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Since I grew up in foster care and have no real ties to family or nation...I've lately often wondered what it would be like to work for another country (living there of course, not here.) Like Russia or the Ukraine or London or Seoul. I'd be willing to work for just food and "room and board" as long as I had a personal pc/laptop and net access. :P If I have food and the basic shelter I really don't care bout cash/income. My interests: Work with hands/intelligence/computers, have basic shelter, basic food and internet. That's all. I've often wondered if I should submit my information out there and who would respond if anyone. I don't have any degrees but I'm a very quick hands on learner...and I'm getting out of the army in a month or less.
I could easily see myself getting wrapped up in my business or country or related venue. I simply have no ties to anything or anyone here. (Not to say I'm sad about not having ties...just that they aren't there. I feel like a free songbird.)
entropy.13 aol.com
Comments
If you went to Korea or China you could always teach english, assuming you are from the US. I know alot of people who teach english in China and they say the pay is decent enough to live over there and have fun. Which in the long run if you ever came back to the US (assuming you are from the US), you probably won't have enough money to get a car, pay for housing etc.
Don't know if you need a college degree but I assume you don't. Don't know what other jobs would be available out there.
What you basicly describing is volunteer work.
Contact volunteer work organisations, you can look them up on the web and learn more about what they offer and where to sign up.
If it's not broken, you are not innovating.
You may be the first and last person I ever see in my life who actually puts their first two possible choices as...
Russia or the Ukraine...
I know quite a few people who do that too, but they usueally go there to import a bride...
The US has lax immigration laws? Are you on crack? you do know how hard is it to get an unsponsored green card?
Easier then many think. The US hands out 7 million unsponsored visas yearly based on a lottery system. Most nations will not even think about letting unsponsored workers in who do not atleast meet a minimum requirement of skills. Then they usually only have 30 days to get a job within the country.
I agree the US has stricter immigration laws then they should, but that does not mean other countries are any better.
Yeah, you need a teaching degree to teach English in China, you can't just go there and teach English, a lot of people would have went there if it was that easy.
And you need to know Chinese of course.