Rey C.
Racing is life... anything else is just waiting.
So just before the Facebook IPO, Mr. Saverin decides to skip off to Singapore. And while he won't avoid all of the U.S. taxes on the Facebook shares he sells, he will greatly reduce the hit by renouncing his U.S. citizenship. I heard one talking head on CNBC try to justify what Saverin is doing by making a case for lower taxes on the wealthy in the U.S. But the way I see it, if JUST the prospect of lower taxes (or more money in your pocket) will cause a person to renounce his/her citizenship, we are MUCH better off without them anyway. As I see it, if all it takes to turn someone (naturalized or native born) is a sum of cash, then a Chinese company could offer $150K to a Lockheed engineer making $75K, and he could use that as a justification to turn over proprietary information to them.
At least the way I see it... Mr. Saverin, don't let the door hit your sad ass on the way out! And take these with you. :thefinger
IMO, part of the problem with this republic now is we have WAY too many people who wear the U.S. jersey, but are just waiting for an opportunity to sell us out... whether that means members of Congress doing the bidding of foreign lobbyists or average citizens doing things in the name of a political party or ideology, even when it harms the republic and its people longer term. We're running short of people willing to *truly* play for the home team.
Facebook co-founder renounces U.S. citizenship
At least the way I see it... Mr. Saverin, don't let the door hit your sad ass on the way out! And take these with you. :thefinger
IMO, part of the problem with this republic now is we have WAY too many people who wear the U.S. jersey, but are just waiting for an opportunity to sell us out... whether that means members of Congress doing the bidding of foreign lobbyists or average citizens doing things in the name of a political party or ideology, even when it harms the republic and its people longer term. We're running short of people willing to *truly* play for the home team.
Facebook co-founder renounces U.S. citizenship
He owned 5% of the company's outstanding shares as recently as 2009, according to "The Facebook Effect," by David Kirkpatrick, but he has sold off some of those shares since then. He was not listed among those owning 5% or more of the company in Facebook's pre-IPO regulatory filings.
The Brazilian-born Facebook co-founder became a U.S. citizen in 1998 and has been living in Singapore since 2009, but the United States requires its citizens to pay income taxes no matter where they live. Saverin, who provided some of Facebook's initial financing, has not played an active role in the company for many years.
If Facebook's valuation takes off next week, the move may turn out to be a savvy one -- at least from an investment standpoint. If Saverin is still holding any of his Facebook stake, formally leaving the U.S. could lessen his future tax hit.