Can Americans Live in ITALY on Social Security? Best Option for Expats in Europe! - kzbin.info/www/bejne/bn7GkqioZbuXl5o
@HMFamilyLife4 күн бұрын
🙂 Happy Thanksgiving Everyone! 😊
@jackoneil39334 күн бұрын
Great run-down and perspectives! As it's Thanksgiving in America today, I for one would like to express much thanks for making our lives a bit brighter by showing us so many special places and people we would otherwise never known. Thanks again, Our Prayers and best wishes are with you for the new year!
@HMFamilyLife4 күн бұрын
Good morning! Glad you enjoyed the video! Have a blessed Thanksgiving Day!
@WTHenry20233 күн бұрын
Happy Thanksgiving Frank and Angie. God Bless. This bideo was good. .More videos along these lines would be welcome
@HMFamilyLife3 күн бұрын
Thank you--blessings!
@ajfeinmanКүн бұрын
Croatia
@CassieDavis6134 күн бұрын
I found one of your videos about the EU while you were in Italy in 8/2020. I would like to hear your opinions on the EU.
@Brockman-d3e3 күн бұрын
If you want to live anything close to a western lifestyle in the Philippines expect to pay almost as much or more as you would pay in the US. If you want to live in dirty run down area or live in the countryside (the province) then it will be much cheaper. But expect poor infrastructure, lack of medical facilities and a lack of amenities that you are accustomed to in the US. I would recommend spending AT LEAST one year there before making any commitments. I have spent quite a bit of time there and if you spend time there you will soon find out that it's not the tropical paradise portrayed by many bloggers. Much better infrastructure and value for money can be found in Vietnam and Thailand.
@HMFamilyLife3 күн бұрын
Yes, the cost of living thing is like that. The RAMS love to spout off these cheap figures but usually those are the lowest figures and expats always say they pay more....thanks for watching and sharing that. Take care/
@Gizziiusa4 күн бұрын
imho, drinking water "from the tap" is simply an unwise thing to do regardless of what country you reside in....unless it goes through a purification process (it should already be filtered, so no need for that).
@HMFamilyLife3 күн бұрын
I think you are missing a whole lot. It's not about drinking from the tap. If the water that is piped into your home is riddled with parasites you will get parasites, whether you drink from the tap or not. There is an array of ways that people become infected with parasites in these countries without ever drinking straight from the tap. There is so much people don't know about this subject. I guess that is a discussion for another video.
@DanielFernandez-jv7jx3 күн бұрын
Thanks bunches! I really appreciate your no nonsense approach. I feel I can trust the information here. Not so much on other travel vlogs. Do any of your current videos cover the intersections between affordability and good healthcare? Thailand comes to mind, but I would rather retire in a western and hopefully Christian culture. So I was thinking of Romania, but I'm concerned that Putin will turn the Balkans into dumpster fire. Any thoughts?
@HMFamilyLife3 күн бұрын
Glad you liked the videos. Expats like to say the health care is good in the country they're in just like all the people are so nice. These are things that people have "individual" experiences in and your experience may or may not be the same. Health care is something you will have to experience when you experience it, that's what I'm saying. I wouldn't worry about Putin--he knows they are taunting him and a new administration is coming in soon that wants peace and stands for peace. Thanks for watching. Blessings!
@theglobalvagabond30744 күн бұрын
Hello, I don't trust or drink the tap water anywhere. RO at home, Big Berkey at work, bottled water while traveling. Nice video.