Sean Strickland’s suspension for his brawl at a June Tuff-N-Uff event in June has ended, and the former UFC champion had a major update on his next fight.Strickland revealed on his social media accounts that he was offered a fight against Anthony ‘Fluffy’ Hernandez at UFC 325.However, Strickland turned that down due to the high taxes in Australia. The event features a main event of Alexander Volkanovski vs. Diego Lopes for the UFC featherweight title in Sydney.Australia does have high taxes for non-residents, with ‘Tarzan’ claiming that it was as high as 40% in an update a few months back.In his latest message, Strickland explained his decision not to fight in Australia despite loving the fans there:“I did say no to the Australia card. Australia, I f****** love you guys, man. You guys are all white trash, you are all like-minded, but I don’t have medical insurance. So you want me to get my first fight back in Australia and give half my check to you f****** to buy your medical insurance? I ain’t f****** doing it."However, Strickland isn't turning the fight down and is willing to go up against Hernandez in the USA:“‘Fluffy’ don’t want to do it, I don’t want to do it… I love the ‘Fluffy’ fight, let’s get the s*** booked in the States [United States of America].”Check out Sean Strickland’s update below:This isn’t the first time a UFC star has spoken about the high tax rates in Australia. John Makdessi fought on the UFC 293 prelim card in Sydney, Australia.‘The Bull’ lost his fight to Jamie Mullarkey. However, his tax cut from the event also caught the attention of many. In a since-deleted post, Makdessi shared his official payout, which went from $58,000 to $28,461.65 after taxes.Makdessi also asked influencer Andrew Tate for help regarding these high taxes.Strickland hasn’t fought since losing the middleweight title fight to du Plessis at UFC 312. ‘Tarzan’ became the champion after defeating Israel Adesanya at UFC 293, but lost the belt to du Plessis in his first title defense at UFC 297.