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> I'm a non US citizen nor resident, never have been and probably never will be. Because of FATCA, I had to prove to my Eastern European bank (where I actually am a citizen) that I am not a "US person". That designation has no legal meaning, anywhere in my birth country, yet I had to sign a formal written declaration "I, NAME, declare under penalty of penal law, that I am not a US person", to be able to access my funds again.

Your bank was terrified of losing access to US markets, so your bank forced you to prove you're not a US person to be super safe about US tax compliance. Seems like your complaint is with your bank, not the US. You're welcome to bank with a bank that has different policies. I have had European bank accounts before and I've certainly never been asked to prove I am not a US person. (On the other hand, I was asked to sign an absurd amount of paperwork that had nothing to do with the US, because it's Europe, and you need thirty-four forms and a notary public to be allowed to even exist.)

> USA always overreaches.

The US doesn't care about you at all.




> The US doesn't care about you at all.

of course not - they're a nobody.

They don't mean the US cares about the individual - the post is about the general level of regulation that the US is able to force upon third parties.

But then again, this is what it means to be sovereign. And to be honest, the US's overreach is not as high as it could've been given how much clout they have. Imagine if it was china in the same powerful position - what would've been the overreach then?


> Your bank was terrified of losing access to US markets, so your bank forced you to prove you're not a US person to be super safe about US tax compliance

It's more that a lot of them got fines a decade ago because of that so now US citizens are just straight up banned from most European banks.




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