Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

A collection of old posts from all forums. No new threads or new posts in old threads allowed. For archive use only.
funwithsafety

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by funwithsafety »

SpermFear Said:
And it's "holy" cow. Not "holly" cow. "Holly" cow might be a Christmas thing, I don't know....

TAXES FOR REVENUE ARE OBSOLETE

In the same sense that the Law of Gravity is obsolete.
Holly cow, typing errors on a instant blog post bug you that much - Holy cow, I must have gotten under your creepy skin! hollly coww...

TAXES FOR REVENUE ARE OBSOLETE was written by Beardsley Ruml,
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in 1946 and is reflected in all kinds of tax discussions of the time. The Income Tax after WWII was engineered for use as a social planning tool to keep people in line. None other than Milton Friedman who worked for Treasury at the time helped create a withholding policy that would serruptitiously replace the Victory Tax and leave Americans with only enough money to live at the level of comfort the governement deemed appropriate. The monies the government confiscated where to be used to put a lid on the population and limit their imput into the economy.

Read the article. http://home.hiwaay.net/~becraft/RUMLTAXES.html
I don't think there are any typing errors in it so you shouldn't be too distracted. :D
funwithsafety

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by funwithsafety »

SpermFear Wrote:
If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same within 10 days after notice and demand, it shall be lawful for the Secretary to collect such tax (and such further sum as shall be sufficient to cover the expenses of the levy) by levy upon all property and rights to property (except such property as is exempt under section 6334) belonging to such person or on which there is a lien provided in this chapter for the payment of such tax. Levy may be made upon the accrued salary or wages of any officer, employee, or elected official, of the United States, the District of Columbia, or any agency or instrumentality of the United States or the District of Columbia, by serving a notice of levy on the employer (as defined in section 3401(d)) of such officer, employee, or elected official. If the Secretary makes a finding that the collection of such tax is in jeopardy, notice and demand for immediate payment of such tax may be made by the Secretary and, upon failure or refusal to pay such tax, collection thereof by levy shall be lawful without regard to the 10-day period provided in this section.
(bolding added).
Nothing in the second sentence "limits" the application of the first sentence of subsection (a).
Really - then why doesn't the IRS have the power to levy "any person"? Why can't they serve a notice of levy on anyone other than those listed.

Come on SpermFear, you know why: the definition of "any person" is "any person liable for a tax", or "taxpayer". Those "persons" who work in the capacities listed are the only “taxpayers the service is empowered to deal with..

Also, you know why the IRS sends out the levy notices without section (a). It's because anyone who reads it can plainly see that it doesn't apply to just everyone. Why don't you tell the audience that many persons (not employed as per the section (a) list) routinely avoid levies and liens by using this language against the service.

If your lips are movin' SpermFear….
....
Famspear
Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
Posts: 7668
Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
Location: Texas

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Famspear »

funwithsafety wrote:SpermFear Said:
And it's "holy" cow. Not "holly" cow. "Holly" cow might be a Christmas thing, I don't know....

TAXES FOR REVENUE ARE OBSOLETE

In the same sense that the Law of Gravity is obsolete.
Holly cow, typing errors on a instant blog post bug you that much - Holy cow, I must have gotten under your creepy skin! hollly coww...

The TAXES FOR REVENUE ARE OBSOLETE was written by Beardsley Ruml,
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in 1946 and is reflected in all kinds of tax discussions of the time. The Income Tax after WWII was engineered for use as a social palnning [sic] tool to keep people in line. None other than Milton Friedman who worked for Treasury at the time helped create a withholding policy that would serruptitiously [sic] replace the Victory Tax and leave Americans with only enough money to live at the level of comfort the governement [sic] deemed appropriate. The monies the government confiscated where [sic] to be used to put a lid on the population and limit their imput [sic] into the economy.

Read the article. http://home.hiwaay.net/~becraft/RUMLTAXES.html
I don't hink [sic] there are any typing errors in it so you shouldn't be too distracted. :D
Ain't as easy as it looks, is it?

Look, if you want to be taken seriously here, then slow down, take some slow deep breaths (figuratively speaking), and think things through. We've seen all this before. We see it every day. You are in way over your head.

The U.S. federal income tax law is constitutional, and it applies to the income of individuals (among other things) regardless of whether those individuals are in the public sector or the private sector. The tax law applies to compensation for personal services of individuals. The gross amount of compensation for personal services performed by individuals has been legally taxed off and on since the Civil War.

Put aside all the garbage you've read on the internet and focus your mind. If the average person had not been subject to the federal income tax prior to 1939 or whatever date you want to select, don't you think that real legal scholars would have discovered that by now?

Think about this: If the tax protesters were right, wouldn't it strike you as being a little strange that neither the Form 1040 nor the instruction book has ever contained any statement that the application of the income tax law was ever limited in the way that the tax protester literature typically claims? If the federal income tax did not apply to ordinary private sector worker's salary in, say, the year 1913, why doesn't the Form 1040 say that? Did the IRS just "lie" when it printed the forms, and nobody ever noticed for years and years and years? How the heck did the average person supposedly "know" in 1913 that he or she supposedly wasn't being taxed? Read the form and instructions, if you don't believe me.

Did you know that the highest marginal tax rate for individuals in the early 1950s was 92% for a couple of years, and 91% for many other years in that period? Don't you think that if that income tax were legally invalid, people would have complained? Why is it that with only a few exceptions, almost no federal court cases involving tax protesters developed until around the mid-1970s (when the tax rates were much lower, by the way -- still high, mind you, but much lower than they were in the early 1950s)?

Chew on that for a while. And don't try for a smart a** answer. We'd like to see a reasoned, well thought out explanation.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
Famspear
Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
Posts: 7668
Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
Location: Texas

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Famspear »

funwithsafety wrote:[ . . . ]why doesn't the IRS have the power to levy "any person"? Why can't they serve a notice of levy on anyone other than those listed.
The IRS can levy "any person" as described in the first sentence of subsection (a). Any argument that the IRS cannot serve a notice of levy on anyone other than those listed in the second sentence is legally frivolous. You are delusional.
Also, you know why the IRS sends out the levy notices without section (a). It's because anyone who reads it can plainly see that it doesn't apply to just everyone.
Sure. And I have a big orange bridge in San Francisco that I'll sell to you.
Why don't you tell the audience that many persons (not employed as per the section (a) list) routinely avoid levies and liens by using this language against the service.
No, no one has ever avoided a lien or levy by "using this language" against the Internal Revenue Service.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
funwithsafety

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by funwithsafety »

SpermFear wrote:
If the average person had not been subject to the federal income tax prior to 1939 or whatever date you want to select, don't you think that real legal scholars would have discovered that by now?
Your whole post is nothing more than an appeal to authority -

As far as "real scholars", the Billions of dollars in play each year silenced them and bought them off long ago.

Milton Friedman in his autobiography recounts how he participated in the withholding fraud in 1943 when it was clear that if they were to expand the tax they would have to replace the Victory tax with something...something fraudulent.

He said he regretted doing this but that it was going to get done with or without him...

Real scholars indeed.

There is a whole record of congress and treasury trying to justify withholding after the end of the Victory Tax. It is clear from the record that there was a concerted effort to mislead, lie to and defraud the people of their monies in order to control them and to limit their participation in engineering the economy.

Real scholars indeed!

Your real scholarship consists of reading the 1040 instructions which only apply, yes, to "taxpayers"...holy (no typo) mother of...

Keep buttering your bread with the crushed bones of the American People and keep calling it the law. It's not the law, but if it were the law it should have been repealed long ago. The only reason it isn't challenged by the people is that America is scared shitless of the types of recriminations you folks graphically threaten in these pages daily. They file returns as you would have them and they still live in fear!

The treatment of Mrs Jackson is atrocious and you animals cheer the government on.

The American People are too scared of the IRS to fully participate or to ask for their rights.

Thank goodness the law isn't what you say it is and your constant pounding down of the facts with fearmongering, insults, threats and ridiculous appeals to "real scholarship" while citing IRS 1040 instructions proves it. :D
User avatar
wserra
Quatloosian Federal Witness
Quatloosian Federal Witness
Posts: 7575
Joined: Sat Apr 26, 2003 6:39 pm

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by wserra »

funwithsafety wrote:Why don't you tell the audience that many persons (not employed as per the section (a) list) routinely avoid levies and liens by using this language against the service.
Because that would be a lie. Why don't you prove me wrong by citing a few of those "many persons" who "routinely" avoid liens and levies by claiming that they are not included in 26 USC 6331(a)? BTW, by "citing" I don't mean that you heard that your cousin-in-law's aunt did it. I mean something verifiable. That's why those strings of letters and numbers follow cases and statutes, you see - so that the rest of us can verify that we are not being told some fever dream.
"A wise man proportions belief to the evidence."
- David Hume
.
Pirate Purveyor of the Last Word
Posts: 1698
Joined: Wed Dec 31, 2003 2:06 am

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by . »

Paging Van Pelt. Paging Van Pelt. Please pick up the white courtesy TP phone. A fellow delusional is in need of your worthless advice.
All the States incorporated daughter corporations for transaction of business in the 1960s or so. - Some voice in Van Pelt's head, circa 2006.
LPC
Trusted Keeper of the All True FAQ
Posts: 5233
Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2003 3:38 am
Location: Earth

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by LPC »

funwithsafety wrote:
lpc said: "That holding was reversed by Helvering v. Gerhardt, 304 U.S. 405 (1938)".

So the Supreme Court decided Helvering v. Gerhardt in 1938, and Congress enacted the Public Salary Tax Act in 1939. You do the math.
Ok - if in 1938 it suddenly became "consitutional" to tax these folks, why the act in 1939.
If you had ever paid any attention to real world events, instead of spending your time cutting-and-pasting crap you've found on the Internet, you would know that it often takes Congress months, or even years, to act on legislation.
funwithsafety wrote:I did the math - you can't add! :D
That's pretty cocky for someone who's just been shown to be ignorant, gullible, and stupid.
Dan Evans
Foreman of the Unified Citizens' Grand Jury for Pennsylvania
(And author of the Tax Protester FAQ: evans-legal.com/dan/tpfaq.html)
"Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
LPC
Trusted Keeper of the All True FAQ
Posts: 5233
Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2003 3:38 am
Location: Earth

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by LPC »

Having gotten hammered on Delusion A, our Troll-of-the-Week shifts to Delusion B:
funwithsafety wrote:Really - then why doesn't the IRS have the power to levy "any person"? Why can't they serve a notice of levy on anyone other than those listed.
The IRS can. What part of "any person" in section 6331(a) didn't you understand?

The U.S. Supreme Court has explained why government employees are specifically mentioned in section 6331:
U.S. Supreme Court wrote:“Nor is there merit in petitioner’s contention that Congress, by specifically providing in 6331 for levy upon the accrued salaries of federal employees, but not mentioning state employees, evinced an intention to exclude the latter from levy. The explanation of that action by Congress appears quite clearly to be that this Court had held in Smith v. Jackson, 246 U.S. 388, that a federal disbursing officer might not, in the absence of express congressional authorization, set off an indebtedness of a federal employee to the Government against the employee’s salary, and, pursuant to that opinion, the Comptroller General ruled that an ‘administrative official served with [notices of levy] would be without authority to withhold any portion of the current salary of such employee in satisfaction of the notices of levy and distraint.’ 26 Comp. Gen. 907, 912 (1947). It is evident that 6331 was enacted to overcome that difficulty and to subject the salaries of federal employees to the same collection procedures as are available against all other taxpayers, including employees of a State.”
Sims v. United States, 359 U.S. 108, 112-113 (1959), (emphasis added for the benefit of semi-literate trolls).

Since then, numerous courts have specifically rejected the claim that section 6331 is in any way limited to federal employees. For example:
1st Circuit Court of Appeals wrote:Rogers advances a statutory argument aimed at undercutting the validity of the levy that formed the basis of the warrantless seizure. This invalidity would distinguish his case from Roccio [United States v. Roccio, 981 F.2d 587 (1st Cir. 1992)], but only if we could accept Rogers's argument. We cannot. A levy is defined by the Internal Revenue Code as "includ[ing] the power of distraint and seizure by any means." 26 U.S.C. section 6331(b). Rogers claims that this broad grant of power is in fact limited by the language in section 6331(a) that indicates that "[l]evy may be made upon the accrued salary or wages of any officer, employee, or elected official, of the United States, the District of Columbia, or any agency or instrumentality of the United States or the District of Columbia . . ." 26 U.S.C. section 6331(a). According to Rogers, this provision means that the power of levy only applies to the "salary or wages" of a federal employee.

We reject this absurd contention. Such a ruling renders meaningless the plain language of section 6331(b) indicating that the power to levy is broad.
Richard G. Rogers v. Sophia Vicuna, et al., 88 AFTR2d Par. 2001-5251, No. 00-2051 (1st Cir. 8/28/2001).

Or:
U.S. Tax Court wrote:Petitioner asserts in his response to respondent's motion for summary judgment that respondent does not have the authority under section 6331(a) to levy on petitioner's property because respondent's authority to levy extends only to certain taxpayers.[Footnote 7: Specifically, petitioner asserts respondent's levy authority extends exclusively to "any officer, employee, or elected official, of the United States, the District of Columbia, or any agency or instrumentality of the United States or the District of Columbia".] Petitioner's argument is without merit. In Sims v. United States, 359 U.S. 108, 111-112 (1959), the Supreme Court rejected a similar argument and held that section 6331 authorizes the Commissioner to levy on property and rights to property of all taxpayers.
M. Kenneth Creamer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-266, No. 17116-06L (9/5/2007).

So you lose again. Care to try Delusion C?
Dan Evans
Foreman of the Unified Citizens' Grand Jury for Pennsylvania
(And author of the Tax Protester FAQ: evans-legal.com/dan/tpfaq.html)
"Nothing is more terrible than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Nikki

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Nikki »

Havingfunwithhimself has failed to cite, or even mention, a single instance where anyone has applied any one of his theories in a VICTORY over any taxing authority anywhere.

This is not a surprise since such victories only happened on Planet Merrill, Planet PAM, or some other Bizarro world.

On our planet, his theories not only are guaranteed losers, they usually result in something called sanctions -- a slap on the wrist by a taxing agency or court of up to $25,000.

It is, on the other hand, entirely possible that troll du jour is involved in some form of serious tax controversy and is posting all of his pet theories to buttress a Cheek defense. If so, he is well advised to post them elsewhere where he will not find people who are experienced in the law and who take pleasure in refuting the inane arguments with accurate and specific citations.
Doktor Avalanche
Asst Secretary, the Dept of Jesters
Posts: 1767
Joined: Thu May 03, 2007 10:20 pm
Location: Yuba City, CA

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Doktor Avalanche »

Why do I get the creepy feeling that John J. Bulten is wearing drag?
The laissez-faire argument relies on the same tacit appeal to perfection as does communism. - George Soros
Nikki

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Nikki »

John is markedly more literate than fws; is not as prone to flip, insulting, non-responsive comments; and in the past has supplied much more original content and analysis then has appeared here.

IMHO, JJB has enough to do cheerleading at loserheads and dealing with his own tax issues to preclude his appearance here.
Famspear
Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
Posts: 7668
Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
Location: Texas

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Famspear »

funwithsafety wrote:Your whole post is nothing more than an appeal to authority
Hey, Einstein, this is a forum about tax law. In law, that's what we "appeal" to: Authority. The law is not what you say it is. The law is what the Authority says the law is. The people ratified the Constitution. Under the Constitution, the people elect Congress. Congress (the Legislative Branch) enacts statutes. The Executive Branch enforces the statutes. And the Judicial Branch interprets the Constitution, the statutes, etc., etc., in actual disputes in actual cases.

You are thinking of the "Fallacy of Appeal to Authority." That's something completely different.

In law, when we cite an Authority or "appeal" to an Authority, that's not a fallacy. That's how the U.S. legal system works.

To paraphrase legal commentator Daniel B. Evans, The Law is not some magical, mystical, theoretical thing floating around in your mind, or out there in the air somewhere. The Law is what the courts rule the law to be in actual disputes in actual court cases.

Welcome to reality.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
Cpt Banjo
Fretful leader of the Quat Quartet
Posts: 781
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 7:56 pm
Location: Usually between the first and twelfth frets

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Cpt Banjo »

funwithsafety wrote:As far as "real scholars", the Billions of dollars in play each year silenced them and bought them off long ago.
Hmmm...I must have missed the Accountant, Law Professor, and Attorney Coverup Act, which funnelled all of those dollars to buy the silence of the experts. Who knew?

The pathetic paranoia of these cretinous tax deniers never ceases to amaze.
"Run get the pitcher, get the baby some beer." Rev. Gary Davis
Prof
El Pontificator de Porceline Precepts
Posts: 1209
Joined: Thu Mar 06, 2003 9:27 pm
Location: East of the Pecos

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Prof »

What always amazes me is the way in which tax protestors and others espousing similar views of government and society always seem to think and analyze in the same exact way:

1. Find an book or internet site established by a guru who is obviously anti-establishement and self-educated; or, in the alternative, an affinity group (i.e., the Militia groups) or an internet discussion group in which the participants are obviously anti-establishment and self-educated.

2. Read a quote from or citation of a case/statute or group of cases and statutes. DO NOT READ THE STATUTE OR THE CASE IN ITS ORIGINAL FORM. DO NOT REVIEW COMMENTATORS. DO NOT REVIEW ANY LATER CASES OR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY TO DETERMINE IF THE STATUTE or CASE LAW HAS BEEN REPEALED, MODIFIED, OVERRULED.

3. Make no attempt to understand context or even syntax.

4. If the courts have disagreed with your analysis, point out that the Courts are corrupt/paid for/threatened by the Powers-that-Be; all members of the BAR/same club, etc. However, continue to try to cite case law which might seem to agree with your position or continue to want to litigate in those same currupt courts.

5. Accuse everyone who disagrees with you of being corrupt, controlled, etc., by the PTB. Lawyers are members of the BAR and owe their first allegiance to the court, etc.

6. Pretend that the decisions of courts directly in point, accompanied by sanctions, are somehow not applicable or are fictions.

( Oops, I forgot two more points.) 7. Seize on the pronouncements of marginal figures in American intellectual life like Rothbard, Spooner, Lew Rockwell, etc.

8. Buy into each and every myth or panacia -- UCC Redemption; Admiralty Court Jurisdiction; Roman Law; Alloidial Title; Right to Travel; Contract Law Relationships, etc.

Of course, all of this reflects a very unsophisticated world view disguised as a "very sophisticated view of the way the world really operates." I might boil all of this down to a simple whine: "THEY secretly run everything for THEIR benefit."

What's your favorite whine? Rockefellers; Illuminati; Swiss Bankers; Bohemian Grove; ?

(By the way, mine is: Republicans!)
"My Health is Better in November."
Famspear
Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
Posts: 7668
Joined: Sat May 19, 2007 12:59 pm
Location: Texas

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Famspear »

Einstein wrote:
Thank goodness the law isn't what you say it is and your constant pounding down of the facts with fearmongering, insults, threats and ridiculous appeals to "real scholarship" while citing IRS 1040 instructions proves it
Hey, Einstein, go back and re-read the post. What's the matter -- can't remember why I brought up the Form 1040 and instructions? Since you're averse to hearing about citations to Authority (citations to the actual text of the Constitution, the actual texts of statutes, the actual court rulings, etc.), we thought we'd try the practical approach to bringing you out of your delusion: read the f*****g Form 1040 and instructions, genius. Obviously, you're averse to the practical approach as well.

In fact, you would be a lot better off confining yourself to reading IRS tax forms and instructions than you are reading tax protester crap on the internet.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
fortinbras
Princeps Wooloosia
Posts: 3144
Joined: Sat May 24, 2008 4:50 pm

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by fortinbras »

funwithsafety wrote:This was later changed to: Internal Revenue Code".
Actually, the Public Salary Tax Act of 1939, enacted April, 19, 1939, is a mere 1 and 1/4 page long and, by its own terms, amends the Internal Revenue Code, which already existed.
funwithsafety wrote: However, the amendments did not change the fact that it only applies to the District of Columbia and the federal territories and possessions.
The Act makes clear that the wages and salaries of civil services - federal and state (and any subdivision thereof) are taxable, presumably not only by the federal income tax but also by any state income tax. This Act intentionally applies to people in federal employ but does not limit its geographic application.

The rest of the essay depends on ignoring the definition of "includes" that is expressly contained in the TaxCode, sec 7701, and approved by the US Supreme Court in the Helvering and other tax cases.
SteveSy

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by SteveSy »

I think you missed the point or just gloss over it.

If "from whatever source derived" is as clear as all of you claim it is, there wouldn't be a need to include federal or state employees. I can't count the number of times people like Dan try and claim people are stupid because they don't accept "from whatever source" to mean any source whatsoever no matter who you are. Clearly if it were that obvious and the 16th truly amendmended the constitution to allow for an all encompassing income tax and that was its purpose then clarifying it includes federal or state workers would be idiotic right? Are we to assume that it was unclear that "from whatever source" might not include the government's ability to tax itself? How many times have all of you claimed its common sense? Surely "any person" includes federal workers right? Why would they need to list federal workers if "any person" means any person whatsoever? You are on the one hand making fun of people for not reading the "any person" part but then right after that it lists specific people. Ummmm I thought any person means all people why list anything, its obvious right?

Maybe its no so obvious after all, apparently not.....but you simply are claiming it is in order to portray people who question it as merely stupid so no one will listen.
Last edited by SteveSy on Mon Nov 24, 2008 4:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Imalawman
Enchanted Consultant of the Red Stapler
Posts: 1808
Joined: Tue Sep 05, 2006 8:23 pm
Location: Formerly in a cubicle by the window where I could see the squirrels, and they were married.

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by Imalawman »

Dear idiot of the week,

After practicing tax law for a few years I am now getting a post-law degree in taxation. I study under some of the most well known tax scholars in the US. I spend on average about 60 hours a week or more studying the tax code and nothing else. Tell me sir, what motive do I have to keep hidden a secret truth? How about one law professor who is advocating getting rid of the income tax as we know it - what is his incentive for hiding the truth? Don't you realize how rich I could become if were to discover the secret phrase in the IRC that exempts 95% of the population? I could retire in less than 4 years! The sad fact is that not a single tax professor or non-delusional tax professional has ever agreed with your fantasy.

No, there is nothing to explain it away except that you are dreadfully wrong and confused about the law. I grant you the tax code is overly complex and burdensome. The IRS is inefficient and in my opinion, taxes are too high (but about to get a whole lot higher). None of this changes the fact that the IRC in its purest form is a tax on the incomes of the average US resident from all sources.
"Some people are like Slinkies ... not really good for anything, but you can't help smiling when you see one tumble down the stairs" - Unknown
funwithsafety

Re: Public Salary Tax Act of 1939

Post by funwithsafety »

spermfear wrote
Form 1040 nor the instruction book has ever contained any statement that the application of the income tax law was ever limited in the way that the tax protester literature typically claims? If the federal income tax did not apply to ordinary private sector worker's salary in, say, the year 1913, why doesn't the Form 1040 say that? How the heck did the average person supposedly "know" in 1913 that he or she
Did the IRS just "lie" when it printed the forms, and nobody ever noticed for years and years and years?
Did you know that the highest marginal tax rate for individuals in the early 1950s was 92% for a couple of years, and 91% for many other years in that period? Don't you think that if that income tax were legally invalid, people would have complained?
Note how your response addresses none of my points about Beardsley Ruml's "Taxes Are Obsolete" or Milton Friedman's admitted fraud (with Ruml by the way). Instead you throw out a bunch of straw men arguements.

As far as tax dissent because of high rates, it has always existed and you know it.

WWII ended and the Victory Tax provisions were repealed but it was not publicized. Most Americans assumed that paying the Victory Tax and Paying normal income taxes were the same thing and they were led to that belief by guess who, the veracious IRS and Treasury.

Most Americans and businesses rolled over for the Friedman and Ruml's withholding fraud.

Over time the abusive state of the tax system was recognized even by the main stream and some reforms of the rates and filing provisions took place. Most Americans are not so independently minded as they think they are and they will look for relief from the apparatus of governement that lied to them in the first place.

The IRS lies constantly - This is why the American people are terrified of their own government. Even filing "conventional" returns, people run a foul of the service and a letter from the IRS is feared more than induction to the military!

Here are some a neat comments on why the Public Salary Act was passed which may clear up Dan Evan's confusion as to whether 1938 comes before 1939! The congress were simply trying to strong arm the Supreme Court into reversing itself as to the constitutionality of the tax!
And to lend to the 16th amendment and the IRC "a presumption of constitutionality". At best that is all you can say about current IRS and Treasury practices. They have a presumption of constitutionaly without the REALITY! :D

Congressional Record-Senate, April 4, 1939, page 3765, Senator Brown of Michigan:
“The Senator from Vermont for himself may certainly make that reservation; but there is no question, under the accepted practice here and in the courts, that the fact that we pass the bill will lend to it a presumption of constitutionality.”

Congressional Record-House, February 9, 1939, page 1321, Congressman Reed of New York:
“I repeat that the purpose of this bill is not to raise revenue, for it is conceded that it will not produce more that $16,000,000, a sum insufficient under the present spending program to run the Federal Government two-thirds of 1 day.
The purpose is to bring congressional pressure upon the Supreme Court to destroy the fundamental principle that one sovereign power shall not destroy the functions of another sovereign power through the power of taxation, which is the power to destroy.
…We know the evil at which the sixteenth amendment was directed. The Court had held that you could not impose a tax upon the income from real estate or from personal property without apportionment. The people wanted an amendment that would have the effect—and all the debates here has brought out that this was the understanding of the States when they ratified that amendment—of making it possible for the Federal Government to tax the incomes from these two sources without apportionment. That is all in the world the sixteenth amendment did.”