American, but want to live and work in Europe? Here’s one easy way how

A typical but unfulfilled dream for many Americans is to live and work in Europe, at least for awhile. Long enough, perhaps, to learn that language they’ve always wanted to learn — French, Italian, or even German.

Well, guess what. It’s a lot easier to do than you might think. In fact, you could get on a plane tomorrow and find a job in Italy in a matter of weeks, or even days (if you’re lucky).

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Why Rednecks Should Stop Worrying and Love Europe

The following article appeared in The Huffington Post in February 2017.

I was a redneck, but a year in Europe changed my life.

My hometown was Harlan, Kentucky, a coal-mining hub set deep in Appalachia. By 1989, through circumstance and chance, I gained a scholarship to study at a prestigious prep school in Massachusetts. My classmates included a Hilton, a Roosevelt and a son of the King of Jordan. Deerfield Academy offered a career trajectory far higher than I had any right to expect, if I could seize it.

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Are Europeans and Americans Drifting Apart?

The following article appeared in The Huffington Post in 2014.

Broader surveillance was supposed to be about catching terrorists, not about eavesdropping on a German leader who’s been one of America’s best friends.

Revelations that the National Security Agency tapped German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s private mobile phone have made a big impression here in Brussels and across Europe. They have given concrete form to a long-held European suspicion: that sometimes when America talks about protecting the West from terrorism, it really means conducting surveillance for its own economic and political advantage. It turns out that it’s not about your security, this example seems to say; it’s about our prosperity.

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