
Nathan
2.5K posts

Nathan
@udonomefoo
Dislike: stupid humans Like: stupid animals If your political affiliation is in your bio - go away










my business is doing 15-20k a month and i can't qualify for a mortgage i need to pay myself a higher salary for TWO WHOLE YEARS before i can qualify for one, tripling my tax burden might be smarter to keep renting



It’s going unnoticed because so much other news is happening, but the war drums are beating again in D.C. The warmongers worry this is their last chance to get the white whale they’ve been chasing for thirty years, an all-out regime change war against Iran. A new Middle East war would be a catastrophic mistake. Our military stockpiles are depleted from three years of backing Ukraine. Our effort to reshore manufacturing has only just begun and will take years to bear fruit. War would worsen our already immense deficit and national debt. Iran is larger than Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan combined. A war would not be easy and could easily become a calamity. Thanks to President Trump’s restraint during his first term, America has a golden opportunity to pull away from Middle East quagmires for good. We shouldn’t throw that opportunity away so that sone D.C. has-beens can feel tough by sending young Americans to die yet again.






















We must tax low interest loans to the ultra wealthy. This is the great tax scam of the billionaires. The banks make a ton off other services from these relationship loans. Billionaires pay no taxes and spend away...




A W2 employee can put $24,500 in a 401(k), but a commercial real state broker can put in over a $100k? Here's how it works: Broker earns $800K in commissions. Broker 401(k) - Employee Contribution: $24,500 - Employer Match: $47,500 Broker's Spouse 401(k) - Employee Contribution: $24,500 - Employer Match: $7,500 A couple of things to keep top of mind: 1) Make sure your spouse has an actual role 2) You only want to do this if you plan on increasing the 401(k) from $72K to $100K+ If you just pay your spouse a salary and don't max the 401(k) you are actually increasing your taxes.

















