If you eat the Soylent Green as Turvyed suggests, and it's made from your vegan friends, is it technically still vegan eating? I muse upon things like that while analyzing the LE charts.
Nah veganism can be dirt cheap if you do it right. Just avoid the hipster vegan restaurants and Whole Foods 'organic' fixation. For example I just had my dinner which consisted of rice, beans and cauliflower. The heap of food on my plate probably cost me about 20 cents.
Humans are scum so eating them sounds fine to me. As to Vegan, without people drinking milk or using it, they'd be no cows alive, better to be alive then never exist even if for a short period of time, give life to animals, drink milk. Can I go to Gregs and eat cakes for cheap if Vegan?? hell no, not yet, give it time I bet they'll have vegan ranges.
mr r1234 heard Spain real estate with building and property can be found online muchly, plan ahead, the cayman's may play into your scheme
Not too sure about Spain or anywhere in Europe - may not be cheap enough for my contingent emergency retirement plan. Cayman is out - it's expensive plus its in hurricane alley. I was thinking Costa Rica. Retirees can live there for $1,500-$2,000 USD per month all-in. To me that's a real possibility because it's not too far from the US and I can easily travel back and forth in case my kids want to live their lives in the US.
mr r1234, not to live, if indeed you intend to carry out your scheme, you may find that sam and the irs can be jealous lovers and hate to see you take your capitol when you leave. but now with your response, i see. sounds like a vacation. cheers
No matter which country I move to, US law requires me file US taxes every year (even if the tax owed is zero). That is a bit of a pain.
Garbanzo beans, lentil with collard greens, seitan meat tacos, brown rice, broccoli etc, polenta, fruits, greens....super cheap. I know a 70 yr old raw vegan who eats like $8 a day. No medication, eye sight has gotten better, works all day.