Why and How I Renounced US citizenship: My Expatriation Story

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hi my name is Andrew Henderson and welcome to a very special Nomad capitalist video this video is going to be really in-depth I've got a lot to talk about and I have a lot to share with you about a very important topic and about a very important announcement that I wanted to make you aware of and so this video is gonna be a bit longer it's gonna be a very serious video and so on something that's really very important and I to think that you deserve to know about and it's about a big decision that I have been working through in my own mind as a private citizen separate from Nomad capitalist for a while now actually for many many many years and so I made some notes unlike most of the other videos we do that I do extemporaneously I made some notes cuz there's a lot to talk about and I want to make sure that I don't miss anything but this is not a topic that I had planned to discuss you know partially out of respect to the parties involved which I will talk more about later in the video but also you know out of privacy and so I'm going to cover the I think they're relevant and important parts of this big announcement that you can learn from while still hopefully maintaining the respect that people who are involved in and obviously keeping what needs to be private private but the announcement from me that a lot of people have been asking about we've been getting this on our YouTube videos we've been getting at our articles you know when you have or four million people who look at your stuff we've been getting this question a lot you know for a long time but I think people have felt it recently people have felt it a bit more based on some of the content we've put out and I'm here to announce that as of late in 2017 I decided to no longer be a citizen of the United States this has been really an interesting process for me and I think it's important to share not only the background not only feelings but the process that was that I went through so that hopefully some people out there can identify with this and people can understand why I did it and people can understand if it's something they should do or maybe something that they shouldn't do I had a lot of stereotypes shattered during this process a lot of things I didn't expect which I'm going to talk about more in the process part but I've been thinking about doing this for a long time you know I grew up in the United States and I would spend when I was eight nine ten years old I had two big maps on my wall one was a US map one was a world map and I spent most of my time looking at the world map thinking of how I was gonna live another country thinking of how maybe there was somewhere else that I would feel a bit more comfortable and as you know a number of years ago I started traveling around it's been about a decade now that I've been traveling around looking for where I can go and be treated best in so many ways from personal to financial many of the things not purely financial but really about personal life as well and a couple years after starting to travel I left the United States for good and I can tell you that when I left the United States for a good remember sitting with some of my friends including one of my old business partners in the United States and I was very upset about what was happening in the United States I was very angry about the rules if you go back to the very beginning of nomad capitalists late 2012 you'll see more sarcasm more snark we've updated a lot of those old articles that had actual information because a lot of that information it's changed but if you look at you know if you just if you remember those days I mean remember that I was more frustrated about the United States from I being a US citizen and would often speak in some sweeping generalizations and with speak in ways that today I wouldn't want to be speaking in and so if you go back to - when I started Nomad capitals and even a bit before that I had thought hey do I want to be a US citizen I like it much better living overseas I tend to connect to people better overseas and I really started to go through the process but I you know I was very kind of the fact that you know I don't want to just throw away what is a widely sought after passport just for being angry and I think that was the important emotional decision that I made back then is that you don't want to be angry so fast forward a couple years about a little over two years ago I was very close to deciding to make this decision then with like late 2015 and I talked to some folks in my family and I ran this idea past some people in a more casual way and and got some feedback and I was about ready to go through with it and then some things came up that actually made it somewhat beneficial to be a US citizen and I kind of went back and reevaluate and sodalite let me let me put this in the back burner for now and come back to it later and and people would ask me hey you know why are you still a US citizen you talk about it and in quite frankly I always said you know it's really nobody's business I mean I'm the nomad capitalist I advise people on different things they can do and then how to build a nomad capital strategy but obviously you know what works for me may not be what works for someone else but people asked and I said you know I look at it once a year and decide if it makes sense for me and when I went back and evaluated this year I just decided that it no longer made sense for me to to be a US citizen and that's ultimately when I decided to go through the process now before I get into the process is this is not something that's for everyone I think that it's funny that you know among my close colleagues and friends and advisors I've talked about this in the last two-and-a-half months since I've gone through the process and one person said oh you know now this is just you're just gonna be the renunciation guy that's gonna be your advice to everybody that's gonna be your thing and I think that you know the the emotional growth from going back years ago when the approach to do this was much more angry is that this is not for everybody got together with four guys last week who came and we did a little mastermind we were helping them with their plans had a lot of fun one of the guys had already planned to renounce before it came to me one of the guys we determined that might be a good thing for him to do because he just wasn't feeling it anymore like I was one of the other guys you know was generally one to either and what was keeping the idea open and one of the other guys said hey I love living in the United States I'm you know I'm just gonna stay you as soon as I left the country and I think that you know that was a good kind of group of people that demonstrates the different opinions they're out there this is a decision that not only do you have to come to on your own it has to feel right for you but it's one that not everyone should make contrary what some folks might believe this is not really a financial decision for many people you know the news media likes to paint it as a bunch of rich guys who are just running off I'll go into some of my reasons in a minute but you have to feel right with the decision when I talk to my former business partner a couple months ago before I made my final decision to to renounce he said you know you're going through the different reasons you're going through your feelings and he says you feel a lot more at ease a lot more comfortable a lot more happy and a lot more at ease really with this decision than you did when you first started talking to me about it years ago and he says back then I would have never I would have said enter come on you're being crazy you're being emotional you're overreacting don't do it he says now you know he said this is a guy my former business partner you know he loves living in the u.s. you know he he and I share many opinions the nomadic capitalist stuff it is not one of them he says you know and I I you know I'm gonna live in the u.s. I'm gonna be proud of the u.s. he says but I can see for you why it doesn't make sense anymore and he says you know for me it makes sense for you just to go down this route and to no longer be a US citizen I think you'll feel a lot more comfortable that way but it took me years of really going through the process to come to this conclusion now you know maybe there are some people for whom it is a financial decision more so than it was for me and for them they can come to terms with a lot more quickly that's okay too but I think that you know having heard from a lot of people over the years some of whom are kind of angry this is not something you want to over react to it is an emotional decision it is an emotional decision and so I want to talk about the process and I want to talk about what happened and I want to kind of give you some insight I'm gonna say this I want to be very respectful to people who are involved in this process because one of the stereotypes but I didn't necessarily have anymore but one of the stereotypes that a lot of people have that was shattered for me was the difficulty of doing this or the sense of judgment of doing this the people whom I worked with the people who helped me with this at the u.s. level were incredibly professional they were incredibly non-judgmental they were actually incredibly nice you know I mean you can say hey you know people who work at the State Department are they're professional they do the job these people were actually extremely nice and I actually felt like they actually went out of their way to help and to be kind and that was something that I think demonstrated to me that I was ready to do this because if you would have asked me five years ago back when I was talking to my friend and partner Matt about this you know the idea was I'm gonna go in there and I'm gonna you know you know be you know I'm gonna give a piece of my mind and and they're gonna be angry and nothing can be further than the truth I was extremely professional I was at my best I think they were extremely kind and helpful and really accommodating and you know this idea that this process should be adversarial I think is not the right thing to think about I think that we see so much media and we see so much of the general public who is angry with the quote/unquote 1% and we project that onto the government quite frankly if you're a US citizen this is your right and I think that if you work in the State Department you're your you know my impression has been that people are pretty cool with that you you get the sense perhaps that they would not make the same decision after all they're working for the US government and I respect that and and one of the things that I feel that was right for me what was coming in terms with the fact that you know the u.s. does not have to be my enemy obviously there are some people that I help for whom you know they have more financial motivations for doing this and that's okay and they may come to terms of this very quickly but if you're someone who is upset with the way that the u.s. does business you're upset with the way the u.s. manages its foreign policy it upset with the fact you've got to fill out a thousand forms every year I think coming to terms understanding that you know the US government you know they don't to be the enemy and actually now that I've renounced I feel much greater sense of peace and understanding that you know what I family who lived in the United States and that's not what I want to do but I respect them and I respect their decision I have I don't respect all the US government's policy decisions but I have a respect that you know not even who works there is a terrible person and I have a sense that I no longer have to be upset about it it's no longer my circus it's no longer my issues to deal with and it's funny it you know occasionally we'll watch something on YouTube we'll watch something from the US news media and I realize this is not my cross to bear anymore I'm no longer a part of this and the US may have broader implications in other parts of the world and in the monetary system in many things but it's no longer my my cross to bear but let me let me go through the process it's you know rather simply and all a bit some of the more detailed stuff because I don't want to be seen as giving folks advice after all we do do that here at nomad capitalists but the process was quite simple I you know the first thing I did was I I spent about a week or two sitting down with family members and friends and associates and people I work with and talking about this and talking about how it would work I decided I wanted 2017 to be the year that I would do it um you know I just decided that it's the end of the year and I can simplify my life and going to 2018 just have a new outlook and so I made the decision and I contacted the embassy in a place where I live one of the places where I live and I arranged an appointment and they were incredibly helpful he said hey you know if you want to come in tomorrow we can help you and I was traveling at the time I was in Mexico actually meeting with some folks at a little meetup and so I adjusted my travel plans to come back a bit earlier than I expected and I'm to get in there and get an appointment went in and booked my appointment and showed up and brought a couple of forms discuss the process answer some of the questions and again was very professional one of the questions that I don't think that they always ask in these appointments but they do ask sometimes and they asked me it was you know what what's your reason why do you want to do this you know the honest thing that I told them was you know I just don't really feel like an American anymore maybe I never did and that's an area where I think that I as the Nomad capitalist and perhaps different from some of the folks that we helped because you know again there's some people who just say you know what you know I have people who they're involved in cryptocurrency and you know if you're a US citizen or a u.s. resident you can't participate in I see I was for example and they say you know what I'm losing a 10 million so I don't I just want to renounce and that'll solve that problem maybe they love the United States I mean obviously not enough to stay but maybe they don't really have any of the you know the the kind of emotions about it that I've had but I said you know I just I don't feel American anymore and I feel and I haven't for some time but I feel it now to the point where you know when I feel like I'm totally comfortable to do this I've been living outside the United States for many years now in the last four years I spent all six or seven days last summer it was interesting that when I went last summer when I landed in Chicago and then I got my bags and went on to Phoenix where I had lived in the US for a while I went and checked into the phoenicians my favorite hotel and an old watering hole I used to spend time in when I lived there I said you know I feel like a tourist here I said it's a great hotel great people I can speak to them in English we can laugh together a little bit we had a nice time but I said you know when I landed in the United States they make they make you fill out that landing card or at least they give you the card I had Global Entry but they give you that card you have to fill out and it says you know where your resident of and for the first time ever since I had left the United States for the last time I said I where am i resident it's really hot here you know obviously I have a residence cards another country but where's my real country of residency you know it's not here that's really the first time that I really had to think about it and that was that feeling kind of led me to realize you know what this is a place that it's nice to come for a week every who knows how often do all the kind of American stuff I went to Denny's you know met some friends but I really for the first time it felt like a tourist and I felt what it was like to be you know somebody from any other country just visiting the United States going to Vegas going to New York doing whatever and having a nice time and having a respect for the contribute but not feeling like it was mine and so I told the embassy said you know I don't really feel like an American I've been out of the country for so long I feel comfortable that you know if I was never able to come back that you know it's nice to have the option but I could live with that and you know I didn't go into all the details it's really nobody's business and I won't go into all the details here but you know I didn't and I don't feel like an American um I realized that I was spending a long time building an identity again not only for business reasons but really for personal reasons which we want to get into here but for personal reasons of building an identity and my identity you know when I wear a flag then occasionally you know going around to meet different people it's not an American flag that's not out of a hatred for the US but it's out of just a sense that it's not my place obviously there are other reasons one of the things that I've learned from working with folks who have renounced some of them who had done so before they came to me for help with other stuff but one of the things I've learned is that when you do it it feels like a weight off your shoulders and there is there always was for me a certain sense of dread is someone who believes in compliance is someone who believes that you know it's best as a successful person to follow the law and that's the best thing to do I mean you know whether you think morally the law is right or not I think following the law is a good idea and if you're a US citizen and you don't like the laws that being a US citizen brings with it then you have the option to do what I did it and get out of the system you know I I don't agree with people who just say you know bury all your you know put all your cryptos off line and and just you know don't follow the rules because you can and I'm sure that might anger some people that I'm saying that that's okay you know I'm looking for people who believe that you know following the law whether you like it or not it's a good thing to do and so for me as someone who has that kind of Midwestern upbringing where I grew up with you know your word is your bond you do the right thing wanting to do the right thing wanting to be compliant brought with a sense of dread I remember a couple years ago I went out with with a with a with a girl from Iran briefly and you know I I felt so uncomfortable doing that because you know all the issues between the u.s. and Iran every year you know you have to file tax returns you to file F bars as a US citizen I have one bank that every time you change your debit card you lose your debit card do you get a new one they'd give you a new account number and I think I had like 14 or 15 accounts maybe not quite that many but I had a lot of accounts at this one Bank and we went through the f bar I'm like reporting account after account and I'm trying to figure out which balance went with which account well this account had this balance but then it went over to this it just became so confusing and I said oh you know I want to do it properly it's so difficult there was this this sense of dread that you've had all these different rules and regulations and you want to follow them properly you want to be compliance and to the best of my knowledge I always did I was always my intention I reported every bank account reported every company but it just became a lot to keep up with you know a lot of papers you know people think oh the reason is taxes and actually they did ask me know this is about taxes and I was gonna confuse what they meant and they said well you do understand if you renounce if you owe us money the debt doesn't just go away and that is true the same as your many military obligations don't go away um you know I have used legal strategies for myself for a long time to pay very very little if anything I think that's a fair system considering I've lived in the United States again all of six days in the last about four years and or even longer than four years actually you know I wasn't using in the services people may take issue with that but that is the law and I was able to basically do what people from other countries in the world do where they leave their country and they don't really pay much other than I had to file all these forms every year and follow all these regulations so I legally paid you know very little it's not really about tax I don't owe the IRS money in fact they recently sent me a letter saying we actually owe you some money but it was that sense of trips the paperwork was just keeping up with everything which if you want to be a US citizen I know guys who have come to me they said you know what Andrew you know yeah I'm a citizen over here too you know one guy I am a citizen of Australia but you know what it's worth it's worth going through some hassles every year I'll hire an accountant I'll keep some records it's worth it to be able to stay a US citizen and I'm not saying that you know for me the reason was paperwork but not just that's just an extra little push in the right direction for me the real reason for me was I felt like I didn't identify with the country I didn't really need to go back and live there I had spent years overseas and and I felt like I had a new identity and all those things just made it more and more clear for me you know obviously if you're a British citizen and you don't feel British anymore you may still keep your British passport other convenience but is a US citizen there's a lot of other things to consider so they asked me I went to the interview they said we know what are your reasons and I told him and we had a nice chat and they said you know listen you know you know when you do this it can't be undone and they won't walk through some scenarios with me and I said I understand they said okay great you need to come back again in Sui made an appointment again this embassy was very nice and they allowed me to come back pretty shortly thereafter and so I went out and I gave it some thought I did some journaling and I actually made some videos for my own use that I may or may not put on sometime in the future but I wanted to write document how I feel and then I went back to the embassy for the next appointment I took the two thousand three hundred and fifty dollars in cash in an envelope and when you go in the first thing they do is they call you up and I say hey please give us the cash and there's oh there's like a was like a like a cash register that you you put the money to the thing and they put in the cash register and the girl it was actually coached she's actually kind of cute I you know I thought it would kind of be a inappropriate time to say anything you're going to pronunciation appointment but they took my money they gave me a receipt and they said you know have a seat we'll call you up well I learned about this process is the renunciation processes actually I mean it's a very dignified process I mean most people who go in to apply for visas for a tourist fees or whatever even when I was engaged a long time ago and went through the fiance visa process everything's done were you standing on one side of the window and you slip papers under the thing this process is actually done in an office and you sit there and you talk to them and it's you know rather dignified and so they went through a lot of the questions again and then it came to the part where they say all right raise your hand and read this out if it's the oath of renunciation and so they read you a bunch of stuff from the paper and then they say all right now we need to read this raise your right hand and read this and I can tell you you know I said it was a bit emotional at that moment I kind of felt like it was like breaking up with somebody where you read it and you're basically saying I mean something that's pretty serious I mean it wasn't I as you know we've talked about for many years I you know don't this or we think that just because you're born somewhere that you have to be in love with it or that you have to be a patriot or that you have to stay there forever that you shouldn't have options and I still believe that but that's not to say that some of the conditioning still doesn't work its way into you at a very deep level and that you're not going to fight a little bit of it off if you've ever broken up with somebody you know that when you're saying those words when you're looking the person in the eye you're saying those words we can be together any longer it's a little tough and sometimes you know if you're like me you're like most people you've you've ended a relationship with somebody wet you wish it could have worked out and under different circumstances maybe it could have and you get a little emotional you know it is emotional and you really think about it you really feel it when you're saying those words and then they thank you and and they tell you that all right hand us your passports please and they roughly nice enough to say hey if you if you need him for I actually had to you know if you need it for a little bit of time we can do that and I said no it's okay then it's a fair deal but you know when you renounce you don't get the passport anymore I mean it's only fair and then you walk out and like any break up you know you walk out in these US embassies they're all very in a fortified you'll walk out it almost feels like you're you know you're walking it feels like you're walking to have a jail almost because they're so fortified and then you go to the front desk you go through guard shack and you you get your phone back and you could do anything that you brought with you that you weren't allowed to take in then you walk at the front door and you take your first breath of air as essentially a non-us citizen and you realize you've got a new life ahead of you and if you do it for the right reasons as it took me years to come around to and and maybe it takes you less time if this is the right decision for you maybe it takes you less time but you realize kind of like breaking up you say you know what it's unfortunate that it had to happen but you realize that ultimately it'll be for the best and ultimately you can't have any regrets you know I've done a couple things in my life that that have changed the course of my life and some of those I still haven't seen the full result of but I never like to have regrets I always wanted to say you know I made the right decision for the time one of the things that I was in Serbia last year and I've made so many friends in Serbia and I have team members from Serbia and obviously Serbia as a history of the United States going back not so long ago in our lifetime and I was in Serbia a couple months ago but a month before I made the decision I remember us having dinner with somebody and she was telling me the story of how she grew up with her father family was from Kosovo they moved to Serbia when she was a child and her father moved and she said when the war started she said something in my father changed and she said he he he made it he lived a couple years after that but when she was a child her her father passed away and she said something from the war with the u.s. changed him and it wasn't for the better and I remember sitting there across from her and seeing her try and be strong about this that something that obviously happened a long time ago but still impacts her and impacted her family and changed her family and that really crystallized for me something that is easy to say in theory it's easy to say that hey you know we don't agree with what the United States does and I would say that being an American doesn't mean agreeing with everything the United States does but it's someone who had no like early held that identity of being American I'm ever sitting there with her and feeling that this was really not part of my identity that that that there were other sides to the story and realizing that I had to have an identity that suited me and that is as emotional as giving up US citizenship can be for some and and again I took me a while to come to the conclusion and I did it and I I won't look back but I also realized I didn't want to have those negative emotions about being a part of something that I didn't entirely agree with and I you know it was painful to see the impact of that on somebody else and I learned I really crystallized for me you know the whole issue of identity so the question is you know where do I go from here and this is something I've also learned from friends and colleagues and people that I work with in countries like Serbia you know Serbians cannot go to the United States about a visa there are some countries that Serbians can I go to that a visa or other countries and no doubt not being a US citizen I will have the ability to go to a couple fewer places in the world you know so far we made a video here about you know going to Thailand I got a Thai visa took about a day and cost three seven dollars it was very easy I got a visa to go to Japan took about a week very easy very pleasant people you know one of the things I talk about with the people I help is you're never gonna fully understand this stuff until you do it that's part of whites in my opinion good to have a mentor and one of the things that I've done over the last ten years is try and figure this stuff out without much of a mentor it would be a lot easier if I had myself if I had Nomad capitalist to look back on and kind of help me and guide me through the process not only the procedural stuff of which company to get which bank to get which passport to get but the emotional stuff because I think that really nobody talks about this so many people in our space or so they hang on so much to you know the man of mystery let me use a fake name let me hide my identity you know let me be the badass that they don't identify the stuff that I think people really think about the fears the insecurities and and is Menten in particular I think that we tend to step over those fears and step over those insecurities because we don't want to appear weak but we still have them we still wonder what's gonna happen and so what I tell people is you're not gonna understand how the entire process works unless you either have been through it in which case I now have a greater clarity of how it works or unless you have a mentor who was really sat down and and studied you know how this process works and and what the feelings are what what you need what you have to do is cetera one of the things that I've learned is that you know depending on which passports you have you know getting visas can be relatively straightforward not all visas but for me and the places where I want to go and the places that I think are the future and where I want to call home I'm very confident in in the strategy that I have now you know if I want to go to New Zealand I'm can I have to get a visa and I went through that process lately and it is not as easy as Thailand or Japan for somebody like myself who is constantly on the move I've also realized and I'll talk about this another video that I want to slow down a little bit because I've basically seen most the countries I think that I have potential and I want to spend more time in those places and not be on the go as much which also supports this decision but you know you can still obtain residence permits you can still obtain visas you can still go many places if he's are free I mean where I'm at right now just came visa-free 90 days same as an American for me not a lot has changed now your situation may vary I don't have a great need to go to the United States there will be a process if I want to do that and obviously you know I'm gonna continue just doing the things that I really geek out on which is getting residence permits doing the immigration stuff I don't think a lot changes what I do feel is a sense of freedom and not only because oh okay now I don't to file a tax return anymore because I do to fellow final tax return this year it is partially that hey I I do feel a sense of freedom and a detachment from all these that sense of dread that I talked about but I also feel much more aligned from an any point of view that you know when you're an American and you don't agree with the things that you know the u.s. stands for you don't really feel like you connect with the average American certainly I work with I work with largely Americans and work with US citizens Australians Canadians largely in the people that I work with and the people that I met with last week for example I mean they totally get what we're talking about you get what we're talking about but the average person the United States I never really got along with and so now not having to say hey you're a US citizen I'm a US citizen it feels much more peaceful for me and I meet people from the US in various places met some of the lobbyists today and it's like hey you know what that's cool that's your other than identity and mine is something else and there's a really a great relief for me that has come but I don't think anything else has changed I mean I remember just just for fun I went out and set up a new offshore company just to do a little research and develop it but also just to kind of celebrate hey I don't have to follow a form for this anymore obviously some we're gonna speculate some are gonna say oh this is this this is just the latest guy who we just dozen want to pay I was already very optimized in that regard this for me is about me as a private citizen I'm doing this video because I think that nobody else in this field has done this if they have and they won't stand up and talk about it is there some risk to me doing this maybe but I believe that you deserve the truth I deserve the people who are out there who are considering this deserve to know if there's somebody who supports them and who understands them and that this this is not just a technical process cuz the people who come to me asking should I renounce do I want to renounce I do wanna renounce I think that having mentorship is what they really crave they want to know how does this work they want to know what's involved and so that's why I want to provide and I want people to know that there is someone who understands them even if that means that I will be the subject of some nasty comments or the haters coming and saying he did it for this for that reason I I know what's in my heart I know why I did it again there are certain parts of this process that will remain private to me because it's a very personal process but I want to get I wanted to tell you this because I think it's important that you understand that there are a lot of misconceptions about it you know the US government does not have to be your enemy and if you approach it that way you probably will not succeed but you will have your own reasons if this is something that you want to do and there's a process to figuring it out if this is something that you should do if you are living the lifestyle that we talk about here I am happy to help people who are trying to figure this out whether you're trying to figure out whether you should do it with your in the process whether you want to do it you just kind of want to figure out how do you strategize to do that obviously I have learned a lot going through this process and I'd be happy to help of course you know Nomad capital is calm we take a very limited number of people who want the kind of mentorship I'm talking about you don't want a strategy this is something that I would have done with or without Nomad capitalist but I think that having a megaphone to talk to millions of people and let them know that they're not alone is important that's why I made this video I'd love to hear your your thoughts and your comments here I appreciate your taking the time to watch the video I hope that this has helped people who are looking to better understand the process I understand it's not going to make sense to everybody but it is something that I think needs to be clarified because we this is a process that is very opaque and people deserve to know how it works and perhaps by talking about it some folks will realize they don't want to do it but there it is so my name is Andrew Henderson nomads capitalist calm is the website and I'm gonna continue to do my research do my development the RDS we call it here right and no doubt this will make some of the parts of doing our day little bit easier there might be a few things a bit tougher as a non-us citizen but I'm gonna keep doing I'm going to be doing regardless and appreciate your taking the time to watch this video for no mega capitalist document management ursin thanks for watching
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Channel: Nomad Capitalist
Views: 121,107
Rating: 4.7271852 out of 5
Keywords: why i renounced us citizenship, how i renounced my us citizenship, how to renounce us citizenship, renouncing american citizenship, renunciation of us citizenship, renunciation, i renounced my us citizenship, why renounce american citizenship, renounce us citizenship, citizenship, expats, expats renounce citizenship, living overseas, stateless, living offshore, working offshore, offshore structures, second citizenship, nomad capitalist, nomad capitalist andrew, world citizen, travel
Id: UYjooV1eadw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 41min 5sec (2465 seconds)
Published: Sun Mar 04 2018
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