Why Californians Are Fleeing To Mexico

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  • čas přidán 10. 05. 2024
  • In 2021, over 360,000 people left California in what many are calling The California Exodus. But a rising number of them are migrating out of the country all together and instead, heading south to Mexico to escape rising housing prices, traffic and expensive healthcare.
    Take a closer look at David and Travis' lives in Mexico: / caféconlechetravels
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    Why Californians Are Fleeing To Mexico

Komentáře • 16K

  • @mrbannana5690
    @mrbannana5690 Před rokem +1692

    As a mexican i want to make a serious petition to all americans that plan to live here: please support local businesses, if you are living here dont buy groceries on walmart or big supermarkets, dont buy food to mcdonalls or big fast food chains, we are recieving you with open arms, at least do this for us, thank you

    • @JorgeSchz2004
      @JorgeSchz2004 Před rokem +86

      Yo también soy mexicano pero cada quien puede decidir en donde comprar y donde consumir, no los puedes obligar a comprar sólo en comercios locales.

    • @a.c.6475
      @a.c.6475 Před rokem

      Hmm!...Americans will come, inhabit, then destroy! You'll see!

    • @Chr1st1an11
      @Chr1st1an11 Před rokem +11

      👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @itmustbecomeasun
      @itmustbecomeasun Před rokem +37

      Tampoco es como que ayude mucho porque ahora los comercios locales van a subir sus precios, es el problema de la gentrificación. Mejor que paguen sus impuestos, su visa de trabajo y que el gobierno regule las rentas, es la única opción viable para no darnos en la madre.

    • @dahezu3238
      @dahezu3238 Před rokem +29

      @@JorgeSchz2004no los podemos obligar, pero eso lo mínimo que pueden hacer si no pagan impuestos, aparte de contar con un salario mayor que el promedio de mexicanos

  • @maxlemusa3520
    @maxlemusa3520 Před rokem +3602

    I came from Africa, sold everything to relocate to US, life is hard than expected. I moved back to Africa to start again and now doing great. I have a work life balance

    • @justinshades6652
      @justinshades6652 Před rokem +305

      That's awesome. No place like home. I love my country but it's getting to expensive and I'm Indigenous Native American..

    • @maxlemusa3520
      @maxlemusa3520 Před rokem +1

      It's funny how alot of Africans are moving back to the continents, and thousands are dying of coming to US. You tell them life is not easy in the US they think you don't want them to succeed. Most of the things they see when other visit Africa from US is Iphones, tablets, stories about tesla self driving and they go 🤯🤯

    • @retrocloud760
      @retrocloud760 Před rokem +289

      There's little work/life balance in USA.

    • @samm552
      @samm552 Před rokem +98

      Good for you mate, cheers.

    • @maxlemusa3520
      @maxlemusa3520 Před rokem +21

      @@samm552 thx

  • @ytuser993
    @ytuser993 Před 6 měsíci +38

    As a non-mexican I can say house prices will grow like in San-Shitcisco

    • @Buydaa.M
      @Buydaa.M Před 6 měsíci +2

      SF nice city
      turned sad

    • @ofsoundmind2687
      @ofsoundmind2687 Před měsícem

      You are correct. Don't let these Californians in. They created all their problems and now will bring that to you.

    • @foxenmilleroceans5894
      @foxenmilleroceans5894 Před měsícem +1

      Whole state of Trashfornia actually

    • @DavidMiller-kf1ss
      @DavidMiller-kf1ss Před 26 dny

      Greed is good-not. Lol.😢

    • @GoldTau-km9dm
      @GoldTau-km9dm Před 26 dny

      But how can housing price rise where nobody wants to live?

  • @thefutureisnow8159
    @thefutureisnow8159 Před 4 měsíci +27

    Californians I’ve met are super high maintenance- it’ll be interesting to see how they manage their expectations with the laid back Mexican traditions😂

    • @FGN666
      @FGN666 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Shut Up .
      No, caravaninvasion

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Před měsícem

      Lies again? Ass Kicking USD SGD

  • @aliciaflores7095
    @aliciaflores7095 Před rokem +6206

    I live in both countries and I trust my Mexican doctors so much more. I have my neurosurgeons number and have gotten care I’d never get in the US because the system is not made for the patient, it’s made to benefit the insurance.

    • @desultude
      @desultude Před rokem +250

      Yes, I have to personal phone numbers of my doctors, and I usually get a one hour or more sit down with them. My internist charged me 200 pesos (about $10) for my last visit with him. We sat in his office and discussed not only my health, but literature and the state of the world. But, remember, be deeply afraid of crime. We don´t need more of you down here.

    • @george5156
      @george5156 Před rokem +199

      @@desultude If america bought less drugs the blue collar crime would be less in Mexico. Sadly I don't know how to fix the white collar crime problem.

    • @davidschulman7988
      @davidschulman7988 Před rokem +124

      I am surprised at how good and affordable health care in mexico actually is. My wife got sick 2x there and the care was good both times. Once the doctor made a house call!

    • @Shhhoooooo
      @Shhhoooooo Před rokem +13

      Any relationship with the Flores woman running for Congress?

    • @tittiesinmyface-cv1iv
      @tittiesinmyface-cv1iv Před rokem

      Your Gunna get kidnapped

  • @magaritaavila8535
    @magaritaavila8535 Před rokem +4827

    To the senior citizens like me who doesn't have any savings and depend only on our $900 SS income, Mexico is a great option to avoid homelessness.
    With $200 I cover housing and utilities in a nice 2 bedroom apartment.
    The rest is for medical, dental, food, travel and entertainment. Such a wonderful life style that I could not enjoy in the USA.

    • @nikolaievans2432
      @nikolaievans2432 Před rokem +205

      Yeah but what about the crime plus guns are banned

    • @markcurranjr7366
      @markcurranjr7366 Před rokem

      @@nikolaievans2432 you do realize that you are living in the second most dangerous country in the world. Only South Africa is more dangerous than the USA.

    • @SaL-ep7zb
      @SaL-ep7zb Před rokem +122

      $700 dlls cover food, gas, entertainment, travel ?? WTF?? You can't be serious.

    • @eljefe5858
      @eljefe5858 Před rokem +321

      @@SaL-ep7zb yes. 14 000 pesos. Twice an average wage.

    • @kceros
      @kceros Před rokem +401

      @@SaL-ep7zb in Mexico and all around latin america. $700 month is a lot of money

  • @christopher5585
    @christopher5585 Před 9 měsíci +18

    Some San Diegans live in Tijuana, commuting to and from work. Be prepared to leave home EARLY everyday and arrive at work about 3-4 hours BEFORE you punch in

  • @BeelySalasBlair-uy5wn
    @BeelySalasBlair-uy5wn Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thanks for the segment.

  • @Tahnaiya
    @Tahnaiya Před rokem +3837

    Thank you for referring to them as "American immigrants" and not "expats". For some reason when Americans (and other Westerners) migrate to another country, they want to call themselves "expats" but when others migrate to America, they call them immigrants.

    • @Derffie353
      @Derffie353 Před rokem +218

      Facts

    • @ludwigramirez4711
      @ludwigramirez4711 Před rokem

      americans, as always, being eternal hypocrites.

    • @SymonnePat
      @SymonnePat Před rokem +468

      Agreed. They try to make it sound trendy bc westerners put a negative connotation behind “immigrants.”

    • @bsdpowa
      @bsdpowa Před rokem +1

      Expatriates and immigrant are two different things. You should at least look up the term in the dictionary (it's free!) before trying to sound smart on the internet, because it makes you look stupid.

    • @myself342
      @myself342 Před rokem +1

      So do they have voting rights in Mexico?

  • @djwoosie98
    @djwoosie98 Před rokem +3776

    So does anyone not see the irony in this? Why happens to the natives of these countries that see an influx of rich or well off foreigners moving capturing up property/homes? Will they not experience the same problem these foreigners did in their home countries?

    • @Thebrothaisback
      @Thebrothaisback Před rokem +488

      No one asks that question when Mexicans and other move to the USA

    • @magaritaavila8535
      @magaritaavila8535 Před rokem +325

      Yes we see it, it's a vicious cycle!
      On one hand the dollar helps with the economy and on the other hand, all the foreigners are driving the property prices higher unaffordable to us Mexicans.

    • @cable30
      @cable30 Před rokem +91

      Basically moving to Mexico is like being an investor if u have a place in the states but then get another in Mexico that u are just another investor causing housing to go up in areas but u are living in Mexico and not just buying up place to re rent anytime. so i can see why Mexicans be mad any by chance. i guessing they wanna get a place that is new but if we go and take up all the new places then residents who actually lived there a long time are priced out cause foreigners are taking places that residents try to get but cant for any reason. so now Americans are turning into investors by keeping 2 places for any reason. so overall no shock.

    • @janedoe5510
      @janedoe5510 Před rokem +113

      @@Thebrothaisback because it's not the same

    • @eitkoml
      @eitkoml Před rokem +173

      This wouldn't be a problem if American cities would fix their zoning laws to get rid of the R1 zoning, banning anything but low density, single family, detached houses. The majority of land in America's cities is zoned for that, banning everything else. This creates shortages of housing all over America.
      There needs to be re zoning allowing for land to be used for medium density housing like duplexes, townhouses, and even apartment buildings; along with mixed use to better meet the needs of people. California's major metro areas are well past the point where it is worth the money to tear down R1 housing and replace it with better uses of the land. This would relieve the shortages for all uses.
      America's major cities also need to get rid of their rampant car dependency, which only leads to congestion. This is done by providing other options, giving Americans freedom of choice in how they move from place to place and liberating them from the de facto requirement to own cars.

  • @mjg239
    @mjg239 Před 3 měsíci +25

    *It's 2024, the CAFE CON LECHE Travels couple featured in this documentary NO LONGER LIVE IN MEXICO and HAVE BOTH SEPARATED.* I followed their CZcams channel and they LEFT Mérida, Mexico (several months after this documentary was published) and BOTH MOVED BACK TO LOS ANGELES in late 2022! Also as of November 2023, Travis announced on his personal CZcams channel that he and David have separated and he now "travels the world" solo, full-time making content for his vlogs! I wish these types of quickly made documentaries would give updates in the description of the video at least, because life situations change all the time. This isn't the first time I've seen a situation where a couple or a person moves somewhere and it looks all idyllic and serene in the video but then a life-event happens and a total 180 is made a year or more later. I know a guy who left California for North Carolina and was going on and on about how he and his wife had a bigger home ONLY TO MOVE BACK TO CAL less than a few years later!

  • @YosemiteFour
    @YosemiteFour Před 6 měsíci +16

    On my first of three total trips to Mexico, we crossed the border back in the 1980s when a CA DL was okay for an ID. We dayhiked a peak and when we got back down to our cars to head home after a great day in the mountains, we were surrounded by two dozen rifle bearing members of the Mexican Army. Everyone said we were lucky it wasn’t the Federalis. They took what was not theirs anyway. Éramos alpinistas.
    California has 39 million residents. When 2.4 million Californians leave California in a year for Mexico or anywhere else… that will be a story. 360,000 isn’t a drop in the bucket for our overpopulated state.

  • @thehealingqueensv
    @thehealingqueensv Před rokem +2953

    I cross the border often and the biggest problem is when the locals in the tourist areas are losing business because of the Americans taking over with their own businesses. They invest with other Americans instead of Mexicans and it really hurts the Mexican economy and creates a bigger disparity. It's sad.

    • @diegochavez6203
      @diegochavez6203 Před rokem +265

      Duh "Americans" even though Mexicans are also Americans have always took advantage of the poorer countries than get angry when they migrate to the u.s lol

    • @Megabyte2k4
      @Megabyte2k4 Před rokem +143

      Soooo basically the exact same thing that happens in the US...can't say that just a couple of minutes into this video, this wasn't one of the first things I thought was gonna be an issue. Also, the 1st two individuals you interviewed this thing are internet content creators...? 🤨 Really? So not, like, an average American or American couple that has a more normal or average job, huh...? Well, ok then...guess I'll just imagine I can relate to their plight here in the US. 🙄

    • @Rells26
      @Rells26 Před rokem +156

      No different than Mexicans coming to America. So it’s a balance

    • @thehealingqueensv
      @thehealingqueensv Před rokem +275

      @@Rells26 there is a big difference. The US is a 1st world country and Mexico is a 2nd world country. Taxes aren't the same. Rules and regulations are completely different in both countries, not to mention the cartels who take over your business. In Mexico you can't be an immigrant and ask for a loan from the bank, you have to be a citizen to even purchase any property. You don't see children in the US who live in poverty risking their lives on the streets blowing fire out of their mouths just to make a few pennies like Mexican children do. There's so much I can discuss on how different it really is. US citizens going to Mexico just to save money and Mexican citizens going to the US to make any money, there's a difference.

    • @Rells26
      @Rells26 Před rokem +40

      @@thehealingqueensv I get your cry. I don’t agree with neither but hey both are happening

  • @karlabritfeld7104
    @karlabritfeld7104 Před rokem +946

    We are getting screwed in the USA for cost of health insurance, housing, food, cars. I applaud anyone who is able to get the hell out of this pit and start a good life somewhere where the cost of living doesn't leave you having to live in the streets.

    • @patrickunderwood6638
      @patrickunderwood6638 Před rokem +49

      Yeah, if the US doesn’t get rid of the separating zoning laws and single family zoning their birth rate probably won’t return to replacement.

    • @kunalrathod8165
      @kunalrathod8165 Před rokem

      good👍

    • @kunalrathod8165
      @kunalrathod8165 Před rokem

      good👍

    • @philschiavone101
      @philschiavone101 Před rokem +13

      They key is not to move into an expat area. I have a house in Guadalajara. I can drive to Lake Chapala if I want a $5 coffee. But I am happy to walk my neighborhood and enjoy the leisure lifestyle in a small suburban town.

    • @stephanieellison7834
      @stephanieellison7834 Před rokem +32

      That's what I did, in 2018, when I fled for India, where I have ancestral and cultural links to this homeland. I feel like India is an ancestral homeland for me.
      The problem is plain and simple the White Man. The White Man is the one who cuts hours, wages, benefits, outsources jobs, doesn't provide training for entry-level technical jobs, forces people to work unnatural hours, AND raises the cost of living for everyone else, and he does this to his own people, even. He makes the rest of us whiteys look bad.

  • @cedarpoplar
    @cedarpoplar Před 5 měsíci +5

    You do know this is not going to last. Things change rapidly

  • @axelrosete3744
    @axelrosete3744 Před rokem +2216

    As a Mexican that used to live in Mexico City, I can agree that foreigners living in Mexico are raising rent and property prices overall. My wife and I rented a small loft in a "share living" building. Our rent was around 475 USD a month, with internet, water, electricity and gas included. It may seem quite cheap for someone earning in USD, however, to put things into perspective, rent was equivalent to over a third of our household income. Even though we considered ourselves lucky to have found that loft, it still made daily living with other expenses quite difficult. This is because the city, or at least the good, interesting and touristy parts, are built for foreigners, not locals. This makes life difficult to enjoy for the average Mexican that maybe earns around 350 USD a month.

    • @CarlosMongeLuna
      @CarlosMongeLuna Před rokem

      THIS GODDAMNIT THIS hdsptm

    • @jasminepayne1895
      @jasminepayne1895 Před rokem +155

      I live in Florida and this happening to us😥Rent a year ago was the most $500 now it has sky rocketed to $1000 and higher.

    • @CarlosMongeLuna
      @CarlosMongeLuna Před rokem +98

      @@jasminepayne1895 gentrifications the name of the game

    • @jasminepayne1895
      @jasminepayne1895 Před rokem +27

      @@CarlosMongeLuna Well not the area where i was living but there definitely is gentrification going on.

    • @CarlosMongeLuna
      @CarlosMongeLuna Před rokem +55

      @@jasminepayne1895 its not visible until theyve driven most of the former tenants and landowners out

  • @lundungoth
    @lundungoth Před rokem +1033

    It’s important to remember that Mexico is a wealthy country - just all the wealth is directly at the top and leaves close to nothing for the majority. The US is heading towards this.

    • @smileyfacewithsunglasses7613
      @smileyfacewithsunglasses7613 Před rokem +35

      Exactly!

    • @zzzzzzasleep6407
      @zzzzzzasleep6407 Před rokem +16

      Thank you.

    • @sbmal
      @sbmal Před rokem +14

      So true

    • @paull1027
      @paull1027 Před rokem +25

      U dont know the definition of a “wealthy” country…like every single country in the world,they would all be considered “wealthy” according to your definition….corruption exists everywhere..of course, the top people of every country will be super rich…mexico might be a “wealthy” country in terms of natural resources or what not,but if u mean “wealthy” in terms of gdp..then mexico is a 2nd world at best,perhaps even a 3rd world country

    • @hamzerpanzer
      @hamzerpanzer Před rokem +60

      @@paull1027 They are just on the brink of a second world country at the very worst, don't exaggerate

  • @user-se8ds5ev5k
    @user-se8ds5ev5k Před 3 měsíci +1

    Used to live in El paso and was in commercial construction.
    Back in 85 the whole workforce was coming over from Juarez and making 7.50 an hour. They were very rich and they had multiple businesses in Juarez. Bars, hotels and so on and so forth.

  • @aandino1239
    @aandino1239 Před 4 měsíci +2

    My house was paid off. I rented it and now live in South America Airbnb for 1/4 of expenses I had in America. I don’t work just enjoy life.

  • @scott2228
    @scott2228 Před rokem +588

    The Cali exit is hurting other states. Cali needs to get its own house in order. The cost of living in CO has skyrocketed in the last 10 years. 1 main factor is Cali residents overpaying for houses. Bc it’s still a fraction of what they were paying.

    • @michaelthurmond1740
      @michaelthurmond1740 Před rokem +31

      same thing is happening in Idaho

    • @shaddythewiz3836
      @shaddythewiz3836 Před rokem +59

      it’s honestly bound to happen to most states with rapidly growing population because of the way we build our cities and the pace we are building houses . California had a massive migration from other states until there was no more space to build anymore . Now other states are getting that influx and seeing what Californians have been experiencing for years . The same with New York where i live . they are just building no stop because every new housing is almost always filled up or brought .

    • @nic7761
      @nic7761 Před rokem

      They also bring their mixed indoctrination and political views which imbalances the home we grew up in. I think it's possibly intentional on a bigger scale

    • @nosir1440
      @nosir1440 Před rokem +12

      @@shaddythewiz3836 yes thank you. Someone with a brain.

    • @VoltairesRevenge
      @VoltairesRevenge Před rokem

      CA had a surplus last year. Heck, they’re giving money away! They’ve gotten so bold with the extra cash that they’re going to be the first state to pay reparations. They’re not even making a serious effort to find all the scammers who stole unemployment during the pandemic.

  • @snowytyler3793
    @snowytyler3793 Před rokem +1709

    This is wild. This is what happened to the small town I grew up in. A lot of wealthy New Yorkers wanted summer/weekend homes and now I could never afford to love there. My parents bought our house for 18,000 and the last time it sold for a million dollars. It’s crazy to imagine.

    • @shinigamix4481
      @shinigamix4481 Před rokem +73

      Exactly this happens so much to many of us In the hood or ghetto

    • @Lauri2014
      @Lauri2014 Před rokem +68

      @@shinigamix4481 Except that most people in the Ghetto are renters, not homeowners...so they can't really do much to oppose it. However, in the countryside, they let it happen until they can't.

    • @cheefqueef6494
      @cheefqueef6494 Před rokem +7

      @@shinigamix4481 Yeah, the welfare office LMAO

    • @ElizRued
      @ElizRued Před rokem +3

      What town is that

    • @shinigamix4481
      @shinigamix4481 Před rokem +30

      @@Lauri2014 but rent goes up regardless, you might as well paid for the house . With the type of mortgages that are given.

  • @Best-tp9re
    @Best-tp9re Před 7 měsíci +1

    Well done report !!!

  • @MrTabo2023
    @MrTabo2023 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I left California for the Philippines. I wish I could say it's been great. The cost of living is definitely a big plus. It's kinda nice to buy groceries and only pay the equivalent of less than $20 for a full bag of groceries. But there are other things to consider when moving to another country. Some are as mundane as hot water or the lack thereof. Compromises have to be made. The big question is can you adapt. As a young man it is easier to adapt. But at 67 years old it becomes a serious conversation.

    • @AzukiBuns
      @AzukiBuns Před 4 měsíci

      Lack of hot water sometimes, bad piping. The water has a weird smell to it. No more baths in lots of places. However, it's so cheap 😂 I'm waiting to get a permanent resident visa.

  • @noelnantais5154
    @noelnantais5154 Před rokem +200

    Not American, living in Mexico for 4 years now. Beautiful place to live.

    • @MarinaLaroche
      @MarinaLaroche Před rokem +2

      Dans quelle région êtes-vous ?

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred Před rokem +9

      free place too... I was so caught by surprise while living there how everything was easy and how little government interferes with your daily life... one of the cheapest driver's license in the world... that's always a sign of a place that has real Freedom... less bureaucracy... employment might be a problem though, I could not figure out how to hired "legally" by companies

    • @cartel_papi
      @cartel_papi Před rokem +2

      @@FeelingShred there are always gonna be trade offs innit

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred Před rokem +5

      lived in the Acapulco region for 6 months and paid USD 120 to share a big furnished apartment with another guy, all utilities included... most apartment buildings in mexico also have access to rooftop... what a nice place

    • @1mol831
      @1mol831 Před rokem +4

      The Americans should move to Vietnam

  • @LIDABEAR
    @LIDABEAR Před rokem +1084

    Gentrification is a major issue. Won’t be surprised to hear about protests happening once locals are getting pushed out by American immigration

    • @joe1972
      @joe1972 Před rokem

      Yeah, but "they're" damned either way; "they" move in and are blamed for gentrification, "they" move out and are blamed for 'white flight'.

    • @micanope
      @micanope Před rokem

      What? Like an American president calling Mexicans rapists? I think Mexico has already demonstrated much more civility than America.

    • @JackMasterAndrew
      @JackMasterAndrew Před rokem

      The irony is a lot of those people that fled to Mexico are probably anti gentrification lmao

    • @yana6118
      @yana6118 Před rokem +28

      Exactly

    • @torahibiki
      @torahibiki Před rokem +81

      You cant buy land in panama no more. A 300² meters lot is like $18k usd. Thank you very much Americans.

  • @DMP-rn9bv
    @DMP-rn9bv Před 6 měsíci +2

    I make good money but the other day I visited a veterinarian to see how much it would cost to have a simple surgery performed on one of my pets and it just blew my mind so yes I did go to Mexico and it literally only costed me about 15% of what it would have here in the states

  • @lorsange1107
    @lorsange1107 Před rokem +214

    As a mexican living near to the minimum wage (here in Mexico), I would also love to live in a cheaper place and profit from the locals as well.

    • @nerval-ts5wk
      @nerval-ts5wk Před rokem +5

      Pues puedes ir a vivir a cuacamaya en Lázaro cárdenas Michoacán, allá es muy barato todo 👍

    • @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN
      @Timothee_Chalamet_CMBYN Před rokem

      Just follow the other Mexicans going across the border. They enjoying what you seek 😂

    • @elguerio35
      @elguerio35 Před rokem +6

      pues migrate a Venezuela wey.

    • @jonathanlara1297
      @jonathanlara1297 Před rokem +2

      @@elguerio35 En realidad el chiste sería que los extranjeros apoyen a la economía nacional gastando en lo producido aquí, para que la entrada de capital sea buena y apoye a la economía al mismo tiempo. Si sólo vienen y gastan en cosas producidas allá, afectará a la economía aún más.

    • @JorgeSchz2004
      @JorgeSchz2004 Před rokem +1

      @@jonathanlara1297 Pero no puedes obligar a nadie a comprar o consumir sólo comercio local. Yo soy de Monterrey y no me gusta comprar ciertas cosas en mercados o comercios locales, prefiero hacerlo en supermercados.

  • @vielumiereg9794
    @vielumiereg9794 Před rokem +502

    Honestly it's happening everywhere. Where I live, 1 bedroom apartments are approaching the $2100 a month mark, and there's no signs of it slowing down at all. And then people come from places like California, where they're used to the higher cost of living, and they'll buy houses with cash without even having seen the property yet here. I literally can't buy a house because all I have is a loan, and every time I make an offer, someone just offers up literally 5x the amount in straight up cash and I get tossed to the side for obvious reasons. It seriously sucks.

    • @EllieGabby
      @EllieGabby Před rokem +2

      Thanks for watching☝️Get-in-touch , Let's discuss on Financial investments'

    • @karnubawax
      @karnubawax Před rokem +56

      Save your money and bide your time. A correction is coming. Probably a very big one.

    • @kevm3
      @kevm3 Před rokem +46

      Same thing is happening all over the US as well. They are selling their properties in California for millions and then going elsewhere and offering cash.

    • @williamtillman196
      @williamtillman196 Před rokem +17

      I read the avg profit on a Ca home sale is 800k so yeah they have enough to buy a couple of houses all cash in most places of the country. I also was losing out with all cash bidding 30 to 50k over asking price and then started looking at houses that others didn't want. I finally got a house that sat for 2 weeks that was nasty for 30k less than asking price. Take what the market gives you. I'll have equity when I am done instead of over paying trying to outbid someone else. Or wait for a correction. It's a cycle and always has been. What's different now though is hedge funds are buying properties too so you might not see as much of a price decline but you might have a better selection.

    • @wyofett1412
      @wyofett1412 Před rokem +16

      I still pay just $550 a month all utilities included for my one bedroom apartment here in Wyoming. That same price I paid 6 years ago.

  • @crollwtide9452
    @crollwtide9452 Před 2 měsíci +1

    1:35 This particular thing was happening all over the US as well. Wherever people were moving to, housing and rent was skyrocketing. This was definitely happening in Nashville.

    • @codiciosa1
      @codiciosa1 Před měsícem

      That's why my friend moved to Brazil. Cost of living is way cheaper. Bought a house own it tax-free

    • @MrProg-ey3tl
      @MrProg-ey3tl Před měsícem

      Yup, a large amount of Californian businesses are moving to Utah, and prices are going up...

  • @user-hh8zq9co1r
    @user-hh8zq9co1r Před 3 měsíci

    I grew up along the border in El Paso, Texas. The idea that Americans are living in Mexico isn’t something new nor strange. I remember my best friend in middle school lived across the border and had to commute daily. My coworker in college also lived in Mexico. Lots of people have their own stories and reasons, but there are thousands of Americans in Mexico.

  • @businessowner1170
    @businessowner1170 Před rokem +723

    Myself and wife and kids moved to Mexico last year for 6 months. We lived in a gated community 3 bedroom, 2 bath CASA and food and utilities and gas and rent and internet and swimming like 3 day's a week and getting ice cream and eating out once a week for $1,000 a month (no joke) with 5 kids lol it can be much cheaper than that but we wanted to live comfortably. Yes Mexico has it's problems lol just don't go out late at night and mind your business and your fine. Oh wait, that's the USA as well 😂😂 we came back only because we just tried it out. The Mexican people are amazing and very welcoming. So Yes I vote Mexico over USA any day!

    • @Ozmni11
      @Ozmni11 Před rokem +16

      Total opposite of the United States.

    • @SanchezFrank21
      @SanchezFrank21 Před rokem +18

      😂 that’s awesome that you were able to try it out with your fam.

    • @coupleofbeers31
      @coupleofbeers31 Před rokem +35

      There are so many other countries way better than the US. Congrats on your move. Life is what we make it for sure but location and culture is a huge part of it. I'm hoping to leave the US for Europe soon. Cheers.

    • @jamzee_
      @jamzee_ Před rokem +21

      So uh….
      Go back and stay.

    • @businessowner1170
      @businessowner1170 Před rokem +34

      @@jamzee_ Well Let me explain something to you. Listen and learn. We want to go to Belize next but.....had to come back to the USA to make money more money in order to do this as I don't want to run out of savings in 5 Years! Thanks for your comment 😁

  • @adele2464
    @adele2464 Před rokem +1387

    Mexico is just another planet . It’s not what the media shows you. I love the stress free lifestyle. Mexico is living ❤️

    • @fps6612
      @fps6612 Před rokem +124

      My name is Federico and I live in Chapala, Jalisco. It's a great pleasure to se many Americans coming here in recent months. We welcome you to our country and you will feel the freedom, relaxation and peace of mind that everyone deserves. Un abrazo desde México.

    • @Rodrigo-tk2fm
      @Rodrigo-tk2fm Před rokem +11

      @@fps6612 bro, I love Chapala!

    • @julioalcaraz5417
      @julioalcaraz5417 Před rokem

      Drug cartel violence, kidnappings, political uncertainty. You can have Mexico. Just wondering why more Mexicans are still leaving Mexico and heading to the USA.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Před rokem +44

      Pssst. Do we really want more estadounidenses?

    • @mrpablomx
      @mrpablomx Před rokem +98

      Mexico Stress Free? Lol

  • @ONDALVL
    @ONDALVL Před měsícem

    Yall wrote this CHAT-GPT "More Americans are leaving the hustle & bussle of California" 😂😂😂

  • @ZGG991
    @ZGG991 Před 9 měsíci

    My husbands family is from Mexico been living in Houston but always go back to visit family and get certain treatments like for teeth. It’s so much cheaper and they do an amazing job.

  • @Antonio-wh3oq
    @Antonio-wh3oq Před rokem +511

    Well this seems pretty problematic…
    I can see the Mexican and local governments allowing this for economic reasons (even if they don’t pay taxes, they spend money on Mexican businesses, which generates substantial tax revenue by itself on top of direct foreign investment of sorts), but this definitely won’t continue forever, especially once local politics catches up and Mexican voters start getting outraged. These people are basically recreating the very problems that led them to flee California, but in Mexico. They are now the rich pricing the average people out of their homes. Except in this case, the wealthy aren’t even citizens and likely aren’t interested in becoming naturalized due to their home country’s labor laws. It’ll be interesting to see how things play out over the next 15 years’ time.

    • @0fficialdregs
      @0fficialdregs Před rokem

      i would crackdown on that

    • @scottyflintstone
      @scottyflintstone Před rokem +54

      Mexico should take steps to protect their citizens. But if they don't, I have little sympathy

    • @Magneticitist
      @Magneticitist Před rokem +110

      Mexico needs to put up a wall

    • @eldromedario3315
      @eldromedario3315 Před rokem +7

      @@Magneticitist jajaajaja

    • @crazemate
      @crazemate Před rokem +51

      @@Magneticitist make Mexico great again 🤓

  • @pottertheavenger1363
    @pottertheavenger1363 Před rokem +774

    The two most popular neighborhoods in Mexico City, Condesa and Roma, have had their prices drive up. It does gentrify but it brings new opportunities as well. Money, security, jobs... And it's not just from USA, there's also from Canada, Spain, Britain, Germany. We have lots of Koreans and Russians...
    Luckily, the city passed a law that requires 33 percent of new development projects to be for lower income budgets, even in such nice neighborhoods.
    We just want migrants to respect the law and culture, to leave their prejudice at the border, to support local business, to learn spanish. And remember, if you came here it's because you saw Mexico was getting better, you can't put it down anymore.

    • @polishherowitoldpilecki5521
      @polishherowitoldpilecki5521 Před rokem +10

      How multicultural has Mexico City become?

    • @pottertheavenger1363
      @pottertheavenger1363 Před rokem +73

      @@polishherowitoldpilecki5521 it has always been, but now it's more noticeable as it's a new wave

    • @Revealthereal_
      @Revealthereal_ Před rokem +72

      I think they will destroy the place just like they did Hawaii.

    • @jhonkafirk
      @jhonkafirk Před rokem +21

      Welcome to the MAGA movement.

    • @LuLuLately
      @LuLuLately Před rokem

      😂 oh like those immigrants from Mexico that refuse to speak English or even acknowledge it?

  • @Goldsteinphoto
    @Goldsteinphoto Před 7 měsíci +1

    The world is changing and people are more fluid than ever. I've owned a home north of Puerto Vallarta for 7 years. I will retire there. I can't buy anything comparable in the US. Many Canadians and Americans are there and many tourists. Summer tourists are mostly Mexican The rest of the time worldwide but predominently Canadian and US. Lots of digital nomads from everywhere too.
    My hometown is Silver Spring MD. That town had a huge influx from Central America. In recent years it grew a large Ethiopean community.

  • @cherieestbien1902
    @cherieestbien1902 Před 5 měsíci

    In most cases an expat is someone who moved to snother country to work, and has a work permit that grants them legal residency.

  • @timallan8426
    @timallan8426 Před rokem +375

    These people trying to justify pricing out locals in Mexico are 100% the same ones complaining about gentrification of U.S cities. Oh the area is not made for locals. Dude that is basically the same reason people give for gentrified areas. Once you price people out, its no longer for lower income people. And the point about bringing in additional money to Mexico when they moved there. You are basically doing the same thing when an area gets gentrified. Better shops and better/more jobs. I hope these people can see the hypocrisy of their actions and statements

    • @djwoosie98
      @djwoosie98 Před rokem +36

      Thank you, I made the same comment. People have turned into the monster they fear.

    • @bobbleheadmoe
      @bobbleheadmoe Před rokem

      Colonizers

    • @franciscopalacios4638
      @franciscopalacios4638 Před rokem +6

      I have seriuos doubts about this particular point. $900 a month is just above middle class in mexico.

    • @fools5271
      @fools5271 Před rokem

      Humans.....

    • @RG-ld8wv
      @RG-ld8wv Před rokem

      *ridiculous

  • @patriciazavala1991
    @patriciazavala1991 Před rokem +397

    This is low key terrible, those moving out to other states or Mexico are raising rates wherever they go. If you’re going to live in a different area then stop out pricing the locals and pour into local businesses. Be considerate of the locals there and respect the culture in place. That’s all I’m saying.

    • @0fficialdregs
      @0fficialdregs Před rokem +76

      it seems like it's the american way. move to another country, jack up the prices, get mad when you're the problem people are getting kicked out, the cycle repeats. Sad...really sad.

    • @logan4moua
      @logan4moua Před rokem +19

      Basic demand and supply. No one want price raise anywhere they go. Ask the sellers, they only want more money.

    • @dcmiguel7777
      @dcmiguel7777 Před rokem +12

      Same thing is going on in portugal

    • @SnackKing1
      @SnackKing1 Před rokem +10

      @@0fficialdregs It's not something that is done on purpose with bad intent. Ever heard of something really basic called supply and demand?

    • @jayomnisen1210
      @jayomnisen1210 Před rokem +14

      Most people moving to Mexico from California are Mexican-Americans

  • @enough1494
    @enough1494 Před 6 měsíci

    I am in Red Louisiana. I know 7 couples that are living a Greta life in Mexico, from this town alone! Mexico is a paradise!

  • @commercialand
    @commercialand Před 9 měsíci

    Where does one go in Juarez MX to get braces?

  • @anatejada1100
    @anatejada1100 Před rokem +475

    This happened in some towns in Dominican Republic, they were fishing towns, beautiful beaches, but of course the government let richer immigrants build hotels, open stores, restaurants, and houses. All the locals were kicked out. While many countries are paradise and affordable for foreigners, the locals are barely making it

    • @katalinabrigitte3395
      @katalinabrigitte3395 Před rokem +60

      Happening to Native Hawaiians as well. 😪

    • @Droughtson
      @Droughtson Před rokem +1

      They deserve it because those people have been coming to America driving up housing, rent and education prices for DECADES. You don’t like it when the tables turn though.

    • @VegasElement
      @VegasElement Před rokem +2

      What neighborhoods are those in D.R.?

    • @jerrykobylt7387
      @jerrykobylt7387 Před rokem +16

      In the Dominican Republic, the locals are so f'n lazy that if a door knob falls off a door it will stay there on the ground until the building collapses. Theres a reason they're poor.

    • @jerrykobylt7387
      @jerrykobylt7387 Před rokem

      @Michelle I didn't realize it's the government the provides jobs. Im a capitalist. Get off your ass and make things happen rather than waiting on someone else to "provide" you with jobs ... Genius

  • @bcaominh
    @bcaominh Před rokem +478

    The fact that no taxes are being paid to Mexico is messed up. People need to contribute to basic services, sanitation, water etc...

    • @ishastrega6851
      @ishastrega6851 Před rokem

      You buy all your water in Mexico for household and drinking purposes. There are no underground pipes. If you buy property, you pay taxes and say even renting an airbnb, you pay 20% taxes on the rent. Same for hotels. Believe me: Mexican local and federal governments are taking advantage of the influx of tourists and new residents.

    • @crzyruskie86
      @crzyruskie86 Před rokem +127

      Thats funny because when we say this about immagrants who come to the US we are somehow racist.

    • @crzyruskie86
      @crzyruskie86 Před rokem +4

      Immigrants*

    • @mango-strawberry
      @mango-strawberry Před rokem

      @@crzyruskie86 what? Immigrants that come to US pay taxes either in US or their home country. Countries have this agreement so that people don't have to pay dual taxes. Infact, immigrants pay more taxes than the American citizens, and they have no rights either.

    • @Anthony-rk2cm
      @Anthony-rk2cm Před rokem

      @@crzyruskie86 they do pay income taxes because they work local jobs people that say that are either racist/uninformed. People with remote jobs aren't contributing, they don't pay the state taxes for the utility, school, medical benefits they receive. They're in effect leeches

  • @josephsonora3787
    @josephsonora3787 Před 8 měsíci

    Mexican Word Of The Day: SOFA KING
    It's Sofa King hot down in Mexico this time of year! 😂

  • @LindaErtel-qt6ow
    @LindaErtel-qt6ow Před 2 měsíci +1

    Is air conditioning needed in Mexico and is air conditioning available in Mexico?

  • @MusicAutomation
    @MusicAutomation Před rokem +1151

    I'm hearing from friends that this migration trend is everywhere. Locals of a tropical island that were once sustained primarily by seasonal tourism are now being gentrified by swarms of remote workers from the states and driven out by the resulting 10x increase in cost of living.

    • @themightyflog
      @themightyflog Před rokem

      So mainly them pesky californians driving up prices for everyone and turning other places into homeless encampments.

    • @DamianBadalamenti
      @DamianBadalamenti Před rokem +53

      @anon google account That's not gonna happen. Phoenix was growing way before the work at home movement

    • @royroy8697
      @royroy8697 Před rokem +63

      Yeah if i had a remote job id prob move to Puerto Rico- i like the vibes there. And i wouldnt want to be a money leech- id support locals with shops and stuff because thats how everyone benefits.

    • @billi706
      @billi706 Před rokem +37

      Don’t forget to blame the ones who started all this, not the ones who are just trying to survive.

    • @Ikaikaalika95
      @Ikaikaalika95 Před rokem +17

      Sounds like what happened to Hawai’i just after WW2

  • @el.noelramirez
    @el.noelramirez Před rokem +497

    I lived in Tijuana many years. I kept seeing more and more Americans, Mexican-Americans start to live there. I lived in Tijuana and worked in San Diego, the rents in TJ started to increase dramatically as more people started to move in. The lines to cross at the border got longer and longer. The bad thing is that many people live in Tj, but have no legal status to live there, as such, it is hard to estimate the population and find resources for this natives to Mexico.

    • @marvietorino2351
      @marvietorino2351 Před rokem +10

      Move here in Philippines😉

    • @kimgordon3695
      @kimgordon3695 Před rokem

      Border slum

    • @albtor2251
      @albtor2251 Před rokem +1

      Los dólares mijo $$$

    • @wingman5985
      @wingman5985 Před rokem +40

      Sounds kind of familiar to us in the states too. LOL

    • @howardpryor7778
      @howardpryor7778 Před rokem +38

      Lol. @Noel Ramirez Y'all are getting a taste of what the US has been dealing with for some time now. It's nice to see the roles reverse for a change. Lol. Don't complain.

  • @user-ly6bb4zd7t
    @user-ly6bb4zd7t Před 20 dny

    I noticed this happening in El Paso a couple of years ago. I have family on both sides and I spent a year there on my retirement celebration

  • @Mikericetti1203
    @Mikericetti1203 Před 9 měsíci +4

    They don't want it,so let's take it and see how they like it.

  • @mcarlkv53
    @mcarlkv53 Před rokem +501

    “If the American people allow private banks to control the issue of money, first by inflation, and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that grow up around them will deprive the people of their property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.” - Thomas Jefferson.

    • @jessicah3782
      @jessicah3782 Před rokem +26

      that quote sounds like karma

    • @matthewkinder6910
      @matthewkinder6910 Před rokem +13

      thomas jefferson knew a lot about compound interest , I think he just call out the system he helped to build all his life, it might have been just a memo for his kids haha... I remember hearing Charlie Munger praising Jeff.

    • @jesusrosefromthedead8017
      @jesusrosefromthedead8017 Před rokem +2

      @@jessicah3782 ??????

    • @frederickmfarias3109
      @frederickmfarias3109 Před rokem +9

      The *private* banks cannot hurt anyone, it’s the *government* banks and *fiat* money you are forced to use.

    • @DrJohnnyJ
      @DrJohnnyJ Před rokem

      Jefferson did not say this. There were no corporations when Jefferson lived and the terms deflation and inflation were not in use. Ignorant troll.

  • @phoenix5054
    @phoenix5054 Před rokem +370

    California plans to spend $22 billion for housing. $21 billion for compliance and consultations, $1 billion to pay for $500k tents.

    • @RandomCaliforniaAdventure
      @RandomCaliforniaAdventure Před rokem

      They did it with their mobile homeless tiny tiny tiny garbage box that cost them $160,000 each. Oh wait, it was Los Angeles that started that wave and the people who got the contracts were friends of the Los Angeles city officials. On a greater scale, I can see how California would squander that money to make little room for any displaced individuals while raking in the majority of that $88 billion. You're right!

    • @saradomin89898
      @saradomin89898 Před rokem +50

      wish i could upvote more than once.
      $21b for compliance, consultations, zoom meetings and hella bureaucracy just to help the citizens lmaooo

    • @KR-yb2qq
      @KR-yb2qq Před rokem +17

      That is after paying for the unions, lawyers and city approvals.

    • @fernhappydog5707
      @fernhappydog5707 Před rokem +7

      Move the decimal to the left and you see the breakdown for public school funds ..

    • @williampotter2098
      @williampotter2098 Před rokem +11

      @@KR-yb2qq And bribing "activist" organizations not to sue to stop any progress that decent people try to make.

  • @glorialovesChrist
    @glorialovesChrist Před 5 měsíci

    The last trolley from SD to TJ is filled with Senior American Men renting rooms for $350 usd a month

  • @tjmartin8516
    @tjmartin8516 Před rokem +764

    I like how they conveniently ignore the crime open drug use and homelessness for reasons why people are leaving California

    • @mopes2713
      @mopes2713 Před rokem +69

      It correlates to the same things if you trace back the root cause. Drug addiction and homelessness is a societal issue, and the society that is their every day reality is that of inequality and unaffordable living. Which is why they drink and do drugs and can’t afford an apartment to begin with.

    • @wowmazin4399
      @wowmazin4399 Před rokem

      ​@@mopes2713 Ironic how Californians are doing the exact same thing they espouse they despise. By moving to mexico, they are gentrifying the local area, one process they blame for increasing inequality and unaffordable living.

    • @freshimpactco.8698
      @freshimpactco.8698 Před rokem +16

      They did mention rising crime, but homelessness was definitely ignored.

    • @staninjapan07
      @staninjapan07 Před rokem +41

      Also the woke attitude (which, in part at least, contributes to the things you mentioned) went unsaid.
      I stopped watching when, at about 50 seconds, the narrator failed to mention that as the main cause.
      This is not to suggest that all Californians are woke, it goes without saying.

    • @mopes2713
      @mopes2713 Před rokem

      @@staninjapan07 lol People aren’t leaving California because of Wokeness, it’s because we are living in a time of late stage capitalism and massive inflation. Capitalism is unsustainable and does not work for the benefit of the many. Lol what the hell have you been listening to??

  • @AndromedaMarina
    @AndromedaMarina Před rokem +346

    As a mexican engineer who had to leave Mexico in search of a better-paying job, I found out that in OK most jobs offered are blue collar manual labor. Still, we moved there and took the jobs. Life turned out to be very different from what we expected, with bad quality health and education systems, expensive, heavy on politics, military mindset and weapons. To learn that the same US citizens who refuse to fill these manual labor jobs in their own country will be raising the cost of living back in my country is hard to digest.

    • @joshuajensen8771
      @joshuajensen8771 Před rokem

      please go back to your homeland. you need to focus what you can do for your nation, not what your nation can do for you. you have no allegiance or loyalty. just a me, me, me mentality.

    • @Omnihilo
      @Omnihilo Před rokem

      This is the exact conversation I’ve had with many r*ci$t$. “Oh, if America is so bad why does everyone keep coming here???”. Because they, just like you, are fed a crock of lies only to realize America isn’t the gleaming land of opportunity it’s portrayed to be. I work with a lot of immigrants and every single one has told me they wish they could go back home, they regret coming here, or they would much rather go home but what’s stopping them is the jobs don’t pay enough. They suffer here so they can send money back home. At least that’s what they’ve told me.

    • @shac9131
      @shac9131 Před rokem +27

      Most of our produce stems from Mexico and illegals picking in farms here in America because most Americans don't want to pick fruit!
      Me, I love gardening and wouldn't mind helping on the field, but it's hard to find this work since the illegals are doing it or may be private American run places
      Most Americans that discriminate Mexicans simply have no idea that they're the ones responsible for putting some/ most of the produce on their plate

    • @joshuajensen8771
      @joshuajensen8771 Před rokem +36

      @@shac9131 So you want to continue the exploitation of labor while undermining the sovereignty of a nation for cheap produce? I'm sorry but Americans can pick the fruit on their farms. We don't need greedy businesses taking advantage of cheap labor. We will gladly pay higher prices and develop new technology to automate the process.

    • @joshuajensen8771
      @joshuajensen8771 Před rokem +27

      @@shac9131 The exploitation of labor and evasion of taxes must stop. We must take care of our own country and maintain our national sovereignty and in turn, our own destiny as a people.

  • @niccoarcadia4179
    @niccoarcadia4179 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I am learning Spanish right now. Knowing Italian seems to make it easier.

  • @jonathanhnunez
    @jonathanhnunez Před rokem +186

    Same thing is happening in Puerto Rico, a lot of wealthy people from the US buying properties in the island turning them into air bnbs etc, putting people in the streets because they get kicked out of the apartments they lived in for years. Making it impossible for the people from Puerto Rico to afford a house now days.

    • @briananderson8428
      @briananderson8428 Před rokem

      Everywhere the US goes, the worse that place becomes.

    • @freetrailer4poor
      @freetrailer4poor Před rokem +34

      Real estate is ruining America.

    • @brianmilosevic8400
      @brianmilosevic8400 Před rokem

      Why do the government sell out to foreigners????

    • @ginajingtravel2276
      @ginajingtravel2276 Před rokem +19

      They are doing the same thing in the US. The Government should tax more these people who owns a multiple Air Bnb's specially if they live out of State. They are driving the houses through the roof!

    • @fennypermatasari8263
      @fennypermatasari8263 Před rokem

      hi I'm Fenny Permatasari, international relations student from Indonesia.
      I'm looking for a Mexican or American to help me with my final assignment for a course. Are you willing to help me?

  • @DrinkingArt
    @DrinkingArt Před 8 měsíci

    Nice report, just wish there was mention of cartel crime and safety considerations of those who moved/plan to move. Many people of different nationalities watching the report with no idea why this wasnt asked. Is cartel danger only relevant in the border area of Texas and not CA?

  • @JohninHouston1969
    @JohninHouston1969 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I followed the Cafe con Leche guys from the beginning. They had good content. They have returned to the United States because the job opportunities were not very good in Mexico. The grass is not always greener over the border. I think Mexico is a better retirement location.

  • @roadaffy
    @roadaffy Před rokem +345

    México should charge taxes to all those who make home office from Mexico to companies outside the country.
    They are not staying as tourists they are working.

    • @euphiemiadrake5633
      @euphiemiadrake5633 Před rokem +28

      So America should do the same to mexicans who flock to the us fair play and all that

    • @roadaffy
      @roadaffy Před rokem +100

      @@euphiemiadrake5633 absolutely they do it even if you are ilegal, the only diference is that there is no return of taxes for us.

    • @mikeyy425
      @mikeyy425 Před rokem +6

      they aren't getting paid pesos (or by any mex job), so technically they aren't working in mexico

    • @anthonyvigil7567
      @anthonyvigil7567 Před rokem

      That’s not gonna work trust me that happened over here in California during January Brown’s campaign in the late 2000s. When companies and corporations were shipping jobs after China they raise the taxes but all I did was give the government more money and did nothing to stop job decreases.

    • @DulceCubana100
      @DulceCubana100 Před rokem +27

      @@euphiemiadrake5633 Actually they do pay taxes. Not just from purchasing goods and services but out of their paychecks tue government takes their portion.

  • @miniwolfang9563
    @miniwolfang9563 Před rokem +346

    This is how I feel about the Philippines. I'm a Filipina-American with a desire to return to the motherland to reconnect with my culture and because the cost of living in the province is so affordable even with a very modest budget.

    • @CobaltHaze
      @CobaltHaze Před rokem +11

      you've got to the best name ever!

    • @miniwolfang9563
      @miniwolfang9563 Před rokem +13

      @@CobaltHaze You've a pretty cool name, yourself, LadyBug.

    • @stellaharris2704
      @stellaharris2704 Před rokem

      If you stay invested and ignore the market’s ups and downs, you’ll make a lot of money in the long run. My consultant is Wayne Marcel, I found him on CNBC interview where he Featured and reached out to him afterward. I invested $200 on Bitcoin mining and I got $4,700 profit in just 3hours, I made a successful withdrawal to my cash app, it safe and legit. I trade with his company platform and haven’t regretted doing so

    • @CyclingMartialartswithMusic
      @CyclingMartialartswithMusic Před rokem +2

      Im in the same page.

    • @evanwilliams9588
      @evanwilliams9588 Před rokem +4

      You should do it Mini if you can. The journey of a 1,000 miles begins with a single step!

  • @Ballet1111
    @Ballet1111 Před 2 měsíci

    The rising rents are disgusting. I wish there was a better law to protect tenants. Landlords increase rent but the tenants are not receiving a pay increase .

  • @geedee2420
    @geedee2420 Před 9 měsíci

    Half of my crew live in Mexico and cross the border each day for work... They are living much better lives then the other half of the crew who live on the American side.

  • @b1646717
    @b1646717 Před rokem +337

    In 2008 my retired grandparents watched about 60% of their savings disappear. Somewhere like Mexico or Costa Rica became their only viable option. They ended up in Belize.

    • @davidjasso178
      @davidjasso178 Před rokem +1

      were did they move to?

    • @j.l.salayao8055
      @j.l.salayao8055 Před rokem +1

      @@davidjasso178 one or the other.

    • @b1646717
      @b1646717 Před rokem +23

      @@davidjasso178 Belize, lol. My grandmother was a teacher who spoke passing Español. My grandfather did not.

    • @davidjasso178
      @davidjasso178 Před rokem +2

      @@b1646717 Belize seems interesting

    • @geraldmedrano8594
      @geraldmedrano8594 Před rokem +19

      Yeah, they probably sold their investments during the bottom of the market, had they waited a couple of years they would have earned a nice return on their investment I bet

  • @alexanderordinary2110
    @alexanderordinary2110 Před rokem +73

    Up Next: "why has Mexico suddenly become way more expensive to live in?"

    • @chrisb.2028
      @chrisb.2028 Před rokem +2

      Honestly it wouldn't be so bad if the wealth these immigrants bring ends up in México, but it doesn't, many of those properties belongs to people living outside México, so the money briefly touches México only to leave the country, it doesn't help these immigrants still expend their money in the us rather that going to México's pockets.

  • @TaniaUnplugged
    @TaniaUnplugged Před 7 měsíci +1

    It's annoying how your video
    Is only promoting more Americans to live here raising rental costs. Thanks for doing that.

  • @user-qg6lc6qq9o
    @user-qg6lc6qq9o Před 8 měsíci

    I'm not gonna lie I have been thinking about moving to Greece or Indonesia. It's too damn expensive for anything here in the US.

  • @arturogutierrez3
    @arturogutierrez3 Před rokem +89

    I'm Mexican, used to live a great life in Tijuana until now, I'm being kicked out by people from the US, it's funny how that works, I wish I could afford to keep living here where I was born, but rent has tripled since the pandemic drove San Diegans here. Honestly, I just wish they'd shut up about how cheap everything is, what do they think business owners do after hearing this over and over.

    • @guyhaydu364
      @guyhaydu364 Před rokem +2

      Thank the Dems bud

    • @afrodiasporanews9938
      @afrodiasporanews9938 Před rokem +1

      YOU AREN’T CRYING ABOUT MEXICAN ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION TO THE U.S. SO DON’T CRY ABOUT U.S. CITIZENS HAVING A RIGHT TO BUY REAL ESTATE IN MEXICO!

    • @AnonymousGuy341
      @AnonymousGuy341 Před rokem

      @@afrodiasporanews9938fair point

    • @AlanNri20
      @AlanNri20 Před rokem +20

      @@afrodiasporanews9938 and you are crying about illegal inmigration to america in search of an easier way of live, but you aren't crying about gringos coming to México in search of an "easier way of live"

    • @afrodiasporanews9938
      @afrodiasporanews9938 Před rokem

      @@AlanNri20 I CAN TELL YOU HAVE COMPREHENSION ISSUES. REREAD WHAT I SAID. I’M A U.S. CITIZEN THAT OWNS REAL ESTATE IN LATIN AMERICA, I’M DEFINITELY NOT CRYING AT ALL LOL.

  • @anahicamacho8619
    @anahicamacho8619 Před rokem +350

    As a Mexican, I see this problem not only along the border but also in major Mexican cities. The problem is that a lot of these Americans don't even bother to understand Mexican culture and feel entitled to what they have only because they're "contributing their dollars to the economy." But they really are driving rent prices up, and sometimes without even paying taxes. It's gentrification and there's no nice way to put it.

    • @sonicmiku3009
      @sonicmiku3009 Před rokem +58

      Have an American who moved out of South Texas, I had my same view when Latinos cross the border illegally into our country, a big population did the exact same thing so I don't see what the complaining is about. However I apologize that ignorant Americans are treating you like that. Hopefully our relationship will be better.

    • @bossmedia4028
      @bossmedia4028 Před rokem

      I wish I felt sorry for you but when usa needed you to stop sending all your unskilled bottom of the barrel people that lower quality of life to America and also refuse to learn English you all just laughed and called us racist. Now that its the other way around its bad huh.

    • @ianmccullough1918
      @ianmccullough1918 Před rokem +1

      Like Mexicans who don’t even bother to learn English

    • @rtorto311
      @rtorto311 Před 10 měsíci

      Lol as if people that come here to America pay taxes lol. And work under table taking jobs whatever

    • @ateshiasjourney1111
      @ateshiasjourney1111 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Totally agree

  • @RobertSmith-qq2ss
    @RobertSmith-qq2ss Před měsícem

    Are New Yorkers going to Venezuala?

  • @reimannx33
    @reimannx33 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Mexico needs to builds a wall ..lol

  • @urielaragon04
    @urielaragon04 Před rokem +329

    I liked the video; however, the fact that no local (low-income) person nor Mexican-American was interviewed says a lot about it as well. I am a Mexican-American, and I finished my primary and secondary education in Oaxaca, Mexico. After graduating community college in the LA area I decided to move to the Tijuana/San Diego area to finish my Bachelors in International Relations. Even though I am living in my country (since I hold Mexican citizenship), I acknowledge that I am also contributing to gentrification. What do I do to really support the local community? I buy in convenience stores, small businesses, rising restaurants that are NOT located in wealthy neighborhoods. Corruption and inequality in Mexico is much greater than in the US, and if the US dollar will remain in wealthy areas across Mexican cities, then “supporting the locals” is a false statement.

    • @jimmygarciagaricia4108
      @jimmygarciagaricia4108 Před rokem

      Mexican Americans are from old Mexico!, There's 27 continentel american countries, the united states is just one of them!!!
      Mexicans and there reservation brothers and sisters are the real americans!!!.

    • @jasonlee8156
      @jasonlee8156 Před rokem +10

      I thought about being an expat and living down in Mexico. Like Ixtapa, Cancun or maybe Mazatlan. But then I moved to North Carolina. Don't regret it at all. Glad to be here.

    • @elenashteiwi4739
      @elenashteiwi4739 Před rokem +10

      Corruption is just as bad in the US just do some research.

    • @curlyb4c95
      @curlyb4c95 Před rokem

      I just wouldn’t want to live in Mexico ever.

    • @sladewilson377
      @sladewilson377 Před rokem

      @@elenashteiwi4739 This is stupid. Mexico far far worse on the corruption index. Generally, 3rd world nations are far more corrupt than 1st world ones.

  • @homoguy563
    @homoguy563 Před rokem +255

    Why do these documentaries always talk about "remote work" and "work from anywhere" as if it's more common than it is? That's a minority of people. The vast majority of people do working class jobs that require their physical presence. The people that make and serve your food and clean up after you can't just "work from anywhere". They don't have the luxery of working from home. They have to get up everyday and go some place they don't want to be and do things they don't want to do even during a pandemic while some are complaing that "we're all stuck at home". Uh, no "WE'RE" not. It's like they don't think anyone without a white collar career matters, so they barely bother to acknowledge they exist.

    • @ff6605
      @ff6605 Před rokem +24

      and a lot of white collar jobs need your physical presence as well I work at a bank but I still need to physically be there helping customers

    • @rridderbusch518
      @rridderbusch518 Před rokem +5

      @@ff6605 If you're in the USA your job might not last long. I'm in the North-East and have both savings and checking account at the same bank. My spouse has received several checks from inheritance upon his mother's death. The bank would not let him in the door! Huge investors are all they're interested in. He ended up using ATMs to put these huge checks into the bank. Kind of scary!

    • @hugomendez5625
      @hugomendez5625 Před rokem +12

      I agree , this video is a bit classist

    • @emajjabowen6748
      @emajjabowen6748 Před rokem +5

      Clearly this video wasn’t meant for those people. It’s not classist… it’s targeted.

    • @chiefswife1212
      @chiefswife1212 Před rokem +3

      SOLDIERS GO TO WORK EVERYDAY TOO, BUT DoD CIVILIANS HAVE BEEN AT HOME WORKING FOR 2 YEARS NOW!!!

  • @sexybutterfly4ever
    @sexybutterfly4ever Před 8 měsíci

    Wow I live in Central Florida and I had no idea apartments in Hollywood were so cheap. A 1 bedroom for $1600? Yes Please. But Mexico seems even better

  • @jolting
    @jolting Před 8 měsíci +1

    A dollar spent in a country will eventually be taxed.

  • @Jenna1394
    @Jenna1394 Před rokem +23

    Californians and New Yorkers are reaking havoc everywhere now, it used to be gentrification domestically but now they're going international with it. This wouldn't have happened if these residents understood that paying over half their income on rent wasn't sustainable EVER and normalization of that and living paycheck to paycheck to say their live in NYC or LA, was disastrous.

  • @paulo7200
    @paulo7200 Před rokem +339

    Mexico has stronger private property rights than the USA for primary residences. You generally can't have your home foreclosed for property taxes or HOA dues like in the States.

    • @arturocamaney9235
      @arturocamaney9235 Před rokem +7

      Plus, firearms related crimes aren't prosecuted as aggressively down there as in the U.S. Mexico, in many ways, is also more 2nd amendment friendly. Hank Yoo got nine years for not disclosing his diagnosis on Form 4473 in Texas.

    • @scottnorris5683
      @scottnorris5683 Před rokem +3

      @@arturocamaney9235 WoW, that's nuts.

    • @nothingbutchappy
      @nothingbutchappy Před rokem +20

      @@scottnorris5683 also not accurate... You need a firearms licence in Mexico.

    • @scottnorris5683
      @scottnorris5683 Před rokem

      @@nothingbutchappy I never mentioned anything about firearms?

    • @nothingbutchappy
      @nothingbutchappy Před rokem +1

      @@scottnorris5683 I was correcting arturo

  • @user-cx8oc7ho2s
    @user-cx8oc7ho2s Před 2 měsíci

    Get real! I work in one city and sleep in another. In one city i commute 2hr per day spend 9 hr working and 1 hr getting ready. The other i spend 8 hr sleeping 1 hr eating with 3hr unaccounted for. Can anyone tell me where i work and where i live.

  • @NetSystemDesigns
    @NetSystemDesigns Před 9 měsíci

    Wages being cheap in Mexico keeps the cost of living down. $15/hour minimum wage is a large part of why CA is so unaffordable.

  • @jeremygood3246
    @jeremygood3246 Před rokem +86

    Every family has that one person who will break the family financial struggles, I hope you become the one🙏

    • @darlingtonsam3614
      @darlingtonsam3614 Před rokem

      Assets that can make you rich
      Crypto
      Stock
      Real estate
      Gold

    • @josephfrys6969
      @josephfrys6969 Před rokem

      @@darlingtonsam3614 You're right, Fear is one of the factors that hinder most persons to invest into crypto, most persons say ignorance..

    • @greggeorge6711
      @greggeorge6711 Před rokem

      When you invest in crypto you are buying days you don't need to work

    • @popsarah7805
      @popsarah7805 Před rokem

      Now is the best time to purchase and invest in bitcoin, stop procastinating

    • @danielmedina4953
      @danielmedina4953 Před rokem

      Investing in crypto is the most profitable investment due to its current rise, huge profits and future benefits.

  • @rn6542
    @rn6542 Před rokem +385

    It’s not as easy living in Mexico as it looks/sounds. Yes, Mexico is beautiful but having “an American (Californian) way of life” type of quality forces Americans to live in a “bubble” in Mexico. ALL bubbles end up popping. It’s unsustainable. Like what California has caused to it’s own residents.
    Mexico does not have the infrastructure and moreover their culture will eventually not allow for bossy entitled Americans (Californians) to drive them out of their own. Many Americans (not all) have chosen to be obstinately spoon-fed. To them being a “hard-working” American means that you should just click away into being wealthy. All other ways of earning a living like the blue-collar jobs that make any society run, exist, and maintained are frowned-upon. Sorry folks that’s exactly who sustains Mexico and in many ways the U.S. through undocumented immigration. That’s what makes Mexico beautiful and humbling - it’s hard working people - not being afraid to get down and dirty. That’s also what made America great at one point too. That’s what made the American Dream - us little folks. That was the American Dream, that if you worked hard enough this country would reward the sweat of your brow.
    Californians just want to have their cake and eat it too. Sorry to break it to you you gotta make and bake the cake too.

    • @stephanielaurenbounds4958
      @stephanielaurenbounds4958 Před rokem +25

      There’s NO free lunch.

    • @princessesoftheking7411
      @princessesoftheking7411 Před rokem +24

      same.with Mexicans too ! California is huge L.A is not California

    • @lissam956
      @lissam956 Před rokem

      American needs to burst their bubble. They always act as if they deserve the world and all its luxury.

    • @selah9515
      @selah9515 Před rokem

      ok. brilliant southerner

    • @Mario-lv5bv
      @Mario-lv5bv Před rokem +5

      Ya but have u actually lived in California recently it's expensive af

  • @Samborondon11
    @Samborondon11 Před 9 měsíci +1

    If the politicans are smart they'll start advertising & incentivizing business & investment opportunities in the local to those moving to Mexico, if they play it right Mexican business owners could see a flood of capital with lower interest rates and spur more and better employment for the locals.

  • @jg7857
    @jg7857 Před 6 měsíci

    I lived for many years in San Jose, California. Once the wife and I retired, it was adios California. The cost of living is too much. We were able to sell our mobile home in San Jose and buy 2 acres in Arizona with a nice beautiful home with a swimming pool And live much better financially than if we would have stayed in California.

  • @redskeith4737
    @redskeith4737 Před rokem +35

    I now understand the concept of privilege that gets tossed around more a days, these two living like kings surrounded by poverty talking about having room for a hobby is just depressing

    • @thesleepingpusheen2650
      @thesleepingpusheen2650 Před rokem +1

      Funny enough those two seem like the "woke" type yet they don't have a problem with taking advantage of its poorer neighbor country

  • @psychicrenegade
    @psychicrenegade Před rokem +87

    I grew up in the Bay Area...so the chaos was normal to me. But after leaving, moving to Oregon, and returning to CA about a year later...the traffic was literal insanity! I could not believe how much growth had happened in only a year!

    • @GustafsonBen
      @GustafsonBen Před rokem +1

      As a native Oregonian, I both hate you and love you right now. As an Oregonian yeah I think I can afford property/housing here, you moving here (although you moved back) in part cost me/will cost me maybe 100k in aggregate. To buy my freedom of owning a place of my own.

    • @yootoober2009
      @yootoober2009 Před rokem +7

      I'm glad I never once considered living in California, visited a few times, got stationed there once...but I chose to retire from the military in Arizona in 1997...first it was fine, i liked the desert and the heat and not much traffic, but home called me so i moved back to the Philippines and quite glad I an missing all the chaos brought on by modern American lifestyle and the hateful society the Orange toddler president fomented...

    • @noahpatterson5667
      @noahpatterson5667 Před rokem

      @@yootoober2009 democrats have ruined California , they might as well rename it chinafornia

    • @ABC-ABC1234
      @ABC-ABC1234 Před rokem

      @@yootoober2009 He didn't bring hate to the society, he just highlighted the true nature of certain groups in America...
      And don't get me started on the current demented zombie walking liberal freak that is currently bringing US closer to a conflict with Russia AND China (at the same time!!!!) for the first time in decades! How as a President, do you manage to almost trigger conflict with 2 of the most powerful geopolitical nations on earth (next to USA???)

    • @jordanjohnson9866
      @jordanjohnson9866 Před rokem +1

      Nah. Not the traffic was literal insanity! Not “the traffic was literal insanity!” /

  • @garysieg9355
    @garysieg9355 Před 9 měsíci

    I paid 1350/month in Los Angeles in 2018 and your payin 1650, both 1 BR, not so bad really....

  • @user-ho4nw5sf3w
    @user-ho4nw5sf3w Před měsícem +1

    Why not, most of them came from there to start with, and there is no language barrier.

  • @aracelik7222
    @aracelik7222 Před rokem +282

    I did! I LOVE MEXICO!!!! Not just for saving, for enjoying life, traveling within Mexico, endless options from historic, city, nature. Sophisticated cities, great medical care, dinning, theater. Mostly, I feel so much safer. Schools, Churches, sacred places.

    • @nsanenthembrane
      @nsanenthembrane Před rokem +5

      Where in Mexico did you move to

    • @BellicV
      @BellicV Před rokem +23

      @@nsanenthembrane if she feels safe definitely not the north, nor the south, nor Mexico City or Acapulco, or the state of Sinaloa. Pretty much any big city in Mexico.

    • @nsanenthembrane
      @nsanenthembrane Před rokem +2

      @@BellicV I was considering moving to Mexico City for a bit but I have cats and need my place to not get broken into

    • @oo--7714
      @oo--7714 Před rokem +24

      @@BellicV Dude there are safe places in Mexico like yucatan a place that has 2 million people.. With a murder rate lower than the usa National average (5.1) and is on par with Belgium and lower than Canada.

    • @The.Hawaiian.Kingdom
      @The.Hawaiian.Kingdom Před rokem +7

      @@oo--7714 The Yucatán is starting to get bad though.

  • @adamcolclasure4892
    @adamcolclasure4892 Před rokem +471

    I moved to Asia instead which is usually, ranked as one of the highest cost of living regions. Despite, that it's still half less than what I would spend in the states, and healthcare is far cheaper and ambulance rides are free. I'll take my cheaper healthcare and paid holidays. The bigger problem that isn't discussed is America is the only country, outside Eritrea that tax American citizens regardless of where they live.

    • @janedoe5510
      @janedoe5510 Před rokem +49

      You pay for ambulance rides in the US? 🙃

    • @AGhostInTheMachine
      @AGhostInTheMachine Před rokem +129

      @@janedoe5510 several thousand dollars to go a few miles

    • @janedoe5510
      @janedoe5510 Před rokem +20

      @@AGhostInTheMachine 🤯 i can't believe it

    • @jlee4768
      @jlee4768 Před rokem +43

      @@janedoe5510 if you are uninsured then yes. fun fact: a rescue chopper or an airlift to the hospital average cost was $40,000, and that's in 2016.

    • @noiceferatu7937
      @noiceferatu7937 Před rokem +37

      @@janedoe5510 20 years ago, I got in a car accident and was taken by an ambulance. A year later, I received a bill of $5,000 for the ambulance ride. I didn’t have that kind of money, so it was agreed to pay in installments.

  • @ReyRLopez
    @ReyRLopez Před 8 měsíci

    When I came to live in Mexico in early 2001, I rented a 3 Br house for 250 per mo. An ocean front trailer today can go for up to $1,000 per month, with condos going for up to $2,000 per month. Why, because the same condo 40 minutes north in San Diego can go for $4,000 per month. American Realtors are flooding the border town where I live, marketing to Americans the relative deals available, for their profit. Playas de Rosarito, B.C. is now over 32% Expats looking for a cheap retirement. I came back to my birth country to enjoy the relaxed lifestyle and the lovely people, not to mention the food. But they are pricing this area out of the hands of the locals faster than they can find where to live.

    • @VIDENTE_PAINITA
      @VIDENTE_PAINITA Před 8 měsíci

      If you went to a different country from your place of origin to settle there temporarily or permanently, you are not an expatriate, you are an inmigrant.

  • @TomTom-xp2jb
    @TomTom-xp2jb Před 8 měsíci

    I think this trend is only going to grow. It's just getting too expensive for the average North American now. Not only rent but everything else is out of most peoples affordability. I'm actually thinking of the Mexican migration myself. I currently live in Vancouver ,Canada and am finding it just too expensive in the last few years. Good program. Thank you.

  • @joshuastarkloff9602
    @joshuastarkloff9602 Před rokem +307

    It's happening in Florida as well. A lot of people during the pandemic moved here, and now the price for everything is going up. And the people who moved here, now are finding that Florida is just as expensive as where they came from. Specially bad in the Southwest area thanks to the retiree community buying up all the homes so they can have a second or even third home to do old people things.

    • @pdb2k154
      @pdb2k154 Před rokem +16

      South Florida is expensive

    • @Revealthereal_
      @Revealthereal_ Před rokem +80

      Californians and New Yorkers are driving up the cost EVERYWHERE! Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Texas, now MEXICO! Why don’t they change the ridiculous amount of laws and housing cost in their state instead of bringing their problems to the rest of us! We have increased traffic and increased rent due to y’all! Thanks a lot! I had to move from ATL to NC because my rent doubled!

    • @kevinmach730
      @kevinmach730 Před rokem +2

      Bummer. Maybe you should consider Mexico

    • @Jacob-ec6st
      @Jacob-ec6st Před rokem +54

      As a Floridian, I'm keeping my hopes up that their first taste of a real hurricane will send them running back

    • @krystelhardesty9960
      @krystelhardesty9960 Před rokem +37

      @@Jacob-ec6st It never seems to really get rid of them though I live in central FL and they just keep coming and nothing seems to scare them off not even Florida man.

  • @Pandaluver67899
    @Pandaluver67899 Před rokem +54

    I would like to retire in my parents' hometown in Mexico. I know by the time I get to retire (40 years) things could be almost unlivable for retired folks here.

    • @SuperTonyony
      @SuperTonyony Před rokem

      In 40 years, wet bulb temps in Mexico and the southern half of the US will be unlivable.

    • @ruqayyahcurtis7504
      @ruqayyahcurtis7504 Před rokem +1

      @Crystal Better buy something now! Don’t wait.

    • @johnames6430
      @johnames6430 Před rokem +1

      a mcchicken will cost around a 100 dollars by then, MCD will have 100 dollar menu instead of 1 dollar menu

  • @frankiemendivil6459
    @frankiemendivil6459 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I used to live in Mexico I hve family there I live off grid so it’s perfect for me

  • @jaimepatino1382
    @jaimepatino1382 Před 3 měsíci

    Top 8 American Foods Banned in Other Countries
    Instant Stuffing and Mashed Potatoes. Making stuffing with Kraft Stove Top Stuffing takes a mere five minutes. ...
    Skittles. ...
    Twinkies and Little Debbie Swiss Rolls. ...
    Pillsbury Biscuits. ...
    Bread with Potassium Bromate. ...
    High Fructose Corn Syrup. ...
    American Pork. ...
    Chlorinated Chicken.

  • @giovannicanales5156
    @giovannicanales5156 Před rokem +460

    I am a dual citizen who moved to mexico in 2020 and lived there for over a year. Now i just moved back to CA, trust me there are massive trade offs, as much as I loved Mexico being back in CA feels good. There are a lot of things that are a hot mess down there too, moving because you think the grass is greener on the other side and it will fix any problems is the wrong approach. Moving because you retired or are going to pay cash for your house down there is much better, for me i discovered it wasnt all I hoped for, now I am buying a small ranch in California and will try to live peacefully and enjoy traveling to the state parks across the US, another thing you cant do in Mexico without worrying about the cartels unfortunately. Everyones experience will be diferent so best of luck to anyone about to take on the endeavor!

    • @user-pv3rl2lv4p
      @user-pv3rl2lv4p Před rokem +6

      Why did you leave Mexico?

    • @ud2895
      @ud2895 Před rokem +42

      @@user-pv3rl2lv4p read what he wrote!!

    • @MagicBoterham
      @MagicBoterham Před rokem +64

      @@user-pv3rl2lv4p He said that he didn't like the food and he wasn't expecting there to be so much Mexican food.

    • @fourdoorsmorehoes
      @fourdoorsmorehoes Před rokem +103

      so you have money to buy a ranch in Cali.. the video is about people who don't have enough money to live a decent lifestyle in cali

    • @searphhoney
      @searphhoney Před rokem +7

      Was your main reason for moving the cartel?

  • @DouradaBambina
    @DouradaBambina Před rokem +284

    The sense of community given by Mexicans is unparalleled. Better food. Quality of life.

    • @wingmanbbc
      @wingmanbbc Před rokem

      Who knew Trump could be so right. He said that Mexico would pay for the wall. Not only are they paying for it, they are building it, just to keep the californians out.

    • @theweeklynewsexplosion5358
      @theweeklynewsexplosion5358 Před rokem +15

      I don’t understand why they don’t build high quality transit between Tijuana and San Diego. That traffic looked awful!

    • @DameOfDiamonds
      @DameOfDiamonds Před rokem +7

      Actually I could get the same from any red state

    • @r.paulcooper5195
      @r.paulcooper5195 Před rokem +19

      ​@@DameOfDiamonds Any red state? Clearly you're not from Mississippi.

    • @Krystal_Kitty7
      @Krystal_Kitty7 Před rokem

      Quality of life for who? If you're a woman with children good luck to you, you run a higher risk of getting killed or your children stolen.

  • @bettyechols6405
    @bettyechols6405 Před 8 měsíci

    If it wasn't for my kids/grandkids, I would go to Mexico or somewhere 🎉❤

  • @ashikana21
    @ashikana21 Před rokem +320

    I came very close to being raised in Mexico. My dad was one of the best supervisors at his plant, and his company had another one opening in Mexico City and offered my dad the opportunity to transfer. He really wanted to do it but my mom refused. I have always been drawn to visiting there. My mom had a lot of Mexican friends around in my childhood, too.

    • @HelloTuuuurdz
      @HelloTuuuurdz Před rokem +25

      Mexico City is the coolest city in the world! Go check it out 😁

    • @noahpatterson5667
      @noahpatterson5667 Před rokem +3

      U will love Mexico city its one of the best cities on the globe

    • @jennifergarza7766
      @jennifergarza7766 Před rokem +4

      Go visit! It’s one of the greatest cities in the world.

    • @ayuanabradford3206
      @ayuanabradford3206 Před rokem +2

      Guess u be heading back soon lol

    • @BNJA5M1N3
      @BNJA5M1N3 Před rokem +4

      If you're not mexican you cannot buy property there. So if anyone on this video said you can buy a condo...not true.

  • @and1111000
    @and1111000 Před rokem +58

    Shame, the locals will be priced out by remote workers. Parts of Mexico will become like San Francisco, where IT workers have bought up properties, essentially pushing lower paid workers much further away from the City. Fine in America but the Mexicans who have decided to stay in their own country will pay the ultimate price. Expect to see the Selling Sunsets there soon, the Instagram rich types will move in, forcing the lesser-earning Mexicans to move to crappier parts. Mexico should tax these hybrid workers who earn top the dollar but use Mexican resources. Not sure hybrid workers add to the economy, unlike Mexicans that work in America for low paid jobs and have to cross the border every day.

    • @Mr-Moon
      @Mr-Moon Před rokem

      There are some neighborhoods that are no longer affordable to Mexicans, they're filled with Americans and Mexican- Americans.

    • @dofehino5444
      @dofehino5444 Před rokem

      remote workers do in fact add to the economy, theyd be speding tgeir money and paying taxes to a different country otherwise, its like having a trade surplus. otoh its bringing an upper class from abroad, making the lesser local upper class and middle class feel stressed

    • @KarlosEPM
      @KarlosEPM Před rokem

      Go back home and make america great again.