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Jingthing

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Everything posted by Jingthing

  1. Fancy some Persian food? Israeli food isn't Palestinian food. It's a fusion of different cultures with of course Arabic origins being important. I like the spicier Yemenite Jewish origin dishes. Israeli kids are crazy for chicken schnitzel. Does that sound Palestinian? I can understand in the current environment why some Israeli restaurants might want to play games like the Iranians did with Persian. Nobody owns foods. Does Italy get a commission for every pizza?
  2. It wasn't hit intentionally. But once hit they wanted to bury the evidence in the Caspian sea.
  3. The accidental targetting was somewhat understandable and excusable in the fog of war (although there should be no civilian aviation in such areas) but the refusal to allow landing and sending it over the Caspian Sea hoping to sink it was a crime of unspeakable evil.
  4. This video speaks to this topic and yes it is critical of both red and blue but is clear that giving power back to Trump was definitely NOT the answer.
  5. It's basically hopeless. An American politician can't even whisper economic inequality without being red baited.
  6. It is. Yiddish shvartze is now a slur though. But in the context of native Yiddish speakers speaking among themselves שוואַרץ is neutral as black. A grandfather of mine native Yiddish speaker worked with black people and used the S word. He wasn't Martin Luther King but the tone and context that he used with the word was kind of ambiguous, like in between neutral and slur. Meanings of words change over time. Mel Brooks is funny and that joke was funny. Often with comedy it works to be edgy. A comedian today wouldn't go there of course.
  7. I have worked closely with many Indian engineers on such visas. All very competent and more hard working than Americans. Interestingly though I did notice that the super star super creative most valuable employees were generally Americans and sometimes Russians.
  8. We can no longer say Trump was a fluke.
  9. The topic here is the Russian war on Ukraine.
  10. You won't accept anything negative about Putin.
  11. That is very true but as I'm in Jomtien (Pattaya) there must be thousands of U.S. expats remitting non-exempt retirement account money. So here and at other expat havens details about how the local TR offices are dealing with these very common vehicles have a better chance of being revealed before too long. Another fun thing which is being emphasized by the Integrity Legal guy. TR is NOT in the business of helping people to pay less tax. So in this example if you file traditonal IRAs in full (ignoring treating them as capital gains situations or subject to 2023 valuable exemption) they're not going to complain especially if it results in you paying tax. Which is a reason to seek expert advice on such matters, but of course, at this point it's wise to consider that "experts" don't really know enough about many details yet to be worth their fees.
  12. Lots to digest. If I decide to treat my IRA end of 2023 valuation as exempt, I would simply not file at all as that and Social Security (exempt) are my only remitting income. But of course they're seeing remittances from the banks, and if audited, unlike you, I would have very little confidence in asserting that 2023 valuation theory. I wouldn't really expect an audit at my modest levels of remittance. However, at some time in future I may need to remit a very large one time amount, and then I would see an audit as veering towards probable. I also find it very hard to believe that IRA withdrawals can validly be treated as profit/loss situations as are non retirement account investments. So I'm afraid my current still held understanding (basically from an online tax info source) is that: Withdrawals from Traditional IRAs are about the FULL amount (remitted), not capital gains. The 2023 exemption rule probably does NOT apply to retirement accounts That the income is viewed by TR as non-exempt PENSION income. My action now is that I won't do an IRA withdrawal until end of next year and before then I have a Thai tax lawyer in mind who I will consult with before remitting any of that . And/or this issue will become more clear over time with some kind of consensus info gleaned from the experience of others.
  13. That's a theory but as it's closed it's understandable that people that previously ignored Thai taxation are feeling that it may be unwise to continue to do so. As I said before, we can't predict the enforcement going forward but now if you ignore when you actually are liable for tax, the audit letter might actually come, when before this you knew it wasn't coming.
  14. I would never pay 500. My range is 100 to 180 usually with volume discount. I think there is more to it than just THC percentages. With better stuff, when they are marketed as having an identifiable flavor, you can actually taste the flavor, which is pretty cool. Plus of course the differences in strain effects. For very infrequent indulgers, that's even more reason to go for better stuff.
  15. True. But a loophole so big that TR hadn't ever bothered typical retired expats living on remittances before and I have never heard of even one even filing except if they had a presence in the THAI economy.
  16. BTW, at the shop that I found that I like, I asked about their customer base. They told me all the tourist nationalities and Thais as well.
  17. It's kind of like wine. Many people don't appreciate better wine. In fact, their palate doesn't register the difference. But many people do. The different strains REALLY do have different effects.
  18. Coincidentally I found one that I think is better than the online options. Why? Fair price. Excellent and FRESH product which you can see and smell how FRESH. I'm not into the 10 baht a gram stuff. I like higher end. I can get higher end online for maybe 30 baht less, but sometimes they ship STALE product and popcorn buds when you paid for more. At the shop I used, there was another customer who appeared to be a regular coming in as I left. So yes they're there to sell products. Obviously, there is an oversupply of shops. I guess it's an easy business to start is the reason there are so many.
  19. My understanding is that IF the worldwide income thing comes into play it would take multiple years to actually roll it out. But there is something real that we know is real for tax year 2024 about remittances. The old wonderful loophole is now gone. So far, that's all that has changed but it's potentially a very big change.
  20. I get your point. HOWEVER. in the Thai tax system you file without the need to document. Documentation demands only come IF you're audited. So having a DEFENSIBLE plan for how you are SELF determining your tax situation is required either from the taxpayer himself or a preparer. I got the First In First Out guideline from a Thai owned tax specialist company. Would it be accepted by TR on audit? I can't predict the future but following that is better than having no logical structure for your self determination.
  21. "They" already did something which you would know if you had been paying attention. If you're talking about details of enforcement, etc. regarding typical retired expats, then you're correct, we don't know the details about that yet. As far as I can tell, they haven't been auditing typical retired expats living on remittances up till now. Maybe that golden age will continue. But they have solid grounds now to look at that demographic more closely now as they did close the wide as the Grand Canyon loophole about timing of remittances.
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