Hi all! This is an alt for anonymity. Please be gentle, this is a hard topic for me to discuss.

I’m a progressive United States citizen who is looking to get out. I’m of Italian descent so I’m working on getting Italian citizenship through jure sanguinis, but it’s going to take some time, if it works at all (gotta substantiate some relations) and won’t extend to my husband until he completes a citizenship test, which he can do after living in Italy for two years.

Here’s my big question: is moving to Italy even a good idea?

I know there’s a significant element of fascism there, but that seems to be the case to varying extents throughout Europe. I’ve visited a few times as a tourist and everyone was very kind. I also have a US cousin that lives there as a permanent resident near Napoli and she is very encouraging, saying people will be welcoming. We don’t want much, just to make a living and maybe have a kid.

  • wewbull@feddit.uk
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    5 days ago

    You emigrate to Italy and then you’ll be an immigrant from the US. One’s a verb, the other a noun.

    Once you have Italian citizenship you’ll be able to live an work anywhere in the Schengen region. So a lot more options once you’re in.

    • kryptonite@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      That’s not the difference. Both words have noun and verb forms.

      Immigrate = to move to a place

      Emigrate = to move from a place

      Immigrant = a person who moved to a place

      Emigrant = a person who moved from a place

      So they would be emigrating from the US and immigrating to Italy. They would be a US emigrant and an Italian immigrant.