Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Whether you're a working stiff or a business owner yourself, this is the place to discuss all aspects of financing your drinking habit ;-)

NO BUSINESS SALES HERE PLEASE, WE HAVE A SECTION FOR THAT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by eriksank »

Jamie_Lambo wrote: Wed May 03, 2017 10:05 am... as i say your perception is way off ...
True. However, the point is not about not making errors. We should make them. If you don't make errors, it just means that you are not doing anything at all. In that sense, a way-off perception is ok, as long as you have a perception. The remainder of the effort is -- at worst -- just incrementally improving your existing views. While I am sitting here in my Sihanoukville villa, typing this from one of its air-conditioned rooms, being way off is absolutely a non issue, because I can happily afford to be way off! ;-)
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by Jamie_Lambo »

eriksank wrote: Wed May 03, 2017 10:18 am
Jamie_Lambo wrote: Wed May 03, 2017 10:05 am... as i say your perception is way off ...
True. However, the point is not about not making errors. We should make them. If you don't make errors, it just means that you are not doing anything at all. In that sense, a way-off perception is ok, as long as you have a perception. The remainder of the effort is -- at worst -- just incrementally improving your existing views. While I am sitting here in my Sihanoukville villa, typing this from one of its air-conditioned rooms, being way off is absolutely a non issue, because I can happily afford to be way off! ;-)
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by vladimir »

Jamie, I bought a lot of stuff when I was younger that I wouldn't have without the sales people. I would say in certain sales markets, interaction is crucial.

@eriksank ...I'm living for the day when someone rips off Wall St.

Back home, people cheer when a bank gets robbed.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by Duncan »

vladimir wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 5:15 am Jamie, I bought a lot of stuff when I was younger that I wouldn't have without the sales people. I would say in certain sales markets, interaction is crucial.

@eriksank ...I'm living for the day when someone rips off Wall St.

Back home, people cheer when a bank gets robbed.



Whats the name of the prison where they do that . ?
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by eriksank »

Duncan wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 8:42 am
vladimir wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 5:15 am Jamie, I bought a lot of stuff when I was younger that I wouldn't have without the sales people. I would say in certain sales markets, interaction is crucial.
@eriksank ...I'm living for the day when someone rips off Wall St.
Back home, people cheer when a bank gets robbed.

Whats the name of the prison where they do that . ?
The exchange rate BTC/USD reached $1500 this morning. The value of my savings have doubled since October. Every time the exchange rate goes up, it encourages other people to exchange their dollar savings for bitcoin, further beefing up bitcoin's exchange rate, and creating additional inflationary pressure on the dollar. We are not going to rob the banks. We are going to destroy them.

The French Revolution started by storming and destroying the Bastille, the French King's prison, on the 14th of July 1789. This is what happened to the governor of the Bastille, Bernard-René de Launay:

De Launay was then seized and his sword and baton of rank torn from him. He was supposed have been taken to the Hôtel de Ville by one of the leaders of the insurrection, soldier (future general) Pierre-Augustin Hulin, but on the way there, the furious crowd assaulted him, beat him and eventually lynched him by stabbing him repeatedly with their knives, swords and bayonets and shooting him once. The actual killing was reported to have taken place near the Hôtel de Ville when the struggling de Launay, desperate and abused, cried out "Enough! let me die." and kicked an unemployed cook named Desnot in the groin. After the killing, his head was sawn off by Mathieu Jouve Jourdan, a butcher. It was fixed on a pike to be carried through the streets.

We are not going to just "occupy Wall Street". No, no. Next time, we will simply burn Wall Street.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by vladimir »

Duncan wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 8:42 am
vladimir wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 5:15 am Jamie, I bought a lot of stuff when I was younger that I wouldn't have without the sales people. I would say in certain sales markets, interaction is crucial.

@eriksank ...I'm living for the day when someone rips off Wall St.

Back home, people cheer when a bank gets robbed.


Whats the name of the prison where they do that . ?
South Africa. Most South Africans have a very antagonistic relationship with their banks, crappy service, high fees, scams, collusion on mortgage rates etc.

The worst Cambodian Bank would eat them for breakfast.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by vladimir »

eriksank wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 11:27 am We are not going to just "occupy Wall Street". No, no. Next time, we will simply burn Wall Street.
Need help?...I have matches.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by eriksank »

vladimir wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 12:06 pm
eriksank wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 11:27 am We are not going to just "occupy Wall Street". No, no. Next time, we will simply burn Wall Street.
Need help?...I have matches.
Since we already have 25 billion dollars, coinmarketcap.com, fast growing to 250 billion dollars over the next 18 months, and then to 2.5 trillion dollars, it is us who have the money to buy the matches we need, and not Wall Street. All they have, are paper and digital dollars that will soon be worthless.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by Username Taken »

But, if you destroy the banks and their currency, then your 250 billion bitcoins will be worth 250 billion bitcoins. You wouldn't want to exchange it for worthless $$$.
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Re: Work Permits in Cambodia for Business Owners

Post by eriksank »

Username Taken wrote: Thu May 04, 2017 2:39 pmBut, if you destroy the banks and their currency, then your 250 billion bitcoins will be worth 250 billion bitcoins. You wouldn't want to exchange it for worthless $$$.
Yes. There's a catch, however. Bitcoin is not a valid substitute for paper token money, which people will still need to buy a coffee or groceries or other local purchases. But then again, this can also be done just locally. Each city could have its own paper money for that purpose. The digital dollar, however, will disappear. Why would anybody want to hold savings in a currency that the government and the banks just keep printing and devaluing? There was no alternative in the past, but now there is. So, I would not want to exchange bitcoin to worthless $$$, but I am perfectly ok to exchange them once in a while to local paper city money. Regional paper money is not much of a political threat. We can happily tolerate it. Paper tokens like the Cambodian riel are a political non-issue. You can use it to pay the motodop with. Nobody really wants his savings in that kind of paper tokens anyway. Furthermore, bitcoin will not replace the Cambodian riel, because there is no, and will never be, a paper version of bitcoin with which to pay a motodop a few thousand riel. Hence, there is room for things like the Cambodian riel and for cryptocurrencies like bitcoin. There is no room, however, for the digital dollar or digital euro. These things must be combatted and destroyed, until they are gone.
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