[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

How does one find such an advisor? Do you have a trustworthy website that has a list of them, with reviews?

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Expenses are kept low by living in a low-cost-of-living country and volunteering several months per year at intentional communities with work-trade programs. Usually you do 20 hours of volunteering (per week) in exchange for free food and accommodation. Great way to travel, meet cool people, and lower your annual expenses.

My plan is to rent out the condo half the year, which should cover condo and tax expenses. I'm still looking, but I think the combined taxes & fees would be <$4,000 per year, and I can charge $1,000 per month if I get a condo in a good location (in South America, taxes are very low). I don't expect passive income, but I do think it'll pay for itself and give me (and my friends) a place to sleep for free whenever I visit the city.

Also you probably don’t want most of the money in the condo, so you may have a mortgage as well.

I don't like debt. I'm currently thinking of putting $500k into the land and $300k into the condo. What would be the benefit to getting a mortgage?

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Correct about credit unions, but not about the bitcoin earnings. I was denied before I was asked the source of my income or even how much I'd be transferring-in. This was an application just for a standard savings/checking account.

Unless the AI that is denying me learned that I used to work for a company that does cryptocurrencies. Or read my blog and saw the word "bitcoin" and put me in a "high risk; deny" bucket. It scares me to realize that's possible in 2024 :(

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

https://2fa.directory/

I have 3 banks that use TOTP. It's common in credit unions.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

I started a business a few years ago :) I don't like living idle. Retirement for me means contributing to open-source.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

Thanks. Is a tax accountant different than a CPA? That's definitely my priority now.

I'm still waiting for them to pencil me into a meeting, but so far it looks like three's not much I can do to reduce my capital gains tax burden.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

If all global monetary transactions moved to Bitcoin, the amount of energy used by bitcoin would not increase, and global emissions caused by financial transactions would decrease by nearly 100%.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 0 points 1 week ago

This analogy is only valid if you don't have a bank account.

It is valid criticism for me to say that I'm moving the bitcoin into the bank account, because that is the equivalent of dumping a truck load of motor oil in the lake, whereas bitcoin is the equivalent of dropping one drop of motor oil in the lake.

I also fly once per year. Honestly that's worse. I'm aware of the harm that I'm causing. I try to minimize it. But bitcoin is far better for the environment than tradfi companies.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 1 points 1 week ago

Low cost of living countries and work-trades at communities.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online -4 points 1 week ago

The key to your misunderstanding is the "per transaction" part. It's a common misconception.

Now look at how much energy the whole financial industry uses. Put it on a line graph next to bitcoin's energy usage. You can almost not even see the blip of bitcoin's energy usage compared to the harm that the financial industry is causing.

Then learn how the energy does not increase as the transactions increases. This is a fact. The difficulty increases. It's mathematical. Read the white paper.

Then maybe you can finally see the lie perpetuated by the financial industry, which is a disaster to our environment compared to the greener alternative of bitcoin.

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online 0 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Be careful. You run many of the same risks as a lotto winner.

I've been spending $5k per year for the past 7 years. I think I might go all crazy and spend $10k this year lol. I've already bought like 8 bottles of $3 wine!

cash management account

what do you mean by "cash management accounts". Is that just a checking account split with other banks?

I've wondered about this a lot. We saw recently the mismanagement of Synapse. It's true that their customers would have been insured by the FDIC if they actually had put their customer's money in these FDIC-insured bank accounts. But they didn't.

These US banks have a history of fraud. If they didn't actually keep your money spread-out in different accounts, staying under the $250k limit, then you would only be insured up to $250k, right? I'd love to see that theory tested -- but I don't really want to risk it with my own $

[-] throwaway92937@discuss.online -1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Are there any sites that compare them? I've spent the past month just searching for a CPA. Took a long time to find one that has experience with cryptocurrencies and as willing to communicate with e2ee.

I do think it's good advice to do an hourly consulting with a financial advisor after I pay my capital gains taxes in a few months..

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throwaway92937

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