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9798461831486
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Titel: Nomad Capitalist
Auteur: Andrew Henderson
ISBN: 9798461831486
Conditie: Beetje gebruikt
ou want more freedom, more prosperitv, and more opportunity to tre in the world despite more opposition and less hberty in your home country. The Nomad Capitalist will show you how by following Andrew Hendeson’s five magic words to “go where you're treated best” and implement Its EKG formula to ENHANCE your personal lifestyle, KEEP more of your money, and GROW your money by living, investing, banking, and doing business overseas. The second editton of Nomad Capitalist will give you more than ever betore. You wall get more how-to information, strategies, and countries to implement into your offshore plan, two completely NEW chapters on renouncing US citizenship and cryptocurrency, updates throughout the entire book, four completely revamped chapters on everything from love to tax savings, How-To Action Plans at the end of every chapter, and a brand new ending that will help you start your own personalized offshore journey. If you want to thrive in today's world, start here. Start with The Nomad Capitalist and discover how to go where you're treated best. ANDREW HENDERSON In 2008, Andrew Henderson began researching the best places in the world to live, do business, and invest based on his fathers prescient words: “go where you're treated best”. He later started Nomad Capitalist to share how he had lowered his taxes from 43% to 1%, obtained multiple second citizenships, spent time in over 100 countries in search of freedom and opportunity, and invested in countries all over the world. He and his team now help high-level entrepreneurs and investors to keep more of their own money, create a Plan B for turbulent times, and grow their wealth and freedom. Shuttles are for Slaves: An Introduction Dateline: Las Vegas, United States There was only one reason 1 had chosen to return to the United States that cold January evening. After a year basking in the warmth of the tropics, it was not so that US Airways could destroy my brand-new luggage (as they had), or so that I could gamble on the Strip (as Ì had many times before). It was not even for the fluffy cotton candy that graced our dinner table that evening. No, I was in Las Vegas as a messenger. My mission? To deliver a wake-up call. I stood in front of a packed conference room full of guests and declared that there was no reason for them to continue living, banking, doing business, or even being a citizen of a country that no longer served them. They had more options. I knew this because I had been living abroad discovering and enjoying all those options. Not only had I spent years observing the different ways that things are done around the world but I had also worked to benefit from everything other countries have to offer — from higher interest rates to nicer women. The past year abroad was simply an intensification of those efforts. Barely a year before the conference, I had sold my last USbased business and went from frequent traveler to full-time nomad. Tired of paying 40% or more of my income in taxes and shopping at the same Trader Joe's, I was ready to totally transform the way 1 lived and did business. Now that 1 was finally free, my mission was to find all the gaps in the world system and use them to my advantage. 1 would gr, bevond Tim Fetriss’s version of geoarbitrage — using chea production and labor in one part of the world and selling to hi. paving customers in the West — and delve deeper into the globa economy to leverage everything it had to offer. IT would visit the world's emerging hotspots, places that few were talking about, and discover the opportunities that still fewer could even imagine. In doing so, l would create the conditions for my ultimate personal freedom and economic prosperity. And that is exactly what I did. I spent all of 2013 traversing East and Southeast Asia, deliberately planning each stop in countries like Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia to fully understand where the opportunities existed in those countries — the world’s new frontiers in an Asian century. 1 met with a cabinet member in the Philippines, the CEO of Vietnam’s largest western bank in Saigon, a private equity fund manager in Cambodia, and countless startups, expat entrepreneurs, and nomads staking their claims and making their fortunes in the world’s final frontiers. Along the way, I shared my experiences and insights with a growing audience of readers, but 1 knew I could do more to help them. After a year of non-stop travel and research, 1 returned to the United States to reveal the opportunities I had discovered abroad in person. It was a simple message about how they could keep more of their money and live a better life, but the crux of the whole conference was for them to form their own game plan for everything offshore, ranging from foreign bank accounts to second passports. For the hundred or so folks who had paid $2,000 each to attend, it was a chance to learn the “secrets of the universe” as it were; a new way to live and make money that few knew about or imagined could even be legal. For me, it felt like Napoleon’s return to Paris; the story of a man exiled yet emboldened to come back one last time. That was because it would be among my last times in the United States. I had made the conscious decision — one you can make, too, if you so desire — that the grass was greener in the Malaysias, Serbias, and Mexicos of the world than where 1 grew up. Times had changed and the United States that was once lauded as the “best place to be born” was no longer so. Bearing the theme “Fight or Flight”, the conference was designed to help the audience members - who knew little about these greener pastures - decide exactly what they needed to do to survive and thrve in this changing world. Would they stay where things were famuliar but in decav, or go where the grass was indeed greener? For most people, front page stories of chaos in the rest of the world are cause enough to stay home; but not for my guests, nor for me. e realized that the real world is far different than the sensational headlines designed to incite fear and keep people from bertering their lives. Despite being more aware of the changing world than most, my guests were naturally still confused about what they should do. Should they move overseas? Open an offshore bank account? Get a second passport? Bury gold inside an ammo can in their backyard and mark the spot with an “X°’? They had come to my conference to find out. Amidst the speeches and breakout sessions designed to broaden guests’ mindsets to the world of opportunity just waiting for them, a small group of VIPs and I took to experiencing Las Vegas as “Nomad Capitalists”” in a private dining room with a balcony overlooking the city. The menu was a ‘what's what’ of hipster fare only found in the Land of the Free, culminating with a dessert of cotton candy and Oreos. Only in Sin City would a $150-a-plate joint serve up circus food for dessert. After dinner, as several of the event speakers and I sat sipping cocktails and conversing about our travels (“T disagree! Rwanda is better in the summer!”), a conference manager came through the restaurant advising everyone that the last shuttle back to our hotel was leaving. When the manager earnestly advised a libertarian raconteur not to miss the final shuttle, the man looked up from what must have been (conservatively) his sixth or seventh rum and Coke and remarked quite matter-of-factly, “Shuttles are for slaves.” ‘That took a while to sink in… “Shuttles are for slaves.”” What exactly did he mean? As our conference continued throughout the weekend, however, I realized just how telling my friend’s remarks truly were. We had all joined together to learn how to escape the fate of becoming slaves to the system. We were tired of the government telling us what to do and how much to pay. We felt uncomfortable in a country that called itself “the land of the free” but did not do much ...
Bestel direct op onze website!
Titel: Nomad Capitalist
Auteur: Andrew Henderson
ISBN: 9798461831486
Conditie: Beetje gebruikt
ou want more freedom, more prosperitv, and more opportunity to tre in the world despite more opposition and less hberty in your home country. The Nomad Capitalist will show you how by following Andrew Hendeson’s five magic words to “go where you're treated best” and implement Its EKG formula to ENHANCE your personal lifestyle, KEEP more of your money, and GROW your money by living, investing, banking, and doing business overseas. The second editton of Nomad Capitalist will give you more than ever betore. You wall get more how-to information, strategies, and countries to implement into your offshore plan, two completely NEW chapters on renouncing US citizenship and cryptocurrency, updates throughout the entire book, four completely revamped chapters on everything from love to tax savings, How-To Action Plans at the end of every chapter, and a brand new ending that will help you start your own personalized offshore journey. If you want to thrive in today's world, start here. Start with The Nomad Capitalist and discover how to go where you're treated best. ANDREW HENDERSON In 2008, Andrew Henderson began researching the best places in the world to live, do business, and invest based on his fathers prescient words: “go where you're treated best”. He later started Nomad Capitalist to share how he had lowered his taxes from 43% to 1%, obtained multiple second citizenships, spent time in over 100 countries in search of freedom and opportunity, and invested in countries all over the world. He and his team now help high-level entrepreneurs and investors to keep more of their own money, create a Plan B for turbulent times, and grow their wealth and freedom. Shuttles are for Slaves: An Introduction Dateline: Las Vegas, United States There was only one reason 1 had chosen to return to the United States that cold January evening. After a year basking in the warmth of the tropics, it was not so that US Airways could destroy my brand-new luggage (as they had), or so that I could gamble on the Strip (as Ì had many times before). It was not even for the fluffy cotton candy that graced our dinner table that evening. No, I was in Las Vegas as a messenger. My mission? To deliver a wake-up call. I stood in front of a packed conference room full of guests and declared that there was no reason for them to continue living, banking, doing business, or even being a citizen of a country that no longer served them. They had more options. I knew this because I had been living abroad discovering and enjoying all those options. Not only had I spent years observing the different ways that things are done around the world but I had also worked to benefit from everything other countries have to offer — from higher interest rates to nicer women. The past year abroad was simply an intensification of those efforts. Barely a year before the conference, I had sold my last USbased business and went from frequent traveler to full-time nomad. Tired of paying 40% or more of my income in taxes and shopping at the same Trader Joe's, I was ready to totally transform the way 1 lived and did business. Now that 1 was finally free, my mission was to find all the gaps in the world system and use them to my advantage. 1 would gr, bevond Tim Fetriss’s version of geoarbitrage — using chea production and labor in one part of the world and selling to hi. paving customers in the West — and delve deeper into the globa economy to leverage everything it had to offer. IT would visit the world's emerging hotspots, places that few were talking about, and discover the opportunities that still fewer could even imagine. In doing so, l would create the conditions for my ultimate personal freedom and economic prosperity. And that is exactly what I did. I spent all of 2013 traversing East and Southeast Asia, deliberately planning each stop in countries like Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia to fully understand where the opportunities existed in those countries — the world’s new frontiers in an Asian century. 1 met with a cabinet member in the Philippines, the CEO of Vietnam’s largest western bank in Saigon, a private equity fund manager in Cambodia, and countless startups, expat entrepreneurs, and nomads staking their claims and making their fortunes in the world’s final frontiers. Along the way, I shared my experiences and insights with a growing audience of readers, but 1 knew I could do more to help them. After a year of non-stop travel and research, 1 returned to the United States to reveal the opportunities I had discovered abroad in person. It was a simple message about how they could keep more of their money and live a better life, but the crux of the whole conference was for them to form their own game plan for everything offshore, ranging from foreign bank accounts to second passports. For the hundred or so folks who had paid $2,000 each to attend, it was a chance to learn the “secrets of the universe” as it were; a new way to live and make money that few knew about or imagined could even be legal. For me, it felt like Napoleon’s return to Paris; the story of a man exiled yet emboldened to come back one last time. That was because it would be among my last times in the United States. I had made the conscious decision — one you can make, too, if you so desire — that the grass was greener in the Malaysias, Serbias, and Mexicos of the world than where 1 grew up. Times had changed and the United States that was once lauded as the “best place to be born” was no longer so. Bearing the theme “Fight or Flight”, the conference was designed to help the audience members - who knew little about these greener pastures - decide exactly what they needed to do to survive and thrve in this changing world. Would they stay where things were famuliar but in decav, or go where the grass was indeed greener? For most people, front page stories of chaos in the rest of the world are cause enough to stay home; but not for my guests, nor for me. e realized that the real world is far different than the sensational headlines designed to incite fear and keep people from bertering their lives. Despite being more aware of the changing world than most, my guests were naturally still confused about what they should do. Should they move overseas? Open an offshore bank account? Get a second passport? Bury gold inside an ammo can in their backyard and mark the spot with an “X°’? They had come to my conference to find out. Amidst the speeches and breakout sessions designed to broaden guests’ mindsets to the world of opportunity just waiting for them, a small group of VIPs and I took to experiencing Las Vegas as “Nomad Capitalists”” in a private dining room with a balcony overlooking the city. The menu was a ‘what's what’ of hipster fare only found in the Land of the Free, culminating with a dessert of cotton candy and Oreos. Only in Sin City would a $150-a-plate joint serve up circus food for dessert. After dinner, as several of the event speakers and I sat sipping cocktails and conversing about our travels (“T disagree! Rwanda is better in the summer!”), a conference manager came through the restaurant advising everyone that the last shuttle back to our hotel was leaving. When the manager earnestly advised a libertarian raconteur not to miss the final shuttle, the man looked up from what must have been (conservatively) his sixth or seventh rum and Coke and remarked quite matter-of-factly, “Shuttles are for slaves.” ‘That took a while to sink in… “Shuttles are for slaves.”” What exactly did he mean? As our conference continued throughout the weekend, however, I realized just how telling my friend’s remarks truly were. We had all joined together to learn how to escape the fate of becoming slaves to the system. We were tired of the government telling us what to do and how much to pay. We felt uncomfortable in a country that called itself “the land of the free” but did not do much ...
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