Breh, there's a difference between someone forced to leave their home to go to another country where they don't speak the language and their qualifications aren't recognized or they were unskilled labor in their old country and someone who went through the visa process has qualifications or skills recognized by the country and has some if not extensive language proficiency.
False. There are plenty of countries besides those that have renewable energy plans.
OP does seem to not understand how difficult emigrating from America can be. This simplified view of
Find a place, stack your bread, and leave is very unrealistic.
You have to find out if the country is even accepting immigrants, if they are what type of immigrants are they accepting? Skilled unskilled, retirees? If they are what are the visa requirements, language requirements, what the job market is like for foreigners and if the culture fits.
You can't just move without having a concrete plan with fallbacks in place.
The reason why I chose Germany is because they have a booming IT market with not enough employees. There are plenty of jobs willing to sponsor a work visa. There is also a job search visa for people with university degrees which is my fallback if I can't get an initial job visa or jobs want face to face interviews before they hire. I study German with a tutor every two weeks. I want to have enough to comfortably live(not survive off of ramen) for a year and
I've lived in Germany with the Army for 4 years and I like the people and way of life there.