Message from @Deleted User 57835c2c
Discord ID: 343133570409168896
But I will. Next couple years probably.
you're self actualized?
you mean your Trve Self works in an office?
Yeah. I'm basically a sperg. I love super detailed legal shit.
so given anarchic freedom you'd still do it? what do you do, paralegal? lawyer?
lawyer
interesting. what area of law?
If I had fuck you money, I'd probably do something pretty similar. I'm really involved in energy policy in my state.
energy
tell you what
I would do it less hours per week that's for sure
if I get fuck you money (which I hope to, rather quickly in fact), I will seek out your services entirely on the basis of you being altright
haha
do you need a wind farm or solar array built?
you know I bet I could get spergs to donate to it as a nonprofit
do you know much about taxes and their evasion/avoidance/avoision?
if not, simply being able to tell me how to find the kind of lolyer I need would be a huge help
I know some about taxes and how to take advantage of legal tax shelters. I don't know anything about how to evade them without getting caught.
but I can't give you advice because I am not licensed to practice in your state.
basically the question I need answered is.... if I have an LLC or S-corp producing dough, and I want to move it to a trust and invest it in conventional assets, what's the most tax efficient way to go from A to B?
so far everyone says "that's a hard question, you need competent lawyers in that area," but I don't know how to even find them
so maybe you could point me in a direction
would be willing to use ovreseas options and even bitcoin
I would look for highly rated firms in your state that have a tax practice. If you want the best of the best, you're probably talking about firms like Skadden or Orrick or Akin Gump or Alston & Bird or something like that in LA.
But that's probably overkill for what you want.
firms with estate planning practices would probably also have the info you want
my guess is, and this isn't advice, is that they'll tell you to max out tax-sheltered investment vehicles like a 401(k) (which you can sponsor for yourself under a certain self-employment provision or as an LLC) and a "backdoor" IRA
You would then just pay income taxes on income you are paid from the trust
for which a certain deduction is available, iirc
taxes on capital gains in complex trusts gets into a level of specialization I don't have
S-Corp is a good idea since you seem to be funneling everything into long term investments, but you would want to check on how your state treats S-Corps because it varies a lot and some just treat them as regular old C-corps
I see
I do not consider 401gay to be a tax shelter
Are you an actual lawyer @UOC
yes
retirement accounts are no good for me unless they are going to provide me a tax advantage on paying my bills from them at age 31
Or just a fag
Oh cool
lawfag
I will take your advice though
just look up tax lawyers from l33t practices