For this month's travel information blogspot, I've
focused on something that may interest those who not only have special job
skills, but would like to live a nomadic life that allows them to live very
comfortably in countries they've always wanted to travel to, here is a brief
how to do that "bucket list" while young for 2026 and beyond, much
like the HGTV "International House Hunter", you can.
According to Google's AI, global immigration is more
restrictive, and I'll paraphrase the analysis, for instance, in the USA and UK,
while Canada is focusing on limiting economic migrants, Australia and Europe
are picking skills based migration, nevertheless, now there is a growing trend,
"nomad migrants" for skilled professionals, who can travel with
special visas into a country, and when another country offers more money for
their skills, they can decide to go there, the takeaway is the key trend in
developed nations, restrictive, and focused on job skills.
However, I have found a variety of websites to proclaim
the restrictive trend globally, as well as offering predictions for beyond
2026.
My research proves that the current administration's
restrictive immigration policy is a global trend, and the emphasis is on job
skills globally, too.
What is a new wrinkle to the global immigration tale is
the skills based nomad visa.
There is no doubt that in the USA, politics is at the
root of the opposition's championing of the non-skills migrant that is
economics based, moreover, I've covered this aspect in another blog for that April
blogspot, nonetheless, when immigration globally is now focusing on the skills
migrant, in my opinion, the global trend is a predictor of the future when the
politics of travel is no longer a factor that translates into a voting issue.
Yet I was unable to find any website to back my future
immigration prediction.
I did find a reference in Google's AI when I asked in my
search engine's question slot, "… Geopolitical Strategy: Labour migration
is being used as part of geopolitical strategy, such as the EU's development of
skills partnerships and legal gateways in countries like India, merging foreign
policy with labor needs…"
Regardless, although this month's travel blog was not a
travel topic informational for the average traveler, I wish you a travel future
of making memories.]
For example, I remember arriving in Paris on 1 April 1st,
an "April fool's arrival, my luggage handle was missing, and I had my
feisty Bichon Frieze to maneuver in his pet carrier through the cavernous
Charles de Gaulle airport, then while I waited for the Airport shuttle bus, it
started raining, my woes continued, when I arrived at my apt., the security
code didn't work, but then, I was in Paris, where every day was a minute by
minute.
HAPPY TRAVELS!
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