OK, let me answer this as a native English speaker, born in Britain, who took a school exchange to Russia in 2012. 99% of College/University level students in Russia can converse fluently in English.. Some are more fluent than others. But I did not meet a single one, that could not speak English to a good level. Today, apparently, 34% of Russians are fluent. This does not surprise me. I would say that’s accurate. I would say the majority are youth in the major cities, but English is understood by almost all of the educated in Russia.
What type of assets do you have to have to go there? And is there any requirement for a verbal or written Russian proficiency despite that many speak English? Really curious
Regions in Russia have quotas for temporary residence permits, taking into account local need for qualified professionals. You can be on a work permit or temporary residence permit without a language exam. But to become a permanent citizen you have to have been a resident for five years and pass an exam on the Russian language and Russian history - https://www.icenter31.com/Russian-Citizenship-Test/
Where would you go? We are still #1 as far as I can tell. And no other country is making it easy for us to get in
Move to Russia
Putin is super based
Putin loves his country
Russia declared independence from the Rothschild dollar
Russia banned vaccination mandates
Russia is not allowing refugees
Russia is a Christian nation - "Christianity in Russia is the most widely professed religion in the country."
Russians believe that homosexually is morally unacceptable, bans foreign same-sex couples from adopting Russian children
Russia seeks to ban trans, bisexual, abortion and polyamorous propaganda
Russian woman are considered the most beautiful in the world
If you work remotely at night and earn a US salary, you will live like a king in Russia
Many Russians speak English according to this guy:
https://www.quora.com/Do-many-people-living-in-Russia-speak-English
What type of assets do you have to have to go there? And is there any requirement for a verbal or written Russian proficiency despite that many speak English? Really curious
Regions in Russia have quotas for temporary residence permits, taking into account local need for qualified professionals. You can be on a work permit or temporary residence permit without a language exam. But to become a permanent citizen you have to have been a resident for five years and pass an exam on the Russian language and Russian history - https://www.icenter31.com/Russian-Citizenship-Test/