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mvdf

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Everything posted by mvdf

  1. XAU is the safest of safe havens. Predicate currencies (those pegged to historically stable fiat and metals) are not immune to devaluation and inflationary fluctuations. If it must be fiat, CHF has been historically and traditionally the planet's refuge currency. If you want a second opinion, ask someone innately conservative with money.
  2. That's truly sad. He literally threw it back at you with that look of disdain?
  3. Once a marked man, always a marked man. Nowhere for fugitives to hide, even in the most remote corners of this planet. It's just a matter of time and GPS coordinates.
  4. Will your country's embassy accept what you wrote above as proof of funds? Or am I asking a rhetorical question here? When we Asians apply for a visa to visit your country, we can't just prance into your embassy with a bagful of EUR or USD and show it to the visa officer. ATM slips and screen shots of bank account balances are equally frowned upon. They want a genuine, original and current document and I quote verbatim from a consular source: Additionally, it is important that all of your documents are original, in English (or an official translation attached), and official. Your bank documents should be on bank letterhead with the name of the account holder, account number, and the total amount of funds indicated on the forms. Why then should the Thai embassy adjust and adapt for your excellency's convenience?
  5. The P40 supports it. And almost all iPhones. https://www.airalo.com/help/about-airalo/what-devices-support-esim
  6. Yes, they are quite strict now with account creation and reactivation processes because of a rising incidence of fraudsters and identity thieves using stolen credentials to create accounts which they then use for scams. Banks will now want you to come to the nearest branch so they can sight the original passport or driving licence and also confirm that the person showing it matches the person named and pictured on it. One solution is to go to Singapore (preferred than HK) and request for an identity reference. This will be channeled by HSBC to the UK internally or via the SWIFT messaging system.
  7. If you have an iPhone or any phone that supports eSIM, there is no need to post, you can instantly get the SIM card and install it. https://www.airalo.com/thailand-esim The eSIM comes with a Thai number. Alternatively, yes, you will need to find someone who would be willing to buy the physical SIM card, activate roaming and post or courier it to you. That person must be someone you can trust because the SIM can be duplicated or renewed anytime, thus giving that person access to your OTP which, as you know, can be used to access your account and perform transactions if he or she is privy to your account number and mobile banking PIN or password.
  8. The play-of-words talent of some forum members here is unparalleled. The English language has truly evolved and matured.
  9. I hope so because other countries in the west also target us Asians for such atrocities.
  10. i'll hazard a guess... errr... perhaps by "decorating" someone's head with plastic bags?
  11. They must have misspelled it. I know they rank highly in Defamatory Arts.
  12. Boiler room strategy. Call and call and call until one naive and gullible fool falls for it is the scammer's motto.
  13. The title is wrong, deceptive, defamatory and misleading. The gang is not Cambodian. It is a Chinese-led, Chinese-staffed, Chinese-managed and Chinese-controlled phone scamming operation.
  14. If this happened in the west, the first thought in everyone's mind would be a robbery in progress. Ramming or crashing a car into a jewellery shop is an established MO of criminals. Luckily nobody made premature assumptions by shooting or hacking her to bits before asking questions.
  15. Bank staff are always on edge when interacting with callers. "cannot" is their standard go-to response for almost all requests placed via calls. Access to mobile banking would be the only way. As for using a letter of authorisation, power of attorney or similar documents, this can be very time consuming and costly to achieve because of this fixation on sighting documents affixed with seals or stamps, in Thai language and in their original form. A document prepared by a foreign notary public might not convince bank staff to act on the instructions within that document. Irrelevant as it may seem, the alternative would be to transfer from your German bank to your Thai account. I have transferred several times by SWIFT from my DKB account in Berlin to my Kasikorn account. Arrived and credited the following day.
  16. I know, i know. A veritable truth there. A country of meddlers. A unique and ubiquitous trait of people who simply can't mind their own business. Or genetically predisposed to Karenitis.
  17. I have credit cards with KBank and ABA (Cambodia). Both are secured cards or cards issued on the basis of blocked funds as a form of security or collateral. The funds are in THB and USD fixed deposit accounts respectively, locked and inaccessible for as long as the cards are active and in the cardholder's possession. My credit limit is 80% of the fixed deposit amount (KBank) and 90% for my ABA card. As for Thai banks issuing cards to foreigners on the basis of a creditworthiness assessment alone, they are probably quite strict and might start with a cautiously low CL to mitigate risks. I also have DKB and Lufthansa credit cards in Germany which are "real" credit cards or cards issued on the basis of credit scoring. I don't use my German cards for online transactions though and I use them sparingly in this part of the world because I am scared of fraud issues. Disputing spurious transactions can be a nightmare, especially because DKB is a branchless direct bank.
  18. To prevent calculating and manipulative foreigners from gaming the system. Those who constantly think about finding loopholes or ways to bypass rules properly followed by other foreigners.
  19. False hopes. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2022/04/06/national/lift-entry-ban-106-countries/ "... except tourists"
  20. Worst nonsense I ever read. He should be fired and sent back to his village as a wood chopper. Only country with such a requirement. The hypocrisy stinks to high heaven. Trying to portray a welcome! welcome! oh do come! approach towards foreigners but once they are here, the opposite attitude prevails.
  21. Nowadays everything/anything can be de-bolted. Just a matter of time, opportunity and tools.
  22. Just watch how she enjoys every luscious and tasty bit of all those scolopendra she grilled.
  23. Embarrassing. Makes me cringe, cold sweat running down my back from the shamelessness and brazenness of this thievery. And hid the wares where? Ok that was a rhetorical question.
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