.
Thanks for this, I enjoyed reading your comparison..as one intending to move to Canada, will I be able to save money and perhaps buy a house someday. I want to move to a country that will be rewarding in years to come. Would appreciate your reply, thanks
@@camillaamadi5210 really depends on which city/province you choose to immigrate. If Toronto/Ontario and Vancouver/BC, housing is very, very expensive and it will be increasingly difficult for you to save and buy your own house. Other provinces are definitely cheaper and better, though do your research on the economy of each province and what career opportunities are available to you. Hope this helps
@@camillaamadi5210 If I am still younger (in my twenties or thirties) I would stay in the US or move to Switzerland or Sweden. The "Canadian Experience" is ridiculous really. It is better to have a orientation of the Canadian workplace so to speak. Healthcare is getting worst. Canada's banking system is better than the US. Canada is more on "who you know" thus networking is important (and paramount) while in the US skills is important. One of the easiest job is HR (pretty much the ATS machine takes care of the HR job) as long as you get your CPHR designation. For me the HR profession in Canada is a disservice to immigrant professionals who worked hard on their education and work experience to be disrespected and hire on the basis of "soft skills" alone or majority of this reason. Give me a break, if there is situation it is the HR's job to mend the broken communication or misunderstanding between employees. Top of mind should always be technical skills first then other skills after. Goodluck Camilla. It is not all roses living in Canada. The world is huge, there are other places worth living for.
i agree 100 %... i think bcos the presenters are white , so they dont face it
Higher salaries in the US
Almost all my Canadian immigrant friends in IT field moved to US for better pay, low cost of living and better weather.
not surprised!
A better weather isn't accurate. Some cities in the US has a much worst winter than Canada. The Summer in Canada is very nice. Moreover, US has many fire issues in California area. I would say that Canada has much better quality of life. There is no poverty in Canada. If you see some homeless in Canada is because they are people with addiction problems or mental illness, still Canada has many good programs for them but many homeless refuse those programs because of their mental illness or addictions.
@@marthaeugenia8179 No poverty in Canada? Bwa-ha-ha-ha! One state alone, California or Texas is richer than Canada. US is not perfect but for people that are NOT lazy, they can make much more and pay less taxes, buy groceries for less and also houses are 40% cheaper in US in general. The poor and homeless in US get free medical care MEDICAID and free dental care, free phone, free housing and free food(EBT card). Some refuse govt housing but so they can use drugs and alcohol but they accept the money and food stamps(EBT card). Fire issues in California? I have never seen a fire and I live in California. California is huge with 40M people like Canada. You believe the liberal media too much on TV and online. LOL. For IT professionals, weather is much better in California, Arizona and Texas where US tech industries are mostly located. You freeze, we don't. LOL
@@marthaeugenia8179 dude you should see the homelessness in major us cities it’s ridiculous
>low cost of living
That was a lie
I will forever appreciate this channel, you’ve helped me and my family a lot, your videos, advice and lessons are inspirational helpful to us,
I now earn every week. You’re such a blessing to this generation, we all love you
Great video! What could be added though is personal taxes, job market and career opportunities. Also, it all depends on individual situation- education level, health and occupation
Sounds like we need a follow up video on this!
Pels helap me
This was a very educational video. I’ve been considering moving to Canada when I am old enough and am trying to do as much research as possible. I’ll update you in several years.
Never take drug,never develop any bad habit such as smoking or gambling..., then you will be all right wherever you go
Hi, I’m a Canadian living in the USA. Pros and cons for each. For hard workers and entrepreneurs,you will undoubtedly have success- USA is where most of the big companies have started, and small businesses do well, too. Americans work very hard and not everyone is suited for that type of lifestyle. My second point may be a little controversial. As a retiree we have Medicare which covers major medical- hospital and doctors at a rate of 80%. The additional must be paired via private insurance that is optional or out of pocket. We have chosen a good supplemental policy that allows us to make our own referral to specialists- with a waiting period < 2 weeks. The point is that you can choose what you want. No waiting!I know that people in Canada who wait a year to see a doctor in a non emergency situation! You will say that it is expensive,but people choose not to prioritize medical care and instead purchase luxury items etc. what I like is the choice. I don’t want to not be able to see a specialist when I feel I need one!! I like
Choice!
Trudeau govt managing Healthcare is scary.
Yep..if you truly EXPECT your fellow countryman to fund YOUR HEALTH, STAY IN CANADA. If you take responsiability for your own health & life style the US is best. Plus, the US has many options for health care coverage. " Socialized" medicine is paid by someone, somehow( usually taxes), so in the end everyone pays ..it ain't free!! The costs of medicine just gets passed down. The bigger question becomes...do you EXPECT YOUR FELLOW COUNTRYMAN TO PAY FOR YOU(& YOUR LIFESTYLE) OR DO YOU FEEL THOSE CHOICES ARE YOURS?
@@shirleybalinski4535 True, I agree. I like having choices as I am healthy. I do not want the government running and regulating my Healthcare. Life is precious snd health is the most important that is why I live in US and prefer the US Healthcare system. It is more efficient and innovative, the latest medical equipment and medications mostly are created in US. The best doctors and surgeons are mostly in US because they are well-compensated, same with nurses. NHS in UK and the Canadian Healthcare systems are a mess and have long waits, some people cannot even find doctors. In US, we already have govt run Medicaid for the poor and Medicare for 65 and older, I do not want govt hands in rest of USA's Healthcare. Period.
@@paengguin9381 Healthcare is controlled by Provincial governments. Trudeau has nothing to do with healthcare.
It's crazy to see how many Canadians have ZERO understanding of our political system, but yet are allowed to vote and give their opinion 🤦♂️
And by the way, I don't like Trudeau as well, but he has nothing to do with healthcare, not now, not in the past, not in the future either.
Americans work hard and live a difficult life. Working hard and the American dream is a scam many are beginning to understand.
Listening to you guys definitely makes me want to come to Canada. With everything going on in the USA. As a family of multiple races it’s scary now.
Great video…loved it! My perspective is a bit different…I grew up in Canada, I lived 4 years in Toronto, 1.5 years in Waterloo, 14 years in Ottawa and 3.5 years in Calgary…overall, just little over 23 years in Canada. I graduated from University of Waterloo and Masters from University of Ottawa. I have a strong educational foundation from Canada, which I am very proud of. I moved to Houston, TX in 2016 and my last 8 years of living in US has nothing but AMAZING!!! While living in Canada, i was never able to save any money. In my last 8 years of working and living in US, I am 90% done paying off my mortgage on a very nice 5800sq feet house in Sugarland, TX. I owe very nice 2024 Lexus and 2023 Mercedes SUV that I can only dream of in Canada…so Canada is good in so many thing (I do have a soft corner for Canada in my heart as I grew up there) but when it comes to opportunities and life style to its full potential…USA is way ahead of the game.
I’m late to this video but I just wanted to correct y’all by saying that the school shootings that happen in the US are NOT accidents. They are terrible tragedies that should be preventing but we find ourselves continuously dealing with them. There’s a lot of people in the US that have experienced gun violence or know someone who has & to say that it’s some “accident” is unsettling
You’re right
It’s a violent place. Not for everyone. Consider that before moving. We also don’t ask citizens to surrender to criminals, so there’s that…
In Vancouver you can’t get a shack for less than a million. That $550,000 figure is heavily skewed by the house prices that are in the middle of nowhere.
I am leaving Canada as i live after 4 years , i wanted it after three but covid was a serious disturbance. By the way all my friends are moving out of Canada too.
Where are they moving to?
Why and where are they moving to?
That’s what I hear too. Cost of grocery in Canada is double the US and the pay is about the same. I hear some people there are skipping meals! I’ve seen lots of videos on Canada. It’s a good country, aside for the guns, I prefer the US. And did I see something like it’s a place to have one kid or none? What in Gods name is that? I have a coworker who lived in the UK, Canada and now lives in the US and likes it best here. I guess it depends on what you want. What I hate about the US is the gun violence. It will be a much better country if it wasn’t for lack of gun control.
@@irenegaruba48 In fact , Canada and US share long border and Guns in Canada is also unavoidable :(
@@leeleelarlar7072 You are so right. The truth is always hard for people to admit.
What surprised me the most is that even with nearly half the population being 1-2gen immigrants, the barrier of Canadian experience is still so high for newcomers.
We have faith things will change soon. Canadian job vacancies are at all times high and some employers will have no choice but become open to newcomer talent
@@MakeThatChange I do notice more and more posts on the job bank that are open to non citizens/PR.
It's a way to lowball newcomers.
@@hovikkevork3069 which is wrong.
Go to USA where pay is much higher, taxes are lower, and goods are cheaper. There are 50 states to choose from, there are states with no income tax and low sales tax. No carbon tax, Canadians are being taxed to death by Trudeau and his elite minions.
I totally agree with that half a point for personal hygiene because why are your shoes there😂
Both my Canadian born professional children emigrated to Silicon Valley, Fremont and San Francisco CA. Never to come back.
Did you move too?
My wife and I spend much of our time in Fremont and El Cerrito.
We are both retired and in our seventies. We are well settled and comfortable. Most of our extended family (26 in all; family of 4 moving to Texas permanently next month) moved to the U.S. at different times. We too have US permanent residence status, but find it difficult to make a permanent move, especially after a life time of working in Canada. Besides, the Canadian dollar trading at 74.01 US. If we move, all our assets will dwindle 25% in a flash; We are completely debt free, and don't intent to be in debt to banks. 😁
Had we left 30 - 40 years ago, we could've done much better in the U.S. as my children, brother and extended family have done; some spectacularly! And the American weather and people are wonderful.
Then again, the U.S. economy is a 26 trillion economy; Canada is only 1.84 trillion and ranked in GDP ( PPP measure) at 17th Globally. India ranks at number three. (in much more accurate PPP measure).
It's self evident why young, disappointed, professional Indians are leaving Canada in droves. If they cannot get to the U.S. they are much better off in India, at present, the fastest growing large economy.
So, Canada in any measure cannot be compared to the U.S. or for that matter, India.
Best Wishes to you both.
Incidentally, approximately 12,000 Canadians took up U.S. citizenship in 2020. That includes my children.
Amindra,thanks for the fair assessment. You can't compare USA to Canada. As you said,America is the largest economy, has various climate differences in its territory that you can select.Canada has no choices.There are more opportunities here than in Canada.With regards to health care,I think we have a decent health care,and we have most advanced technology when it comes to Medicine.So many Canadians who live in the boarder with the US,come to us for treatment. The main thing here is,high taxes in Canada and expensive commodities which is a killer.
I needed this video . I plan to move there as soon as I get all of my ducks in a row
At the end of the day I think Canada and the US share a lot of common ground in a lot of areas.
The major difference in my eyes between Canada and the US is the competitiveness of each economy. The US is far more competitive and innovative than Canada. Canadians are more risk averse and seem to want to work for the government or a big company whereas Americans are more confident in themselves and would prefer to work for themselves and try to start a business for themselves - and importantly - want to have it become a large business.
As a Canadian I wish I would have moved down to the States and tried it out when I was younger. I'm too old to move there now...
Canada still isn't a bad place but it is nowhere near as prosperous for the average person, or I should say the average worker, as it used to be. And Canada's economy seems to be deteriorating rapidly and being usurped by newly developing countries whereas the economic future of the US seems brighter due to the powerful innovation in the US. However the social situation in the US seems to be deteriorating more so than in Canada.
Great comment and analysis, I agree. There are way too many Canadians working in the public sector, many come here for all the socialist benefits, but don't realize its gonna cost you with high taxes on everything.
Canada is where you can struggle and pretend you’re having a good life in a first world country and the US is where you can make money and actually improve yourself
Lol, so true in words!!! I left when they started advertising Canada as "the best place on earth". , I knew then something was afoot and everyone sold stuff on the side to make ends meet and pretended that it was whilst they waited for a loved one to pass and cash in and turn on their own siblings to move into luxurious brand new 400sq ft cubicles for $800k. I thought Japan, Singapore or Switzerland were supposed to be more expensive?!, Well, at least they think that their Canadian healthcare is free, lol.
Well put
If you are already rich than yea
Or you can suffer out loud like the rest of the American people through exploitation and unaffordable housing
As long as you don't get shot at.
Money is not only improvement dude when you're not respected based on your wealth. That's what canada offers when you're treated well and leading a short love that's good what's wrong in it. Just have a lot of money and no real friends and having rivals. That's shit dude.
The difference in cost of living (Canada being higher) I think has become a problem. Also, everyone in the US doesn't have to live in NY or LA, so we can decide on a more affordable city to live in. It might not be as cosmopolitan as NYC or TO, but at least you can afford a home. My Mom was born in Ontario in the 20's, and migrated to the US in the 40's for lack of work. In the 80's, I would have loved to have moved to TO... even had girlfriends there, but doors just wouldn't open. Get in if you can, but if you take away the epidemic of U.S. gun violence (wish we could...), then America is still a good place to live and is still a magnet destination for the world. Great video!
The average Canadian's tax burden is merely 2% higher than the average American's. When I found that statistic I researched and verified.
Healthcare is a huge consideration for families.
Id perfer to pay for it, 20% of canadians dont have a Doctor. Go to the ER room and its over a 10-12 hr wait. Lose half a pay cheque to taxes to collapsing healthcare system.
I live in Buffalo area-great place.
@@macdee8837 Do you know how many Americans don't have a doctor and do the same thing, or wait until they are basically dying to see someone? MUCH higher than 20%. An ER wait in the US is just as long and then you might get put in a hallway and wait another 2-4 hours to see a nurse or doctor for anything other than vitals.
I usually do not leave any comments, but your video deserves standing ovations! Bravo! Thank you for high quality content!
Wow, thank you!
I am a Canadian. The job market in the USA and salaries appear much better! For me, reduced sunlight hours in winter in Canada = depression.
Well, we just had our second, in two weeks "code red" lockdown in North Carolina. This is when a suspected mass shooter enters a school building. This is happening all over the US on a weekly basis. I suspect that Canada does not have this incessant problem. If you're sending kids to any school in America, this conversation significantly changes. Btw, there are some amazing people in the US. There is opportunity for sure. Healthcare is outrageous here and yes it can also take months to see a specialist here too. Incarceration rates are absurd. Education is unaffordable. My son's school just sent out an email stating that "emergency food is available for anyone who needs it". Food insecurity is real here. Conservatives are loosening gun laws adding fuel to an ongoing crisis. Racism/sexism/anti-lgbtq is very real with close to half the country. But yeah....in some places it's warm. 😐
Firearms are not the problem its a culture problem and its now happening in Canada. Society has grown lazy, alot of people want the easy money and drugs can make anyone rich and money, or lack there of is the root of most societal problems.
Its a hard truth, but not all cultures are the same. 1950's America regardless of ethnicity, people had guns racks in their trucks, no one stole anything, no lootings, no gangs, no thugs, no mass violence. Motor city Detroit, blacks were living middle class like everyone else, now look at Michigan, its a run down state.
I think the government is the biggest threat to American's freedom. As someone said "There are no blacks who own planes who are shipping in the cocaine into America" The CIA introduced powder cocaine and crack cocaine into urban areas of L.A. and NYC in the 80's to destroy impoverished community's. YES, there still are people who discriminate and hate drives violence and you can see the division still in all parts of the United States. People should watch the movie with Tom Cruise "Made in America" it breaks down the roll the CIA had with cocaine. That's my two cents.
@D33Lux thank you for the reco!
USA is the largest economy of world, there are plenty of jobs and opportunities here, only the size of the economy of Texas State, where I live, is equal to the total economy of Canada.
💯🙌
One more factor to compare (even though it was mentioned under 'gun control') - is the crime level. In Canada, although rising, it's still pretty low - on par with the rest of the developed world. The crime situation in the US is way worse with one of the highest share of imprisoned population in the world
The crime rate depends heavily on where you live, the crime rates in places like LA and Chicago drive up the national rate, but they will have zero effect on you if you’re living in Iowa for example.
This is huge. Even a random state like Ohio is ridiculously dangerous!
If you like Canada but hate the cold, just live in US West coast states . Colorado, Montana, BC, Alberta, Dakota are basically the same place.
In Egypt you don't need a training to get a license driver. you just go to the convenience store to get your license driver without to pass an exam and you are good to go! free for all! there is no driver rules in Cairo with 20 millions of peoples. Everybody arrives from all directions even from the sky!
US is far better for individuals who wants to grow and work on themselves. I lived in US for 2 years and I got the best education learned a lot and met one of the most ambitious people. I always was motivated to do more. US boosted my education and career. Unfortunately I couldn’t stay there due to immigration issues. I moved to Canada and I am here for almost 5 years now and I am still struggling just to make ends meet. Every day I am looking for ways to get out of here back to US or elsewhere. Legalization of drugs, prohibitably expensive housing, poor access to health care, lack of availability of well paying jobs, massive intake of immigrants, overtaxation and fewer businesses opportunities. Canada was great place to live back in 1990s and early 2000s. Everything is going downhill after 2018. Immediately they need to fix immigration, taxation, healthcare, housing, drugs, and support small businesses.Else, Canada will continue to be the place of broken dreams.
Strongly agree with you , it’s to hard to live in Canada now specifically rent, also health care is “free” but let’s talk about what’s behind so poor quality I’m agree that Canada is a great country but they need to fix a LOT of things!
Healthcare is drastically behind most 1st world nations. For example, to see a specialist in Canada it can be up to 8 months, in Germany its 1 day. Weather is dreadful 6 months of the year, cost of living is unattainable in 2024. The average Canadian will NEVER be home owner and rent is over $2,000 CAD/month. The trudeau name was a curse on this nation. Both trudeaus, Pierre and now Justin have done nothing for the benefit the Canadian people.
Why can't you just stay in your homeland?
For tourists, US is more welcoming and people are friendlier. Canadians are a bit arrogant. Both countries are incredibly beautiful!
💯🙌
Lol funny how you think that. I’m starting to think you don’t live in either because you got it mixed up big time. Canadians are really welcoming and friendly. but the nerve of some people in the USA
There’s nice people don’t get me wrong but if you go downtown Manhattan, New York and calmly wave at someone you’ll get a 🖕🤬🫵 happened to me many times and I’m sure it’ll happen more
This was a really well put together video guys! Clear and to the point but also interesting and funny.
Thank you. Glad you enjoyed it!
Love the video. I like that even though there was a winner, you let viewers know the winner is up to them and what is more important to them. I’m convinced to stay in 🇨🇦
🙏🙏🙏
As a American I can tell u that Canada is a much better place for many many reasons.
Wow, that was an interesting comparisson between both countries, regards from Mexico.
Cheers!
I live in Buffalo, Toronto born. I got a spousal green card based on marriage to my late wife who was a dual citizen though she was US born.. Western NY is very friendly and very supportive, at least to me it is. And yes I live close to the border-I come up often. I became a USC in 1993 btw.
How are you enjoying Buffalo after Toronto?
You forgot to say Canadian live on top of each other like a roommate cant rent a house by yourself all the houses like hotel 10 people live in them 🤣🤣🤣
I know a lot of people move to the USA
Haha we did mention the housing prices in the video and alludes to that. I’m just not sure how good of a quality of housing you can get for the same price in the US - this includes quality of life, the overall neighborhood safety and demographic and dependence on driving.
@@MakeThatChange sure you may get more space in the US but it comes with the added expenses of having to drive everywhere, $$$ to upkeep your car for daily use, $$ and time for maintaining the house/garden, etc. Stack me in a tower in Canada any day .
I do like Canada 🇨🇦 and USA 🇺🇸
USA is great for business
Canada is great for life
It is probably better to start in Canada because immigrants are really welcome here but personally I am very tired of high taxes and very expensive homes
I wish I could generate profit in US and live in Canada during summer months ONLY:)
One day Ruslan, you will!
If your a U.S. citizen and move to Canada you have to pay both countries taxes- just to note. So.. never escaping taxes haha.
@@cloudy_xDD Actually, Canada and the USA have a tax agreement, so in most cases you do not pay both. This is my experience
@@cheryl641 Can I get a source on that? I’m aware they have some agreements.
@@cloudy_xDD It's called the U.S/Canada Tax treaty. You can google it. You still have to file taxes with the US. though.
I was born in California, lived in New York and Travel the USA for business for 28 years and have moved to Canada and lived in various Provinces (BC, Alberta, and Ontario) for 15 years. The last 8 years I have seen Canada start to die. This country has become a land of broken governments, and broken dreams and the only thing holding it up are the awesome but naive people of Canada. I don't say this with any joy. I wanted to retire and die in this country but not feel like I have no choice but to leave. In fact I'm not the only one.
Canada right now is experiencing a major brain drain, especially immigrants that came to Canada. Think about it. People who left Ukraine or Syria who came to Canada to avoid a war, are leaving because of how unaffordable it is here. It's not uncommon to have a doctor, nurse, engineer or any professional with a masters degree come to this country and work at a coffee shop or do Uber eats just to make a living. Most Canadians are $500 away from being bankrupt. We are taxed to the point of being demoralized and even if you work harder, you are taxed harder.
You might say, "well at least you have free healthcare". and I will have to back hand you. IT'S NOT FREE! It's fine for small things and emergencies but not for long term care. If you are a person with a broken back, they will stabilize you but expect 6 months to 2 years to see a doctor and end up in this sick socialized medicine hell. Even simple stuff you will need to wait 2 to 4 hours to see a doc. I have family that work in the healthcare system in Canada and the situation is grim. Nurse are burning out and doctors feel there is no future in Canada. This also contributes to the brain drain in Canada and makes our system getting worse. THE WORST PART is even if you have money, you can't go to a private health care hospital. At least in the USA you have options you have public health care (25% of the total use system and free to the public), private/public hospitals (need insurance or government support plans), and fully private (rich bastards LOL).
I will skip politics just because its a can of worms up here, but is a less free country than the USA. C11, C18, gun grabs, no recall vote ability, etc. Just watch the daily House of Commons news feeds to watch these politicians and you will feel sick to your stomach.
In the last 6 years the drugs and homeless problem has reached every major city in Canada. We are not talking small level. I'm talking Skid Row levels. Law enforcement has their hands tied even in violent crimes. You are not allowed to protect yourself during an attack. Drugs are now given by the government, and sold to kids
Last and obvious one. NO FUTURE. You kids will never own a home. They will have a future with massive government interference. Try buying raw land in the middle of absolute no where in BC. If you move far north you might be able to buy something, but 40% of your build will be government nonsense before you even get permission to start building. It took me 4 years to build my own home using my own labour and it was a nightmare compared to building in the USA (California and Texas). If you are a parent, what future do you honestly see for your kids in Canada in 2023? No home, no car, no saving and even if they have six figures in the bank, they are still functionally poor in Canada.
I am sick of what Canada has become and I'm not alone. I talk with the cashiers, doctors, software engineers around me and the same sadness. I am angry how this great country is now a Ponzi scheme. I used to proudly say how much better Canada was than the USA. I can't anymore and it's more evident as you get older in Canada. If you are getting older, you will find Canad to be hostile to the old vs the USA.
Hi dear as An African immigrant currently living in the UAE (Dubai) and would like to change not only my life but also my family's back in Uganda which of the 2 countries would you recommend me to migrate considering everything
This is everything I’ve come to know of my Canada. I can’t wait to leave for the USA. More freedom and opportunity. I love what you said concerning children’s opportunities. They literally have nothing to look forward to here. Are there any states you’d recommend?
Best comment on here, brutally honest and factual. Sad to see what Canada has become. The trudeau name has been a curse to this nation.
@@D33Lux Even when Trudeau is gone it won't fix much. The issues are structural, cultural and run deep. Bottom line...your kids won't have a future worth living in Canada. Move to the States. Or abroad.
Great video. A huge round of applause for the hard work you've done for making this video. 💯👏👏👏
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you so much!
NYS has upskill and workforce development. I also went to school here in America. Took out student loans and paid them back. Later for my Bachelors, I took advantage of tuition reimbursement through work. That said, I think I did pretty good for myself through the years here as a Canadian expat.
That’s awesome! Well done
I came to Canada back in 2021 from Mexico to pursue an MBA in Vancouver. All in all, I definitely have a lot to thank Canada for: a new career, new friends, and better work/life balance, to mention a few. I was supper happy to land in tech after graduating and working as a Product Manager for a Vancouver start up. Career wise, though, I sometimes am a bit thrown off with just how more competitive are salaries, jobs, and overall career advancement in the U.S. On top of that, the current housing situation Canada-wide is unbearable for Canadians and newcomers alike, and I frankly don't know whether I'll ever be able to save enough money for a down payment. I wonder what your stance is in regards to continuing on a career as a PM, especially coming from Anastasia. How has your journey in Canada looked like? Did you ever reconsider moving to the U.S. for broader career opportunities? Would love to hear from you guys soon. Btw, kudos for the cool video!
All the points! 🍁
🙌
Environment safety in the US is relative to where you live. I live in VA and we don’t even lock our doors and have never had any issues with crime. Any big cities will have crime.
Yeah, it's something that people from the outside often need help understanding when they look at national statistics. Most crimes can be avoided by avoiding certain bad cultural areas. So although crime can be terrible in certain US cities, the suburbs, and small towns are typically very safe. It's nothing like how the US is portrayed in the international news. For example, I haven't encountered theft or violence in 30 years! I am saying this as someone who lives in the suburbs of Metro Detroit.
@@scratchpenny they watch the news and look at statistics and automatically assume that the entire US is dangerous when it’s not the case AT ALL😂 I live in a small town in Delaware and I’ve NEVER witnessed a single crime or even heard a gunshot
@@DA-db9bi I really want to immigrate down there when I finish school. Canada is a garbage country!
Objective, impartial, and informative video. Thanks.
Hardly. Where are these women from?
I wanna give my two cents as a Jamaican who lived in Canada,Germany and the us for me i wanna see the us is better interms of making money. It's better to get around , open business, hustle it's have that go-getter capitalistic mentality, Canada and Germany are similar. In Germany its haaaard to get anything done and bureaucracy will end you. Canada is a bit better and less bureaucratic. The us is a play ground filled with variety of everything and did I mention how easy it is to make money. Canada and Germany habe similar health system but in Germany things get done quickly, the us system is good if you have money. Racism is in all three but Germany and Canada are kinda not in your face, Americans will be in your face though, to me i prefer the america racism at least i know who to be aware of but in CA and ger you don't know who your enemies are because they will smile with you while not liking you. For kids it's like this , i would raise my kid in Germany because they have the kids are so well mannered and well behaved but i will let them experience american high school . Canada is waaay more peaceful , Germany cleaner. The bottom line is if you are a young ambitious Person the us is for you, but to retire I'll choose Canada but let my kids grow in Germany.
Thanks for sharing your perspective! It’s great!
I don’t know if it was a joke and I’m giving the reaction that was expected, but I am an American and can attest nobody here is wearing shoes to bed. I don’t even like wearing socks when I’m at home.
That’s good to know!
@@MakeThatChangeright I don't know where you heard that sht
i, an american, recall seeing someone wear shoes in the bed. i was absolutely horrified, as was everyone i know, but i HAVE seen person do this before
My cousin from NYC wears shoes in the house and has fallen asleep on the couch with his shoes on, but they were hanging off the edge of the couch. I don't see how people could be wearing shoes all the time indoors, its good to take off your shoes and put on flip flops and relax your feet.
If you want to be an entrepreneur and make things that change the world. then USA is better like for Engineers and Entrepreneur etc. In Canada is more for peoples who want take the benefits and get out of there after they have the Canada passport, bachelor degree and educate there childrens. Somebody with a brain will not continue to pay so much tax and huge cost of living and end up no saving and broke like in Africa. Also extreme weather, not enough sun etc. and no social skills.
Just finished the educational cost part : the provincial government of Quebec is currently discussing about a project to give extra benefits to international student if they agree to certain conditions such as "if they study in specific area" and "if they work in the province for a certain period of time" (these specific areas are usually the kind of studies that would give them jobs that the province need the most at the moment).
My father moved to Canada as a five-year-old shortly after WW2… shortly after that, when he was 12, he moved to the US with my grandparents to make more $$.. shortly after that, Vietnam broke out and believe it or not people in the country on work visas, children got drafted…so my father went to beautiful British Columbia where I was born.. and thank God my dad disobeyed American orders or I wouldn’t exist…☝🏼🧡🇨🇦
Thats an amazing story. Glad your father made these decisions
@@MakeThatChange my father moved to Canada in the late 60s from New York be ause he refused to go to Vietnam and met my mother in Toronto for decades he refused to go back to america
6.3 million Americans served in Vietnam. 50,000 died there, so less than 1 percent death rate. You'd still have pretty good odds of existing.
@@minuteman4199 what would his odds be of having post traumatic stress disorder?
Any other Americans watching this and weeping? Hey Canada.........SEND HELP!!!!
I'm Canadian, I was born here and I'm 46 years of. In my opinion, free health care is not all it's cracked up to be. We may pay nothing for healthcare but you get what you pay for wink wink. There are thousands of Canadians that don't even have a family doctor, and most hospitals in Canada are extremely under Staffed.
💯 we made a video about Canadian healthcare looking into why it is the way it is here ruclips.net/video/PmVIKcOoRaM/видео.html
We pay an arm and a leg in taxes, and most people don't even use the health care.
I find it hostile here in Canada as you get older. I have to get blood work for my aging parents and they have to wait 2 hours. Actual treatment can mean waiting 6 months to 2 years. The kicker is we have money and would gladly pay for a private option if we were allowed.
@SSingh-nr8qz There is quasi two tier option.
Canada is colder and more expensive, but yes, definitely better.
🙌
Canada's healthcare is not all that. Atleast in Ontario. There is no dental coverage, no eye coverage. But its good for people who old or have critical illnesses since its all covered.
Canada also has a very weak job market than the U.S. There is almost no opportunity for highly skilled labor. The U.S is a world leader in technology and industry and has more rewarding opportunities for talented people. As a Canadian who has lived in the U.S. I must agree Americans are more willing to be friends with strangers. I also think the U.S is far more culturally diverse but better assimilated. The U.S is a better place if you are talented and hardworking. Canada is a better place if you are a min wager.
By " minimum wager " you are referring to people working in factories and farms? How I'll that be better if they are going to spend whole that on housing!?
I love how you tried to give a positive twist to the unfortunate job situation in canada where highly educated people are forced to driver uber due to lack of opportunities!!
Thank you - glad you appreciated it!
Agree with you
It's everywhere nowadays
Well the country only has 38 million people so there are fewer employment opportunities. What's America's population?
I worked in healthcare and often met lab techs, doctors and well educated immigrants who had to jump through hoops or clean house for a living. Are you suggesting that Canada's lab techs, doctors, electricians and so forth would be welcome to immigrate and set up practice in their foreign country of choice without challenging exams? I think not, I think Canadians would be driving cabs and Ubers.
What these RUclips peeps failed to mention is that since 1990, and in particular since the recession of the early 1990s, the job market has been horrible in Toronto-it never fully recovered. Two problems, too much in way of businesses has left the city and second too many newcomers have gravitated to Toronto making the job market extremely competitive. The pandemic only made things much worse. Because of all this, long long commutes are common-that is if you have a job and it is assumed you are not working from home.
I don’t know which of the United States you were in where people wear shoes in bed but that’s crazy and definitely doesn’t reflect the norm
great to know!
I’ve been thinking about moving to Canada for years. There are many advantages and disadvantages to America and Canada. I just want to make sure it’s not a ‘ The grass looks greener on the other side of the fence’ situation and then find out a ‘ I never thought of that’ situation.
As an American, this seems heavily biased towards Canada. There's a wide variety of states that are much much better than Canada it seems, while others are worse.
that's fair
Yep and gonna make an arrangement to travel to Canada next year. 🇨🇦🥰
Safe travels!
It was obvious right from the start that this was just a set-up to make Canada look better. It came across as biased to get the desired outcome. I like Canada and Canadians but you do love to pat yourself on the back. I've lived in 6 places in the USA including Alaska and have been to Canada many times and have Canadian friends and neighbors here in the Arizona where I live now. Despite what you hear, most places are very safe here. All in all, I would still prefer to live in the USA.
Glad to hear that Mark!
I am getting the impression that this channel is canadian government propaganda.
You took the words out of my mouth. Watch videos about Canadians leaving their country and others. Yes America has violence and it’s getting the reputation that it’s not the place to raise children, Despite the violence in some areas there’s so many places ten times Canada where it’s extremely safe and people continue to have children and raise them safely in every part of the country. The myth that Canada is a better country has been exposed all over the media. They’re running here to the US and actually have better quality of life here. Any have left their country for Mexico and other countries. I’m not one to want to bash another country, but these ladies are saying what they think is true but they’re not aware of the reality of both places. People who love welfare and handouts love Canada. The more ambitious love the US, though there’s welfare and handouts in the US too, no one brags about such things. America is such a huge country, I don’t know why it even gets compared to a country the size of Texas. In population. The US has states with better economy than Canada. Compare Canada and Australia or Switzerland or something. Not with the Big Dog!
Canada is just too cold, nothing like those 6 month Winters
For me, I live in Vancouver, but when I'm done college, I'm hoping to find a job in Seattle and immigrate there. They recently opened up a Pokemon HQ there, Nintendo's hiring, Seattle's the HQ of Bungie, the maker of the Destiny games and much more! I feel like it's easier to find a job in the US than in Canada. In fact, my college instructor said so. There's more jobs there than in this small town. I'm heading towards SFU and I'm hoping to land a few coops, including one in Seattle to see if I like it there. And no, I do not care about healthcare, mass shootings or politics. The chances of you randomly being shot is about the same as getting ran over by a car. For healthcare, it's usually provided by your employer. But otherwise, you can buy it yourself as there's many options to choose from. Some of them are really good, but people are just overgeneralizing everything. My hope is that employment will eventually lead to permanent residency. Then, I can go buy a house in Texas, Florida or Colorado where it's much cheaper than Vancouver
why Seattle?
I used to live in Seattle and have family there. Seattle is dying. Better to take a remote job in the USA and move someplace else in Washington. STAY AWAY FROM PORTLAND OREGON! There are lots of places in Washington that are stunning and close to Seattle.
@@didemakpinar1154 It's where all the jobs are. I need some place where there's lots of jobs in my field and where there's lots of jobs, the chances of one company being willing to sponsor my visa increases. But also that it's closer to home and I can visit friends from time to time until I move someplace farther. Then I won't be able to see them that often anymore.
@@SSingh-nr8qz I cannot take a remote job because I first need a visa sponsorship and companies I don't think are willing to do that if they don't even require you to show up in person
Floridas housing is NOT cheap.. just to let you know.. I live there and prices are going thru the roof. Insurance is difficult now as well because of hurricanes with insurance companies leaving the state.
I live in Atlanta, GA, USA, and I have called 911 like 7 times since I’ve lived here (3 years). Each time I have called it has taken the police about an hour and a half to come to my house. Crazy!
The United States is in a different league all together. Canada is a very small player. It is also, probably the most colonial place on this planet.
4:20 Look at how she immediately pulls away from the hug 🤣, poor guy didn't even have a shot on camera
I think she lost her footing
What a great research has been done! Thank you a lot for this video!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Good Night everyone!!!
Born in the USA to one American parent and one Canadian parent, so I am (was) a dual citizen.
Moved to Canada in the early 80's with my Canadian parent when they split up and while I missed the USA at first, Canada quickly became my new home and earlier this year, I renounced my US citizenship to become 100% Canadian.
The USA is (was) a great country, but no longer aligns with my values, especially over the last 6-7 years. It has become a very mean spirited nation that I no longer wanted to be associated with.
To me the choice is clear. Canada isn't perfect, but it's a much better place to live than the USA and in most categories the data backs that up.
-Canada ranks higher on the Freedom Index than the USA does, so according to the Cato and Fraser Institutes, we're more free in Canada
-Lower violent crime rates
-Lower murder rates
-MUCH lower gun crime rates
-Better access to health care
-Longer life expectancy
-Higher quality of life
-Lower infant mortality
-Lower maternal mortality
-Greater reproductive rights and healthcare for women
-No crazy far right wingers
But the pizza is better in the USA, I'll give you that.
Thanks for sharing your comprehensive points. It means a lot coming from Canadian/American
Healthcare is terrible here, everything is taxed and taxed some more, infrastucture is way behind for that taxes we pay, housing crisis, immigration. I wish i had dual citizenship lol
@@macdee8837 where's "here"?
@@klauswigsmith Canada.
@@macdee8837 Our healthcare is actually pretty good. It's a better system than what the Americans have. Could it use improvements? Absolutely, but again, it's better than south of the border.
Taxes are always gonna cause complaints, but it's been proven that Canadians get better results for the taxes they pay than Americans do, especially with regard to healthcare.
There's a housing crisis pretty much everywhere
Immigration? What about it? Care to elaborate?
I can see two power houses still not contented but i Thank God for you guys here in kenya we are way back
I'm an American and have NEVER heard of anyone wearing their shoes to bed...smh 🥴
hahah good to know! Maybe it's just the movies?
From my traveling experience… i can tell Americans got more spending power than canadian… most of the time i met canadians at hostels and cheap hotels 😂 Americans pay with powerful us dollar, tip well, don’t bargain !Canada still good country but don’t compare it to the states … not yet 😊 !!! Canada has too much taxes ,cheap public services, less opportunities, six months of depression 😅 bureaucratic system
I am so thankful to Ottawa for making Canadian immigration much easier for skilled workers. Living abroad is literally a dream for so many Indians including me.
Exactly !!
Everything outlined in the video is A-O-K with me. The segment about Canada's sane, civilized and responsible approach to firearm ownership is alone, enough for me to drop everything and live there!
In the US, I only was allowed 5 weeks off after having my baby, because I took off about 4 days before my baby was born due to Early Labor!! I also was only paid HALF my salary. They wanted me to return to work while I was still in pain, my daughter was having swallowing difficulties which continued for 3 years, and I was having PPA! It is awful. We are moving to Canada this year for many reasons but maternity leave, childcare costs, and safety are some of the most important reasons!
You say that now...look at Harry and Meg. They said the same but only stayed for a month or so, and that was good weather too. Lol
Sorry to hear you're given so little time off for maternity, especially concerning a sick child. You get a year in Canada for maternity leave. This amount can be divided by the couple, however they like. I believe both parents are able to take 6 months at the same time.
@@HiDefi Could you pick a more, unrealistic, example? How many millions do Meg and Harry have and how many millions does the average American struggling have?
@@Pucciniscottage not sure what you mean? But you don't get a lot for your money in Canada as you would in say either USA/UK. An average detached house about an hour away from 1 of the only 3 cities (2 if you don't speak French), costs about $2m. It's impossible, unless your family bought one years ago and you've inherited it.
Good luck on scraping snow every week, high sales tax (13-15%), expensive housing cost, tremendous bad weather, heavy traffic, expensive foods etc….😂😂
I don’t think the point you gave to Canada for education is fair. Sure a lot of Uber drivers are lawyers and doctors, but they did not study IN CANADA. They studied in their respective home countries before immigrating to Canada and so it should not reflect on how educated Canada’s population is. I don’t think that was a fair comparison. I also wouldn’t give points to Canada for healthcare, or I’d give an equal point to the US. Work-life balance should have been followed by “growth/wealth building opportunities” and the US will win points on that.
I’m a Canadian btw.
Long ago, things might be different I think. My sister was given a job as secretary in oil company Exxon in Canada about 40 years ago. She came back to Malaysia after 5 years, and she can go back, but she did not, maybe because of the cold weather. She never complained of anything in Canada, so I think it was good at those times.
Yes, but sadly Canadians cannot leave and live anyplace cheaper and retire .. they will live the rest of their years alone in hospice or a family's basement dwelling
The US is better than Canada if you value money. Canada is better than the US if you value peace of mind.
YMMV.
Totally agreed 💯
What peace of mind. Oh yeah, gun violence.
America way better currency
@@irenegaruba48 gun violence is a problem that only exists if you decide to live in a shithole like Chicago.
Another great video, thank you! The fall colours look good in the background. Perhaps a video of forest walk somewhere nearby would inspire?
Certainly it would! The time of the year is beautiful these days!
What about us retirees? It used to be a $1500 a month min. Income to live there. Grew up un Alaska, spent a lot of time in Rupert and Terrace, thinking of moving ther from WA state US.
I'll bet that the few Americans moving to Canada end up coming back to the good old USA.
Fuck those traitors. I'm an immigrant to this country, and love it here! Couldn't ask for better opportunities, friendlier people, openness, and nature. I have so many family members who would love to come here, that whenever I hear some white asshole complain with a threat to move, I always encourage them because it's freed-up space that can hopefully be occupied by a family member who will be appreciative of the country
If anyone wants to go to bed, that's all right. Just Turn off the Volume, because That's OK.
These two are Canadians so they are showing you the flowers garden of Canada and the sewage in US. Nobody should consider this as their immigration advice. You need to find an immigration lawyer and do your own research before making any serious decisions. Canada’s tax and unemployment rates are much higher than in the US. It is also freaking cold in general and they have extremely long winter which means you will be locked inside your house for the majority of the year especially if you are a senior citizen.
100% always do your own homework
Canada works for me because I love snow a lot. It’s one of my favourite things aside from thunderstorms and tornadoes etc. I’m quite introverted so I wouldn’t mind staying indoors for the most part. I’ve read that healthcare is free in canada but honestly, the one thing that is making me not want to move to the us (used to be obsessed with USA… until now) is the insane crime. I no longer feel safe at the thought of just… being there. I see lots of body cam videos and some people kill just because from what I’ve seen. In canada, I understand there’s definitely crime, but it’s not as much
Canada was great up until the 90's. Those born here in the 40's or 50's had a great life, safe, good economy, hunting culture, affordable housing...etc. The nail in the coffin for Canada was Pierre Trudeau and the 1982 Charter of Rights and Freedoms. That dummy actually put "enjoyment of property" so essentially changing the BNA and magna carta so people don't essentially have property rights. 2024 major city's have high crime, rampant drug use, safe injection cites in big cities, gang violence, home invasions. Toronto has become car theft capital of Canada and I was told by retail cell phone stores there is robbery because criminals know Canadians have dreadful self defence rights. The trudeau name is a curse on this nation.
@Snowyturbo it all depends on where u live. Some cities are more dangerous than others. Research each place and use common sense. That's all you need to be safe.
My impression living in both places is that for most of us there is no clear winner and many people on both sides of the border tend to think it's better on the other side.
Thanks for saying that!
Housing in Canada is in the millions [limited ground space] 2-3m for the land alone...USA, you can buy a new house with a pool for $255k. Canadians, you can keep your free (not free) health care system and I would choose USA. I lived in Canada for 40yrs yet all my longtime, close relationships were Americans. I moved to the UK as we Canucks are not allowed to leave (just retire in usa for only 6mos). However, London is not British anymore and so you get a lot of reverse racism here, buts it's about 6x cheaper than Canada. Summary: Nowhere is perfect.
I think you have misunderstood. I am Canadian and in exactly the same position. No disagreement here.
Thanks guys you are an inspiration…..only challenge in Canada is house prices
It’s a huge challenge - but what can we do?
And the awful weather ofc.
@@MakeThatChange move to smaller cheaper cities 😂😂
@@hovikkevork3069 that’s geography can’t do much
@@rohanutep81 Exactly, nothing could be done about it.
My husband is transferring soon to Canada. We will be that American family yet again moving in.
we wish Canada welcomes you with open arms!
At the end of the day I think it is difficult to say which country is better---lets just say they are different and which is better for an individual depends on their risk tolerance and objectives in life. Life in Canada and most European countries is much more laid-back than living in the US. However, it is much more improbable that you will ever become really wealthy or have the the number of career opportunities in Canada that you might have in the US. Instead, it's pretty easy to live a decent and comfortable life. The US in return is made for entrepreneurs and the truly ambitious. If you are a high performer and you have that kind of "Protestant work ethic", the US might be the better country for you. Canada might have attracted someone like Elon Musk in his youth but they couldn't keep him---he went on to the US for his university education and from there to Silicon Valley. People with bold new ideas rarely come to Canada or Europe and if they do, stay there---they go to the US because they will find an ultra-capitalistic playground with people willing to finance their ideas plus a government that gives them maximum freedom. Companies like SpaceX or Tesla could have never been invented in Canada or Europe. Of course, the flip side of all that is that not every American is or can be a super successful entrepreneur, so you have a lot of people struggling with their lives, having two or more jobs and still not earning enough to have a decent lifestyle. Canada and Europe have much deeper social safety nets with universal health care, pensions, longer vacations, and less expensive higher education, but these are paid for with higher taxes and lower salaries. The US has a much bigger population than Canada, a more developed and diverse economy and the geographical advantage of a more temperate climate. Culturally Americans are for the most part not fans of big government and can be described as more individualistic, conservative, patriotic, religious and with strong but diverse political views that vary by geography and the urban/rural divide.
Thank you for sharing this Frank. It’s a wonderful summary and great perspective to learn.
Yep..good perspective. Too many people have too high expectations, are not willing to sacrifice, expect most " desires" to come easy or at little cost.
100% right!
With the much higher cost of housing in Canada it is no longer the case that it is easier for the average person to have s more comfortable life in Canada
@mlml8018 I agree. I'm American and moved to Ontario to be with my wife. I couldn't believe that the cheapest apartment we could find in a small town was $1400 a month. Looking forward to moving back to US in a couple years.
I think you got it wrong with giving the point to Canada for healthcare. I lived the majority of my life in Canada paying punishingly high taxes fir our glorious “free healthcare “🙄 You know the one where you wait for 9 months to get a cat scan and then another 5 to get it analyzed. Here in the USA as a working professional I pay a modest buy up fee to my employer’s healthcare provider and actually get to see a doctor in a timely manner and have standard procedures done quickly. Not the case in good old Canada.
Nice perspective from both countries
Thank you!
Not really, the gun and religious issues are very subjective. As with abortion rights.
I live in the US but I really want to visit Canada! Some people do wear their shoes in the house in America as I’ve seen it but I can’t stand putting shoes up on furniture, especially my bed! To me, that’s disgusting. I’m glad most Canadians don’t do that!
You are very biased. For some owning a gun might be more important than having gov. decide if you should. You also didn't look at weather and geographic variation which US would win in no time. What about infrastructure, travel, and food cost, cost of living in general? US would take all of those. What about pension systems (Canada might be ahead on this one)? That lame half a point is just that, it's lame. US has some real sore spots: racial tensions, healthcare, weak labour laws, inaccessible higher education. But we pretty much get beat at everything else and I am Canadian.
We would need to make a separate video to uncover the points you've mentioned as they are highly variable. Weather and geography depend on personal preferences. Infrastructure would depend on province/state/city. Cost of living would depend on income. And so on and so forth.
Both countries have great educational systems! I was educated inCanada and my child in USA. My parents placed a high value on education, I passed that on to my child. Children who have high expectations with support will do well, no matter the country. ( barring illnesses, disabilities etc) No excuses!
taking all the shoes in the house is a individual homeowners choice in America is like half you cannot just go walking in people house I do service work and everytime I go to the house and asked if I should take off my shoes
2 Canadians 🇨🇦 that are happy to have left Chinada
@sorry for my English Canada is now Chinada
nah... if you want ACTUAL data stats, then it's Indinada ;)
Canadian Comm. Party= Trudeau is the dear leader.
Climate aside, yes, IMHO as an Italian who lived in both countries.
I'm currently living in USA and visited Canada back in 2019. I loved my time in Canada overall and it felt more racially diverse, safer, and cleaner than my home country. However, both countries have similarities in vibe, topography, background and culture.
P,
Outside Toronto Canada isn’t racially diverse
@@paulwilliams2024 it's usually just Asian or white.
I have lived in the USA all my life. First in New York then in California. Now I am a writer and book illustrator. I enjoyed visiting Canada but as I am a senior I am not welcome to move and live there from more then six months at a time.
Both have their own pros and cons. I think it depends on your purposes.
💯💯💯
Exactly 💯
I'm American. The half a point for sleeping with shoes on I don't think is accurate. The only exception to that I can think of is if someone passed out drunk. I did agree with some of their points especially around education. Having a lawyer being an Uber driver should be looked at as a problem though unless it's purely their choice. I work about 70 to 80 hours a week and took three days vacation last year which is no life at all. Not feeling like I can afford to educate myself here gives no end in sight and if i save a dollar today it's worth 50 cents in ten years so retirement is also very hard here in the states.
You didn't discuss taxes , Canadians pay way more taxes than Americans to access so called free health care ..
And cheaper education!
@@MakeThatChange our education is only expensive because the government backs the student loans, universities can charge whatever they want because the government will pay the loan.
And many other public services!
Income tax in the USA are actually higher if you make 42,000-49,000
There’s free healthcare. It’s just awful and you’ll get put on hold for anything it doesn’t matter if you broke you’re arm or having a heart attack.