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Jobs To Screw The Taxman With.

 
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Jobs To Screw The Taxman With.
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edisme
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Joined: 24 Oct 2006
Posts: 2699
Location: NYC

Post Jobs To Screw The Taxman With. Reply with quote


This thread is related to

Screw The IRS And Get Away With It

I think many of us are starting to realize that maybe we are meant to pay taxes thanks to the loopholes in the law this guy mentioned;

http://atgpress.com/inform/indexinf.htm;

in these audios:

http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer1.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer2.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer3.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer4.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer5.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer6.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer1-2-6-07.mp3
http://vyzygoth.com/audio/informer2-2-8-07.mp3

The old man knows his stuff and I'm still trying to digest the material on that website. However that doesn't mean you don't participate in an active way to screw those who are trying to screw you and your loved ones. So the purpose of this thread was for everyone to jump in and provide jobs, side-gigs and ways to avoid the taxman getting your money the poor and so called middle class way.

Job suggestions-My Top 5:

1. Personal Trainer- I mention this as my first one because it is how I make my living and has actually been very fulfilling to see people succeed in their health and fitness goals. It pays great money and I have friends who make three figures doing this on their own and working for the corporate beast just to give the scraps to the taxman. All it takes is a love for helping people, knowing your anatomy, love of exercise and knowing your nutrition. I know most of them have a bad reputation thanks to the brainwashing they receive but many of them just like the doctors are starting to wake up to the brainwashing they've received from magazines and television and of course The Terminator.

2. Bartender- I have friends who take home 500 a night from this. If you are a night owl and have plenty of energy and can multi-task then this a great gig for you. It is one of those jobs where you can play with the numbers at the end of the year because tips can vary from night to night or if you work during the day. Alcohol will sell in any economy, just remember that.

3. Waiter/Server- Same as above. If you find the right snooty restaurant you could do ok and keep your money as well. Good for those in the younger age ranges who still can't believe the right arm of the bank can take so much. At least here you might have some money in your pocket to pay for the indoctrinating brain washing they make you pay for called college.

4. Musical/Weird Talent Panhandling- Laugh it up but here in the city there are people that can rake in about 7.5 k a month clean cash. I've seen immigrants fresh off the boat but loaded with talent come in and make more than some Americans sitting in an office. It works well in big cities with lots of tourism like here in NYC.

5. Special Trade/Craft- If you have ingenuity you better use it not just on yourself or whatever company you work for but for side jobs. People always need something repaired and these type of business work by referrals. Setting up websites and posting on local bulletins online and offline is crucial. Competition can be stiff but if your good it will work.

Hopefully you can add more suggestions to the thread as well.


Last edited by edisme on Thu Mar 22, 2007 6:26 am; edited 1 time in total
Thu Mar 22, 2007 5:42 am
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madthumbs



Joined: 22 Feb 2006
Posts: 8244
Location: Fingerlakes - NY usa

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There are so many tax loopholes for wealthy people. Just talk to one of the salesmen at an RV show about how you can deduct the cost from your taxes if you use the vehicle just once a year for business! It's time the poor and middle class stopped getting shafted.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 6:15 am
edisme
MVP 2012


Joined: 24 Oct 2006
Posts: 2699
Location: NYC

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madthumbs wrote:
There are so many tax loopholes for wealthy people. Just talk to one of the salesmen at an RV show about how you can deduct the cost from your taxes if you use the vehicle just once a year for business! It's time the poor and middle class stopped getting shafted.


My wife is an accountant so I always make fun of her for working for the side of darkness. Seriously though, with the crap she tells me these wealthy elites get away with its no wonder people always look for ways to screw the IRS. Back when I was brainwashed I used to think that these people were costing us money but in reality they just get pissed because we are not lining the pockets of the bank. Now I say screw it. Its time to take business in your own hands this for our survival. These people can't continue living off us.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 6:24 am
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Ceara
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Joined: 28 Feb 2007
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If you have a bit of land, you could always grow some organic food and sell that. Health nuts go crazy over home grown food. Plus the flavour is amazing, because it's always picked fresh. My specialty is growing lilies, but we also grow lots of veggies. A couple of retired men locally also sell potatoes (no sprays whatsoever) and hay. All under the table, so to speak. Even if you don't sell your produce you can take a huge chunk off your grocery bill. Plus you'll avoid all those chemicals the bigger industries use. My whole life I've never had much money at all and we always had a garden and ate healthy with all sorts of specialty foods that are just way too expensive to buy at the store. It's a family activity, plus excellent exercise. Very Happy

Seeds can even be free or at little cost. Register on gardenweb.com and look up the exchange forums. Say you are just starting out and you'll have offers for free seeds coming. Gardeners tend to be very giving people. With this method of obtaining seeds, you'll receive cultivars that are not sold by seed companies, such as the Heirloom varieites.

I know of a couple of people who bake homemade bread and take it to the convenience stores and sell that.

Strawberries is another good one. If you can find the right place, you can buy strawberry roots for 50 cents each or less and in no time at all you'll be over run with strawberries. We started out with 100 roots and now there are so many I'm going to have to pull or plant elsewhere. Dip in chocolate for a specialty treat.

For some info on the tax laws, watch Aaron Russo's documentary.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 10:52 am
edisme
MVP 2012


Joined: 24 Oct 2006
Posts: 2699
Location: NYC

Post Reply with quote
Ceara wrote:
If you have a bit of land, you could always grow some organic food and sell that. Health nuts go crazy over home grown food. Plus the flavour is amazing, because it's always picked fresh. My specialty is growing lilies, but we also grow lots of veggies. A couple of retired men locally also sell potatoes (no sprays whatsoever) and hay. All under the table, so to speak. Even if you don't sell your produce you can take a huge chunk off your grocery bill. Plus you'll avoid all those chemicals the bigger industries use. My whole life I've never had much money at all and we always had a garden and ate healthy with all sorts of specialty foods that are just way too expensive to buy at the store. It's a family activity, plus excellent exercise. Very Happy

Seeds can even be free or at little cost. Register on gardenweb.com and look up the exchange forums. Say you are just starting out and you'll have offers for free seeds coming. Gardeners tend to be very giving people. With this method of obtaining seeds, you'll receive cultivars that are not sold by seed companies, such as the Heirloom varieites.

I know of a couple of people who bake homemade bread and take it to the convenience stores and sell that.

Strawberries is another good one. If you can find the right place, you can buy strawberry roots for 50 cents each or less and in no time at all you'll be over run with strawberries. We started out with 100 roots and now there are so many I'm going to have to pull or plant elsewhere. Dip in chocolate for a specialty treat.

For some info on the tax laws, watch Aaron Russo's documentary.


I almost did the mistake of following the tax things in the documentary but history doesn't stop at 1913. It appears that a lot of what he mentions here is debunked by the audio above. Which is why Ed Brown might be in a lot of trouble in the future. Either way we are at war and it is tyranny like madthumbs has said, so its your choice.

I would love to try what you mentioned out. We live in the urban jungle but I might try to grow some hydroponic plants. Unfortunately the minerals in the soil won't be there but its a start.

Thanks for the links.

Perhaps I should tell the mother in law to start baking some bread since it is much better than buying the crappy rolls they sell in the groceries.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 11:05 am
madthumbs



Joined: 22 Feb 2006
Posts: 8244
Location: Fingerlakes - NY usa

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Did I read "hydroponic"?

Marijuana / Hemp

- Use LED lights, and check the tutorials for growing without getting caught.. IF you understand the risks.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 11:37 am
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edisme
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Joined: 24 Oct 2006
Posts: 2699
Location: NYC

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Laughing

While I might do ok with that line of work I also fit the racial profile a little too well if you know what I mean. Wink
Thu Mar 22, 2007 12:03 pm
Ceara
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Joined: 28 Feb 2007
Posts: 508

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A quickie hint. You don't have to mix the bread dough by hand. I have problems with one of my wrists and it hurts to knead bread so I use my bread machine to mix and let the dough rise, and afterwards I take out the dough, roll it out and put it in pans or make rolls. Super easy! I never use the machine to bake, I can't stand how it turns out. But oh my does fresh bread ever make the house smell good. I also use the bread machine to make pasta dough.

Grow some stuff in large plastic tubs or pots on your balcony. Things like cherry tomatoes can even be grown upside down or in a hanging pot that allows them to drape over. Pots are good for tomatoes, cucumbers, potatoes, beans, peas, and even lilies. Potatoes can also be grown in a slit open bag of growing medium - no pot necessary. A balcony or large sunny window can be a salad bar! lol

Don't some larger cities have lots for community gardening? It might be a good idea to find an unused property and ask the city if it can be used for gardening. Also some cities have free compost and just need a truck or containers to take it home. Rooftops are also good for the same.

I don't mean to be preachy... I just love growing and creating things by hand and am passionate about it. I guess it's because I grew up doing it so I'm old fashioned at 32. lol I reckon that anything I learn to do on my own, prevents me from having to look to others to do it.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 12:20 pm
madthumbs



Joined: 22 Feb 2006
Posts: 8244
Location: Fingerlakes - NY usa

Post Reply with quote
Ceara wrote:
Don't some larger cities have lots for community gardening?


-Every city regardless of size should have an organic one! (I've been preaching this too).

Not sure how useful this is, but I found a list, and added some seed supply companies here:
http://www.opposingdigits.com/seeds/

Was hoping to get feedback on some companies, but only got one so far.
Thu Mar 22, 2007 12:32 pm
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Ceara
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Joined: 28 Feb 2007
Posts: 508

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Here's a couple for you

Richter's Herbs www.richters.com

Vesey's www.veseys.com

I only order from these seed companies. They sell organic and heirloom varities.

Vesey's is awesome for seeds and I highly recommend them for that, but I don't like their live plants section. Many all live plants (like lilac and flowering shrubs) we've ordered from them have either been the wrong type, wrong color, or just flat out dead upon arrival. I do have to give them credit for refunding the cost for these failures, with no hassle whatsoever. On the upside, they have $5 and $10 bulb and root specials, that I like to get regardless of their size. It's a chance, but I know that I'll be cheerfully refunded if any problems. Their lily bulbs are usually in superb condition. Super nice people work there. I live out in the country and can never get certain varieties local so am stuck with mail order. They ship to the US as well as Canada. Their veggie and flower seeds are always fresh, pop rapidly, and grow like mad.

Richters also sells to USA and Canada.

Both companies have prompt, super quick service and excellent customer support. Both also send free catalogs.

If anyone desires more info on growing stuff (the legal stuff that is LOL), I have a ton of info in my head, plus many reference books. Just ask away.

I'm sorry Ed.. I seem to have hijacked your thread. I'll shut up now. lol
Thu Mar 22, 2007 12:54 pm
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