I come from one of the European countries that is currently in a full-scale war. I am always haunted by the danger of deportation, prison for political statements and military mobilization and sending to war. I managed to leave my country, now I am looking for options where I can quickly and easily get a passport of any of the second or third world countries, so that I can avoid problems being a citizen of my country. If anyone has any information or ideas on this matter, I would be interested to hear, perhaps someone has or has had a similar problem.
>>2824209No, stay in your home country, you're not welcome
>>2824209The “without investment” part of your premise is more than a little unrealistic—even if you can’t buy a passport with cash (which is increasingly rare in itself, along with being fairly expensive), getting a new citizenship is almost always going to require a significant investment of time. The main exceptions to this rule are probably citizenship by descent programs, which can sometimes be satisfied pretty quickly without extended residence in-country, but if you qualified for one of these you wouldn’t be posting this question.The Netherlands, France, and Poland, at least, all have pathways for international students who have earned degrees from local universities to obtain work and residency permits to stay on after graduation. If they can successfully accomplish this, I assume that pathways to naturalization over the course of a few years can also be accessed.Estonia, Italy, and a couple of other countries in Europe have pretty good digital nomad visa regimes, if you’re working online or capable of doing so, but I don’t know if any can open doors to naturalization.In the Americas, Paraguay has a very inexpensive permanent residence program that can become an application for citizenship relatively quickly—I think it’s five years, but I don’t remember. And Argentina has a startlingly generous nationality law, through which I believe even an irregular immigrant can apply for citizenship after some number of years, as long as they can get away with living there illegally for long enough to qualify without getting arrested and deported.Almost everywhere else, if it isn’t slow, it’s expensive.Good luck.
>>2824209Why are you asking us and not ChatGPT?
>>2824219Both are equally retarded.
>>2824209>I can quickly and easily get a passportLol lmao even, doesn't happen unless you have a fuckton of money.>>2824218>And Argentina has a startlingly generous nationality law, through which I believe even an irregular immigrant can apply for citizenship after some number of years, as long as they can get away with living there illegally for long enough to qualify without getting arrested and deported.Unless something changed under Milei I don't think they can even deport you IIRC. But I don't think actually getting a citizenship there is that easy since it's not an automatic thing and you have to go to a court for that.
>>2824209Countries with jus soli law. Fuck a slut, shit out a baby, get citizenship
>>2824218Regarding investments, I meant passports like the Caribbean ones, where you have to pay 200 thousand for a passport, but it is clear that minimal investments for duties and lawyers will be needed. It seems that there are two options left, either Latin America, where you will either have to bribe some official, or marry some Asian whore, which is what I will most likely do.
>>2824253Yes, this probably best option lol
>>2824245Yes, I've heard many times that in Argentina it's now easiest to get a passport by birth of a child, education and there are a lot of other ways, you can pretend to be a faggot and get a passport
>>2824218>—Hi GPT
>>2824269Do the robots use a lot of em dashes? News to me. I have literally never used ChatGPT, or any of its cousins; I fucking hate “generative” AI.
>>2824209Marry a foreignerGet residencyIt's that simple
I can't think of any country that fits all of the things you listed.
>>2824279Sure thing buddy, we all believe you.
Argentina - lots of Ukranians/Russians already there, the locals seem to prefer that you actually plan to move there not just get the passport and bounce>>2824262>marry some Asian whoreI don't think that actually gives you citizenship anywhere, only long term residency permit
>>2824810>I don't think that actually gives you citizenship anywhere, only long term residency permitIt does in countries where you can get a citizenship after residing there for some time, fake marriages for immigration purposes are a thing, I don't think any asian countries do that though or if they do it's probably something ridiculous like you have to live there for 20 years.
>>2824253That gets the baby citizenship. Not you.
>>2824318It’s nowhere near as quick and easy as people seem to think. People here and elsewhere seem convinced that getting married to a local is an instant, guaranteed ticket to permanent residency, but it’s a time consuming and bureaucratic process literally everywhere, and it’s almost never really guaranteed. In a lot of countries, spouses just get special visas that have to be regularly renewed, sometimes for years, before permanent residency is even an option (in the USA, for example, it can take over three years of legal cohabitation on marriage visas that have to be renewed every six months to secure a green card for a foreign spouse, although it can be faster). And transitioning from permanent residency to naturalization/citizenship, which is what OP was hoping for, usually takes at least a few years on top of that. I think it’s an additional three years as a green card holder to be eligible to naturalize in the US, but I haven’t looked it up in a while. And I know it takes even longer than that in some places.The “anchor baby” approach is even more complicated (not to mention pretty much only being an option in the Americas, Pakistan, and some random African countries with jus soli nationality laws).