No Hiding And No Running With Delta

Bajo, I love your double-standard! You admonished expats before for buying Dollars on the black market because it was illegal. Then you boasted about travelling to Miami (?) and put everything on your Arg credit card because you got a really good price on exchanging your Dollars.

Then we find out that you charge your expat clients in Dollars! The quote that we heard from a person who actually used you was U$3.000 and with no promises to actually get them their Arg citizenship. So we are to believe that you take those Dollars that you make from your law practice and change them at the official rate in the bank? Hahahahahahaha! No, you didn't do that.

Vende patria, no?

Here is the double-standard in the airline ticket case: Argentine govt officials (and you, of course) tell everyone that they should stop thinking in Dollars and only think in Pesos. This is Argentina. The official currency is Pesos. Then they themselves do something completely different. I earned Dollars in my job in the US. That money is in my US account. I pay for my airfare on a US airline that originates in Buenos Aires with my US credit card that is paid with my US Dollars. What right does the Arg government have to that money? It wasn't earned in Arg. You can't have it both ways - unless of course you are a government official or the elite who earn in Dollars.

Thievery. 100%
 
Nikad, Argentina can tax and you just don t like it.

You disagreement doesn t mean that the tax is illegal.

Thieves? I didn t know you were anarchist.

Admit that you just don t like it.

I suspect her biggest problem with Argentina taxing is the fact that the government gives little back to the people it taxes and instead benefits personally and politically from those mismanaged funds. The richer people have means of avoiding a lot of the problems the government creates while the poorer suffer for it.

Surely doesn't make her an anarchist. I'd say it makes her a rational human being.

Maybe the taxes aren't illegal, but in my opinion, and many people's, they are immoral. And here I can't help but reference things like "invalid foreign debt" and whatever other propaganda the current government uses to excuse its wrong-doing while painting itself lily-white (or should I say lily-pink?)

Of course, personally, I think all governments are pretty much the same in many ways and the majority of people are hoodwinked...
 
paying taxes 'should' be a source of pride. There is legal and than there is moral. Of course it is legal as they write the rules(laws) of the game. They are after all the biggest gang in town. But that does not make it 'right' at all. To take something that belongs to someone else without consent is called stealing. Don't matter who you are. But that is a 'moral' view. On the legal side of things they can do whatever they want, as it is a fiction. Some might argue that 'morals' are a delusion. Anyways...

"The only winning move is not play the game" - Joyce Riley
 
Bajo, I love your double-standard! You admonished expats before for buying Dollars on the black market because it was illegal. Then you boasted about travelling to Miami (?) and put everything on your Arg credit card because you got a really good price on exchanging your Dollars.

Then we find out that you charge your expat clients in Dollars! The quote that we heard from a person who actually used you was U$3.000 and with no promises to actually get them their Arg citizenship. So we are to believe that you take those Dollars that you make from your law practice and change them at the official rate in the bank? Hahahahahahaha! No, you didn't do that.

Vende patria, no?

Here is the double-standard in the airline ticket case: Argentine govt officials (and you, of course) tell everyone that they should stop thinking in Dollars and only think in Pesos. This is Argentina. The official currency is Pesos. Then they themselves do something completely different. I earned Dollars in my job in the US. That money is in my US account. I pay for my airfare on a US airline that originates in Buenos Aires with my US credit card that is paid with my US Dollars. What right does the Arg government have to that money? It wasn't earned in Arg. You can't have it both ways - unless of course you are a government official or the elite who earn in Dollars.

Thievery. 100%

You are so low. Well, that's you.

Tell me, when you were a child, you used to dream about being a cop or a priest, or both? Because when you behave as both you are pathetic.

Your ignorancy, however, has no limits.

Lest's see:
1) Contracts in usd are forbidden only when they are about renting appartment for living;
2) The commercial chamber already stablished that a contract in usd has to be paid in usd or in pesos at the price of contado con liqui: 10.92 today.
3) You discuvered that I do contracts in usd? Sherlock, this is not a secret, in fact it is legal.
4) You discovered that I charge 3000 usd? You are an awkful Sherlock then, I do charge over double that amount thanks to you. I used to charge less to the member of this forum but thanks to you I realized it was a mistake and discriminatory.
5) That i don´t promest success? Of course, to promest success is a seriuos ethics failure. The bar association already enacted a precedent about how ethic do I work, would you like to read it?
6) Airtickets? As far as I pay taxes I can spend with my credit cards abroad. I got benefits for following the book, so what? Envy?
7) The AR government has something called sovereignty on its territory and if you live here, they can tax you. If you pay ganancias then you can get the 35% back. But, do you pay taxes on your work? I really don´t mind, I don´t play to be the morality censor of the internet like you.

But I didn´t read any argument about the topic, perhaps this is because you are clueless, perhaps...not. it is for sure.

One thing I have been doing during this years in this forum is to make fall down some childish euphemisms like "perma-tourist" or "Colonia run". However, if you like to continue living based on your fairly tales, go on and feel with your moral superiority ¿? based on fairly tales.

Taxes sucks? yes, of course. And high taxes are the side effect of living in a country with a strong debt.
 
I suspect her biggest problem with Argentina taxing is the fact that the government gives little back to the people it taxes and instead benefits personally and politically from those mismanaged funds. The richer people have means of avoiding a lot of the problems the government creates while the poorer suffer for it.

Surely doesn't make her an anarchist. I'd say it makes her a rational human being.

Maybe the taxes aren't illegal, but in my opinion, and many people's, they are immoral. And here I can't help but reference things like "invalid foreign debt" and whatever other propaganda the current government uses to excuse its wrong-doing while painting itself lily-white (or should I say lily-pink?)

Of course, personally, I think all governments are pretty much the same in many ways and the majority of people are hoodwinked...

El queso, Anarchism is a political philosophy that advocates stateless societies often defined as self-governed voluntary institutions which (the first consequense is to do not pay taxes).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchism

High taxes with little return is the consequense of a big external debt to be paid.
 
paying taxes 'should' be a source of pride. There is legal and than there is moral. Of course it is legal as they write the rules(laws) of the game. They are after all the biggest gang in town. But that does not make it 'right' at all. To take something that belongs to someone else without consent is called stealing. Don't matter who you are. But that is a 'moral' view. On the legal side of things they can do whatever they want, as it is a fiction. Some might argue that 'morals' are a delusion. Anyways...

"The only winning move is not play the game" - Joyce Riley

http://www.lavoz.com...na-en-las-vegas

Afip caught this people who went to see the box fight to the US and they where monotributistas but they spent about 30.000 usd in this trip.
One of them was a lawyer who owns a porsche (a very expensive car in this country). However, he declared almost the minimum wage.
Nobody likes to pay taxes, specially those who choose this country to avoid paying them.
 
Then give me anarchy any day, over what we have now.

Somalia and many other african countries can provide you real anarchy. However, it might not like it. Venezuela is also a good destination for anarchy.
 
I yet have to see the actual rule that states that a tourist NOT buying his ticket in Arg has to pay invcome tax advance in usd or an Arg resident buying his tix abroad with foreign funds... it just doesn´t exist. The rule says that foreign aliens buying tix in Arg have to pay in dollars and pay the tax. Nothing is said about the former.... all very strange....THIEVES!
 
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