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 #asknostr  asking for a friend

let's say a person wanted to relocate to colorado, or nearby, up in the higher parts of the mountains, and they stacked their sats and had plenty of spending power the current cycle ( shutup #58k gang ), how hard would it be to find some little place to rent and wave away the thugs with badges regarding not having official papers to live there?

you know, hypothetically speaking... 
 You have a passport to get into the country? If so, nobody is going to likely pay you any mind. Getting someone to rent to you would probably be your own difficulty. However, you can probably get passed that pretty quickly if you offered up a larger deposit. 
 nice, that's what i thought... and i would just stay in an outlying area, little places like 2000-3000 population, where i can get to know a lot of the important people 
 Smart. Cash is king, especially in small communities like that so as long as you don't cause trouble, you'll likely be treated like one.  
 yeah, i'm just gonna hodl my arse off and when the elevator goes up, probably january, but who knows could be earlier, i'm outta here

my lease here ends in december so it will work out pretty neat 
 If you don't want to be in the big cities, you might be better off in Wyoming than Colorado.  The Colorado state government has gone full tyrants, but haven't stopped Venezuelan gangs from taking over apartment complexes by force.  Also, Wyoming doesn't have a state income tax and has lower sales tax.  Of course Wyoming is a little colder and a lot windier, so you have to be tough.  Bonus is that Wyoming has so many areas where there are too few people around to care who you are or what you are doing there.  Make sure any place you find has proper water. 
 i'll keep that in mind, i've always liked the sound of wyoming from the descriptions and depictions i've seen 
 https://www.gettyimages.com/photos/wyoming-mountains

this looks like a beautiful place 
 don't you have to be crazy rich to live in wyoming tho. or is that Montana 
 according to this

https://www.nass.usda.gov/Publications/Todays_Reports/reports/land0822.pdf

it's actually the cheapest land in the USA

my guess is because water is a problem, also wind and cold, like nostr:nprofile1qy88wumn8ghj7mn0wvhxcmmv9uq3wamnwvaz7tmjv4kxz7fwdehhxarj9e3xzmny9uq3wamnwvaz7tmpw3kxzuewdehhxarj9ekxzmny9uq3zamnwvaz7tmwdaehgu3wwa5kuef0qythwumn8ghj7mtvv44h2tnwdaehgu339e3k7mf0qy28wumn8ghj7un9d3shjctzd3jjummjvuhszymhwden5te0danxvcmgv95kutnsw43z7qpq356t6fpjysx9vdchfg7mryv83w4pcye6a3eeke9zvsje7s2tuv4ssp07p4  mentioned 
 also, these features make it very desirable for me... i like cold and wind...  just to figure out how i can go about acquiring full control of a piece of land... i mean, i guess probably it's possible to register a corporation as a foreigner and put the title there... or maybe just even long term rent off someone, by the sounds of it main thing is i need a patch with a well or where i can get one bored out 
 wyoming and montana were on my list of places to drive through this summer. I'm sure they are beautiful... but maybe you should also consider Texas. I'm not even from Texas, but it really has grown on me. 

Texas has its own electrical grid, and it's close enough to Colorado that you could drive overnight up there.  There are 2 hub airports for United and American Airlines plus we are a short bus ride/drive from Monterrey, Mexico with all of the Mexico destinations. 

There's the ports along the Gulf Coast, and fertile gulf coastal plains. and then there is the Hill Country with it's cold fresh water springs in the middle of the state. Beautiful deserts to the west, and acres and acres of plateau farmland to the Northwest.

It's also very windy here, tons of windmills everywhere. It's just a hot wind from June to October, but you could drive up to New Mexico or Colorado for a break.

Maybe put Texas in your evaluation matrix... 
 amarillo maybe... dalhart...

northwest texas is a desert too, but it's got altitude, and yeah i'm totally down with the attitude of the place, especially distant from Austin and Houston

i'm fine with living in a dry place, really, just needs to be high and there needs to be accessible water that would remain accessible even without electricity... in Australia it is very common in the dry country west of the Great Dividing Range to see these iron windmill things that pump water up out of the ground, i almost forgot that

so, gonna chalk that one up on the list as well... wyoming has low land prices, texas has good culture, colorado maybe not a good option 
 If you're considering other places, there are probably quite a few areas in Nevada that foot the bill. Other benefit is no state income tax, no corporate income tax and no taxes on corporate shares. 

There are a ton of small cities in different climates, too. You can go from dry desert in Vegas to mountain climate in Mount Charleston in 30 minutes, for example. 

https://www.nevada-demographics.com/cities_by_population
 
 hmm i didn't know there was mountains in nevada but now i do...

it rather seems to be that aside from colorado, there's a lot of good parts around them mountains 
 if i have options then probably the one i'd pick out of them all is the one where owning guns is relatively easy... 

i'm not so much interested in the marauding hordes or invading scenario, honestly i doubt the modern economy can really pay for a serious war other than the one they are kicking off in eastern europe... no, it's because bullets keep working for decades, don't need power, and can net you food out in the wild, and maybe once in a while scare off some dumbasses trying to rip something off... plus also lots of fun, and something i've hankered for since i was in my mid 20s... australia is fucked up about guns, it's one of the biggest red flags, i mean literally, for any place, bad gun laws, bad place to live 
 Nevada is soooo dry. Unless it's Reno/ Tahoe area. In that case it's a very nice place. Utah is also horribly dry. 

The good thing about Texas is that it sets your expectations so low that when you travel anywhere else on vacation, you will think it's beautiful  
 Dry is a feature to me. I hate humidity (grew up in the Midwest) and also have zero allergies living here.  
 yeah, i don't mind the dry, wet you have mosquitoes and fungus and shit, parasites everywhere

and yeah i'm looking at utah also, that whole region is now on my radar... i think i need to get there, set up in a little town somewhere, fiat mine and stack sats and get my papers and a motorcycle or car or something and do a lot of driving around to see... there is green patches everywhere, around the edges of mountains, and the dry places are still good too, a bit easier, i really think it's something that has to be seen before you know where you are gonna plop yourself

the more i think about it the more it seems obvious this is where i'm heading... madeira is nice but i would love to live in a country where english is the spoken language, and somewhere that i can easily get into guns is a huge plus, also, access to beef... that's another big one... the entire midwest is beef country, above all else 
 that whole region is great for road trips in the winter. i never liked road trips before driving in New Mexico, AZ, Colorado. and to lesser extent Nevada/Utah. 

the vistas are never ending. Colorado especially has a different biome/landscape every 1 hour that you drive. 

New Mexico has a special place in my heart although it's poor compared to the rest.

I drove from Tahoe to Reno to Salt Lake City, Reno to Salt Lake was least favorite part of the region. It got really interesting again south of Salt Lake CIty in Bryce Canyon. 
 I just happen to own the largest motorcycle dealership in Wyoming. 
 wellll... i want something that can do the highway fine but can also go offroad, it doesn't need to be powerful, so long as it can actually move at some velocity on a steep slope

when it comes time for me to make a move, i'm sure that i could be assisted by you 
 maybe you can point me somewhere to help me do all the skinner pigeon dances that get the seeds to come out of the feeder, like long term residence and drivers licences? 
 My husband really likes the Kawasaki KLR650.  It is good on-road and off-road and has a very large gas tank, which is handy when it is a long ways to the nearest gas station.  The only pseudo-problem with it is that it is a little on the tall side.  It is taller than I am comfortable with, so if you have short legs, you might prefer something else. 
 KLR is a very small tractor disguised as a motorcycle 
 i'm not really in so much of a hurry to need 650, honestly, a 250 4 stroke is enough for me, i had problems with a kinda heavy 50cc and hills but i don't think a 250 is gonna totally choke on most of the hills i might encounter, and worst case, fuck it, turn around, maybe there's a more gentle slope to the same destination, or not

i'm not young enough anymore to care, and wasn't that excited about going fast, every time i go fast i have flashbacks of every time i've slid on gravel and tarmac in my life and i am fine to go a bit slower... just as long as it stops fast and isn't too heavy i'll keep my eyes open 
 i recently had a tumble on some steep concrete "road" near me a few weeks back and i'm just glad i didn't break any bones but it took 6 weeks for everything to get back to normal, i just don't feel the need to push those kinds of boundaries at all, it was never in my temperament, and whenever i got possessed of such stupidity it tended to end up being regrettable 
 Wyoming is Constitutional carry, so no permit to carry a gun as long as you are not a felon.  (I'm not 100% on the rules for non-citizens) 
 honestly, i'm loving the altitude and the sparse population alone, having good gun laws is weighing heavy towards wyoming as well... i was uncertain because i knew texas was good but then i looked at texas high altitude terrain and it's just as dry and shitty, and colorado is shitty for guns, and afaik nevada is shitty for guns as is new mexico... so it's now firmly in the lead for my choice, as is Rock Springs and Green River

i'm just gonna try and pick out a reasonable spot to land in and set up, and get myself my legits and a vehicle (probably a motorcycle) and roam a lot to see what is around and follow my heart 
 Depends on where you live.  The Jackson Hole area is one of the most expensive in the country, but there are areas that are dirt cheap.  The only thing you have to do is verify that water is available.  You can buy vast acres of land for almost nothing, but they don't have water. 
 i'm looking around those parts, and Rock Springs seems like a reasonable starting point for me... definitely south west is the part of the state i'd be looking at