
First I think Tim's summary of my situation is very accurate and fair at this point. One nit of a detail:
I surmise, given the size of Anguilla and the non-constitutional basis of its government, etc., that it _might_ be a lot easier for a bureaucrat or the Governor-General, or whomever, to seriously disrupt any business by a few phone calls. I don't know this for a fact, but I suspect it to be true.
Anguilla does have a constitution. It would be hard for any bureaucrat to seriously disrupt an Anguillian's business. There just are not any regulations that they can arbitrarily invoke to harras people. However, x-pats are here as guests and they have to get a work permit, or visa, or something from time to time. So if x-pats do something that wears out their welcome, they have to leave. Tim:
Contrast this with a small data haven (a new industry) in a small country, with operating margins that are razor-thin (given the pricing structure Vince announced, I doubt Taxbomber and other customers were paying enough to ensure a flow of payoffs to the Ruling Families of Anguilla and the various officials that need to look the other way).
Nope, no bribes to government. However, in doing business here a lot of people have learned more about the Internet and computers. And I and another x-pat have started a weekly computer club. So there are good reasons that Anguilla should like having me here. For the record, the only bribe I have paid while I was here was (indirectly) to someone at the phone company to try to get a phone installed faster. It did not help, still took a year to get the phone. Cable and Wireless, and their high prices, is the worst thing about Anguilla. The current Anguilla government seems to be very clean. The rumor is that Cable and Wireless bribed the previous government with things like a free loan of a bulldozer worth $500/day for a couple weeks to get their 30 year monopoly contract. Given that CandW is making millions each year, seems they got off cheap, if true. Claim is that the UK does not mind their companies bribing officials, and CandW does it alot all around the world. -- Vince ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Vincent Cate vince@offshore.com.ai http://www.offshore.com.ai/vince/ Offshore Information Services http://www.offshore.com.ai/

Vincent Cate <vince@offshore.com.ai> writes:
The rumor is that Cable and Wireless bribed the previous government with things like a free loan of a bulldozer worth $500/day for a couple weeks to get their 30 year monopoly contract. Given that CandW is making millions each year, seems they got off cheap, if true. Claim is that the UK does not mind their companies bribing officials, and CandW does it alot all around the world.
I don't see a problem with that. All governments are corrupt by definition. As far as I know, the U.S. is the only country in the world prohibiting its businesses from bribing foreign officials with the silly law known as the Foreign Corrupt Practices act (as if U.S. politicians didn't take bribes!) The results are: U.S. businesses not being competetive in the international markets where bribes are the traditional part of doing business, and a significant paperwork/compliance cost in all other international markets. --- Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps
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dlv@bwalk.dm.com
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Vincent Cate