The Truth About Muslim Countries

2024 ж. 19 Мам.
133 977 Рет қаралды

Become a Client: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
Get our free Weekly Rundown newsletter and be the first to hear about breaking news and offers: nomadcapitalist.com/email
Join us at Nomad Capitalist Live for four days of knowledge and networking open to all: nomadcapitalist.com/live/
There’s a hidden assumption that all Muslims are the same, despite the fact that Muslims are found in over 50 Muslim-majority countries and nearly every other country on earth. This assumption also extends the worst stereotypes about Islam and Muslims to all Muslims.
In today's video, Andrew shares his firsthand experiences in Muslim-majority countries, shedding light on the stark contrast between common misconceptions and the vibrant realities he's experienced.
00:00 Start
00:39 Audience's Comments on Muslim Countries
1:42 Not All Muslim Countries Are the Same
4:50 Cultural Dynamics Between West and Places Like Malaysia
7:33 Benefits of Living in Malaysia
11:46 Dispelling Stereotypes
Nomad Capitalist is the world's most sought-after expert on legal offshore tax planning, dual citizenship, and international asset protection. We work exclusively with seven- and eight-figure entrepreneurs and investors who want to "go where you're treated best."
Nomad Capitalist has served as the “architect” and “general contractor” for 1,500+ clients who wanted one company to manage their holistic plans. We help these clients keep more of their wealth, increase their personal freedom, and protect their families and wealth against current and future threats at home.
Our in-house team of researchers, strategists, and executioners know more about these strategies than just about anyone. We’ve also spent more than a decade building a trusted network of attorneys, accountants, real estate agents, and others to assist our clients. As a result, our approach is not only holistic, but agnostic; we offer our clients advice on and options in 90+ countries, more than any other firm by far.
If you’re looking to diversify internationally, whether for lower taxes or as a “Plan B”, trust the industry pioneers at Nomad Capitalist and our experience serving the needs of globally-minded entrepreneurs and investors.
Become Our Client: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/
Our Website: www.nomadcapitalist.com/
About Our Company: nomadcapitalist.com/about/
Buy Mr. Henderson’s Book: nomadcapitalist.com/book/
DISCLAIMER: The information in this video should not be considered tax, financial, investment, or any kind of professional advice. Only a professional diagnosis of your specific situation can determine which strategies are appropriate for your needs. Nomad Capitalist can and does not provide advice unless/until engaged by you.

Пікірлер
  • - Become a client and build your plan B: nomadcapitalist.com/apply/ - Learn more about these strategies at our annual live event: nomadcapitalist.com/live/ - These are 6 reasons why you should move to Malaysia: kzhead.info/sun/i9ahXZaAmYmefJ8/bejne.html

    @nomadcapitalist@nomadcapitalistАй бұрын
    • ❤❤❤

      @vladimir_obama_@vladimir_obama_29 күн бұрын
    • ❤❤❤

      @vladimir_obama_@vladimir_obama_29 күн бұрын
    • Yes Malaysia is great for now, largely thanks to its British inspired common law, institutions and entrepreneurial minorities. Lets hope it stays that way despite their Prime Minister's increasing pandering towards Islamists for votes. Malaysia does not have 'culture wars' in the Western sense because they are still grappling with basic human rights taken for granted in the West, like equality between races and religious freedom for all (Apostasy from Islam is technically punishable by death in several Malaysian states). Of course none of this affects your priviledged 'nomad capitalist' Western clientele that have no actual roots and are uninvested in the long-term success of any one society, but they must understand the full picture of any country that is being suggested for them to move to.

      @based-beagle@based-beagle28 күн бұрын
    • cap, whites are mocked, picked on, persecuted in jakarta, whites are mocked, picked on, persecuted in kota kinabalu

      @frequentiis@frequentiis27 күн бұрын
    • @@based-beagle British inspired common law isn't better than Islamic law just because it's British. Drop your superiority complex and accept the fact that different belief systems exist. Britain is one of the worst colonisers in the history of the world and the British government plus many British institutions are currently complicit in genocides today. they don't need to lecture people on their idea of law or human rights.

      @user-yf5je1dn1q@user-yf5je1dn1q27 күн бұрын
  • After 13 years, my wife and I left South America for Penang, Malaysia. The healthcare here is excellent, and the food is both fun and exotic. Being consumers is enjoyable, and we feel safe and welcome. In just a month, we've already made many friends.

    @yousseph777@yousseph777Ай бұрын
    • local friends or fellow expat friends?

      @wasnt.here.3853@wasnt.here.3853Ай бұрын
    • Exotic food. 😂That's spices

      @carkawalakhatulistiwa@carkawalakhatulistiwaАй бұрын
    • I'm so happy for you and your wife. I'm from Sabah and I have a crush, he's in South America. 😭

      @Marionette7@Marionette729 күн бұрын
    • Which country in south America ?

      @booksquotes948@booksquotes94829 күн бұрын
    • Food...bit of health care...hmm...good for a pet dog.

      @patricka.crawley6572@patricka.crawley657229 күн бұрын
  • I have visited Malaysia and worked with Malaysians. People are very polite and soft spoken. If that doesn’t give you peace, I dont know what will.

    @uddiponaziz6501@uddiponaziz6501Ай бұрын
  • As a Singaporean, i can vouch that our Malaysian neighbours are pretty chill. It is a safe place with great food. We are all pretty open in south east Asia because we are all so different. Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and Singapore are all very different and at the same time respectively of each other's differences.

    @alvarny77@alvarny7729 күн бұрын
    • Yep been to both countries (Malaysia and Singapore) in February. Loved the culture and the hospitality of people. Wish I could live there honestly. Unfortunately for Singapore, it's much more expensive than Malaysia and home country

      @youdononeetokno@youdononeetokno28 күн бұрын
    • Out of all those countries. Think it's only the Singaporeans that need to tone it down a bit when in other countries, especially in SEA. Oh so cheap lah. And need to stop acted like chee bye kings & queens. If Singaporeans acted entitled and bodoh in Europe. The local Asians would rob them.

      @jamesdivine69@jamesdivine6928 күн бұрын
    • I've been to USA and UK both are fanatic

      @NewVideoTech3000@NewVideoTech300027 күн бұрын
    • @@NewVideoTech3000 In what manner

      @missplainjane3905@missplainjane390527 күн бұрын
    • @@missplainjane3905 they have no problem whatsoever to exploit other countries and kill people, they feel like they have the right to do so

      @NewVideoTech3000@NewVideoTech300026 күн бұрын
  • I've lived and traveled to several Muslim lands, beautiful kind friendly people

    @katemccrew@katemccrewАй бұрын
    • Yes beautiful and friendly on the surface only. But there are many subject matters that you cannot discuss and if you do then radicals may behead you even !! You need to listen to Ex-muslims channels

      @Limited144@Limited14429 күн бұрын
    • Nah. We just need to stop funding z I o n I s t s

      @katemccrew@katemccrew29 күн бұрын
    • Limited your limited in knowledge

      @abumustafa9578@abumustafa957829 күн бұрын
    • @@abumustafa9578 stop doing Taqaya ! Read Texts of your Books directly. We cannot support teachings of such direct hatreds, threats and violence against other humans in the name of such so called religion.

      @Limited144@Limited14429 күн бұрын
    • @@Limited144 Sounds like you have never been to a Muslim country. Because those who have, finds the place better, in every level, than the west.

      @kakarote100@kakarote10028 күн бұрын
  • Recently came back from a trip to Saudi Arabia and I noticed something about myself - I’m always in a state of paranoia, fear and anxiety by default as a result of living in the UK. I was constantly thinking about putting my phone away, clutching my belongings etc until I realised people in Saudi Arabia don’t really steal and it’s a super safe country and that I should relax a little bit more. Just that aspect about my mental state made me realise that I need to move out of the UK asap where there is constant crime and theft is starting to go unpunished and I’m left in a perpetual state of paranoia, fight or flight and stress whenever I step out of my house.

    @Yazzyyaz92@Yazzyyaz92Ай бұрын
    • I feel the same way in the US as you do in the UK. I don't go to cities here anymore and all holidays are out of country.

      @JessicaT10118@JessicaT10118Ай бұрын
    • Similar experience - western countries are insane, literally.

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • You are right..even when the pray coming seller go praying and just leave their stuff.

      @zigfxtech4940@zigfxtech4940Ай бұрын
    • Shuush. Those Islamophobes will tell you that you are lying

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • ​@@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292 Sure buddy. I'm sure that THAT specific thing is what "islamaphobes" will attack, lmao. There's actually ACTUAL reasons why certain people are "Islamaphobic", if you can even call it that... its far more pointed than fear or hate of a religion, specifically its terroristic elements (that have unfortunately arisen over the past half century or so, cause it paints a bad name for most muslims, who are genuinely kind and welcoming people... usually, at least lol) and islamic countries' tendency for top down authoritarianism. The majority of people all around the globe from every religion and creed are generally good and nice people, from China to Saudi to Czechia to Cameroon to Brazil to Mexico to Canada to etc. etc... don't fall for these deceptive traps and stereotypes that people paint to hand wave certain arguments and topics people don't 'actually' want to discuss or bring up. Good people are good people, but there is still bad in the world.

      @user-xp5id1kh4r@user-xp5id1kh4r29 күн бұрын
  • As a happy expat in KL, I couldn't agree more. Malaysians are chill and non judgmental. I'd love to stay here as long as possible.

    @kachrachi@kachrachiАй бұрын
  • Fyi : We, as Muslims in Malaysia, apply this verse of our holy Quran to our daily lives. Surah Kafirun (Arabic text: ألكَافِرُونَ‎) is the 109th Surah of the Qur’an. It is titled in English, “The Disbelievers” and composed of 6 verses Say, “O disbelievers, I do not worship what you worship. Nor are you worshippers of what I worship. Nor will I be a worshipper of what you worship. Nor will you be worshippers of what I worship. For you is your religion, and for me is my religion.”

    @tat2547@tat254728 күн бұрын
    • But the disbeliever will never let muslim alone

      @lordgarmadon1995@lordgarmadon19955 күн бұрын
    • It is a very healthy way to think about other people.

      @cybertube003@cybertube0034 күн бұрын
    • But we welcome you to worship what we worship. The discipline and cleanliness will make you a happier contentented person free of drugs and alcohol and permisiveness

      @mishahul@mishahul4 сағат бұрын
  • I lived in Dubai, a Muslim city for 10 years and never saw a homeless person or a beggar. But when I visited California I was shocked seeing tens of thousands of homeless people.

    @dianasher5510@dianasher5510Ай бұрын
    • You are right. We should care about the poor.

      @MohammadMonirHossain-uo2mm@MohammadMonirHossain-uo2mmАй бұрын
    • Hhhh. Thanks for exposing the west and saying the truth

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • That's because your country does not have its citizens' interest at heart. They use their money in wars and illegally invading sovereign countries and giving Billions to Isreal instead of building the US and helping its homeless and veterans. The US is collapsing. You need to vote for genuine and patriotic leaders.

      @user-hi3oh2yw9j@user-hi3oh2yw9j29 күн бұрын
    • If you are Homeless in Dubai you get kicked out of the country. It's illigal to be Homeless in Dubai because it ruins It's fake perfect paradise like image. Do your research next time before you comment something

      @Skull211@Skull21129 күн бұрын
    • It was similar in Nazi Germany ... so, there's that. Maybe you want to give a more convincing argument ?

      @lescommercantesdindochine1954@lescommercantesdindochine195429 күн бұрын
  • In Malaysia and Indonesia people don't even shout. If a foreigner shouts locals look down at that person.

    @Rightisright111@Rightisright111Ай бұрын
    • And that's a good thing? lol

      @cheery-hex@cheery-hexАй бұрын
    • ​@@cheery-hexyes actually. If you lose your cool you lose face. It means you don't know how to behave properly.

      @genestone4951@genestone4951Ай бұрын
    • We would only shout in an emergency situation.. 😂

      @sabaismail4009@sabaismail4009Ай бұрын
    • very good thing since you dont have to deal with headache everytime someone's scream at you. ​@@cheery-hex

      @lazyaphik9788@lazyaphik978829 күн бұрын
    • Um.. Indonesians are known for being very loud.

      @aldosuryadiputra4339@aldosuryadiputra433929 күн бұрын
  • I went to visit an Islamic country in 2016 and had a family member tell me they would automatically kill me when I got there because I'm in a wheelchair. I literally laughed out loud at the absurdity and their ignorance! When I was in country I had never encountered people who were so kind and wanted to be helpful, even if I didn't need help. I'd rather live in a Muslim country than America, and in fact the Middle East is going to be one of my trifecta bases when I leave the hellhole of the US.

    @JoshuaDStewart@JoshuaDStewartАй бұрын
    • what contry are thinking about specfically

      @kullenmontgomery1210@kullenmontgomery1210Ай бұрын
    • The western media has been controllied by z//ynists thats why people in America are brainwashed

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • Why do you say America is a gellhole?

      @gagoomt4076@gagoomt407629 күн бұрын
    • Good luck getting around in pretty much every "Islamic country" (whatever that means... do u 'actually' mean "Islamic" or just generally muslim, cause they're two very different things) outside of the big cities with your Wheelchair handicap... its one of few things that are great in America that people take for granted, like for real for real. That said, yeah, your friend was pretty stupid... this isn't Sparta, lol

      @user-xp5id1kh4r@user-xp5id1kh4r29 күн бұрын
    • so glad you were treated well and didn't believe the lies about Islam! Our religion encourages helping others who are in need, and it's so great to hear you were helped even when you didn't need help

      @user-yf5je1dn1q@user-yf5je1dn1q29 күн бұрын
  • I am Malaysian. Had a few interactions with foreigners and expats from western countries. Basically, i dont care what you do. As long as you dont touch sensitive issues. You want to do business, please go on. You want to be part of NGO's, go on. Do your thing. Respect the locals and it will be treated two ways. Broken English? Not a problem as long as people understand. It just a medium of communication. You bored with life in KL, go to borneo. Live a while in Kuching or Kota Kinabalu. You want to drive a car yourself? Yeah, you can do that. Some country can convert their driving license to our local license. All in all, we dont care what you want to do. 😊 Dont be a criminal. Thats all.

    @mohdariff4432@mohdariff4432Ай бұрын
    • how about LGBT issues? you put your current PM in prison. just sayin'

      @baciperugina836@baciperugina83628 күн бұрын
    • And thats really how it should be 😊

      @greenearth9945@greenearth994528 күн бұрын
    • And if you’re an extremist and woke, you’re NOT welcome!!!

      @cutiebirdie2216@cutiebirdie221627 күн бұрын
    • I'm in Indonesia, I've been here for a month, I rented a motorbike and, assuming it's the same as Malaysia, I didn't know I needed to convert my driving license 😅

      @sal_strazzullo@sal_strazzullo27 күн бұрын
    • "As long as you don't touch sensitive issues." So if someone did say that Islam is false -for example -what would happen? That's what I'm trying to figure out here. Thanks.

      @Canada3381@Canada338127 күн бұрын
  • We Malaysians don't care whether you are gays or whatever as long as you don't do your things in public. The same goes for heterosexuals. As long as you have some respects to the locals here, it's fine.

    @matzmn@matzmnАй бұрын
    • That's the same for most Asian countries. But most people in the West would refuse to believe that. For example, in China 🇨🇳, one of the *MOST FAMOUS AND RESPECTED* TV hosts is an ethnic minority guy who happens to be BOTH gay AND is a transvestite. But in the western imagination, China is this horrible place where gays and transvestites would be culled.

      @ChinaSongsCollection@ChinaSongsCollection29 күн бұрын
    • yup. even if youre husband and wife, dont go around and kiss in public

      @jeantravolta8217@jeantravolta821729 күн бұрын
    • Lol that's no different from Arab countries. What's even the point of this video??? 😂😂😂😂😂😂

      @DiamondsRexpensive@DiamondsRexpensive28 күн бұрын
    • Dont Care whether youbare gay ? Muslims Care of changing Bad things especially in their country in front of him

      @OmFar-kj3qh@OmFar-kj3qh28 күн бұрын
    • to be fair that is the same thing in Islam generally, no authority will go to your home and punish you for "acting" gay. the crime of adultery in Islam outside marriage regardless of gender is the one get acted on. when you visit another country do not break their rules OR enforce your rules that contradict the country over others.

      @al-adeelah2507@al-adeelah250728 күн бұрын
  • As a Malaysian who has stayed in UK for 7 years, US for 1 year, I've appriacte my country more. When my UK friend asked me why people come to Malaysia, I told him food-unless you want to see flora/fauna (go East Malaysia). He did not believe me...until he went and tried all kinds of food and decided he wanted to retire here.

    @mystvearn83@mystvearn8329 күн бұрын
  • In Malaysia, the rule of thumb is...as long as you do not offend the 3 R's (i.e. Race, Religion & Royalty), then nothing else really matters. Nobody cares what you do, where you go, what you wear or eat etc...but to me...most importantly respects each other's religion & beliefs...never talk bad or start comparing anyone's religion...Islam, Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism etc... thats a big no no here..seriously, we dont like that...otherwise...just live your life..

    @syedidrus90@syedidrus90Ай бұрын
    • If only this was all around the world we won't have a lot of conflict

      @cheikhabdalahi9332@cheikhabdalahi9332Ай бұрын
    • Muslims offend those Rules all the time. Yes, they care that you 1)do not drink alcohol and 2)do not eat during the day in public on their feasting fest or 3) dont you dare wearing a bikini or showing your sexy hair -weird. There are a lot of of rules they want you to follow, basically they want you to live like a Muslim. But THEY do not respect their host countries, they violate laws in all countries all over the world. They even demand us to support them in their useless rules. Thats the opposite of respect, thats called Hypocrisy.

      @user-bk4us9vv8t@user-bk4us9vv8tАй бұрын
    • Is it okay to say nice things about religions? IMO the lessons and stories in religions are worth talking about, and it would be really cool to find a place where other people are open to that. I think all religions are fascinating.

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • But the problem is muslims offend the religion in other countries where it is non islamic

      @rationalist805@rationalist805Ай бұрын
    • Is it okay to convert between religions? Like from Islam to other religions…

      @thecrimsondragon9744@thecrimsondragon974429 күн бұрын
  • An Australian currently living in Kazan where Islam meets Christianity such s dynamic, friendly, nothing is too much trouble city. Have spent plenty time in Malaysia and Indonesia and concur there is something very human about Islam countries.

    @user-nb7yj4mn2y@user-nb7yj4mn2yАй бұрын
    • Kazan as in Tatarstan, Russia?

      @jepbarhalmyradov9135@jepbarhalmyradov913528 күн бұрын
    • I live in Indonesia. Christian and other non muslim always have difficulty to worship because muslim always oppressed non muslim

      @vitoandolini0757@vitoandolini075728 күн бұрын
    • Beautiful 😊

      @greenearth9945@greenearth994528 күн бұрын
    • Good stuff. Now go and tell that to the Christians living in the Middle East. Oh, wait, you can't as they're just about all gone: "Persecution of Christians in Middle East reaching genocide levels" - The Guardian 3 May 2019.

      @3rdEyeWide@3rdEyeWide27 күн бұрын
    • ​@@3rdEyeWideyeah guardian , the so called left leaning paper. Lol

      @vinlondon8904@vinlondon890427 күн бұрын
  • Hi Andrew! I am a musician from NY. Been watching your videos for a while now. I am here in Malaysia at the moment. 2nd x. You are right. I absolutely love it here and i wish we could hang sometime. So much of what you say i been saying for many many years. Except the financial part. We musicians are not all great in that area LOL. Many greetings and hope to hear from you. Peace :-)

    @philmaturanodrums@philmaturanodrumsАй бұрын
  • God bless Malaysia 🇲🇾 and its People.

    @ridzuanali1919@ridzuanali1919Ай бұрын
    • Aamiin

      @TheZeckMarjan@TheZeckMarjan28 күн бұрын
  • Malaysia is a medical tourist hot spot. My family and I are from Indonesia and they almost always travel to Malaysia every 6 months or a year for med checkups alone.

    @anyanyanyanyanyany3551@anyanyanyanyanyany3551Ай бұрын
    • There are no high-end medical centers at all in Indonesia?

      @hammerfall6666@hammerfall666629 күн бұрын
    • @@hammerfall6666 There are some, but they're usually both more expensive and of lower quality. I've heard stories of people getting misdiagnosed after getting a second opinion from Malaysian doctors.

      @anyanyanyanyanyany3551@anyanyanyanyanyany355129 күн бұрын
    • My dad, who is Malaysian, had been saying that, but I was sceptical.

      @fredrickcampbell8198@fredrickcampbell819829 күн бұрын
    • @@anyanyanyanyanyany3551 Malaysian specialists typically are trained in the UK.

      @almas806@almas80629 күн бұрын
    • yeah, second best after singapore.

      @rizkyadiyanto7922@rizkyadiyanto792228 күн бұрын
  • I live in Australia , and there are many Malaysian students here in Australia , and many who do take up residency in Australia as well . These are highly educated and very friendly western accepting people . I have been to Malaysia a few times , wonderful country and wonderful people .

    @rickrimington2760@rickrimington276022 күн бұрын
    • Yeah maybe but living there permanently and holidaying or for work are two different things .

      @Susan-kd3rv@Susan-kd3rv8 күн бұрын
  • I left the USA over 6 years ago because I saw the writing on the wall. Thank goodness.

    @GlobalAdventurer@GlobalAdventurerАй бұрын
    • I left in 2003. Been living in South Korea and China since. My wife is stupid enough to think she will have a better life in the US. I am really hoping that after 1/2 a year, she will change her mind.

      @elzoog@elzoogАй бұрын
    • how are you making a living?

      @PolishBehemoth@PolishBehemothАй бұрын
    • Have you given up your U.S passport ? Give it up and see the difference.

      @george-rk1yv@george-rk1yvАй бұрын
    • @@george-rk1yv Andrew Henderson gave up his US passport. I wonder what he has to say about the "difference" you are asking to see.

      @elzoog@elzoogАй бұрын
    • Were in a big bubble right now in usa its going to get very ugly the next few decades

      @rip6200@rip6200Ай бұрын
  • I have lived in the Gulf for 15 years - first of all in Bahrain and now in Qatar since 2012. I visit UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman and many other Muslim countries on a regular basis and (with the slight exception of Saudi which was much more conservative although sugnificantly more progressive over the last few years), I could not agree with you more. As an Irish/UK ex-pat, I live, and always have lived, freely, without any hindrance whatsoever, in a benign dictatorship where the Emir seeks to do nothing other than ensure the contentedness of his citizens and those foreigners who choose to live here. Same in Bahrain and UAE. I can wear what I like, drink what I like, do what I like, go where I like, worship peacefully and without any botheration provided I don't set out to proselytize others. The key to achieving this is to recognise and respect local customs and integrate into the local population. Live among the locals and live here respectfully as you would live at home. The problem in countries like where I choose to live arises when people come here and chose to act as idiots without respect for the locals and then get offended when they are called to account for conducting themselves in a manner not befitting where they are, and most probably, from where they originate from.

    @Gaulty62@Gaulty62Ай бұрын
    • I agree with you.

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • Couldn't agree more - and this is exactly why I think most western countries, certainly the English-speaking ones, are having serious issues these days. Increasingly, at least in Canada, many people from around the world are demanding (through 'hate speech' and human rights tribunals, for instance) that their host country cater to them in every possible way. Obviously not everybody from all places, but it is a problem. And most politicians in those countries just endlessly pander to these ethnic silos and their demands, resulting in what we see today. The countries being discussed, well they just don't tolerate that nonsense. You moved, you integrate - END OF STORY.

      @yuzuchuhai880@yuzuchuhai88029 күн бұрын
    • It is because media has an agenda and they are spreading fear-mongering lies all the time 😅

      @marveler5336@marveler533623 күн бұрын
    • Do you still intend to come back to UK someday?

      @pedrolopesabolafio7771@pedrolopesabolafio777120 күн бұрын
  • Malaysians were super nice when I was there last year. I also had the health screening at Prince Court Hospital, and WOW what efficiency!

    @diannaboyd7876@diannaboyd7876Ай бұрын
  • I am an arab muslim i can say one thing this guy is smart good job !!!

    @chillout914@chillout914Ай бұрын
    • What do you think the main issue with terrorism in the general middle east/arab region of the world has most to do with? The majority of arabs I've met have been very nice and welcoming and I could never imagine them turning to or becoming disgusting terrorists or any of the people they'd associate with... so how do terroristic elements form in this region, do you think? Its something I've been trying to understand for over a decade, and I can't figure it out

      @user-xp5id1kh4r@user-xp5id1kh4r29 күн бұрын
    • @@user-xp5id1kh4r i know that you are being sarcastic. The biggest terrorists are westerners, especially your government. EEsrael just conducted a terrorist attack against a soveregn iranian embassy and killed 13 Syrian civians, yet the west didnt label that as terrorism. You guys in the US have plenty of terrorist attacks but you dont label them as terrorists because you atribute this world only to the muslims. cia and mossad killed a million people in Iraq, they have killed 40k in Palestine. What do you call this ? You want Muslims and Arabs to just sit and not defend themselves? You would do the same and the oppressor wil call you a terrorist

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • @@user-xp5id1kh4r America and the west kill 100 millions of Muslims . Just look at Iraq, yemen, Palestine. If they defend themselves you call them terrorists? Dont be hypocrite. Muslims are nice people but the west inflicted too much damage on them. France alone killed 6 million Algerians when we demanded independence. After, we took weapons against the french invadies, we were labelled as terrorists. You make those rules but we know they are useless.

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • Islamic terrorism is just a bogeyman. Islam has been around for 1400 years. Of those 1400 1100 have been periods when muslims have ruled large parts of the world. Under Muslim rule non-muslims lived side by side and had their own rights and protections. It is a fascinating history which the current powers that be have tried to tarnish and destroy. Islam is a threat to the current world order of debt and materialism. They want people to have no belief other than the belief in themselves and care for no other than themselves. They want to burden you with debt and for you to spend all of your money on pointless items. Islam would be an antithesis of this. You wouldn't know it by visiting Dubai but a true Islamic Community would function differently.

      @abydx@abydx29 күн бұрын
    • ​​@@user-xp5id1kh4r the main perpetrators of terraria in that region are the Big A and their pr0xy $'r43l. Edit: My comment was originally 5h4d0w b4nn3d, should tell you more than you need to know.

      @deathripperx1@deathripperx128 күн бұрын
  • Muslim countries are on top of my options. They are one of the safest, very tolerant, family oriented, live and let live attitude

    @isrark3@isrark3Ай бұрын
    • YOU, are HIGH.

      @lescommercantesdindochine1954@lescommercantesdindochine195429 күн бұрын
    • Just fyi, "very tolerant" and "live and let live" are two things that are definitely NOT representative of most "Muslim countries", lololol. The other two descriptors are quite apropos though! Most "Muslim countries" are very kind and welcoming... but don't fall into the trap of calling "most" of them "tolerant", lmao

      @user-xp5id1kh4r@user-xp5id1kh4r29 күн бұрын
    • Tolerant meaning non-Muslims are allowed to practice their religion, have their houses of worship, and are not allowed to be harassed or forced to convert to Islam. What kind of tolerance do you want?​@@user-xp5id1kh4r

      @yasminea7149@yasminea714929 күн бұрын
    • we are not tolerant of degeneracy, sinning and paganism no

      @suleymanthemagnificent9117@suleymanthemagnificent911729 күн бұрын
    • Safe (variable) and family oriented. Sure. But "live and let live" is not something you should expect here. We have social rules and there is some flexibility in some aspects but not others. Why? Refer to the first two things above (and more). Maybe this is intolerance for some but common sense for us.

      @msarain@msarain29 күн бұрын
  • It's funny, people get sick of the outcome of progressiveness but keep wanting countries to adopt that ideology. I lived in Qatar a bit and it was great. Have norms and structure and insisting on public decency is not a bad thing.

    @FFuser1010@FFuser1010Ай бұрын
    • Yeah that's basically my conclusion too. But the big question is, how do we move society back to healthy norms and structures without hurting anyone? It seems so hopeless - tolerance led us to immorality, justice led us to lawfare, government led us to theft, etc. Every solution becomes a worse problem.

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • @@fusion9619 Hate to be negative. But it will only get worse. At least in the west and any country that adopts the depravity. I also think it's being used as a detraction. The middle class is dying and the countries are getting poorer. If people are too busy boozing and humping, maybe they wont notice.

      @FFuser1010@FFuser1010Ай бұрын
    • @@fusion9619 Tolerating everything means you stand for nothing - no more morals. Justice only works when you follow Gods laws, not man made laws that promote gambling and drugs and profit them as a government.

      @Aksarallah@Aksarallah28 күн бұрын
    • @@fusion9619 The idea that everyone can be happy/you can hurt nobody and have a clean society is silly, it's because rules are strict in personal and public life that some countries are orderly, safe and peaceful.

      @jobloluther@jobloluther28 күн бұрын
    • ​@@fusion9619you can't turn it back unless people repent and turn back to God by themselves

      @sal_strazzullo@sal_strazzullo27 күн бұрын
  • i'm malay muslim malaysian. im always so nervous when andrew talk highly about malaysia. i worried he put too high of a standard about malaysia. even though most parts he talks about are true, malaysia as a country has its own shortcoming. you will see the goods and the bads when you stay long enough.

    @IbnuIsmail@IbnuIsmailАй бұрын
    • True2, fellow Malay muslim agreed. We are still in a long way journey before we achieve the highest standard of what we wish to be.

      @TheJohnnyJohnny@TheJohnnyJohnnyАй бұрын
    • All our countries have their shortcomings. As long as their safe

      @Viper4ever05@Viper4ever05Ай бұрын
    • As a Malaysian currently living in the UK 🇬🇧 and previously Paris 🇫🇷, obviously there's good and bad parts everywhere, but I can confidently say Malaysia starts feeling safer and more comfortable (in some ways more technologically advanced) to live in The fact that our 4G coverage is active 97% of the time travelling on the highway from Kedah to Johor is mindblowing to my European mates. I can't even get good coverage on a 8 minute train ride, not to mention frequent public stabbings, robberies, murder cases, while places that are safe and great to live in either bores you out of your mind, or on average takes up 50% - 60% of your paycheck, on top of the taxes you'll have to pay starting at ~25% to 30%. I can confidently say, aside from inter-state transport and purchasing power of Western goods, Malaysia fares pretty well in comparison 😉

      @weizenyang@weizenyangАй бұрын
    • he is protected in his bubble

      @valuetraveler2026@valuetraveler2026Ай бұрын
    • @@weizenyang Who's doing all the violence in the UK and France? The labor activists?

      @SurpriseMeJT@SurpriseMeJTАй бұрын
  • I left the USA last year . My American friends did not understand the step up in lifestyle and diverse culture. The people here are incredibly welcoming. Learning the language is my part to show my appreciation and respect of this peaceful culture.

    @Papamorely@PapamorelyАй бұрын
    • Are there good resources for learning the language?

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • Here where?

      @majedtaleb3944@majedtaleb394429 күн бұрын
    • Joho Bahru I am learning via Preply , Llingo and practicing with the locals at the gym or local businesses.

      @Papamorely@Papamorely29 күн бұрын
    • ​@@Papamorelyoh nice that's basically next to Singapore

      @sal_strazzullo@sal_strazzullo27 күн бұрын
    • ​@@fusion9619i found an amazing grammar book, available for free as a PDF, but it's for Indonesian not Malay, but since they're virtually the same language with just a few differences, you could start with that and later fix the few differences, the title is "A student's guide to indonesian grammar" by Dwi Niverini Djenar

      @sal_strazzullo@sal_strazzullo27 күн бұрын
  • I love Malaysia. If I ever decide to move back to Asia, this would be my spot. The cultural diversity is a feature, not a bug. Between KL and Penang island you have just about everything you could need.

    @dudleycarl0@dudleycarl0Ай бұрын
    • indonesia is actually better. Its much cheaper, people are very nice and lot of places to see.

      @vivekjk6729@vivekjk6729Ай бұрын
    • @@vivekjk6729 good luck communicating with the locals in English lol

      @hammerfall6666@hammerfall666629 күн бұрын
    • @@hammerfall6666 Its Indonesia you will use Bahasa Indonesia not English.

      @everythingerina9379@everythingerina937928 күн бұрын
    • @@everythingerina9379 that's why Indonesia are not a preferable place for foreigners to live in.

      @hammerfall6666@hammerfall666628 күн бұрын
    • ​@@hammerfall6666its better that way tbh.

      @rizkyadiyanto7922@rizkyadiyanto792228 күн бұрын
  • I'm in KL, you're right Andrew, it's a wonderful and open place. So safe and people are so friendly! Perfect location.

    @sj2304@sj2304Ай бұрын
    • It really is!

      @nomadcapitalist@nomadcapitalistАй бұрын
    • Certainly understand Andrew's preference for KL, given his lifestyle, kids, etc. There are many other great places in Malaysia too tho.

      @genestone4951@genestone4951Ай бұрын
    • I just searched KL on KZhead and the first results were nightlife scenes displaying the trashiest scenes I've ever seen. It looks like the culture there celebrates criminality and addiction. Quite a horrifying scene for anyone with personal standards, and definitely not a culture I want to be around.

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • @@fusion9619 you do know what you search even on KZhead is influenced by your past searches, geolocation, watched videos etc? the result wasn't absolute. try better keywords like 'live in malaysia', 'malaysia travel vlog', 'move to malaysia' and you'll get better results

      @KedaiNasi@KedaiNasiАй бұрын
    • ​@@fusion9619Pretty sure you not have been in KL but talking like you in there 😂

      @zigfxtech4940@zigfxtech4940Ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this lovely video. Your crystal clear clarification about living in a Muslim country like Malaysia is much appreciated.

    @Yasin_Affandi@Yasin_AffandiАй бұрын
    • Now he needs another video to tell muslims which western countries are tolerant

      @CosmosChill7649@CosmosChill7649Ай бұрын
    • No. He fails to mention when one can openly practice their own religion & political beliefs.

      @captnhuffy@captnhuffyАй бұрын
    • @@CosmosChill7649 Which aren't? Lol.

      @vegbeg9170@vegbeg9170Ай бұрын
    • ​@@CosmosChill7649nonebof the vwestern countries are tolerant

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
  • I have been to most of the countries in Asia as a flight attendant and in a personal capacity. I can vouch for Malaysia and I do relate to what Andrew is talking about here. It is one of the places I’d consider when I finally will get a chance to move away from America

    @user-lc9fg5hi4e@user-lc9fg5hi4eАй бұрын
  • For me, Malaysia is an amazing country with amazing people

    @brothersman524@brothersman52428 күн бұрын
  • I only visited Malaysia but thought it was a great place! Friendly helpful people in a large modern city with many interesting things to see and do and a mix of cultures.

    @gergster6899@gergster6899Ай бұрын
  • I moved to a Muslim country from Malaysia. Way better life. I will say: Westerners need to get over their superiority complex and be humble towards other people.

    @Halaqa@Halaqa29 күн бұрын
    • Like malay back home?

      @huzafah_@huzafah_3 күн бұрын
  • I'm from the UK and live in the UAE. It's great here (in my personal experience) people just get on with their business and I often forget about the culture wars back home.

    @JR-vm4tm@JR-vm4tmАй бұрын
    • UAE hardly muslim anymore tbh

      @Mrbusy498@Mrbusy498Ай бұрын
    • ​@@Mrbusy498uhhhhh UAE or Dubai

      @farooqkeita700@farooqkeita700Ай бұрын
    • @@Mrbusy498 what do you base on that? Maybe Dubai has a lot of expats but that doesn’t suddenly take a whole country out of Islam lol

      @Altioale@AltioaleАй бұрын
    • @@Mrbusy498 The UAE is Islamic law, I think that pretty much clarifies it

      @FA6682@FA6682Ай бұрын
    • @@mainscore7853 human roght blah blah blah. ORDER comes above everything else.

      @shogunero3.6@shogunero3.6Ай бұрын
  • yes. south east asian muslims in particular are very moderate and really chill about different people, different cultures, different religions etc. in fact, they are far more moderate than any fundamentalist christians or evangelists you’d encounter in deep red states in the US

    @joy1ess@joy1essАй бұрын
  • Thank you for your great work Andrew . I have acted on your advice re Prince Court, top notch ! MSU is excellent too ! I love Malaysia and its lovely , friendly people . 😊

    @dennismccarthy7032@dennismccarthy7032Ай бұрын
    • Glad you found my advice helpful! Malaysia is truly a gem with amazing people.

      @nomadcapitalist@nomadcapitalistАй бұрын
  • I am a muslim convert from malaysia. My father is chinese, mother is indiginous. I have bestfriends from all races and religions. Malaysia is very tolerant to other religions and races. We might argue a lot in social media about sensitives issues like politics, religious things but in real life the peoples avoid to talk about such issues and respect each other life. We just focus to what in front of us. Malaysians always focus to keep harmony with other peoples in real life.

    @user-ux8pn4lb1y@user-ux8pn4lb1yАй бұрын
    • You are a convert, not a revert. Its offensive to others when you use the term "revert" as you are implying we are all born Muslim. We are not.

      @globalpropertyinvestment@globalpropertyinvestment28 күн бұрын
    • ​@@globalpropertyinvestmentThat's according to your belief, but according to Islamic belief, yes everyone is born as a Muslim but family and culture shaped their views and opinions, so we use the word revert.

      @nutzhazel@nutzhazel28 күн бұрын
    • @@nutzhazel Then use it amongst yourselves and do not openly insult those of other faiths. How incredibly arrogant. The temerity.

      @globalpropertyinvestment@globalpropertyinvestment28 күн бұрын
    • ​@@globalpropertyinvestmentit's rude to ask someone to name themselves differently because it offends you. And if we remind ourselves that calling oneself Christian or Muslim or Jew also necessitates that it's within their belief that other people are doomed to hellfire, then you should also ask everyone else to stop calling themselves that as well. Your perspective is arrogant and rude, and you probably will disagree with me because you're already offended and nothing can change that, but I'm making this comment so that other people may see there's two sides to this aegument thank you

      @sabrinak.5008@sabrinak.500828 күн бұрын
    • ​@@globalpropertyinvestmentalso you can call them a convert no problem, while they can hold on to their identity as a revert, but to ask them to reidentify themselves is what is rude

      @sabrinak.5008@sabrinak.500828 күн бұрын
  • I've spent a good deal of time in Asia (Malaysia, Vietnam, Hong Kong, Thailand, et al.) Never had any cultural-related issues. Not one. It's all about respect, I have seen over and over.

    @majortom8047@majortom8047Ай бұрын
  • I’ve been to Israel, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq and all the people that I interacted with were super nice and hospitable. I felt more welcomed, cared for, and safer in those countries then I have when I was living in LA. Travel and discover it for yourself ❤

    @Annejali@AnnejaliАй бұрын
    • Have you ever tried converting Muslims to Christianity in any of those countries? Or protesting their governments?

      @karlstrauss2330@karlstrauss2330Ай бұрын
    • Agreed, Jordan, Turkey and Egypt a couple of times. Safe as can be.

      @paulfelkner6749@paulfelkner6749Ай бұрын
    • @@paulfelkner6749 have you ever attempted to build a church or convert Muslims to Christianity in those countries? Or try to write an opinion piece critical of their governments?

      @karlstrauss2330@karlstrauss2330Ай бұрын
    • They treated you nice because they wanted to bone you.

      @khaleelal-saeed8762@khaleelal-saeed8762Ай бұрын
    • thats because you represent no risk or offend their way of life. go out with a shirt saying Jesus is God and then comback to the comment section.

      @kanzzon@kanzzonАй бұрын
  • I have lived at Malaysia and singapore for 7 years for study as well as for job. Now I live in Finland and still miss those days.

    @crimsonx_@crimsonx_25 күн бұрын
  • Been in KL the past 5 months. Had 2 surgeries here. They went well and not too expensive (look into Pantai and usmc, both were very helpful). I definitely felt the doctors here weren't as quick as in Latin America if things go sideways (where they have) to run away. Some things are cheaper than Latin America some more. It's absolutely safer though and pretty much everyone speaks English. It's been a very easy place to live. Just for me personally, it's a little boring, but I've been here for medical purposes so it hasn't bothered me too much. Personally I prefer Thailand having traveled there for 14 years now, especially because I don't drink and like weed, however if I was raising a family or want a very convenient easy lifestyle minus some fun I would consider KL.

    @Palaecro@Palaecro26 күн бұрын
    • LOL you are spot on!! LIfe here is for living in peace and tranquility, mainly. Wont be the place for you given that you like weed and other forbidden stuff, peace!!

      @forevergraceful6160@forevergraceful61606 күн бұрын
  • Malaysia's a great country. For Muslim and non-Muslim alike.

    @ryanvelbon@ryanvelbonАй бұрын
  • As a Muslim who’s lived in the States and U.K. , I appreciate this message… if you respect the local culture by not imposing your ways on them; eg wear respectable cloths to work or in family areas, don’t go out intoxicated / drink drive / road rage. you’ll have a lot more to gain than lose esp if your a family man. It’s not perfect anywhere for all things but on balance if you want to escape the toxic stuff then it’s very refreshing.

    @truesay786@truesay786Ай бұрын
    • Bit rich coming from people who impose their religion on Christian countries.

      @cianog@cianogАй бұрын
    • Oh the hypocrisy

      @talebm5008@talebm5008Ай бұрын
    • @@talebm5008so US/UK culture is drink driving and wearing immodest clothes? The western culture has always been about individualism. The beauty of the UK is the fact a niqabi, a woman in a bikini, a homosexual and any colour of person can all sit together on the train without any problem.

      @qaisrashid6496@qaisrashid6496Ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@talebm5008what hypocrisy all I hear is jealousy that these countries are starting to be better options 😂

      @GigaChad-vv7oo@GigaChad-vv7ooАй бұрын
    • ​@@qaisrashid6496no. I am not comfortable with people who does not have boundaries like wearing bikini on public. Good business need comfortable environment where rules and ethics is respected.

      @cashi4225@cashi4225Ай бұрын
  • I have lived in Indonesia for the last decade, and it has been absolutely awesome.

    @SeanietheSpaceman@SeanietheSpaceman28 күн бұрын
  • As someone who tends to be socially hesitant nowadays (after COVID, etc.), Malaysia is quite awesome. My dentist was great, no problems at all, excellent English. I struck up a random convo with an Indian Burger King employee. This all happened in the same day, and I sometimes go for a year without really talking to random people while living in Europe. I think Kuala Lumpur may be my favorite place culturally speaking, so if I valued 'ease of socializing', then I would pick Malaysia. It's such an easy-going place, I quite miss it. I am fluent in Japanese and can handle Japan very well, but I think I would prefer Malaysia as a primary residence.

    @fjorddenierbear4832@fjorddenierbear483228 күн бұрын
    • ​@@missplainjane3905 Japan is at a higher level of development, but also a higher level of tax (30-40%). Japan offers nothing special to incentivize foreigners to settle there. Although I speak the language, there is no easy way for me to settle there besides finding a company to sponsor a visa. Alternatively I could maybe establish a company, but why would I want to pay 30-40% in income taxes?

      @fjorddenierbear4832@fjorddenierbear483223 күн бұрын
  • I used to work for an Indonesian owned company in Hong Kong 2016-2017 🇭🇰 🇮🇩 ❤ the Indonesian managers and owners were very “modern”, actually ultra modern, hipsters, very cultured, interesting, and wonderful to work with. I also dated some Indonesian women there, some were religious and some not religious, all were very sweet, kind, considerate, feminine, fun, golden hearted … Indonesia 🇮🇩 will be on my list of places to check out next that Andrew recommended. Previously I checked out Belgrade on Andrews advice, I was very impressed with Serbia and will make a trip back there as well. 🇷🇸 I’m American 🇺🇸 btw Not that anyone cares There’s my 2 cents, inflated to $1K ☮️

    @pAuL-nb2ud@pAuL-nb2udАй бұрын
    • Indonesiab Muslim women go out with infidels?

      @rajibhossain9918@rajibhossain991824 күн бұрын
  • Islam is really not an issue at all. I recently am staying in Batumi, Georgia and the locals here are like 33% Muslims 66% Christians, but I don't notice except a few hijabs here and there. As a former "Islamophobe" of sorts, visiting Malaysia cured my skepticism instantly. I would absolutely live there today if I could get 1% tax, because although I like Georgia, I think I may like Malaysia even better.

    @fjorddenierbear4832@fjorddenierbear483223 күн бұрын
  • I’m a proud Malaysian originally from Kuala Lumpur, living in New Zealand for almost a decade. I must say that KL is still the best in so many ways after visited many cities and countries… Your videos have also helped making me appreciate of Malaysia and KL in many different perspectives that I’ve never really thought of!

    @chongyuheng6722@chongyuheng6722Ай бұрын
    • Glad our videos could help you see Malaysia and KL in a new light.

      @nomadcapitalist@nomadcapitalistАй бұрын
  • Malaysia is amazing. I've been multiple times.

    @antoniobrasse7157@antoniobrasse7157Ай бұрын
  • I'm malaysian. I feel flattered but also worried. He's praising us so much but we are far from good enough.

    @miakamei1751@miakamei175129 күн бұрын
  • I’ve been watching your channel for about a year now, still scaling that business I mentioned, not quite ready to be a client yet but I’m currently in Kuala Lumpur to come check it out! I’ve learned so much about it from you I’ve had to take a look and later move here. Thank you for all your work, I’ve loved it here and been astounded by just how diverse, richly colourful and developed Kuala Lumpur is 🔥

    @ProbablyAtTheOffice@ProbablyAtTheOfficeАй бұрын
    • Just get a tax lawyer

      @TheGoldiniac@TheGoldiniacАй бұрын
    • @@TheGoldiniac Yeah I would but I live in New Zealand which is a regressive, authoritarian, third world shit hole thinly veneered in 1st world aesthetic. I the sooner I never have to go back the better.

      @ProbablyAtTheOffice@ProbablyAtTheOfficeАй бұрын
    • @@ProbablyAtTheOffice New Zealand? Authoritarian? I've always thought NZ is very democratic and progressive compared to other SEA nations.

      @hammerfall6666@hammerfall666629 күн бұрын
  • I have traveled extensively throughout the Middle East and the locals were always warm, kind and hospitable. Several of them were very excited and happy to meet an American I felt like a celebrity. I recall shopping for souvenirs at a Suq in Bahrain, after we had negotiated a price the proprietor pulled out chairs and invited us to have tea with him. He wasn't used to interacting with Americans and he just wanted to talk to us and ask how we lived. Those 20-min or so were the highlight of my visit there. Now granted the Middle East isn't somewhere I would consider living as I prefer tropical climates.

    @eq2092@eq2092Ай бұрын
    • It's wonderful to hear about your positive experiences in the Middle East! Thanks for sharing.

      @nomadcapitalist@nomadcapitalistАй бұрын
    • @@nomadcapitalist my current career path has me locked into USA, however, it will allow me retire early at 54. You see most of my funds are locked up in retirement accounts. An overseas retirement is a strong option so I will definitely hit you up as I get closer to that. I could go overseas now but that would most likely cause me to work until I'm 59 or 60 and delay the access to my money.

      @eq2092@eq2092Ай бұрын
    • @@eq2092 you'll be out just in time before thing fully get funky

      @farooqkeita700@farooqkeita700Ай бұрын
    • ​@@farooqkeita700lol you don't know how old he is. He could be in his 30s. The US will be a wreck within 5-6 years.

      @MH-et5sn@MH-et5snАй бұрын
    • While visiting, did you ever attempt to convert anyone to Christianity or publicly denounce the governments policies?

      @karlstrauss2330@karlstrauss2330Ай бұрын
  • One thing about Muslim, Eastern countries, Asian countries is if you are the rebellious type or provocative it’s not going to work out. Also if you are a hot head and have a short fuse. If you’re boring about finance, investing, a Bill Gates of course you’ll have no problems.

    @stephenwatson672@stephenwatson672Ай бұрын
    • It's not going to work anywhere. It ends up badly for all involved.

      @CVUA@CVUAАй бұрын
    • @@CVUA I had those moments living in New York. You get tired of the ethnic people but if you are moving to a foreign country you do have to make compromises. I would tone things down a notch in a Muslim country.

      @stephenwatson672@stephenwatson67229 күн бұрын
  • As a Malay Malaysian muslim, I feel proud yet anxious at the same time with the praises. Thank you Andrew for the sharing.

    @mutexful@mutexful29 күн бұрын
  • I agree with what you are saying about Malaysia, been there recently and truly everyone minds his business

    @mehdichehimi8529@mehdichehimi852928 күн бұрын
  • malaysia and UAE, qatar, saudi ...etc are fantastic countries to live in.

    @qutaibabs1@qutaibabs1Ай бұрын
  • I feel more unsafe in Non-muslim countries than in Muslim countries

    @722guy@722guy21 күн бұрын
    • Yeah lol 😂 trying being a women without covering your hair or some muslim countries face , trying being a women go out on your own without a chaperone, try being a women with a little bit of leg showing , try being a women not cooking in kitchen , no thanks when they treat women like second class citizens , trying being gay they get thrown of tall buildings , so on and so on .

      @Susan-kd3rv@Susan-kd3rv8 күн бұрын
    • same here. i could walk alone at night here and feel safe and nowhere near as scared as i would be back home

      @itsjiyoungie@itsjiyoungie4 күн бұрын
    • Well go to Muslim country then .

      @Susan-kd3rv@Susan-kd3rv4 күн бұрын
  • Well said Andrew. I am a conservative Christian and understand that we must appreciate people for who they and what they believe while staying faithful to the faith. People will and should choose their pursuit of God freely and that’s the best way. Thank you for the most excellent episode…

    @REASONFORTRUTH@REASONFORTRUTHАй бұрын
  • Been tuning in to what Nomad Writes even before there was a KZhead channel. Takes a bold man to be ahead of his time. Pleasure to see Andrew take his rightful place as a very based advisor

    @farooqkeita700@farooqkeita700Ай бұрын
  • Anthony Bourdain also loved that part of the world and always admired the food.

    @leemartinez2975@leemartinez2975Ай бұрын
    • RIP to his beautiful soul.

      @floatingdisembodiedhead8975@floatingdisembodiedhead897516 күн бұрын
  • As a white, Australian middle-aged woman I feel far safer in Malaysia than I did in USA and UK, and I've spent considerable time in all three countries. I'd love to retire to Malaysia, specifically Penang, but finances don't quite allow - yet.

    @JaneNewAuthor@JaneNewAuthorАй бұрын
    • Those Islamophobes will think you are lying

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
    • I can help u out with finances if u want. Please feel free to holler at me. Thanks.

      @rajibhossain9918@rajibhossain991824 күн бұрын
  • Not entirely true. There is still some religious sensitivities that happens in Malaysia which can stir controversy. Generally , people in Malaysia don’t really care as long as the foreigners don’t try to poke & make fun of other people religions.

    @zaf2643@zaf2643Ай бұрын
    • Yeah like the good doctor Naik 😂

      @joebidet2050@joebidet2050Ай бұрын
    • As an expat I have yet to wake up in a foreign country with a compulsion to make trouble there.

      @martypoll@martypollАй бұрын
    • ​@@martypoll exactly. I never understand why people who choose to go to another country and then cause trouble or incessantly complain.

      @eq2092@eq2092Ай бұрын
    • Yes of course but do u hear about it…..no you don’t.They don’t suck the rest of the world into what goes on in Malaysia.

      @jamalgreen3056@jamalgreen3056Ай бұрын
    • ​@@eq2092 exactly lol

      @farooqkeita700@farooqkeita700Ай бұрын
  • Hi Andrew, coming from a western country myself, I fully understand why you make this video. But isn't it a crying shame that you have to do this in the first place. But what you are up against are two things. 1. Most westerners do not live in a muslim country and so muslim faith is also unknown and what is unknown is scary. This behavior is imprinted in our DNA. It is part of our ancient brain which says that we have to protect our own from any foreign entity. 2. Western media (controlled by the (American) government).plug into that behavior because it serves their interest to have the people live scared. A people that is scared is easier to control. What you are up against is generations of western indoctrination. Not only the Muslim religion but also the Russians. You must be scared of the Russians. I used to be in that camp too until many years ago I learned the truth. I hope that your video will help people to be more open to Muslim countries. I was in Indonesia myself and the people are so beautiful, so warm and welcome. On my list of countries that I want to visit is also Albania. Completely different but the stories I hear are amazing. One tip to the people who read this and travel to any other country.... Leave your western arrogance at home. Ummmm, yes, you are arrogant. I was too. Let it go. Respect the country and the people that you visit. When you do, magic will happen.

    @ctrl-del630@ctrl-del630Ай бұрын
    • Very well said!

      @husseinal-khaiat1398@husseinal-khaiat1398Ай бұрын
    • @@husseinal-khaiat1398 🙏Thank you

      @ctrl-del630@ctrl-del630Ай бұрын
  • Malaysia ❤ Indonesia Greetings from Turkiye

    @mymore195@mymore19526 күн бұрын
  • Muslim countries have harsh punishments for crimes but if you don’t do crimes I don’t see why that matters to you. I didn’t read a single rule book when I went to Saudi because I don’t need to. As long as I don’t commit crimes and respect their culture they’re friendly people

    @xondeez757@xondeez75722 күн бұрын
    • It’s not that simple lol do you consider being gay a crime then , do you consider a women a second class citizen then , do you consider showing a little bit of your leg as a women a crime then do you consider a women showing her hair a crime then so on and so on , Muslim countries are backwards , I’m not saying western countries are without fault , im western and by god we have definitely got faults , but what I’m saying is islam so called crimes are not really crimes there about them controlling you , and yes to a certain extent our government try to do that but at least what I mention above is not a so called crime because to me what actually crime is murder , r@pe , gbh , robbing your house etc .

      @Susan-kd3rv@Susan-kd3rv8 күн бұрын
    • @@Susan-kd3rv being gay is not illegal. public affection is illegal regardless of gender or sexuality. a gay person can visit saudi but if you do anything in public like having sex in public then thats on you.

      @xondeez757@xondeez7577 күн бұрын
  • The great thing about a Muslim country is that you probably do not have to deal with feminism, DEI, or the woke culture in general.

    @ezkempinkemp3467@ezkempinkemp3467Ай бұрын
    • oh man, what a insightful comment!!!

      @fordhill6646@fordhill6646Ай бұрын
    • But you have to deal with oppression and terrorism

      @user-mc4xq1kn4z@user-mc4xq1kn4zАй бұрын
    • You do realise Muslim people’s from Morocco to Malaysia are amongst the most diverse groups? Inclusion is important in the Muslim world not a taboo as in America. They are more concerned with social justice and wellbeing than Americans realise.

      @Zeitaluq@ZeitaluqАй бұрын
    • ​@@user-mc4xq1kn4z your source is, western media I assume? This is a stereotyping. The US gov alone has oppressed and deleted millions of people in the last few decades, with all due respect to the American people.

      @NoorAdin99@NoorAdin99Ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-mc4xq1kn4zno

      @herlenicecold@herlenicecoldАй бұрын
  • I love Malaysia- we are flying to kl for a weeks holiday. Would like to move there one day.

    @martinevanloon2695@martinevanloon269529 күн бұрын
  • malaysia , UAE , Indonesia are very friendly i am an arab i recommend all christians or jews to visit them first and you can choose !!!

    @chillout914@chillout914Ай бұрын
    • Thank you SM even though we are very far away but Indonesian Malaysians really love Arabs, I can't express how much I love Arabs 🇲🇾🇮🇩♥️

      @AlfariziZakaria@AlfariziZakariaАй бұрын
    • Well, Malaysia and Indonesia can only accept Jews with other passports, not with their terrorist passports.

      @nutzhazel@nutzhazel28 күн бұрын
  • Andrew, you look great! Your point is well taken. Where is my favorite light green vase?

    @afsharlady@afsharladyАй бұрын
  • Been living in Dubai 2 years, previously in Tunisia, Morocco and Saudi Arabia. Never known more friendly, safer places - particularly the UAE. Compare to where I’ve been in Europe - multiple thefts, assaults and robberies in uk, Italy and Spain. Give me a Muslim run country any day

    @MacSaxe@MacSaxe29 күн бұрын
    • It's ridiculous how common theft has become in the west as well as assaults!!

      @user-yf5je1dn1q@user-yf5je1dn1q25 күн бұрын
  • Andrew, since you live in so many different places, I wonder, how many languages do you speak? How many languages are you fluent in? In how many languages do you just know the useful phrases? A video about language learning as a nomad capitalist would be interesting.

    @zar-party@zar-partyАй бұрын
    • This would be very interesting to know. Since it's really just 5 countries that use English as the de facto language. Even as the official language, English is basically used secondary. For example, Nigeria. English is the official language. However, the entire population of Nigeria uses their tribal languages as the first language they speak. All other countries speak English as a second language. Despite hearing, "everyone speaks English."

      @LostintheUS2030@LostintheUS2030Ай бұрын
    • ​@@LostintheUS2030I'm Nigerian born and raised and even though tribal languages thrive, English is the dominant language. If locals can't speak English, you are functionally illiterate. We do have our broken form of English. If a foreigner can learn the broken English, you will be more closely embraced. If a foreigner picks up a local language, you've won.

      @toonnaobi-okoye2949@toonnaobi-okoye2949Ай бұрын
  • Been to Dubai, Jordan, Syria (before the war) and Morocco. The are all wonderful people even if you don't speak their language.

    @slickperspective2745@slickperspective274528 күн бұрын
  • In Morocco right now, love it and never felt safer. Plenty of others here from the EU, Australia, USA etc. moving here, buying and investing because they want no part of their home country any longer.

    @y.v.g.b.4306@y.v.g.b.4306Ай бұрын
    • Dude, Aussie here. I lived in uae, Russia and SE Asia. How is morrocco? Prices and quality of life?

      @rozzziee6525@rozzziee6525Ай бұрын
    • Does Morocco have any systems in place that will prevent it from making the same mistakes western countries have made?

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • Absolutely, want more desert go to middle Asia,more green go to South East Asia. Do you want multicultural diversity then go to Malaysia. In Malaysia them have Indian,Chinese,Malay and the indigenous citizen. Also many expat from worlwide and you can see many worker from Indonesian, Philippinos,Thai,Indian,Myanmar,Vietnam,Nepal,Bangladesh,Syrian working there. Malaysia truly Asia.

      @zigfxtech4940@zigfxtech4940Ай бұрын
    • ​@@fusion9619Morocco is unfortunately losing its authentic conservative muslim culture and becoming less traditional and more western.liberal because the king is controlled by the west.

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
  • If you want a party capital and pick up the locals, go to Bangkok or Manila or Bali. Malaysia has some party spots but is more family oriented.

    @EzaneeGires@EzaneeGiresАй бұрын
    • Like family oriented people dont do party this is not what i will.like

      @krishgaming9080@krishgaming908026 күн бұрын
  • This video is 100% spot on. I have been living part of the year in a Muslim country since the early 2000s (for work reasons) Never had a problem there. Being in Turkey for so many months out of the year for so long I've gotten to a point I prefer it there than to my home in Philadelphia. I can't let my wife go for a walk at 12 pm here in America without being worried she'll be attacked. In Turkey if she wakes up in the middle of the night she goes for a walk without thinking twice at 2am. Considering how things have gotten so insane here in America over the past decade, I have to say there are places you can live overseas where you'll have a much better quality of life. If you're wealthy (which I'm not) but if you are, you should certainly have a plan A, B and C incase things get bad where you are. Since I'm not very wealthy I only have a plan B, can't afford homes in 10 different nations. I also forgot to mention the healthcare. The healthcare here in most cases is A LOT better than back home. If we have a health issue and we're in America, we go back to Turkey to get it looked at. We don't have to wait weeks and months for appointments and tests either. Everything gets done same day.

    @williamdavis9562@williamdavis956225 күн бұрын
  • why haven't you done an episode on Morocco? Very close to Europe. Like mexico for the usa. Many multi lingual people. lots of french and Spanish speakers. Some English.

    @gringo848@gringo848Ай бұрын
    • beaches or snow in the mountains. Tourist towns like agadir. Lots of history. Fairly open to non Muslims. Plus a 2 or 3 hour flight from a lot of Europe.

      @gringo848@gringo848Ай бұрын
  • living in Dubai last 24years after moving from San Diego California and I have no plans to ever move back now that i am married with 2 teenage boys. My top priority today is the safety of my family .

    @user-pn8pr1bs9k@user-pn8pr1bs9k27 күн бұрын
  • If someone travels to troll, they'll be disappointed! Theres no "freedom of speech," even in America. In Singapore you can't incite people or denigrate religions or ethnicities. This is a sensitivity acrosss muslim countries and muslims are even respectful to hindus. Be respectful to everyone and you'll be fine

    @alextrebek5237@alextrebek5237Ай бұрын
    • Though your ending conclusion is cute and all, history tends to be a problem. Moslems have always had problems with Hindus. Objecting is ignoring history.

      @alexanderl2061@alexanderl2061Ай бұрын
    • @@alexanderl2061 brahmins wrote that history. That is why they make muslims look bad to hide their own atrocities. You should read up on the aryan invasion that brought "hinduism" into the country

      @CosmosChill7649@CosmosChill7649Ай бұрын
    • ​@@alexanderl2061Your country, maybe. In Malaysia, not only Hindus are thriving under the Muslim-majority country, they also hold the biggest festival in the world annually since India herself no longer allowed their country to celebrate it (Thaipusam). Go sht stir somewhere else.

      @shinachikudidnthappen..mov9196@shinachikudidnthappen..mov9196Ай бұрын
    • ​@@alexanderl2061wow man. You must came to Bali. Hindu leave peacefully among muslim.

      @cashi4225@cashi4225Ай бұрын
    • ​@@alexanderl2061its the hindus that are oppressing muslims in India. I bet you are an Islamophobe

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529229 күн бұрын
  • I've been living in Saudi Arabia for 16 years, joining a family that has been here for 15 years before me. That makes 30+ years in total for us as a family. I really don't want to be in another place on earth anymore. I don't deny that there are downfalls like any country does, but the government is working really hard to make things better for anyone living in this country (and things DO get better) and that's enough for our family and many other expats.

    @UmmuFarras@UmmuFarras29 күн бұрын
    • Nice to hear that. The Islamophobes dont like positive testomopnies like yiyrs. They love hearing negative things about Muslims. Where are yiu from originally?

      @brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil5292@brahmaistrash.indiaisatoil529228 күн бұрын
  • 13 years ago i moved from UK to UAE and it's been absolutely brilliant.

    @frostbite9@frostbite928 күн бұрын
  • I don't think people realise that Malaysia is a success story in terms of peace and harmony because of Islam, NOT despite it. Our laws are derived from wisdom from Islam and has preserved culture, religion, language, social cohesion for so many different groups for generations, something the West could only dream off as it uses so much $$ to achieve even a fraction of that in the West. Realise, Malaysia doesn't need to be more secular or liberal. Islam has helped PRESERVED conservative and traditional values while also allow for tolerance and differences. Secular liberal values and laws, progressivism, did not achieve the peace and harmony that the West dreamed off but have lead to culture wars and so many social ills in the West. Why do we want to import a failed paradigm and adopt it into our country? When you move to Malaysia, do not try to make Malaysia more like the Western country you left. I'm sorry if this sounds harsh but Malaysia's harmony and safety has been a huge blessing and I'm worried for its future.

    @sisterrrr2399@sisterrrr2399Ай бұрын
    • Awesome analysis

      @nurhayatimokhtar5589@nurhayatimokhtar5589Ай бұрын
    • You nailed it 💯

      @behuman3852@behuman3852Ай бұрын
    • Not true

      @alvinandzin1982@alvinandzin1982Ай бұрын
    • @@alvinandzin1982 Care to explain your views if you have one

      @behuman3852@behuman3852Ай бұрын
    • @@behuman3852 no freedom of speech. Muslim convert to other religions, they will be prosecution. Racist still exist. They still hate non Muslims.

      @alvinandzin1982@alvinandzin1982Ай бұрын
  • I’m a British Muslim, moved to Dubai 3 years ago. One main reason is because of this whole political issues surrounding Islamophobia and the under the table prejudiced against other cultures in the UK - culture wars! Loved this video - thank you.

    @PsychicPisces@PsychicPiscesАй бұрын
  • Andrew, I am muslim Sarawakian n your *big heart* compliments about our country really sumtim' worried me tho.Sumtim' too much icing on a cake on display will *divert* the buyer ...But thank you so much tho for such *nice words* about Malaysia n we really appreciate it.

    @pegangagamakeranaitusiapak576@pegangagamakeranaitusiapak57629 күн бұрын
  • Insightful video, Andrew. The world is moving on. A lot of Americans remain mired in the past. Of course there are some Muslim countries I would avoid (Pakistan, for example) but many I would embrace (Malaysia being one).

    @arshadali2312@arshadali2312Ай бұрын
    • Malaysia is constitutionally secular and will remain so, of which I am grateful. Yes you are right in embracing Malaysia though.

      @forevergraceful6160@forevergraceful61606 күн бұрын
  • What you see in the news is just what the media wants you to see. I’m from the Dominican Republic and my experience has been that, around the world, people know about Haiti more than the DR, even think we are the same thing; and the ones that know about the DR, think that everyone in the DR lives below poverty level. Why? Because this is what they see on TV. You never know what a country is really like until you’ve lived there for some time.

    @roamingmompreneur792@roamingmompreneur792Ай бұрын
  • Malaysia and Indonesia one of the best places to live. I always many times go there to stay at both countries. And I feel safe and too many diversity. Btw I am from a European country.

    @dino6156@dino6156Ай бұрын
  • Could you make a video about good options for native Brazilian citizens? It would be very useful and probably a well-performing video given recent events.

    @costafilh0@costafilh0Ай бұрын
  • Can you do a video about countries in the china/russia orbit vs American orbit.

    @AnarchyEnsues@AnarchyEnsuesАй бұрын
  • In Malaysia just don't bother about their local politics & 3R, the rest is land of paradise.

    @lkl7045@lkl7045Ай бұрын
  • Excellent content and commentary. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    @MJFUYT@MJFUYT27 күн бұрын
  • Turkey is another great example of a country like this.

    @user-xg6yc8ho3w@user-xg6yc8ho3wАй бұрын
    • Their economy is going haywire rn

      @hideriplays2626@hideriplays262620 күн бұрын
  • I will admit I was nervous when I chose to visit Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur and Kuching, Borneo. I learned I had nothing to fear. You very definitely are surrounded by headscarf wearing Muslim women but no one is paying attention to you. People are friendly. I learned on Borneo that there are special Muslim courts and institutions that attend to influencing and policing the Muslim born population. Islam is lived by Muslims but they readily accept others to live their lives as they see fit. I even encountered a small red light district in KL. I would need to spend more time there though before deciding whether I could live there.

    @martypoll@martypollАй бұрын
    • I love sabah

      @joebidet2050@joebidet2050Ай бұрын
    • Do you feel like learning the language is necessary to live and work there? And if you wanted to learn the language, are there classes for foreigners? I love languages, but I've found some countries are very difficult to get across that initial gap.

      @fusion9619@fusion9619Ай бұрын
    • @@joebidet2050 as a Malaysian who just visited Sabah 😀, I concur. Sabah is just too lovely, even by the Malaysian standard.

      @rafiqmuhamad8251@rafiqmuhamad825129 күн бұрын
    • @@rafiqmuhamad8251 thanks reply If I were a young man I would move to Malaysia but that 12 years residence requirement for citizenship...I'd be dead at my age before I'd get it

      @joebidet2050@joebidet205029 күн бұрын
    • ​@@fusion9619no worries mate, English is widely spoken..it is not necessary for you to speak our languages unless YOU ARE FEELING/ INTEND to. Physical class of language probably offered more in the cities like KL than rural area, you can Google if you want to know more. Btw, there are apps if you want to practice Bahasa.. but my advice is dont worry much about it okay, have peace in your mind is important 😊

      @azwasaaidns3936@azwasaaidns393628 күн бұрын
  • The Malaysian bus drivers and waitresses speak better English and communicate better than 50% of those we hear on US MSM! Thank you! They are more intelligent than 75% of those in US and UK MSM.

    @user-cn5ri5he4c@user-cn5ri5he4cАй бұрын
    • I'm amazed at the number of people who have never been anywhere outside of the USA that have all these opinions about how bad every other country in the World is.

      @eq2092@eq2092Ай бұрын
    • ​@@eq2092And I'm amazed why you're shilling my country with half truths to potential nomads when you have obviously not been here long enough.

      @louis108@louis108Ай бұрын
    • @@louis108 wth are you talking about I'm an American born and raised in Brooklyn NY. I'm also a US Marine and that's how I got to travel so much early on. SMH. Facts less than 1/3 of Americans have a passport and have ever traveled outside of the USA.

      @eq2092@eq2092Ай бұрын
    • @@eq2092 Stay a while. Keep your eyes wide open. That's all I'm gonna say. Cuz that's all I can say.

      @louis108@louis108Ай бұрын
    • @@louis108 you're babbling because you played yourself. 😂🤣

      @eq2092@eq2092Ай бұрын
  • Nomad capitalist is one of the best if not the best youtube channel to refer for westerners who wishes to migrate elsewhere. Thank you Andrew for the great job you have done 👍👍👍

    @tengkuazman77@tengkuazman77Ай бұрын
    • Wow, thank you!

      @nomadcapitalist@nomadcapitalistАй бұрын
  • Even in philippines you must wear pants and shoes in government offices

    @joebidet2050@joebidet2050Ай бұрын
    • Only for Philippines people foreigners dont

      @CristinaVillegas-lo7jk@CristinaVillegas-lo7jkАй бұрын
    • ​@@CristinaVillegas-lo7jk wrong It depends on their mood and where But regional trial court strict

      @joebidet2050@joebidet2050Ай бұрын
    • Canadian here, you wear long pants to court in Canada too! Why is this an issue anywhere? It is pretty standard.

      @plizak@plizakАй бұрын
    • No shirt, no pants, no service.

      @orionspur@orionspurАй бұрын
    • ​@@orionspur😂

      @joebidet2050@joebidet2050Ай бұрын
  • Muslim here, so long as you don’t go around telling people about your private matters (whether gay, lesbian, etc…) they won’t care. Just keep it to yourself and don’t try to push it down their throats. That’s something you keep in the bedroom.

    @MaSa-bp5qe@MaSa-bp5qe28 күн бұрын
  • Another beautiful yet not very popular country is Albania. Different religions seem to be coexisting there in harmony, and no one cares. That's an observation of a visitor who went there a couple of times. I met a lot of great people there.

    @Vierett@VierettАй бұрын
    • Everyone knows that Albania is a country of Astronauts... which will fly into Orbit immediately after Ukraine...

      @AquariumRuss@AquariumRussАй бұрын
  • hey Andrew, great work. thoughts on Jordan?

    @user-fw5fd3pq6m@user-fw5fd3pq6mАй бұрын
KZhead