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Why do US citizens residing in the UK still have to pay taxes to the US government?

Even better, why do UK resident UK citizens have to pay UK money in taxes to the USA?The simple answer is it’s US law.The fact of the matter here is the USA is completely out of line in terrorising the residents and citizens of other countries for money it has absolutely no damned right to by any first world standard, because only the nasty little African dictatorship of Eritrea has the same policy yet far more benign in application!The USA got away with this idiocy(and it is an idiocy, it hurts everyone including the USA, the only winner being accountants and lawyers) for many years because of one simple fact - Complying was largely optional and people were free to leave and ignore what amounts to punishment for leaving the plantation.Obama changed that in 2010 when he signed a law that requires every financial institution on earth to hunt down escaped US tax slaves and report them back to the plantation in breach of all local privacy and anti discrimination laws, or else the USA apply savage economic sanctions to any country not allowing this to happen.FATCA went live in 2014.The backlash is growing as foreign governments slowly realise that they have made their own financial institutions enforcement arms for the IRS to allow the IRS to attempt to levy taxes and monstrous penalties on their own residents and citizens. Many people who were part of signing the International Government Agreements to allow “US persons” to be reported to the IRS( agreement? Sign here or else!) having no idea that they were enabling the US to tax UK born UK citizens.What was also not understood is that the IRS and US government treatment of these people amounts to several clear and serious breaches of the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights.This is not just a little tax, this amounts to persecution and discrimination on an epic scale simply for exercising your basic human right to expatriate.The ways in which the US tax code and FATCA can make life difficult to impossible are almost endless with the never ending threat of the financial death penalty for failing to file a form you never knew existed hanging over your head at all times.The expensive, punitive, unconstitutional privacy invading reporting, tax and monster penalty regime does not stop with the US person but extends to his wife, his kids, his business, his business partner, any financial institution that would have him as a client and even to his employer.The result is you don’t marry an American, you don’t go in to business with an American, you don’t have an American as a client in your financial institution, you don’t lent to an American and you be very, very careful about employing one.He’s toxic, a financial pariah.There’s life restrictions right there.But it gets better….Actual taxes are only a part of the problem but where they strike, they can really hurt.Yet again, the US tax code is punitive toward foreign finances owned by an American but your entire life is foreign.Your local compulsory tax deferred pension, not recognised by the IRS and so taxed under the deliberately punitive PFIC regime, retirement ruined.Where the local high tax regime gives you a break, in steps the USA. Example, US capital gains tax on the sale of your locally tax free sale of your home.Inability to save and invest properly like the locals and as encouraged by local government, for one because the institution simply refuses US clients, for two because the tax US tax regime simply wipes out the gains, for three because you’d need a full time accountant for the reporting, as would be the case for a UK stocks and shares Individual Savings Account(ISA).Again, this impacts the whole family unit, US citizens or not.In short, the unique US practise of citizenship based taxation, the removal of the most basic of constitutional protections for overseas filers, punitive tax treatment of foreign finances, the monstrous penalties applied for the slightest error or omission in hugely complex reporting, taxes that do not recognise the local system (punitive taxation of pensions) local discrimination as a result of FATCA, financial lock out, inability to plan for retirement etc now means, and let’s be clear here…..US citizens are no longer free to leave the US and pursue happiness or opportunity elsewhere unless they can live with persecution, discrimination or are prepared and able to renounce US citizenship, which will require another citizenship.That is a basic human rights abuse.Court cases are now flying around all over the world including the USA and Canada. France has set up its own enquiry in to the affects of US laws in France and the EU and is leading the way in pressuring the EU to take this issue away from individual member states and to take the US to task at EU level.As it stands, Chinese and Russian citizens have more freedom to get out in the world than US citizens, and that damned well should shock people.

How much tax is deducted at the end of the maturity amount in the LIC New Jeevan Nidhi plan?

Jeevan Nidhi is a deferred Annuity Plan. As per this you can commute 1/3rd at the time of maturity, for which there is no Tax as per Sec 10(10-A). Remaining 2/3rd will be paid by way of Annuity based on the option chosen by you at the time of maturity. For Annuity/Pension-The amount received by you, will attract Tax, as per applicable rates.

Do military members have to pay any fee for leave or fiancee forms?

I dont think so and mind you a soldier on mission outside his country cannot be chanced to go online and start looking up for a girl miles away, he will rather satisfy his urge there and wait to find love at home, based on my interview with a LT in syriaIn the summer of 2015, Bryan Denny received a peculiar message in his LinkedIn inbox.“I really need to speak with you, Bryan,” a woman wrote. “I thought you were coming to visit me after your deployment in Syria was completed?”He didn’t recognize the woman’s name or picture, had never been to Syria, and had no plans to travel to Canada, where she lived. Recently retired after serving more than two and a half decades in the Army, including deploying as part of Desert Storm, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Operation Enduring Freedom, Denny had expected to encounter some uncomfortable situations in his transition to civilian life. This wasn’t one of them.At first, Denny just assumed she’d contacted the wrong guy — a simple case of mistaken identity. But as they exchanged messages, he came to a more troubling realization: for several months, the woman had been in a full-fledged online relationship with a Col. Bryan Denny who, it just so happened, looked just like him.Army/Spc. Ryan ElliottLt. Col. Bryan Denny, then commander of the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, in a meeting with key leaders in Iraq's Diyala Province on June 15, 2008.Whoever she’d been speaking with had gotten hold of his pictures, created a fake profile on a Canadian dating site, and constructed an elaborate, tragedy-filled backstory. The Bryan she knew wasn’t married or retired — he was a dashing American soldier whose wife had passed away and whose son had recently suffered a string of severe medical ailments. Over the course of their fleeting online love affair, she’d helped him out with hospital costs, home repairs, and plane tickets home — at a cost of several thousand dollars. Now, she was wondering where the hell he (and her money) had gone.Denny decided to look himself up on Facebook, since that’s where the woman said she’d verified his identity. Nearly 100 accounts with his name and face popped up, each of them displaying his neatly-coiffed gray hair and steady smile. Many included shots of him with his son, while others used images of Denny with his comrades overseas. The majority showed him in uniform during his final months of service.A lump formed in his throat as he took in one doppelganger after another. “It’s hard to capture how confusing and disturbing it is to scroll through an endless stream of profiles bearing your face and name,” he reflected in an interview with Task & Purpose. “The first time you see it, you’re just blown away.”It turned out Denny’s name, his image, and, most important, aspects of his military service had been posted to myriad dating sites and social media platforms, all in an effort to swindle wide-eyed romance-seekers around the world out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Maybe millionsBryan Denny's military photos are ubiquitous on scam social accounts. Fighting back has proven hard, even for the combat veteran.Although many of the fake accounts used his real name, others took on aliases to better cover their tracks, making it all but impossible to hunt them down. Every passing day brought new calls and messages from desperate women who’d been stripped of their pride as well as their life savings by “Bryan Denny.” Some women became so infatuated with him that they simply couldn’t cope with the fact that their love had been a sham — hounding him for attention until he eventually had to ignore them entirely. With his reputation and, increasingly, his sanity on the line, Denny knew he had to take action. But he was a man used to battling insurgents in firefights, not nameless, distant hackers.Anatomy of a romance scamIn the fall of 2012, Notre Dame’s All-American linebacker, Manti Te’o, made waves across the country for his unbreaking resolve in the face of adversity. A gifted athlete and the captain of the top defense in college football, Te’o heroically carried his team to an undefeated regular season and the BCS National Championship game after losing his girlfriend, whom he’d dated online for nearly a year, to leukemia. But nine days after Notre Dame’s loss in the title game in early 2013, news broke that Te’o’s girlfriend wasn’t dead. In fact, she wasn’t real; she was a fictional online persona created by a man named Ronaiah Tuiasosopo.He didn’t know the full truth of the twisted ruse until as late as December, but either way, it gained him national prestige and made him the posterboy of college football for one magical season.Most romance-scam victims aren’t so lucky, these unfortunates — often divorced, widowed, or disabled women over 40 — are being extorted by distant scammers for money and gifts to the tune of some $250 million a year. (Apple products are especially popular. If you have been in similar situation what you need do to recover your money is quite easy , we have a planned scheme at HARPER INTELLIGENCE SERVICES , As a cyber investigator Harper Jeff Zoellers helped solved over 30 internet fraud with the FBI , you can bank on his intelligence and expertise in tracking your online dealings , relationship and recover your lost funds whether from romance or binary option investments.. Get out on google to find him or simply check from this videoFrom an Air Force Public Affairs PSA: "A catfish is a person who pretends to be someone they're not, using social media to create a false identity with the intent of scamming someone, or worse."The perpetrators often operate within intricate networks; many originate in Nigeria or Ghana, where outreach tactics, compelling backstories, and conversation strategies have been turned into a science. By sticking to a formula and passionately professing their desire for a new life with their targeted victims, the scammers disarm and beguile their prey with razor-sharp precision. Just as important, these illicit organizations have stockpiled pictures and personas to bolster the credibility of their fake accounts and reel in victims with ease.One of these scammers’ most successful ploys involves assuming the identities of lovesick American soldiers stationed abroad. It’s easy to see why servicemen have become a particularly difficult disguise for romance scams: sterling reputations, trustworthy characters, and a built-in excuse for being away.And yet, military romance scams are vastly underreported. Many victims are typically too embarrassed to admit they sent thousands of dollars — sometimes tens of thousands — to people they’ve never met. Opportunistic thieves, located oceans away, saw his service, patriotism and chiseled looks… and saw a perfect piece of man candy to dangle in front of eager female suitors. Denny suddenly saw how the deference, perks, and unadulterated praise soldiers receive in America could be exploited in terrible ways when love is on the table.A brief history of military imposter scamsIn 1906, a German named Wilhelm Voigt, fresh out of prison after serving a lengthy sentence for theft and forgery, stepped into a military surplus store to initiate his greatest scheme yet. Emerging from the shop sporting a captain’s uniform, he quickly convinced a group of soldiers to follow him to the nearby town of Köpenick, where under his command, they stormed the mayor’s office and helped him loot 4,000 marks. It was only after the soldiers delivered the bewildered mayor, whom they’d been ordered to arrest, to the Berlin police that everyone realized Voigt and the money had gone missing. Though he was eventually apprehended, he became a folk hero, praised for highlighting the blind obedience of his countrymen to authority.Military imposters have been prolific on our side of the pond, too. As the 100th anniversary of the Civil War approached in the late 1950s, Americans were captivated by a man named Walter Williams, who claimed to be 116 years old and the last living veteran of the conflict. researchers later concluded he’d actually been a child when the war’s first shots were fired at Fort Sumter. Williams was hardly alone in this act: lying about Civil War service was then a favored tactic of fraudsters looking for prestige and pensions.Compared to these examples, military romance scams have a distinctly disturbing — and, in many cases, sensual — flavor. Unlike your more run of the mill instances of stolen valor, these schemes involve assuming the identities of specific soldiers to make victims swoon. Instead of constructing entire backstories, scammers typically tailor their characters around their servicemen’s traits, sprinkling in little pieces of truth they’ve gleaned about the men they’re pretending to be.Denny’s imposters, for instance, frequently talked about being from North Carolina and visiting his family farm there (both of which are true), sending their targets pictures of him out in the field alongside beautiful horses. It worked: turns out plenty of women were drawn to the idea of a wholesome, sturdy country boy with a love of the outdoors and a sensitive side. As the months passed, he began receiving phone calls from women who, desperate to track him down, had taken to searching for him in his home state. In a few cases, they even got hold of his parents. “I’m actually pretty lucky that I’ve only got a cell phone,” he said. “My folks get it a lot worse, since they’ve got a landline that’s publicly listed and easier to find.”By late 2015, Denny was receiving a weekly barrage of calls and messages from frenzied women. His wife and teenage son were getting contacted. Some of the victims had become so entranced that even after being told they had been duped, they couldn’t let go. “I’ve had to end up blocking a few of them because they just can’t sort out what’s real and what’s not,” he said. “It consumes them. There’s one particular woman in Germany who, I’m sure, has pictures of me on her fridge and thinks I’m going to visit her someday. It’s not funny. It’s quite sad.”As a result of such interactions, Denny has become an expert at letting lonelyhearts down easy, writing hundreds of reverse “Dear John” letters to those who’ve fallen for him. He’s also had to learn how to pinpoint and eradicate fake accounts using his information. Since his now years-long search began in December of 2015, he’s identified roughly 4,000 bogus Facebook profiles that utilize a mixture of 51 different photos of him. Last fall, he got a meeting with Facebook executives to talk about the problem, but they weren’t particularly helpful. “At one point, the senior leader we spoke with just laughed out loud at us,” he said. “It was really trite, really condescending, and wreaked of an unprofessional disdain for responsibility and big picture solutions.”Facebook declined to comment on its meetings with Denny for this story, but a representative for the company told Task & Purpose in April that the social network is doing everything it can to ensure the safety of its users. “Staying ahead of those who try to misuse our service is a constant effort, and we work constantly to detect and block harmful activity, including removing accounts,” they said. “Our security systems run in the background millions of times per second to help catch threats and remove them before they ever reach you.”Denny does credit Facebook for meeting with him several times since to discuss his situation. Unfortunately, even if the company does an about-face and fully commits itself to hunting down the countless fake accounts on its platform, it’ll likely still be behind the eight ball for quite some time. “Offenders are truly committed to their targeting of victims, so for every fake profile that is removed or blocked, a new one can be created in its place,” said Dr. Cassandra Cross, an expert who has written extensively on the impact these ploys have on romance scam victims. “Anonymity and the transnational nature of offending works in favour of the perpetrators.”Though the odds are against him, Denny has continued to seek out executives at dating websites and social media providers to highlight the issue. During every discussion, he’s had to answer an uncomfortable question: Why him? Simple: Potential victims “see a guy who’s served his country, has a son, and suddenly lost his wife,” he said. “People want to step up and help that guy out. That’s the great country we live in, the great environment our military lives within. They never suspect those things could be used for evil.”‘I was so naive. My friends were all telling me it was a hoax’Sharon Hughes, a 65-year-old retired nurse and divorcee who now devotes her time to painting, is quick with a joke and has a jaunty, chipper laugh and a penchant for off-the-wall statements. “People have told me I’m unstable,” she told me. “I am unstable; I’m an artist!” Although she hasn’t remarried since she and her ex-husband divorced in 2003, she is looking for a life partner. In other words, she’s the ideal target for romance scammers.In 2015, Sharon was looking on Facebook when a “Ross Newton” popped up in the site’s “people you may know” section. He was a greying, sharply dressed soldier wearing an officer’s uniform, something that appealed to her since she came from a military family. Although she didn’t know “Ross,” the site’s social matchmaking algorithm suggested they connect. Drawn to his good looks, she figured: What the hell? and struck up a conversation. It was a big move for her. “Ross” responded back right away. She was elated.Within a few months, the two were soon exchanging several messages a day and contemplating starting a life together after he left the Army. Sharon was mesmerized by her boyfriend’s daring stories of combat and dedication to his troops, but she also felt bad for him; he’d suffered a terrible string of luck, including losing some of his closest companions in skirmishes. “There was one time when one of his best friends was injured by a grenade,” she said. “He described in detail how sad it was, sitting next to him as he died in a hospital bed. He got quite creative.”

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