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Fortune: America is becoming the ‘uncool’ country that people want to move away from
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:32 pm
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:32 pm
quote:
An odd thing is happening as America, long a beacon worldwide as the defining destination for people in search of a new hope and a new life, is starting to feel like the “old country” that people quietly plan to leave behind. More than that, to be American is downright uncool.
When George Clooney secured French citizenship last year and confirmed that his family’s main home is now a farm in Provence, it sent a strong message about the standing of the American Dream. Clooney has been unusually blunt about what the move represents: a bet that his children would have a “much better life” in a country where fame matters less, privacy laws are stronger, and childhood can be more ordinary than it would be in Los Angeles.
quote:
He is hardly alone in looking elsewhere. In 2025, the U.S. experienced definitive negative net migration for the first time since the Great Depression, with an estimated loss of about 150,000 people, according to Brookings calculations reported on by the Wall Street Journal. The analysis found a “millions-strong” American diaspora increasingly choosing to study, telecommute, and retire overseas, drawn by cheaper health care, safer streets, and walkable cities where their U.S. salaries go further. In Portugal, the number of American residents has jumped more than 500% since the pandemic, according to the country’s Agency for Integration, Migration, and Asylum. In Spain and the Netherlands, the Journal reported, the number of Americans has nearly doubled over the past decade, and last year more Americans moved to Germany and Ireland than Germans or Irish moved to the U.S.?
quote:
As venture capitalist Seth Levine and journalist Elizabeth MacBride argue, an economic model has hollowed out both the middle class and the story that used to make staying feel worthwhile. In Capital Evolution, they contend that “shareholder-only capitalism doesn’t work,” having carved “unsustainable fissures in our economy and our society” by treating workers and communities as “resources to be extracted from.” CEO pay has surged more than 900% since the late 1970s while average worker pay barely moved, they note, and the odds of someone born poor rising to the top quarter of wealth distribution have fallen from about one in four to roughly one in 20. “By basic measures,” Levine told Fortune in a recent interview, “we’re failing to provide economic mobility,” pointing to an average first-time homebuyer age of around 40, up from the twenties a few decades ago.
MacBride, meanwhile, told Fortune that she sees the consequences in mood and behavior rather than just statistics. People, she says, no longer feel that “following the rules of the system is going to get them anywhere,” a breakdown reflected in declining life expectancy and what she calls “a suicide crisis among white men.”
quote:
Along with the decline of this idea of the middle class as a distinct thing that can grow and thrive in America, there is also a risk of America declining as a symbol of global cool. A generation ago, blue jeans, Michael Jordan, Coca-Cola, and McDonald’s played a major role in the West winning the Cold War. (There was also a fateful trip to a Western supermarket when Boris Yeltsin realized how wide the gap in quality of living had gotten.) With Gen Zers growing up globally connected by social media, they increasingly find that, basically, cool stuff is overseas.
LINK
I don't really care if people see us as "cool" or not, but apparently it's a significant development for Fortune.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:34 pm to Kinderman
Can we help them leave faster?
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:34 pm to ShrevetownTiger
quote:
Can we help them leave faster?
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:35 pm to Kinderman
Fantastic. We need 100M gone.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:36 pm to ShrevetownTiger
quote:
Can we help them leave faster?
Can they take 5 illegals with them?
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:37 pm to Kinderman
quote:
In 2025, the U.S. experienced definitive negative net migration for the first time since the Great Depression, with an estimated loss of about 150,000 people, according to Brookings calculations reported on by the Wall Street Journal.
I don't believe this for a second
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:37 pm to Kinderman
quote:
America is becoming the ‘uncool’ country that people want to move away from

Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:38 pm to Kinderman
Rough guess there are 345 million people in living in the USA.
I'd be fine with only 200 million or so.
I'd be fine with only 200 million or so.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:38 pm to Kinderman
Then get the frick out, tackle illegal immigration and Akon trying to liberate African-Americans back to Africa. I dont know ow what i will ever do?????
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:38 pm to Kinderman
sure, sure..... there is a certain political leaning segment that wants to leave/hates america, but there is a vast vast majority that wants to come here.......
how could this be...
how could this be...
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:38 pm to Kinderman
quote:
a bet that his children would have a “much better life” in a country where fame matters less, privacy laws are stronger, and childhood can be more ordinary than it would be in Los Angeles.
He could just move to a different state and get the same thing.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:38 pm to Kinderman
Say what you want about the politics, but birth rates are already in the shitter. The people leaving aren’t necessarily the ones you want to leave either, I.e., high wage earner/tax bell cows. All that said, nowhere near enough people will leave to matter.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:38 pm to Kinderman
What nonsense. For all of its faults, America remains the best nation in world for intelligent, diligent, ambitious people who cherish liberty and opportunity. I've traveled the globe and there is still no other country that rewards hard work and talent like the United States. The meritocracy is under assault by various forces, but it still persists today.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:39 pm to Kinderman
quote:
When George Clooney secured French citizenship last year and confirmed that his family’s main home is now a farm in Provence, it sent a strong message about the standing of the American Dream.
This is actually insulting to normal people.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:39 pm to Kinderman
Am I the only one tired of how many anti-american pussies there are?
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:39 pm to Kinderman
quote:
When George Clooney secured French citizenship last year and confirmed that his family’s main home is now a farm in Provence, it sent a strong message about the standing of the American Dream
It really didn't.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:39 pm to Kinderman
I fully support people leaving. I'm even willing to throw a few schmeckles to help them with their journey.
Posted on 3/2/26 at 3:40 pm to Kinderman
quote:
blue jeans
Haven’t we been through this?
Also, the media has tried to make everything cool by including everything. Diversity, inclusivity, acceptance.
If everything has to be cool then nothing can be cool.
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