Let's Go Together

Wherever I go I see you people, I see you people just like me. And whatever you do, I want to do. And the Pooh and you and me together make three. Let's go together, Let's go together, Let's go together right now. Let's go together, Let's go together, Let's go together right now, Come on. Shall I go off and away to bright Andromeda? Shall I sail my wooden ships to the sea? Or stay in a cage of those in Amerika?? Or shall I be on the knee? Wave goodbye to Amerika, Say hello to the garden. So I see - I see the way you feel, And I know that your life is real. Pioneer searcher refugee I follow you and you follow me. Let's go together, Let's go together, Let's go together right now. Wave goodbye to Amerika, Say hello to the garden.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Czech Republic inks working holiday program plan

Here's a good idea. Go to the Czech Republic. You know their Skoda and how they were a multilingual socialist republic until NATO and the U.S. started meddling. Help them out and enjoy your Middle Europe experience.  

Czech Republic inks working holiday program plan

Staff writer, with CNA
The government and the Czech Republic have signed a memorandum of understanding that paves the way for a reciprocal working holiday program, which is expected to be launched in April, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said yesterday.
The memorandum was signed on Monday in Prague by Representative to the Czech Republic Lu Hsiao-jung (陸小榮) and his counterpart, Vaclav Jilek, the ministry said in a statement.
It said the working holiday program would be launched after the two nations complete follow-up procedures, and details of the program are to be announced later.
The program will allow Taiwanese and Czechs aged 18 to 26 to travel and work in each other’s nation for up to one year, and it is hoped that the program would promote mutual understanding and friendship between young people in both nations said.
The Czech Republic is the ninth European country and the 14th worldwide to have inked a working holiday agreement with Taiwan, the ministry said.
The Czech Republic is one of the most popular European destinations for Taiwanese tourists, the ministry said.

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Home in Taichung for Hanukkah


"Until we meet again and touch our hands together in another land."
Hanukkah will be here again on December 6th. My wife and I won't be going to the Lubavitcher festivities in Taipei; we will be on the east coast of Taiwan in Taitung gazing at the mighty Pacific Ocean, the beautiful mountains, and enjoying the clean air without pollution. By the time we get home, we will have missed the first night of lighting candles. That is good because I have a leftover box from Brooklyn that's missing about nine candles. 
      I will light the candles, say prayers, make potato latkes and eat doughnuts when we get back from our trip, but the miracle of the candles is more important than the festivities. I see it as a miracle that our Jewish traditions have lasted over two thousand years despite the Spanish inquisition and the holocaust. 
     Muslims and Jews had gotten along very well in the Middle World and Iberia until Spain and the Pope deemed our blood filthy and worthy of knights to slaughter. Britain and the U.S. got involved in the 20th century and took colonial land in Palestine for a Jewish state after World War II for their own purposes, despite the idealism of Zionism. 
     Jews and Muslims are closer in beliefs than Jews and Christians, yet someone in the Jewish hierarchy decided to be allies with the goyum who murdered us and millions of Muslims in the Inquisition, six million souls in Nazi Germany, and a million now in the Middle World in their endless war for economic dominance. One hundred million, a hundred million Native Americans were slaughtered to steal their land and resources! Those racist Christians would have done the same thing in Asia if Japan, China and Vietnam had not stopped them. 
     One death of a Jew is not more important to me than the death of anyone for their religious beliefs.  I have a T-Chart in my mind in which I compare atrocities. There are many many more Muslim victims of the U.S. war than there are Jewish victims of it in the attacks coordinated by the U.S. and Israeli military; not individuals who pick up a stone to defend themselves or join a ragtag group for jihad, unless, like ISIS, they are being supplied by the very same military to destabilize their homeland for plunder.  
    As I told my Mandarin teacher yesterday, I am a Jew; I am not "white," and my secular kind are all over the world; not only in Israel. We spread love of humanity and share it with all races and religions. This is the miracle of Hanukkah to me: to spread our Jewish heritage and respect for life and education and tradition around the world; not suffer under a cloud for the sake of U.S. European hegemony in the Middle World.


A friend of mine in Budapest, well aware of Antisemitism (look what Hungary did to the Syrian refugees!) invited me to take a 20 hour train ride with him to Auschwitz to feel the pain of my Jewish brothers and sisters in WW II. Riding through Middle Europe, with too many ignorant fascist wannabes, flush with hatred for anyone not white and Christian, I could never stand the ride to the destination; I know how our story ends. But we can change the story's ending by changing allies to our Semitic Muslim brothers who also pray directly to one Gxd, not through a mythical intermediary.
     A culture - one bitten, twice shy – sometimes rebounds in the most horrible way. Do the survivors of a holocaust arm themselves so it will 'never happen again' or, as in the case of most Jews, find the next closest bully - as in a "Stockholm Syndrome" - in forlorn reaction, for false protection from the oppressor, and allow their new host to break all the rules of war, as the U.S. has done, so long as it doesn't affect them?
       In the 19th century in the U.S. Northeast, some Irish American merchants, after establishing themselves in the U.S., put want ads in their store windows: "Chinese and Dogs needn't apply"? Just a generation before, the signs read: "No Irish or Dogs need apply."
     I feel the pain of the Jewish Holocaust victims but not more than the pain of the slaughter of Muslims and one hundred million Native Americans; few of my relatives were victims of Hitler which, perhaps, changes my outlook. 
     There can be peace in the world, but it depends on U.S. military-industrial imperialism. I am only a working man; a tool for the capitalists to use, break and get a replacement for. I am to the ruling class that would exploit me if they could. 
 
   After reading about the Jewish youth murdered in Israel by one hateful assassin, about one young man, though sad, it gives me no impetus, no credence to anyone to visit Israel to support and show I am not afraid, until President Netenyahu and the hawks, who killed that boy by their policy, are dumped. Only then will peace come to Israel and avenge the cycle of violence. When Israel professes peace with its neighbors, I will go and visit my historic homeland. 
     We are never too old to think of changing heart and doing the right thing; forget the prejudices that keep us behind high walls blaming others. As my mother once said, "You don't make peace by building walls." My Mom was right.


     Despite the hate used to divide us by the oppressors of the world, we should never give up  hope for a miracle of peace. David was the slayer of Goliath with a rock on a rope; it is written in the book. The powerless will beat the powerful again. Happy Hanukkah to all!

     "War Movie" by Jefferson Airplane 
                   listen:             https://youtu.be/Ma9lGs_-OH0
In nineteen hundred and seventy-five all the
people rose from the countryside locked together hand in hand all through this unsteady land to move against
you, government man, d'you understand? 
Gonna roll roll roll the rock around roll roll roll the rock
around lift the rock out of the ground

At the Battle of Forever Plains, all my people hand
in hand in hand in the rain. The laser way won the day
without one single living soul going down. The government
troops were circled in the sun gun found themselves on the
run from our nation. The rock is raised. No need to hide from
the other side now... transformation

Call high to the constellation headquarters, call high to the
most high directors, send out the transporting systems and
send out the sun finders
thirteen battalion of mind readers, three hundred master
computer killers from great platforms in the mountains
twenty mile lasers & great giant trackers... twenty miles
south now. Roll roll roll the rock around. In 1975 all my people rose from the countryside, so until we
meet again and touch our hands together in another land
until we meet again and see each others minds, we
three have met again and touched our hands, talking of
Napoleon in the garden, we will muffle the drums tomorrow
morning. Gonna roll roll roll the rock around, gonna roll roll
roll the rock around, lift the rock out of the ground
Epilogue:
     Over the weekend I dealt with internet schmucks; schmucks you meet on the internet, like ghosts. The schmucks you meet in person are meatier, but schmucks nevertheless. There was an anti-Semitic schmuck and a Semitic schmuck. Neither had anything to do with the reality of the article I wrote for Pioneer Searcher Refugeeblog entitled “Home in Taichung for Hanukkah.” If I called the article “ISIS Beheads Jews in Taiwan” perhaps I would have gotten more views on-line from the ex-pat goyum community in Taiwan and folks around the world, but I’m not a travelling salesman for my literature.
      The first schmuck, an English teacher in a Taiwan technical college, one who saw the intro but didn’t read the article, was offended by the picture I downloaded depicting David slewing Goliath. The schmuck fancied himself a pacifist. His opinion was that the Bible story I alluded to was believed to have really happened. I begged to differ in my reply to his comment. I replied three of four times, taking the high-road of metaphor as he tried deeper into the corner of hate against eye-for- an-eye Judaism while I gave example of how the oppressor should, at last, be destroyed in the head because of his heartlessness. I knew the clown wouldn’t understand so I just blocked him on Facebook, the only way you can kill someone legally without joining an army.
      The second ghost appeared when my daughter IM’ed me on WeChat while I walked along the dyke of the wash towards the ocean Sunday morning. Somehow, a fellow Jewish netizen of Taiwan, Joe  materialized out of the intermist. I put him back, I thought, but he came back to haunt me an hour later asking on Messenger if I had a “Hanukkah emergency” contacting him at 7:43am. I replied that it was “accidentally,” but then later flowed with the contact, as karma, and asked him about that Hanukkah party at Jew’s place he had invited me to a week earlier, in lieu of accepting my invitation to come to our home for latkes. We had it out while I was on the diesel train heading south on Taiwan’s east coast and west from Ping-dong to Kaohsiung. “Hadn’t Nathan invited me on an e-mail,” he asked? “I was incommunicado,” I said, but I’d rather get an invitation in a purple envelope, written in gold leaf on doily paper. I told Joe that an internet invitation should come from him, reminding him that it was he I invited to our home before he side-stepped me into a “Jew list” party we had no intention of attending. When Joe said it was too bad, mate, if I didn’t get an invitation, I asked Leona to use her internet skills to block this ghost so I never make the error of contacting him again by mistake. I’m sorry I wished him a “Happy Hanukkah” in the first place. I must clean my cell phone list of ghosts more often so this doesn’t happen again.

      At the worthless bushiban teacher’s meeting, the six-foot-four-with-tons-of muscle South African of recent employ, asked if I celebrated Hanukkah. When I gleefully said I did, expecting some connection from the Jew he had said a few weeks ago he was, he informed me, to the enjoyment of the ex-pat limey goyum present, that he didn’t believe in Gxd; that he was “only a Jew by blood.” I informed him that ‘Jewish’ was not a race, dope (I didn’t say it out loud; only thinking it of him) and even an African could be a Jew by choice when I forgot that he was, technically, African, of the colonist derivative. To think that I had considered inviting this muscle-bound clown to share homemade latkes with us and Amy, the unfortunate wife of a Taiwanese dingbat male who couldn’t please his Jewish wife to travel down and join us, made me cringe. I will make latkes for Leona and myself. We appreciate it.  

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Two men arrested after police raid cannabis growers

Two men arrested after police raid cannabis growers

By Jason Pan  /  Staff reporter

A cannabis-plant cultivation system is pictured on Tuesday after its discovery by police at an undisclosed location.

Photo: provided by the Taipei City Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Division

Two suspects have been arrested after police raided locations in northern Taiwan in a crackdown on a gang growing marijuana and selling cannabis products at nightclubs in the nation’s major cities, Taipei police officials said.
The raids were conducted on Tuesday in residential buildings in Taoyuan’s Jhungli Township (中壢) and Hsinchu County’s Jhubei Township (竹北), where marijuana plants and equipment used for growing the plants were found.
Two men were arrested in Jhubei on suspicion of growing marijuana after 80 cannabis plants were discovered at the site, said Captain Yen Kuang-tsan (顏光燦) of the Taipei City Police Criminal Investigation Division.
The suspects, one surnamed Chan (詹) and the other surnamed Lu (呂), are reportedly members of a Hsinchu-based syndicate known as the “Windy Flying Sand Gang” (風飛沙幫), Yen said.
Police said investigators are now searching for other alleged gang members, and trying to discover where the two suspects obtained cannabis seeds and how they learned how to grow the plants.
Authorities were told earlier this year that Chan and Lu were allegedly frequenting nightclubs to sell marijuana and cannabis products, and put the pair under surveillance.
Police said the two men are estimated to have sold more than NT$10 million (US$310,000) worth of illegal substances over the past two years at nightclubs and other entertainment establishments in Taipei, Taoyuan, Hsinchu, Taichung, Kaohsiung and other cities.
Their customers were mostly young partygoers, including some in the acting and modeling industries, agents and overseas Chinese, police said.
“The suspects used the ‘potted plant’ method, while utilizing controlled lighting systems with high-pressure sodium lamps, automated water sprayers, dehumidifiers and electric fans to construct controlled greenhouse environments inside the cultivation rooms to encourage rapid growth of the cannabis plants,” Yen said.
The suspects are to be charged with contravening the Narcotics Hazard Prevention Act (毒品危害防制條例), which classifies marijuana as a Category II narcotic, along with mescaline, coca leaf, opium and amphetamines.
People found guilty of manufacturing, transporting or selling Category II narcotics are liable to be sentenced to a prison term ranging from seven years to life, and may be fined up to NT$10 million.

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Taiwan ranks eighth best country to live as expat

Taiwan ranks eighth best country to live as expat

2015/10/18 14:40:10

Taipei, Oct. 18 (CNA) Taiwan ranks eighth among the best countries to live as an expatriate, while Singapore is considered the best place to live and work for expats, according to the 2015 Expat Explorer Survey released by the British banking and financial service group HSBC.

The survey, conducted in about 100 countries around the globe, is based on responses from 21,950 expatriates to questions about managing finances, career progression, local culture and quality of life for their children.

Combining these factors, Singapore is the best place overall to live and work as an expatriate, followed by New Zealand, Sweden, Bahrain, Germany, Canada, Australia, Taiwan, the United Arab Emirates and Switzerland.

An analysis of viewpoints expressed by expatriates in Taiwan shows they have little difficulty settling in, while two thirds enjoy immersing themselves in Taiwan's rich culture.

Taiwan does not rank as high as some destinations in terms of financial incentives, but there are other positives, according to the survey.

Although less than one third indicated earning prospects are better than at home, a similar number said Taiwan is a good place for career progression.

The Expat Explorer survey, now in its eighth year, is commissioned by HSBC Expat and was conducted by third party research company YouGov. between March and May 2015.

(By C.C. Huang and Lillian Lin)
Enditem/AW

Thursday, April 30, 2015

My Opinion: Taiwan's Immigrant Policy Questioned by BBC

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-32508443?SThisFB

In this report from the BBC, there are complaints that Taiwan's immigration policy has not caught up with the number of recent migrant immigrants who want to stay here to live. In America, if you are a citizen and marry a foreigner, your spouse could naturalize in three years. In Taiwan the route to citizenship is not tied to the length of your marriage to a Taiwan national. 

Still, I am a foreign spouse here and have all the rights that my wife has, except for voting in elections, which I wouldn't want to do, anyway, because of the corruption and lack of real democracy.

Foreign visitors should consider the plight of the common working Taiwanese. A citizen's wages are stuck at the level they were sixteen years ago while prices on commodities and housing have gone up. 

Elite migrants from the Chinese civil war, and their offspring, still command privileges beyond native born Taiwanese. They appropriated land and destroyed the Taiwanese quality of life under Japanese rule.

Is this a veiled BBC call for exploitation of Taiwan by new foreigners? 

Too often, foreigners complaining about unfair immigration policy in Taiwan are getting higher wages than citizens of Taiwan! 

 If Taiwan's economy was better, wages higher, more families 

would have children. Migrant immigration is not the solution to


 job shortages; it's an excuse. 



Taiwan already had two elitist migrations last century.


The government should help the common people, first. 




business-32508443

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Becoming Taiwanese

Becoming Taiwanese


Dimitri Bruyas
January 6, 2015, 3:16 pm TWN
A draft amendment to the Nationality Act
 (國籍法) passed an initial screening by a 
legislative committee on Dec. 17, opening up the possibility of dual nationality for some
foreign immigrants for the first time. This is great news for the hundreds of thousands 
of foreigners who have already settled 
here and want to apply for Republic of China (R.O.C.) citizenship, even if some are worried 
that the new amendment would create another problem: foreign nationals from the same
 country of origin with different rights.
Foreign Professionals
Thanks to the proposed amendment, some foreign professionals, such as highly skilled 
individuals in fields such as technology, business, education, culture, arts and sports, could
 soon be able to obtain citizenship without having to give up their original nationality.
Currently, a person must renounce his or her nationality prior to applying for Taiwanese
 citizenship and present a certificate of renunciation of his or her original nationality. In 
the near future, some skilled professionals will be able to forego this difficult process, 
pending a “recommendation” by a select committee.
Other Foreign Nationals
If officially passed in the Legislature next year, the new version of the act would still 
require the spouses of Taiwanese nationals and other immigrants to prove the loss of their 
original citizenship as a precondition to apply for R.O.C. citizenship.
Under the new amendment, however, they won't have to renounce to their original 
nationality before making an application in order to prevent them becoming stateless if
 their application is rejected. Instead, they will have to present a certificate of renunciation
 of their original nationality within one year after naturalization is completed.
Strangely enough, Taiwan allows local citizens to take up foreign nationalities, but 
requires any foreign immigrant to give up his or her original nationality as a precondition. 
The law even gives provisions for canceling the applicant's citizenship within five years 
of naturalization, denying their right to take up a foreign nationality after naturalization is 
completed.
New Problem
Authorities still believe that the new system could potentially give foreigners living in 
Taiwan more incentive to stay here with their families. Yet, many are concerned by the idea
 of having a designated commission in charge of recognizing the past, present or future
 “contribution” a foreign national has made or will make to Taiwan before his or her request is granted.
After all, the answer could be straightforward for a brilliant academic, scientist, 
businessperson, artist or athlete, but what about office and factory workers, housewives
 and underage children? How is the commission going to evaluate each individual's 
contribution to Taiwan's arts or culture? More worrisome, how would such committee 
distinguish between a potential entrepreneur and an artist coming from the same country
 of origin? Nobody knows.
Instead of evaluating a person's love for Taiwan, the aforementioned commission could 
consider evaluating a person's path toward integration into the local community through 
a set of objective principles. Why not evaluate each and everyone's effort to learn the local 
language, get a stable job, create a family and give back to the community, instead of
 longing for “big names” to settle in Taiwan? 

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

How a couple retired in their thirties to travel the world

(Courtesy of Go Curry Cracker)© Provided by Forbes (Courtesy of Go Curry Cracker)
Jeremy graduated from college on a Friday, started working on cell phone design at Motorola on a Monday and worked 80 hours a week for the next four or five years. What fueled his work ethic was $40,000 in debt — $35,000 from student loans and $5,000 in credit card debt for food and other essentials.
But his desire to keep up with his peers led him, on his $40,000 salary, to buy a new car and a three-bedroom house, which turned his previous bike ride to work into a 40-minute commute. The added debt got him to focus on his finances, so he began making models of how he could pay it off, mapped out his trajectory to retirement at 65 and began investing. He then used credit card checks charging 0% interest for 12 months to pay big chunks of his mortgage, his student loan and car loan.
When he started working at Microsoft and moved from Chicago to Seattle, getting a salary bump up to $85,000, he made many of the same decisions (which he now calls mistakes) again: buying a house, having a long commute, and not taking a vacation. Three years in, a girlfriend convinced him to take his first real, multi-week vacation — to the Philippines. He spent the first week thinking about work, checking email. But the scuba diving, mangoes and and tropical drinks began to have an effect, and by the third week, he was wondering how he could live like this every day.
He sold his house, began renting close to work and biking to the office. With his costs slashed, he was able to save. At a conference in Beijing, he met his future wife, Winnie, who is from Taiwan and had been saving 50% of her salary in order to travel. Now, Jeremy, 40, and Winnie, 36, are financially independent, travel the world and blog about their envious lifestyle on GoCurryCracker.com. (The site is named for their rallying cry derived from their favorite snack on their honeymoon hiking Mt. Rainier in Washington, during which they endured bone-soaking rain and encountered mosquitoes as big as bats.)
Here’s the story of how they saved enough to retire in their 30s — Jeremy at 38 and Winnie at 33 — and how they’ve been spending their money and time since.
How did you achieve your early retirement?
J: While I was at Motorola, pretty much every penny of income went toward paying off my $40,000 in debt. If I had $10 at the end of the month, I paid an extra $10 to the student loan. I did contribute to my 401(k) but I took out a loan on it to buy a house and when I sold that house to move to Seattle, I had to pay that back.
By the time I changed jobs, I didn’t have much savings per se. But I was close to being debt free. At Microsoft, I started out at a high savings rate — I was contributing to my 401(k), maxing that out and saving more on the side. After I met Winnie and we decided to retire early, we started reading books like “Your Money or Your Life” and improved on that until we were saving upwards of 70% of income. My last two years working, we were depositing pretty much my entire paycheck into my brokerage account, because we were living off dividends and interest.
We lived close to the university and could walk everywhere, so we didn’t have a car. I was commuting by bicycle — 8 to 20 miles every day. We got most of our food at a farmer’s market and CSA. The biggest part of your income is housing, transportation and food, and those three things were cut really aggressively, so our monthly spend was less than $2,000 a month at the end.
I probably worked three years too long, or we saved too much. The goal was always that we wanted to travel, and once we quit, there was a year and a half of bouncing through Mexico and Central America, and then we came to Taiwan to have the baby.
How much were you earning? 
Jeremy: When I started out of college, I was making about $40,000 a year, and that went up to more than $50,000 by the time I left. At Microsoft, I started at $85,000 a year and by the end of my 12 years there, I was at around $140,000.
Winnie: I worked in the same industry — phones and computers, and my last job was project manager at Dell. I was making about $32,000 in Taiwan.
Jeremy: We got married five years ago, so Winnie quit when we got married and moved to Seattle, so the last three or four years before we retried, when my salary was at its highest, she wasn’t working.
Winnie: I was a freeloader.
Winnie, when you were working for Dell in Taipei, what were your savings habits?
Winnie: The living cost here is quite cheap if you want to live cheaply, so I could save at least half of my income.
Just in a savings account?
We have something like a 401(k) but it’s run by the government, so I also maximized it, and the rest went to my personal savings account and my brokerage account.
So you invested it?
Yes.
Did you have a specific target amount of money that you were trying to save before you retried? 
Winnie: When we got married, the idea was that we’d quit that day and start traveling, so that’s why I quit my job here. But Jeremy said, I think we might need to wait another three years. He liked the project he was on.
Jeremy: I didn’t want to quit in the middle of it. The very original version of the plan revolved around being scuba bums — traveling to the best scuba diving sites around the world and having a partial income from working as scuba instructors.
Winnie: We were trying to think of what we could do for income while traveling.
Jeremy: Then, we talked to real scuba bums who were trapped in the developing world because they had no money and couldn’t afford a plane ticket home.
We would go to the library and get books on investing and learned about the 4% rule [which says that withdrawals from retirement saving of 4% will primarily be from interest and dividends, which would help maintain a balance from which funds can continue to be withdrawn for a number of years], so we built milestones on it. We could see when our investments could, for instance, support us living full-time in the Philippines. Then they would support us living full-time in Thailand. We worked our way up to the point where it could support our lifestyle in the U.S. That was just a straight up 25 times our annual expenses.
What was your lifestyle? And what did your friends think?
Winnie: We’d do potlucks where people brought their own food.
Jeremy: We also did happy hours. Some of our friends had a beautiful outdoor patio area where we did group dinners, and we also did quite a bit of hiking. There was a beautiful outdoor area 20-30 minutes away, and you’d go out there and have a full day’s entertainment for a few bucks of gas. A lot of our friends would spend ridiculous amounts of money compared to what we were spending. When we said, hey, would you want to come over to our small apartment near the university and have Winnie’s home-cooked food, they would rush over. Winnie could compete quite well on Master Chef. It was: Hey, do you want to spend $50 on brunch? Or would you like to come over our house and have this amazing six-course meal?
Our apartment was 900 square feet. We did, for a time, live in a 400-square-foot apartment. It was definitely too small. We were definitely testing our boundaries. Nine hundred square feet is a beautiful size for two people live in, but the average home size today is something like 2,400 square feet. I think we would just feel lost in something like that, like in a giant cave.
One of our friends has a 6,000-square-foot home on the lake. Our friend who did the outdoor party on the patio — his place is 1,800 square feet. For our friends’ places, 1,800 to 2,000 square feet was probably typical. We were paying $980. Rent for a smaller apartment in the hipster neighborhood would probably have been $1,800, and renting a house probably would have cost us $2,000-$3,000.
What was your investment strategy?
Jeremy: It evolved over time, but the vast majority of it was just index fund-invested. Much of our money is just in the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund and the Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund. I read some online forums for early retirement, some Jack Bogle, and Warren Buffett’s advice on focusing on passive index investing. And then you take standard modern asset allocation theory, which says, keep a small percent in bonds, a small percent in REITs [real estate investment trusts], and the rest invested in a split between in total market and total international. And partially because we are looking at a hopefully 60+ year retirement, we have the vast majority of our assets invested in stocks, to get long-term growth to ride us out for our lifetimes.
When the financial crisis hit, how did that affect your plan? 
Jeremy: On paper, we lost $400,000, but I was mostly upset that I didn’t have more cash to buy more stock. I looked at it as a fire sale on stock, and I wanted to buy more at a discount. I had a little cash and used all of that to buy more stock. I even wondered, should I take out a loan to buy more stock? Two years later, we were far more wealthy than we were at the beginning of it. As long as you don’t panic and sell at the bottom and get out of the market completely, the overall market shouldn’t affect you much at all. We’re maybe even stronger for it. Maybe the psychological effect was that I worked a few years longer, and that’s why I said, hey, there’s this really interesting project at work. I partially wanted to ride the market crash out and save a little bit more.
When did you know you had enough to quit it all? How much did you have when you retired?
Jeremy: We knew we had enough after that three-year period. I’ve never talked about net worth publicly before, but we share every penny we spend and highlight how much of a net worth can support that. We can fund our whole lifestyle on $1 million. We’ve been spending $40K a year, minus one-time baby expenses last year.
Do you need to move to a foreign country to make this lifestyle work? 
Winnie: Even in Seattle, we spent $40,000 a year.
Jeremy: When we were in Mexico, we were spending less than $3,000 a month, we had athree-bedroom house in the middle of San Miguel de Allende. We almost bought a house there to use as a base. We would eat out two to three times a day, go out for drinks with friends, we had a gardener and a housekeeper, and all of that was $2,500 a month. Trying to transport that lifestyle to the U.S. would certainly cost much more, but we’d substitute things — we wouldn’t go out for drinks. You don’t pay $15 for a martini. You make one on the front patio. Certainly taking that lifestyle to Manhattan would raise the price.
Do you have any income now?
Last year, the blog made $2,000. It’s a hobby that has the server fees paid for by the ad income. But all of our income comes from dividends and interest. We just live off them. I do a pretty active tax management of those assets, so in 2013 and 2014, we paid $0 tax while also converting about $20,000 a year to our Roth IRA to make that money tax-free forever. I’ve published our actual tax returns on the blog the last few years to show what that looks like in practice. Our plan is to, over the next 30 years, to convert our entire 401(k) into a Roth IRA so we pay no tax going in and no tax going out, so overall, we’ll be looking at $3 million in income over the next 30 years all tax-free.
We track expenses pretty closely, just so we can report them for information and education purposes on the blog, but otherwise, I never really pay attention to it. If we want something, we buy it, if we want to do an activity, we do it.
What have you done since retiring?
Jeremy: We went to Mexico with the idea that we would study Spanish and travel through Central and South America. We thought we’d be in Mexico for two months, but nine months later we were still in Mexico.
Winnie: We’d make friends with local people.
Jeremy: We’d practice the local language. When we were in San Miguel de Allende, which is a Unesco World Heritage City, we took Spanish classes for a month. Winnie took jewelry making and painting. The whole reason San Miguel de Allende developed was silver mining, so there are all these small silver jewelry artisans there, and Winnie was working with one of them. I was doing quite a bit of hiking, and we did a 900-kilometer bike ride around the island.
Winnie: In the beginning, we were very ambitious, like we’ll finish the whole continent in a year or two, but then we were like, we have 60 years.
Jeremy: It was an interesting change. Before then, all of our vacations had been two weeks long.
Winnie: I just threw away the list.
Jeremy: We went at a much slower, relaxed pace. We went to Guatemala for a few months, we went to Belize.
Winnie: Cuba.
Jeremy: Then we went back to the U.S., did camping and hiking around Western Washington and Oregon and then we went back to Mexico. Then we had the biological-clock-is-ticking conversation and then we came back to Taiwan to do in vitro fertilization, because here it costs 20%-30% of what it costs in the U.S. The thinking was we’d do IVF, start traveling again and have the baby in Europe, but we had some early miscarriage scare stuff, and Winnie was put on bed rest for a while, so we decided to play it safe and stay put till the baby was born. Our plan is not to stay here.
Winnie: We change our plan every 10 minutes.
Jeremy: We’ve been working through different ideas — spend a year in Spain, take an RV and drive around the U.S., or drive around Mexico. We’ll see how the pregnancy goes and see how our child’s personality is.