An American who gets Italian citizenship by descent can then use that to get Panamanian residency through the Treaty of Friendship, Trade and Navigation (1965).
@@RC94332 Doing it via the 1965 treaty is likely the better option as the old Italian Empire is much more favoured in Panama than the USA is, geopolitically speaking. The USA is seen in most of the world as a bully. Getting residency via the treaty using Italian Citizenship by Descent (not by naturalization) will likely give a chance at naturalizing as Panamanian - whilst it would be difficult and involve bureaucracy stuffing you around, its more likely to be possible. Trying to become Panamanian through the FNV is basically impossible as there's always an excuse as to why you can't be naturalized - commonly "not sufficiently integrated", or they just "lose" your paperwork and make you infinitely start again.
@@matthewnirenberg nobody in panama has any clue about the old Italian empire you speak of. Nobody cares. Getting residency in panama was very simple as an American. And thousands of Americans do it. No issue at all. Seems like a big hassle the way you suggest when you can just do it direct. I doubt many Italians are being naturalized as you suggest. It’s hard regardless of nationality
@@RC94332 The govt in Panama sure as hell do though. If you re-read my comment (and actually pay attention to what I said) you'd see the part where I talked about becoming Panamanian. No SANE person wastes time on a FNV if they want to live in Panama or naturalize as a Panamanian citizen. Why live somewhere that you have zero rights? Only citizens have rights. To become Panamanian, the treaty route is the only route that's got any chance of being accepted in practice. Plenty of Italians have gone the treaty route and naturalized with far fewer hassles than Americans via the FNV.
@@Jennifer-h4p8h Yes might be, I was looking at Ecuador, yes you can live there if you invest 46K on the house for example, but now gringos are targeted more for burglaries.
@@semvlasveld8799 you don’t necessarily do. You can use a few thousand to leave, get a visa and naturalize somewhere. If you’re not a high net worth individual your advantage is that taxes in these European countries aren’t that bad compared to the free healthcare you’ll get and the cost of naturalising as a citizen. If you move to Europe and pay 40% tax but you earn 60,000 a year, after 5 years you’ll pay 100,000 dollars in taxes, but you’ll get a way better passport than any CBI program.
If you will need any assistance, we help clients get citizenship by descent every day. You can get in touch with our team here: workwithus@nomadcapitalist.com.
@@Captain_Green64 just go to Irish ☘️ embassy page. It’s all on there and pretty simple . You’ll need some proofs etc . I just did the paperwork for my kids as they included now . Did mine few years back
Many countries do grant citizens of other countries special privilegies or event their citizenship in a simplified process however the exception usually includes people who did not get their citizenship by birth or descent.
It’s extremely unfortunate I was born in India 🇮🇳 and life dealt me with an absolutely horrible hand;but now that I’ve come to Christ,He will help me get out of this shit hole. To everyone reading this,don’t give up! No matter how young or old you are and no matter your situation;if you have a good heart ❤️ (because I know most people don’t)The Lord will help you…🙏🏻 Just know it’s a process and good things always take time especially when your own family never supported you…. The Lord shall make a way for me! Blessings.
Actually NO. If you want to go to Afghanistan, you are better off with some other passport, like Iran or India or even a European or East Asian passport.
To retain a foreign trust in Nevis, you cannot be a Citizen of St. Kitts & Nevis. So, if one gets CBI through Antigua & Barbuda, the Trust still remains Foreign?
Yes because you're a citizen of Antigua & Barbuda, not St Kitts & Nevis. Basically the 7 full-member countries of the OECS have their own equivalent of the EU Schengen Zone, where they can freely move, work and live between each of their countries. Countries that are Associate Members of the OECS do NOT have such freedom. If you have a passport from Antigua & Barbuda and go to St. Kitts & Nevis, you need to get the OECS entry stamp in your Antigua & Barbuda passport (they might soon start doing this electronically) and you're good to go. If however you were to naturalize as a citizen of St. Kitts & Nevis after 10yrs of living there, then it would become an issue.
@@devilslayer3548 what is there to take for granted in the US? Andrew mentioned individuals with home country bias. Your comment fits that very statement. So what the OP feels trapped. I feel trapped. I always felt like a 3rd class citizen in the US. Others constantly telling me to go back to a continent, I never came from. I was born in the US. My Parents and their parents', parents, were all born in the US. The US isn't for everyone. Everyone in the US isn't fit for life outside of it. So be it.
Everybody feels trapped; Doesn't mean abroad is better.. Watching videos won't help ofc either. Do some research and you will find most English speaking countries are often just as expensive or stifling but with worse weather tbh
@@LostintheUS-2030what do you mean what is there to take for granted, quality of life in the USA is still way above average. No one here is saying that the US is the best country in the world, but you’d be a fool to think that you’re some third world nation. The fact that you can even pack up and consider living somewhere ‘better’ is huge privilege. Most of the world population lives in a lower standard of living while having terrible travel privilege. People from China and India face 10x the scrutiny an American does when applying for visas and they also have terrible visa free travel.
Thanks for your comment! We helped many Australians leave and have a better quality of life and more options. If you want to explore that path, get in touch with our team here: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
@@RCH369 yeah, I was born in Germany but when I gain Australian citizenship by default when my parents got it I lost German citizenship. Now I would have been able to get that back bit I served in the Australian defence force so am barred. That I would that anyway. My the is this and we, actually she already owns a lot of land in Thailand so that's an option and maybe Malaysia
Why doesn't each State in the USA provide its own VISA that is valid as long as they live in that State. Does the EU provide passports for the individual States that exist under it?
@@texasgermancowgirl An independent State is the same as an independent country - it's an area that has internationally recognized boundaries and its own government.
They can’t due our constitution. Our constitution dictates that every state is part of our union (our country). Whereas in the EU, every country is its own country and was never founded like the United States was. It’s been tested a few times. This is why they can’t ban *legally FDA approved medications from being shipped (unless they are federally illegal). Another example would be if a state had a law that for example (I take no stance on this for this channel) that a pregnant woman couldn’t leave to get medical care elsewhere - that’s not legal under our constitution.
The European Union is kind of useless if I’m being honest unless we are talking about the European Committee. It’s a loose coalition of elected members of member states
In the USA we can live and work in 50 states that are at least double the size of the countries you are naming and as an American citizen I can also live and work in U.S. friendly countries in every continent there is U.S. friendly countries like Netherlands, Spain, Poland, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Brunei, Chile, British Virgin Islands, French Polynesia, Tunisia, Morocco, Seychelles, Madagascar, UK, Germany, France, Monaco, South Korea, Philippines, Australia all those countries from all different continents are U.S. friendly and they don’t complicate immigration process for Americans
I think you have no idea how hard it can be for americans to move to "U.S. friendly countries", specially those in europe. It is not impossible to do by any means, how ever, most regular americans won't even qualify for residence in the EU or the UK.
@@juanpablohurtadolopez6986 the person on the video is not talking about average Americans he is talking about investing 250k in a citizenship of a tiny island country in the the ocean I think instead of throwing 250k to a sketchy foreign government I will spend that on real estate in Barcelona or Greece and enjoy beautiful weather in south of Europe easily
@@InternationaleAutos fair enough, I guess it all depends in every particular case. It is important to keep in mind that the purposes of acquiring citizenship by investment and that of a golden visa are very different, so I really think that it is not a very good idea to compare them as alternatives of one another.
@@juanpablohurtadolopez6986 the short answer people who are willing to pay 250k to get a 2nd passport they don’t really do RUclips research they have assistants they figure things out for them
I want a passport in a country that will do or not do the following: *The cost of living is less than the US. * incarnation rates are less than 1%. *crime is bearable less deaths, thefts are normal.no kidnapping * a country that does not extradition to anywhere. *not a forsaken country via climate change or natural disasters. * not a large country, and not an older than 150 year old country after freedom or reformation. *not an enemy of any other country that has big weapons. * not too many resources so that they do not get invaded. * amenities are important, but all that is needed is that the amenities are sustainable and will be there forever. Health care cannot be free to citizens because it'll be useless. * THE CULTURE has to be friendly and non racist. Where anyone can live in and live a life of freedom without living like you are being watched. * English or Spanish. Easy to learn Spanish. * and lastly, it has to have guns. I know I just destroyed every country in the world. It is ok, the grass isn't greener on the other side anyways.
Yes, just let the perfect be the enemy of the better, makes perfect sense bro 👍🏼 Ireland and New Zealand have a lot on that list though but no guns, the Philippines also has a lot and has guns. There’s only so many countries, no place is perfect. Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t strive for better. P.S. As for the extradition thing, you’re on your own. What, you want this perfect utopia AND you want to be an international crime lord? Those are contradictory things. Countries with no extradition tend to do that because they have to, and they attract criminals because of that… but you said you want less crime, no? You’re clearly theory crafting with near fictional levels of delusion. The pragmatism here is at an all time low.
Four “Free” Second Passports Anyone Can Get - ruclips.net/video/hjh08lEpTzw/видео.html
I have a question what do you think of Micronations
@@Comen_glutamate Micronations or Microstates ? the latter are widely recognized
@@Comen_glutamate Liberland?
@@StonedAlone I mean, that’s one example, yeah
@@StonedAlone _Liberland has no diplomatic recognition from any recognized nation_
why bother then ?
An American who gets Italian citizenship by descent can then use that to get Panamanian residency through the Treaty of Friendship, Trade and Navigation (1965).
Or just get it as an American through the FNV...
@@RC94332 Doing it via the 1965 treaty is likely the better option as the old Italian Empire is much more favoured in Panama than the USA is, geopolitically speaking. The USA is seen in most of the world as a bully. Getting residency via the treaty using Italian Citizenship by Descent (not by naturalization) will likely give a chance at naturalizing as Panamanian - whilst it would be difficult and involve bureaucracy stuffing you around, its more likely to be possible. Trying to become Panamanian through the FNV is basically impossible as there's always an excuse as to why you can't be naturalized - commonly "not sufficiently integrated", or they just "lose" your paperwork and make you infinitely start again.
@@matthewnirenberg nobody in panama has any clue about the old Italian empire you speak of. Nobody cares. Getting residency in panama was very simple as an American. And thousands of Americans do it. No issue at all. Seems like a big hassle the way you suggest when you can just do it direct. I doubt many Italians are being naturalized as you suggest. It’s hard regardless of nationality
@@RC94332 The govt in Panama sure as hell do though. If you re-read my comment (and actually pay attention to what I said) you'd see the part where I talked about becoming Panamanian.
No SANE person wastes time on a FNV if they want to live in Panama or naturalize as a Panamanian citizen. Why live somewhere that you have zero rights? Only citizens have rights.
To become Panamanian, the treaty route is the only route that's got any chance of being accepted in practice.
Plenty of Italians have gone the treaty route and naturalized with far fewer hassles than Americans via the FNV.
@@matthewnirenberg that’s not true. I know people from other countries who have been naturalized that aren’t Italian…
All I realize over and over again is that I need 200K to safe my live.
It's always, always, always about the $$$. 10K might get you to the border.
@@Jennifer-h4p8h Yes might be, I was looking at Ecuador, yes you can live there if you invest 46K on the house for example, but now gringos are targeted more for burglaries.
Pocket change
No you don't. Move somewhere else now, get married to someone from another country, or have a baby in a place like Mexico, Brazil, or Argentina
@@semvlasveld8799 you don’t necessarily do. You can use a few thousand to leave, get a visa and naturalize somewhere. If you’re not a high net worth individual your advantage is that taxes in these European countries aren’t that bad compared to the free healthcare you’ll get and the cost of naturalising as a citizen. If you move to Europe and pay 40% tax but you earn 60,000 a year, after 5 years you’ll pay 100,000 dollars in taxes, but you’ll get a way better passport than any CBI program.
I’m in the process of getting an EU passport as my granddad is from Malta.
If you will need any assistance, we help clients get citizenship by descent every day. You can get in touch with our team here: workwithus@nomadcapitalist.com.
my grandmother was maltese and ive thought about it as well
Norway will get visa free access to china for 15 days as a part of a trade deal with China, and you can extend those 15 days to 45 days one in China 🙂
Irish passport holders have it made in the EU! 🍀 Who else is researching their family tree right now?
Ireland now allows going back to Great Grand parents . It’s all on Irish ☘️ embassy website
Really?! That’s very exciting!
Can you give us your source, please? I am extremely interested
@@Captain_Green64 just go to Irish ☘️ embassy page. It’s all on there and pretty simple . You’ll need some proofs etc . I just did the paperwork for my kids as they included now . Did mine few years back
Requires parents being on the FBR I think
So how much are Irish grand parents? 100k can?
This commonwealth citizenship thing peaks my interest.
2:31 yes you can. Google the compact of free association. Americans can live in multiple different pacific island countries
Many countries do grant citizens of other countries special privilegies or event their citizenship in a simplified process however the exception usually includes people who did not get their citizenship by birth or descent.
It’s extremely unfortunate I was born in India 🇮🇳 and life dealt me with an absolutely horrible hand;but now that I’ve come to Christ,He will help me get out of this shit hole.
To everyone reading this,don’t give up! No matter how young or old you are and no matter your situation;if you have a good heart ❤️ (because I know most people don’t)The Lord will help you…🙏🏻
Just know it’s a process and good things always take time especially when your own family never supported you….
The Lord shall make a way for me!
Blessings.
Good information. Thanks
If you get the Pakistani passport the next place for you is Afghanistan. Good luck 👍
😂😂
🤭🤭
Actually NO. If you want to go to Afghanistan, you are better off with some other passport, like Iran or India or even a European or East Asian passport.
Once you get Pakistani passport as soon you land in Pakistan immediately you will be in JAIL just like their EX PM LOL
@@kbboy101 - I don’t think that was their point.
Can you explain the tax friendly program you talked about regarding Ireland
Isn't turkey trying to prevent people buying there now ? At least in certain towns.
I would NOT recommend turkey. Raduan is an Islamist that promote extreme ideology.
What would be the best 2nd passport to get visa free access to the greatest number of countries, in particular ASEAN nations?
Can you make a video about Canary Islands? You never talked about them
Thank you for your suggestion.
@@nomadcapitalist I will wait for it, i'm thinking about move there and i'm curious about your opinion on those islands
Thank you Sir
I was just going to mention my home country pakistan, but 0:47 ypu mentioned pakistan, great
dude there are so many countries to prepare in case of ww3
We discussed this in a recent video: ruclips.net/video/G4wqa5t4WNY/видео.html
Why is he saying getting a second passport for not much more than the price of one is an option many people “wouldn’t want” ?
What is the best citizenship by investment option for a smooth legal name change process?
turkey
@@capitalist830 Is it better than St. Kitts in this regard? In what ways?
Can a Singapore passport holder get a 2nd passport citizenship with Pakistan?
No, in Singapore they don't allow dual citizenship.
"Mack"-edonia? Have I been saying it wrong?
If you hit the lottery currently at $800 million and take annual installments can you renounce your US citizenship and still collect to save taxes?
Good Luck
Your taxes owed are taken out before you see any winnings.
Hello, what is the cost to become a citizen of St. Lucia by investment with property?
$200k
@@synewparadigm what are your guises fees to help someone get a St. Louis passport with a property investment of US$200,000?z
Thank you for your question! Feel free to reach out, our team will be happy to discuss St. Lucia citizenship with you: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
Please email help@nomadcapitalist.com so we can assist you with the various options.
To retain a foreign trust in Nevis, you cannot be a Citizen of St. Kitts & Nevis. So, if one gets CBI through Antigua & Barbuda, the Trust still remains Foreign?
Yes because you're a citizen of Antigua & Barbuda, not St Kitts & Nevis. Basically the 7 full-member countries of the OECS have their own equivalent of the EU Schengen Zone, where they can freely move, work and live between each of their countries. Countries that are Associate Members of the OECS do NOT have such freedom. If you have a passport from Antigua & Barbuda and go to St. Kitts & Nevis, you need to get the OECS entry stamp in your Antigua & Barbuda passport (they might soon start doing this electronically) and you're good to go. If however you were to naturalize as a citizen of St. Kitts & Nevis after 10yrs of living there, then it would become an issue.
@@matthewnirenberg Thanks.
Pakistan! Amazing country. Stretching from the Himalayan mountains to Arabian sea.
How can I get the Pakistan passport? Sounds exotic
I want to leave USA I feel trapped
Thank you for your comment. Feel free to reach out, our team will be happy to discuss your case: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
Seem to me you’re taking the USA for granted and not saying the USA is perfect like no country is perfect
@@devilslayer3548 what is there to take for granted in the US? Andrew mentioned individuals with home country bias. Your comment fits that very statement.
So what the OP feels trapped. I feel trapped. I always felt like a 3rd class citizen in the US. Others constantly telling me to go back to a continent, I never came from. I was born in the US. My Parents and their parents', parents, were all born in the US.
The US isn't for everyone. Everyone in the US isn't fit for life outside of it. So be it.
Everybody feels trapped; Doesn't mean abroad is better.. Watching videos won't help ofc either. Do some research and you will find most English speaking countries are often just as expensive or stifling but with worse weather tbh
@@LostintheUS-2030what do you mean what is there to take for granted, quality of life in the USA is still way above average. No one here is saying that the US is the best country in the world, but you’d be a fool to think that you’re some third world nation. The fact that you can even pack up and consider living somewhere ‘better’ is huge privilege. Most of the world population lives in a lower standard of living while having terrible travel privilege. People from China and India face 10x the scrutiny an American does when applying for visas and they also have terrible visa free travel.
Damn it. My ancestors left Switzerland in 1649.. distant family is still there. I'm tired of Australia
Thanks for your comment!
We helped many Australians leave and have a better quality of life and more options. If you want to explore that path, get in touch with our team here: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
@@herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513. My grandpa's parents were from Sweden. Yet, it must be a parent. My grandmother's dad, German. Not good enough.
@@RCH369 yeah, I was born in Germany but when I gain Australian citizenship by default when my parents got it I lost German citizenship. Now I would have been able to get that back bit I served in the Australian defence force so am barred. That I would that anyway. My the is this and we, actually she already owns a lot of land in Thailand so that's an option and maybe Malaysia
Pakistan!!!
Why doesn't each State in the USA provide its own VISA that is valid as long as they live in that State. Does the EU provide passports for the individual States that exist under it?
Do you mean the countries within the EU? Sorry just clarifying.
@@texasgermancowgirl An independent State is the same as an independent country - it's an area that has internationally recognized boundaries and its own government.
They can’t due our constitution. Our constitution dictates that every state is part of our union (our country). Whereas in the EU, every country is its own country and was never founded like the United States was. It’s been tested a few times. This is why they can’t ban *legally FDA approved medications from being shipped (unless they are federally illegal). Another example would be if a state had a law that for example (I take no stance on this for this channel) that a pregnant woman couldn’t leave to get medical care elsewhere - that’s not legal under our constitution.
The European Union is kind of useless if I’m being honest unless we are talking about the European Committee. It’s a loose coalition of elected members of member states
Well many reasons but a big problem to this idea is interstate commerce and the availability to freely travel
Dont make the mistake of going to pakistan...
Yes, can’t remotely contemplate any sane benefit of that move 🤔
Is the thumbnail trolling UK citizens?
🤙
You always not interested in paying taxes at all.
But without taxes a lot of countries can't seem to work bro.
First!
Thank you for watching.
Good to know 😮
I'm British. What is this commonwealth you speak of? The commonwealth is dead. Britain is alone.
Commonwealth citizens (e.g. Indian, Pakistani, Jamaican, Ghanaian, etc) who are living in the UK are able to vote in the UK national elections.
In the USA we can live and work in 50 states that are at least double the size of the countries you are naming and as an American citizen I can also live and work in U.S. friendly countries in every continent there is U.S. friendly countries like Netherlands, Spain, Poland, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Brunei, Chile, British Virgin Islands, French Polynesia, Tunisia, Morocco, Seychelles, Madagascar, UK, Germany, France, Monaco, South Korea, Philippines, Australia all those countries from all different continents are U.S. friendly and they don’t complicate immigration process for Americans
I think you have no idea how hard it can be for americans to move to "U.S. friendly countries", specially those in europe. It is not impossible to do by any means, how ever, most regular americans won't even qualify for residence in the EU or the UK.
@@juanpablohurtadolopez6986 the person on the video is not talking about average Americans he is talking about investing 250k in a citizenship of a tiny island country in the the ocean I think instead of throwing 250k to a sketchy foreign government I will spend that on real estate in Barcelona or Greece and enjoy beautiful weather in south of Europe easily
@@InternationaleAutos fair enough, I guess it all depends in every particular case. It is important to keep in mind that the purposes of acquiring citizenship by investment and that of a golden visa are very different, so I really think that it is not a very good idea to compare them as alternatives of one another.
@@juanpablohurtadolopez6986 the short answer people who are willing to pay 250k to get a 2nd passport they don’t really do RUclips research they have assistants they figure things out for them
Can you get UK citizenship by ancestry as an American
I want a passport in a country that will do or not do the following:
*The cost of living is less than the US.
* incarnation rates are less than 1%.
*crime is bearable less deaths, thefts are normal.no kidnapping
* a country that does not extradition to anywhere.
*not a forsaken country via climate change or natural disasters.
* not a large country, and not an older than 150 year old country after freedom or reformation.
*not an enemy of any other country that has big weapons.
* not too many resources so that they do not get invaded.
* amenities are important, but all that is needed is that the amenities are sustainable and will be there forever. Health care cannot be free to citizens because it'll be useless.
* THE CULTURE has to be friendly and non racist. Where anyone can live in and live a life of freedom without living like you are being watched.
* English or Spanish. Easy to learn Spanish.
* and lastly, it has to have guns.
I know I just destroyed every country in the world. It is ok, the grass isn't greener on the other side anyways.
Yes, just let the perfect be the enemy of the better, makes perfect sense bro 👍🏼
Ireland and New Zealand have a lot on that list though but no guns, the Philippines also has a lot and has guns. There’s only so many countries, no place is perfect. Doesn’t mean you shouldn’t strive for better.
P.S. As for the extradition thing, you’re on your own. What, you want this perfect utopia AND you want to be an international crime lord? Those are contradictory things. Countries with no extradition tend to do that because they have to, and they attract criminals because of that… but you said you want less crime, no?
You’re clearly theory crafting with near fictional levels of delusion. The pragmatism here is at an all time low.
you're better off looking for a guy in finance, trust fund, 6"5, blue eyes
First
Thank you for watching.
No problem chief 👍@@nomadcapitalist