Who else is meta-national?
>Reside outside of the US, making all income up to 100k tax free and reducing tax on all income beyond that significantly
>Use country with low cost of living as home base
>Lots of opportunity for arbitrage crops up thanks to your lifestyle
>Mobility means you avoid being taxed in other countries
>Get to travel constantly
If you're in your 20's and childless there's little reason not to do this.
>crickets
>If you're in your 20's and childless there's little reason not to do this.
Then tell me how to do it.
>>1175003
Easiest way for right now? Get a job teaching English in China. They pay for your plane tickets there and back. Part time 12k (6k in China goes as far as 30k in America, 5-1 on most things). You can easily double that by tutoring pushing you up close to full time, and your visa to China switches over to one that lets you come and go as you please, you just have to renew it periodically.
It isn't that hard mate. They'll even help you learn Chinese while you're there.
>>1175011
If you're not a native speaker, could you do that for some other language ? Let's say, French ?
>>1175014
Yep, though they'll let Frenchies teach English too.
Yeah ? I should check on that. Thanks for the tip.
>>1175032
No problem. You can do it in china if you finished either college OR high school, though conditions are better for the college grad but still good. Opportunities are in other countries too, the same job in Saudi Arabia or Kuwait pays like 50k for part time, but you need college.
>>1175011
So just apply for language teaching jobs in china? Sounds easy.
>>1175057
It'll get you your visa and get you out of the country (and to tax exempt status). You can increase your pay by working at other stuff than teaching a handful of college classes, or hustle as a side business like everybody in China does. Look into selling American baby formula.
>>1175052
Yeah actually I'm not from US. I'm from Europe. So I don't know if all these options could really apply in my case, especially since I don't have any certificate of my level in English or any certificate about being able to teach. Got a 3 years degree post high school, but it's not college, I don't know the right term in that case.
>>1175094
It'd work. In China everything is held together by duct tape and chewing gum, metaphorically.