JJ Luna's personal privacy blog. In 1959 he moved to Spain's Canary Islands to begin a then-illegal educational work that included secret meetings in remote mountain forests. Although pursued by General Franco's Secret Police, he maintained his privacy via a false identity and was never caught. When the Spanish dictator moderated Spain’s harsh laws in 1970, Luna was free to come in from the cold. However, he remains in the shadows to this day. He is currently an international privacy consultant.


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PROTECTING YOUR
PRIVACY INVOLVES
MANY FIELDS:
  • Fictitious names
  • Ghost addresses
  • Medical records
  • Home deliveries (not!)
  • Computer security
  • Canadian bank accounts
  • Trustworthy nominees
  • Safe driving techniques
  • Self defense measures
  • Hiding places
  • Craigslist ads
  • Self employment
  • Simple lifestyles
  • Real estate
  • Private investing
  • Hidden ownership
  • Vehicle purchases
  • Home-based businesses
  • Disappearances
  • Secret storage
  • Subpoenas (avoidance)
  • Faraway small banks
  • Identity theft protection
  • New Mexico LLCs
  • Off the grid living
  • Unusual burglar alarms
  • Low-profile travel
  • Border crossing tips
  • Internet searches
  • Stalkers (losing them)
  • Private detectives
  • Anonymous rentals
  • Two-way radios
  • Foreign mail drops

Monday, April 6, 2009

Stop looking for a job. Work for yourself!


There in only one way to keep your private life private (and stay out of the dreaded New Hires list). You must work for yourself. If you are (or plan to be) a carpenter, a sales person, an artist, an architect, an interior decorator, a hairdresser, or any similar profession where you can work alone, I suggest you do work alone. The same applies to starting your own small business. You may not get rich, but you can certainly shoot for $100,000 a year. That will be sufficient to live a simple, debt-free life.

In fact, the absolute best kinds of home-based businesses are those that can be run alone or just with help from family members. Many a small business, although successful in the beginning, has come to grief when the owner was tempted to expand.

Business writer Michael LeBoeuf, in his book The Perfect Business, lists some of the problems connected with hiring one or more employees:

* Your freedom and flexibility will be forever restricted.

* You must give up privacy when an outsider comes into your home.

* You are now responsible for bringing in more money to cover wages and benefits.

* The government will burden you with odious payments and record-keeping chores.

* If an employee fails to show up for work, the extra work will either have to be done by you, or it won’t get done at all.

* Every time someone quits, you have to start all over.

To the above, I would add one more caveat. Judging by what I read in the papers these days, if you have to fire a woman, she might come back to you with a charge of discrimination or harassment. If you fire a man, he might come back with a gun.

(This information is taken from the e-book SKIP COLLEGE: Go Into Business for Yourself.)

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Comments:
When you say "you can certainly shoot for $100,000 a year", do you mean before or after taxes? And if it's before taxes, what net-income target would you suggest?
 
That's after taxes, but is just an estimate. (Before taxes, perhaps $120.) Depending upon how many are in a family, and where they live, the amount will vary.
 
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