Well, duh.A week ago I was forewarned by another member in here to be ***very careful*** regarding what I printed. That individual portrayed you folks as 'lions in a lions den'.

Well, duh.A week ago I was forewarned by another member in here to be ***very careful*** regarding what I printed. That individual portrayed you folks as 'lions in a lions den'.
Grrrrrraaaaaarrrrrrrrrrr!!!!Demosthenes wrote:Well, duh.A week ago I was forewarned by another member in here to be ***very careful*** regarding what I printed. That individual portrayed you folks as 'lions in a lions den'.
LPC wrote:In all my years of research, I've never seen any definition of "United States" that included the territories of the United States while excluding the states of the United States. If you have an example of such a definition, I'd like to see it.GoldandSilverEagles wrote:The term "United States" has more than one legal definition. Is your answer referring to the federal "United States" (aka Federal territories) or are you referring to the fifty union (united) States?
I would hope you don't see them being excluded from the definition, either.GoldandSilverEagles wrote:
Hmmmm....I dont see the 50 union states listed anywhere.
Grixit wrote:Hey Diller: forget terms like "wages", "income", "derived from", "received", etc. If you did something, and got paid for it, you owe tax.
Yet another example of not understanding the use of the word "includes."GoldandSilverEagles wrote: "26 USC Section 3121. Definitions:
(e) State, United States, and citizen - For purposes of this chapter -
(1) State - The term "State" includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa.
(2) United States - The term "United States" when used in a geographical sense includes the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa."
Source: A friend sent Definitions from IRC and CFR (http://www.findlaw.com)
Hmmmm....I dont see the 50 union states listed.
The term "includes" does not exclude items from the common definition of the word being used. If I say, "My key chain includes my car keys." Does that mean my house keys are not on my key chain? No, it does not. However, the common understanding of "my key chain" will exclude any other person's keys. The common meaning of the term, "United States" and how it is used within the federal tax laws automatically includes the 50 states within the understood common use of the term.GoldandSilverEagles wrote: A friend sent this to me.
Source: Definitions from IRC and CFR (http://www.findlaw.com)
"26 USC Section 3121. Definitions:
(e) State, United States, and citizen - For purposes of this chapter -
(1) State - The term "State" includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa.
(2) United States - The term "United States" when used in a geographical sense includes the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa." End of quote.
Source: A friend sent Definitions from IRC and CFR (http://www.findlaw.com)
Hmmmm....I dont see the 50 union states listed.
Joey Smith wrote:The "I may be a citizen of a state, but not of the United States" argument has never been successful, or even close to successful, or even not been snickered at by the courts for being just a stupid argument.
Since you don´t seem to read the FAQ when provided with links, allow me to demonstrate how the courts have used to describe your position:GoldandSilverEagles wrote: Hmmmm....I dont see the 50 union states listed.
they do a good job whoreing themselves out to the corps already.Red Cedar PM wrote:I still haven't received a reply from Mr. Eagles on how he would expect the federal government to raise the revenue it needs to function if his proposed "zero" flat tax were enacted.
and you just helped prove his point about the attitudes on hereRed Cedar PM wrote:I love the claiming of victory and the trash talking after his ass has already been handed to him on a silver platter multiple times by now. Apparently providing evidence and citations to prove someone wrong, and ridiculing them for making outlandish claims illustrates a mentality akin to a serial killer. Mr. Eagles must have gotten his psychology degree from the same place he learned about tax law.GoldandSilverEagles wrote:I'm formulating my next information release and judging from the responses so far, ya all need some serious therapy. I'm mean I'd hate to see you campers in your real life, your attitudes remind me of closet serial killers. This is serious sh*t, ya'all get bent out of joint over someone *with the brains, and sense* not to bow down to your crap. I don't agree with ya'all, but unlike many of you, I cling to Eastern philosophies and so I don't get all whipped out over it.
Outside of Operative and the dude who commented on my Asperger's, I feel sorry for the intimate people in your lives who don't agree with you folks. You all got to be a real bitch to be around in a face-to-face disagreement. Judging from how nasty some of the above posts have been, some of you folks just ***CAN'T BE WRONG**** and hate being questioned. I'd wager that many of you have had past relationships end because of that very weakness.
A week ago I was forewarned by another member in here to be ***very careful*** regarding what I printed. That individual portrayed you folks as 'lions in a lions den'. I disagree. You folks are more like a swarm of mosquitoes.
Operative, I'll have a rebuttal to your claims 2day or 2morrow. Namaskar!
Try http://www.suijurisclub.net -- you have to join, by the way.CaptainKickback wrote:Here at work, the Systems Admins have blocked a large number of sites for promoting hate, violence, drugs, alcohol, pornography and gambling.
http://www.suijuris2.com is on that list.
Just an observation......
Really - how is that?and you just helped prove his point about the attitudes on here
The Operative wrote: Under the Constitution and the federal tax laws, a U.S. citizen is a person who was born in one of the 50 states or territories.
And yours is the most tightly closed mind around, isn't it?GoldandSilverEagles wrote:I realize this may be far too simple for many of the 'Hitler youth' in here to comprehend, but I cannot open a closed mind.
See US court rulings on dual citizenship at http://www.richw.org/dualcit/cases.html for a good sampling of what the law has been determined to be in regard to how citizenship originates and how the 14th amendment does, in fact, apply.GoldandSilverEagles wrote:The Operative wrote: Under the Constitution and the federal tax laws, a U.S. citizen is a person who was born in one of the 50 states or territories.
Nice try but NO!
<snip legally meritless theories>.