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13
Your worst food poisoning?
That's the sort of picture that winds up as a Meme. -
162
Report Cannabis Chaos: 12,000 Thai Shops Face Closure Under New Rules
12000 shops facing closure? It means the loss of livelihood to so many(both the store owners and their workers). Another reason why anti-Pheu Thais on the increase. -
32
Crime Chinese National Caught Using Lost Mexican Passport at Bangkok Airport
Well, those of us with educations are aware that Asian features are not limited to just the few well known Asian ethnicities. -
37
Report Thailand’s Car Market Faces Turbulence Amid Dealer Closures
Businesses are not as foolish. Nobody gives out a loan without looking at the National ID card number which never changes from the day it is first issued to a citizen. The name on the card can be changed for a few Baht, not the number. -
392
Crime Swedish Man Beaten by Girlfriend & Mob of 10 Men in Soi Buakhao, Pattaya
not everyone can be high class like you. -
18
Proposed Revision to US Remittance Tax in BBB
I read several other articles on the remittance tax, and it appears the tax will also apply to US citizens. The remittance tax will start on Jan 1, 2026. The following are quotes from a few different articles. "Earlier versions of the bill included higher tax rates and specifically targeted illegal immigrants sending money outside the U.S. The current version of the "big, beautiful bill," however, imposes a 1% fee only on cash transfers, not electronic transfers, sent to other countries. U.S. citizens who want to send cash to other countries will also be subject to the 1% tax." "Remittance Tax - The Senate version was an improvement over the House version as it would not impose the tax on remittance transfers made by banks or bank cards. The final Senate version imposes the tax at 1%, down from 3.5%, a further improvement. The tax will still impact Americans abroad who don't use bank accounts, Credit cards or Debit cards to move money abroad." "The OBBB also includes a remittance transfer tax at a reduced rate of 1% that imposes an excise tax on certain cross-border remittance transfers, effective for transfers sent after December 31, 2025. The tax applies to both U.S. and non-U.S. citizens."
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