- AgreeableLandscape ( @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.ml ) 17•2 years ago
I was born in China, immigrated to Canada with family when I was a kid so it wasn’t my choice, now I’m a Canadian citizen, which came with dropping my Chinese citizenship. Later became a socialist and really admires what China has been doing and wish I’d never left.
Now, because I have a Chinese birth certificate, I could in theory get Chinese citizenship reinstated if I drop my Canadian one, and go back. And there are days where I want to see about doing that. BUT, I really don’t know anyone in China (yes I have family there but none of them are that close to me, don’t really think I’m “can I crash with you while I get my life together over here” close, at least), but even more damningly, I can’t speak or write Chinese that well (and it’s one of the hardest languages to learn so), and I grew up under Canadian culture and am pretty alienated from Chinese culture, etiquette, and social rules. Especially Chinese pop culture that people my age are into–this makes the language barrier worse because of how contextual a language Chinese is, there are tons of slang and references that are used in place of formal words that, even if you were formally educated in Chinese language, you might still not get unless you’re really knowledgeable in the culture. So my chances of getting a job or even fitting into a friend group isn’t that great.
That’s why.
Really cool info.
If you go to China and get a Chinese citizenship, the Canadian gov’t won’t tell China that you have a Canadian citizenship. Also you can keep your Canadian citizenship while you live in China on a visa for a while. Besides, the best way to learn the language and culture is to yeet yourself over there :)
- AgreeableLandscape ( @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.ml ) 2•2 years ago
I don’t particularly care for keeping Canadian citizenship if I get my Chinese one back, and you’re really trivializing learning language and culture. It. Takes. Many. Years. Speaking as someone who had to learn English as a second language, and that was in elementary school… It’s much harder to do so as an adult simply because you’re expected to be better and more formal at language. What are you going to do in the meantime when you can’t communicate well or read documents from the office, or even read trivial stuff like street signs, or write a basic email? In school, I had to be exempt from a lot of standard writing assignments, instead being given easier, ESL ones while I learned English. What profession is going to do that for you?
And Chinese is one of those languages where you don’t just sound it out. Each character gives you no info on how it’s pronounced, each spoken word gives you no info on how it’s written. You have to memorise those. And tons of completely unrelated words written completely differently have the exact same pronunciations (think reed vs read but for thousands of words). It also means you can’t just punch the letters you don’t understand into a translate app, because there are no letters.
IMO, the only way to be fluent in Chinese enough to immediately start participating in society over there is to take a community college course, or several, on Chinese language before you go. Remember, it’s consistently ranked as one of the hardest languages for native Western language speakers to learn.
- Amicese ( @Amicchan@lemmy.ml ) 4•2 years ago
And that’s why I wish I was born as Chinese!
- جيا ميڠ ( @j_ming@lemmy.ml ) 1•2 years ago
What exactly do you mean by this? A citizen of China? Which province; which language? Do you wish to be born as someone who only speaks Mandarin despite their Chinese parents’ native tongue being one of the hundreds of other Chinese languages?
The categorization of ‘Han Chinese’ as an ethnic group is false nationalist propaganda. It is an arbitrary racial grouping. There is no such thing as A Chinese Culture, there are countless Chinese cultures. “Chinese” is an umbrella term legitimised only by the massive influence of the state and has nothing to do with the actual diversity of its peoples. Each of the so-called subgroups of ‘Han Chinese’ are NOT dialect groups but in fact full-fledged ethnolinguistic groups. The uniformity of Chinese people is spread by communists to erase minority cultures and languages and force them to assimilate into their imaginary ethnic group. China has more languages than the whole of europe, and the preposterous categorization of say Hakka or Wu or Yue or Min as merely dialects of a Chinese language is how a dominant people destroy the multiplicity of its societies. It’s why China government officials will vomit up the sheer ignorance to say “96% Chinese Tibetans can speak Tibetan” and happily continue to ban the use of the dozens of other ‘non-standard’ indigenous Tibetan languages. It’s how the Chinese diaspora all over the world are losing their mother tongues to Standard Mandarin. It’s how every Muslim in Xinjiang is being surveillanced. The moral of the story is FUCK IMPERIALIST CHINA!!!
- stopit ( @stopit@lemmy.ml ) 12•2 years ago
Resources. I have moved several cities in the US in the past, always with jobs or connections lined up…and that was hard. I have, in middle age, moved to a US Territory…which I’m starting to like (i have ok employment, especially for one with no Spanish)… But i would really like to actually leave the US. It’s hard for an average person. That reality aside…i would like to say something, i wish my younger self knew…take chances when you are young…go for it, you have so much time and energy to correct mistakes, don’t be afraid.
As an almost half century old man, my past regrets have everything to do with the the things I didn’t do and nothing to do with the stupid decisions I made…hopefully someone takes this advice.
Love your advice and I will take it!
- Bilb! ( @bilb@lemmy.ml ) 7•2 years ago
Besides what SudoDnfDashY said, I’m sure it really depends on why you hate your country. Or put another way, how much your country hates you. I don’t like the United States, but I’m not in any danger here. I also don’t assume that any country I choose is going to be thrilled to have me.
- MerchantsOfMisery ( @MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml ) 7•2 years ago
The fact that it would be an absurdly privileged thing for me to do and would involve me leaving behind a lot of people I can help. I understand other people have their own valid reasons to move and I don’t judge them for it but for me personally, I don’t think it would be the right thing to do.
- pingveno ( @pingveno@lemmy.ml ) 7•2 years ago
I wouldn’t say that I hate the US per se, but I do often find it frustrating and backwards as a whole. But I love my city and have family that I would seriously miss. While I could do frequent trips, I consider that incredibly wasteful environmentally, given that getting to the US requires a long air flight. So I stay here happy with my family while trying to make a difference locally.
- Gaywallet (they/it) ( @Gaywallet@beehaw.org ) 5•2 years ago
I hate my country, but I love my city. It’s an issue of the federal government not aligning with the local one, and moving will only separate me from an environment I enjoy. The local government provides protections from the federal on the issues I disagree with, and ultimately I am not very affected by what the federal government does - I simply disagree with it because I think it is dehumanizing and stripping away the rights of others.
- Redpandalovely ( @Redpandalovely@midwest.social ) 2•2 years ago
Family and friends.
- kingthrillgore ( @KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml ) 2•2 years ago
Previously: Express Entry limitations. I needed an offer letter AND a IELTS score to get into Canada.
Now that I have a UK passport as well as a US passport, the only real restriction is economic. I would need an offer to retain any kind of work visa and income.
Also, i’m a white male. In the US, socially, if you’re white, male, and straight, you’re more untouchable than anyone else. The system is fucked. I feel more powerless now to fix it than I did before.
- جيا ميڠ ( @j_ming@lemmy.ml ) 3•2 years ago
fuck IELTS
- incici ( @incici@lemmy.ml ) 2•2 years ago
I guess the answer for most people is money. It’s not cheap to move to another country. Add the language barrier and lack of connections, it almost becomes impossible.