Leave to some place you know very little about and see where it gets you.
It's not an either/or situation, you can stay and just move (a part of) your liquid assets to avoid taxes. A wealthy person cannot be divided over multiple body parts, but their wealth can easily and with barely any effort be spread over multiple places.
Considering most western countries allow you to deduct your losses, you don't even need to move your physical assets to avoid paying taxes. Just leave some bad investments in your country of origin and move your profitable investments abroad. If even a well known figure like Steve Jobs can could get away with paying $0 taxes, surely the lesser known of the 1% can realize that too.
Still mourning Google Reader, luckily we can find consolation i in that all those apps and services weren't strategically killed by an evil corporation.
Article is worth reading (use an adblocker though), but if you're looking for a little more than a title but a little less than a new tab:
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Gabe Newell, the co-founder of Valve, explained that providing excellent service is the best method to combat piracy. He added that, "The easiest way to stop piracy is not by putting antipiracy technology to work. It’s by giving those people a service that’s better than what they’re receiving from the pirates."
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The infamous "You wouldn't steal a car" commercial pushed back against piracy over 20 years ago. The ad has received its fair share of criticism over the years, but please humor me as I look at it from a different angle.
If pirating digital content is akin to stealing a car, what is selling digital content and then revoking access without offering a refund? In this hypothetical world in which physical goods work the same way as digital content, what Sony is doing is like selling someone a DVD then breaking into their house and stealing it back after a few years.
Best news would be if they kicked out Israel though