C'punks, The Seminar will cover this in much greater detail, I'm sure but... On Thu, 21 Jul 1994, Linn Stanton wrote:
. . . This is a problem. The capital gains / alternative minimum tax hit is gruesome.
There are alternatives available. Are you familiar with "selling short against the box"? What about tax-free "contributions of capital" to corporations or trusts?
. . . The only stock markets that I know well enough to be comfortable investing in are in the US. That will not magically change just because I get citizenship somewhere else, and that still leaves me liable for US tracking and taxes.
You are too smart to believe this. Why not try to see the obvious solution rather than lament the "fact" that you are trapped? For those of you who haven't followed Duncan's argument in favor of "attitude adjustment," the explanation is implicit in the defeatest attitude demonstrated above.
. . . [in re: Heinlein] The forfeiture laws were weaker then.
Stuff and nonsense. The tactic Heinlein used, for the reasons he used it, would work just as well today. Perhaps you are unfamiliar with what he actually did and why. (Remind me to cover it in the Seminar.) S a n d y