James Cameron appeared on a recent episode of “In Depth with Graham Bensinger” and spoke bluntly about relocating to New Zealand, where he both lives and spent years working on the “Avatar” movies.
“After the pandemic hit… [New Zealand] had eliminated the virus completely,” Cameron said about his reason for getting out of the U.S. “They actually eliminated the virus twice. The third time when it showed up in a mutated form, it broke through. But fortunately, they already had a 98% vaccination rate. This is why I love New Zealand. People there are, for the most part, sane as opposed to the United States where you had a 62% vaccination rate, and that’s going down – going the wrong direction.”
“Are you kidding me? Where would you rather live?” Cameron continued. “A place that actually believes in science and is sane and where people can work together cohesively to a common goal, or a place where everybody’s at each other’s throats, extremely polarized, turning its back on science and basically would be in utter disarray if another pandemic appears.”
When Graham Bensinger noted that the United States is still “a fantastic place to live,” Cameron questioned him by saying: “Is it?”
“But New Zealand is just stunningly beautiful,” Bensinger noted, to which Cameron replied: “I’m not there for scenery, I’m there for the sanity.”
Cameron appeared on the “The F—ing News” podcast one year ago and revealed that his New Zealand citizenship was “imminent” at the time. He also criticized what America had become under Donald Trump, saying: “I see a turn away from everything decent. America doesn’t stand for anything if it doesn’t stand for what it has historically stood for. It becomes a hollow idea, and I think they’re hollowing it out as fast as they can for their own benefit… There’s an innate respect and a demand for respect [here]. Everybody has this kind of equal status in terms of person-hood. And I love that – that’s what I wanted my kids to experience.”
The Oscar-winning director added that he feels “safer” in New Zealand these days, noting: “I certainly feel like I don’t have to read about [Trump] on the front page every single day. And it’s just sickening. There’s something nice about the New Zealand outlets — at least they’ll put it on page three. I just don’t want to see that guy’s face any more on the front page of the paper. It’s inescapable there, it’s like watching a car crash over and over and over.”
Watch Cameron on “In Depth with Graham Bensinger” in the video below.