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19 votes
Accepted

How travel-ish do questions have to be?

Without seeing your specific questions, I'd guess that Expatriates Stack Exchange is a better choice for them. Their help center states: Expatriates Stack Exchange is for people living or intend to ...
Glorfindel's user avatar
  • 6,065
10 votes
Accepted

Should we ask for US visa refusal letters?

Phantom is right. However, US refusals do, I believe, cite a section of the immigration law under which the refusal was made. This generally adds little information, but it might be helpful to know in ...
phoog's user avatar
  • 137k
9 votes

Should we ask for US visa refusal letters?

A long time ago Mark Mayo told me that an answer that says there is no answer is still a bona fide answer by virtue of stating such. Despite having no knowledge of matters arising under US law, I ...
Gayot Fow's user avatar
  • 85.4k
7 votes

Adding "post this on Expatriates" guidance to the ask page

Some details could be used from the expats what's on-topc help page. Shortening the first few of the "what to ask" points might be good enough and not too long: If your question is about ...
SztupY's user avatar
  • 3,245
2 votes
Accepted

Should I re-ask my question on expatriates?

In general questions should not be cross-posted. If a question belongs on another SE site then it's up to the moderators to handle the migration. Honestly I am torn on this. Questions an co-working ...
JoErNanO's user avatar
  • 52.7k
2 votes

Should I re-ask my question on expatriates?

IMO your question was okay since it basically asks about coworking spaces, which is on topic. Your period of stay is only tangential to the question, not an important part of it. I'd say it should be ...
JonathanReez's user avatar
  • 82.5k

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