There is a segment of people using the Internet who argue that
information "wants" to be free and that information should be free.
The problem with that argument is that it takes time to gather, analyze
and organize information into useful articles or reports or news.
Someone has to pay for that time. It may be the author who is doing it
to promote a service of some kind. It may be a company that is trying
to sell advertising on their web site. It may be a business that is
using the free information to draw prospects to their web site.
There is a lot of free information available on the
Internet. There are free email newsletters available on virtually every
subject imaginable.
The evening t.v. news is also free. Radio news is free.
A lot of newspapers are free. You can go to the library and review
hundreds of expensive magazines and some newsletters without
subscribing to them.
So why do some people pay for information?
In spite of the abundance of free information, a lot of
people still choose to pay for some information. But what is the
motivation to pay for information?
We pay for subscriptions to a variety of expensive tax
and legal information services because the available free information
isn't as up-to-date, it isn't as detailed or the quality of the free
information is very poor.
There are a variety of reasons to pay for information,
but I think the main reason is focused expertise. The information
presently available on the Internet about asset protection and
international tax law is either limited, very difficult to find, poorly
written or seriously biased and/or inaccurate. How can you be sure that
the information you are looking at is objective and accurate? You would
have to hire a qualified professional to evaluate the free
information.
That's what our research does for you -- at a fraction
of what you would have to pay to hire a qualified expert to evaluate
the diverse and complex topics that we have evaluated already.
Our research reports offer expert focus on a specific
subject.
Our asset
protection reports focuse on legal ways to protect your wealth from
the litigation epidemic and the growing abuse of civil forfeitures in
the U.S. Each report is an in-depth analysis of a specific subject such
as .........
We search for practical and cost effective solutions to
the litigation problem in the U.S.. We have a team of editorial advisors who
offer specialized expertise to help us find those solutions for you.
One of our editorial advisors is the Chairman of the American Bar
Association Committee on Asset Protection. Other members of that
committee are also on our advisory board.
The Offshore
Tax Strategy Reports are about "going offshore" without getting in
a
no-win hassle with the IRS. The U.S. government is not
going to give us any easy and legal ways to save taxes just by moving
assets offshore. U.S. citizens and permanent residents are subject
to tax on our worldwide income. So the problem is how to get access to
offshore investments and how to move assets offshore for asset
protection and how to do business offshore without having to look over
our shoulder every day for the "long arm of the IRS". For those who
seek tax saving opportunities, our extensive library includes many
articles and reports on how to save taxes.
International tax law is absolutely the most
complicated and convoluted and insane maze of rules in the entire tax
code. Richard Duke is
an international tax expert and law professor who understands these
complex rules. Vernon Jacobs
is a tax author and tax accountant who knows how to interpret and
translate complex tax information into "bottom line" plain English.
This is far more than mere information. This is focused expertise in
print or online.
Each tax research report is an in-depth analysis of a
specific subject such as .........
So why pay money to subscribe to our online research
reports?
If you have an abundance of time and it has no value to
you, you may be able to find some of the information available in our
research reports. Some of the news and information we provide to
subscribers is obtained from free news sources. We devote close to 50
hours a month searching through email newsletters and web sites for
useful insights for the reports that we prepare.
But a lot of our information also comes from expensive
reference sources. We pay in excess of $3,000 a year for subscriptions
to related tax, legal and technical publications which we monitor every
month.
The content of our reports is more than mere
information.
It's guidance and "bottom line" recommendations based on
expertise in the subject. It's help in avoiding getting ripped off by
the many charlatans and ignorant promoters in the marketplace who
offer enticing "solutions" that just won't hold up when or if they are
challenged in court. We bring you professional experience and expertise
in these highly complex and controversial subjects -- which you won't
get from free news sources unless you subscribe to many of the
expensive professional and technical journals that we review each
month.
Another reason why many people buy newsletters is for
"inside" tips.
We are on the inside of the asset protection and
international tax "industry" and we know most of the main players in
the business. Until recently, we sponsored the largest public
discussion list on the Internet on the subject of global asset
protection and offshore topics and we have over four years of
searchable archives of the discussions on that public forum. There is
hardly a subject relating to asset protection or international tax law
that has not been the subject of discussion.
So, while "inside tips" isn't the main focus of our
research reports, we certainly have the contacts and the pipeline to
get that kind of information and to include it in our reports. That's
why many of our subscribers are in the "offshore" business. They want
to know what we are going to say next.
Eight Best Reasons to Subscribe
The best reasons to subscribe to our online research
reports are to ....
(1) protect your hard earned assets from being
taken in a lawsuit or a forfeiture action by overzealous police
officers,
(2) avoid unnecessary and costly conflicts with the IRS over your
offshore financial affairs, and
(3) stay up-to-date on these subjects.
(4) we guarantee that you can't find the
same quality and depth of specialized information on the Internet
without having to pay a much greater price in time or money.
(5) the cost of a subscription is far less than a half hour with a well
qualified expert in the subject.
(6) the cost of a subscription is less than half the price of the
printed research reports and many of the online reports are not yet
available in printed form.
(7) you have immediate 24/7 access to our online subscription
service by using our secure Yahoo e-Store to place your order.
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