Bullet fired in celebration narrowly misses woman in Sri Banphot
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Biden pardons Fauci, Miley and Jan 6 committee staffers!
And in tomorrows news: "Donald Trump signs an executive order demanding investigation and indictment of Dr. Anthony Fauci, Gen. Mark Milley and all the members of the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol" Crystal balls 🙂 I am surprised Biden managed to say the word pardon never mind remember or pronounce the names of those he has pardoned! -
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Village People to Perform at Trump’s Inauguration Celebration
Your internalized homophobia isn't a sexy look. It is okay to be gay. These threads do amuse how the latent homophobes lefties feel the courage to say what they fell though. -
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Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income
Number 7 is the one I warned about long ago, translating all documents to Thai?! Talk about a nightmare in the making! -
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Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income
PN90 Personal Income Tax Return for taxpayer with income not only from employment PN91 Personal Income Tax Return for taxpayer with only income from employment under Section 40 (1) of the Revenue Code Only (1) Income derived from employment, whether in the form of salary, wage, per diem, bonus, bounty, gratuity, pension, house rent allowance, monetary value of rent-free residence provided by an employer, payment of debt liability of an employee made by an employer, or any money, property or benefit derived from employment. Makes sense. PN91 is the short form, only for employment income. Under the rules, pension is considered derived from employment. You have no other income streams? No Thai sourced interest or dividends? No remittances of capital gains or dividends from outside? Maybe you can answer some of our questions: Is your pension non-assessable, excluded by DTA? If so, if entered on your PN91, how do you deduct it? Do you pay any tax on your pension in your home country? If so, how do you claim a credit for foreign tax paid? -
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Thai tax tangle: Expats warned of new rules on overseas income
The small print at the bottom is interesting where it states: It has me thinking the view of some of us that remitted pension income noted in a DTA as not being taxable in Thailand , but only taxable in the pension source country, does not need to go on a Thai tax return. Further if that is one's only income then there is no need to submit a Thai tax return. ...and it goes on a bit to provide some ?? guidance where a DTA provides for both countries (source & Thailand) to tax a pension.
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