Six police officers relieved of duty for alleged ties to Tuhao’s criminal activities
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2,958
Thai gov. to tax (remitted) income from abroad for tax residents starting 2024 - Part II
This is good for those from the UK - but as you note further , many of us are not from UK. However I would like to make a minor point here. Many read 'Government pension' and confuse that with a pension to a government civil servant with a pension given to a qualified UK citizen or UK resident. The differences between "government" pension and "state" pension are lost on many. So just referring to a DTA can often simply not clarify due to there not being a full definition of the terminology used. Thanks for the offer. The German-Thai DTA is actually more of interest to me at present than the Canada-Thai DTA - although I am curious about both, but not in need of immediate help. When 161 and 162 came out, before the end of calendar year 2023, I made an effort to bring into Thailand enough funds to last me for more than a few years in Thailand - while the tax situation became more clear. So at present - I bring no money into Thailand. Also, as noted I may go to the Phuket tax office next year and sit on their door step until they give me a TIN. But a local Phuket RD official made it clear that for the tax year 2024 as long as I brought no foreign money into Thailand (and given my Thai sourced income too small), that I did not need to file a Thai tax return for the tax year 2024 nor did he want to give me a TIN. I obtain foreign income in Canada and in Germany (which I am not bringing into Thailand at present) so I need to be aware of both German and Canadian DTAs with Thailand - and further I obtain a pension from a European government organisation (where at the moment I leave that money in Europe), which as a European Government is not a singular country when dealing with Thailand. Possibly the German DTA applies there (as I lived in Germany at the time when I qualified for that pension) and possibly not. Also my being on an LTR visa may (or may not) exempt me from filing a tax return IF I were to bring money into Thailand - and maybe it won't exempt me from filing a tax return IF I bring money into Thailand. Again, I have the luxury to sit this out and wait. Possibly the only thing to make me want a TIN sooner, is some income I will get on a life-insurance/investment/pension plan that comes to maturity in Germany next year (2025 tax year), and I need to decide how to handle that tax wise (as it may be to my taxation benefit to have a Thai tax # then for the year-2025 tax year). -
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Where do you buy Ivermectin for human use at reasonable price in Thailans
Yes there are many medical papers published now about ivermectin helping to fight cancer especially prostate cancer -
381
Is Bitcoin going to zero?
Who knows what it could be by early next year. If more countries adopt Bitcoin it could rocket. Max Keiser thinks 100k+ by the end of the year. But he was well out of it the year before, when he said it would go to 220k. However, he redeemed himself a little when he encouraged investors to buy when it was under 20k. -
144
Best cheap purchase you have made
Jesus! The bands give you super-strength? -
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Increase in food poisoning in 2023 to 2024 - supporting statistics?
I had more food poisonings this year (3) than in the last 20 years. What's changed? 1. I got old. 2. I still like street food. But the stuff that, 20 years ago, used to be regular food for most people here, and was reasonably clean, is now clearly (in Bangkok) a very low-class rarity. One coconut sweet I bought was clearly rotten, I threw it away (saved me from a 4th food poisoning this year). City Thais nowadays eat at Pepper Lunch, Fuji, Chesters and all the other crappy "food" joints, just look at Terminal 21 or Emquartier. -
117
Sainsbury's Faces £140 Million Hit from National Insurance Hike, Warns of Rising Inflation
Ah the personal attack. -
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Sainsbury's Faces £140 Million Hit from National Insurance Hike, Warns of Rising Inflation
Identify the tax increases on working people. -
117
Sainsbury's Faces £140 Million Hit from National Insurance Hike, Warns of Rising Inflation
I was wondering if you were an idiot based upon your previous posts but now I've decided.- 1
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