viewtopic.php?f=8&t=4189&p=65380#p65380See what you are intentionally leaving out from your comments is that for literally months Famspear has pretended that I had made that entire comment up all on my own, when in fact he must have known (just as you must have known), the entire time that I had merely obtained it from a tax honesty site (just do a Google search on the sentences from the quote and many sites should query back), as this case and many outer court cases are frequently cited upon such sites. Though as it turns out Famspear, this entire time knew it was actually the respondents own statements included within the Certiorari, and that entire time he was boasting me as an outright liar for posting that quote. Though in actually this means, beings Famspear being a downright mentally unstable liar, that at the most this quote was a misunderstanding or unintentional misrepresentation of what are the facts of the case.
No, Weston, everybody knows that you copied the material from somewhere else. Nobody ever said you "made it up all on your own." What we said was that you did what other tax protesters have done -- you tried to make it look like the quote was a ruling by the Court itself. You put it on YOUR WEB SITE and you falsely identified the quote as being a ruling by the Supreme Court.
Yes, I knew the entire time that these statements were the Respondent's statements -- I specifically stated so, back in February, right here in Quatloos, in an entire thread with your name on it -- a thread devoted to this and other nonsense that you have been pushing.
And Weston, I'm not the only one who zapped you on the phony Lucas v. Earl quote:
from Cpt Banjo onWhat, you mean that Mr. White is relying on phony quotes? Surely he didn't try to pass off the losing argument that Mr. Earl's attorney's made as if it were part of the Supreme Court's decision in Lucas v. Earl, did he?
He did? I'm shocked, shocked!
Feb. 7, 2009,
here
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=3740&st=0&sk=t&sd=a
Now, see my comments, back around February 13:
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=3814&start=0
And here's a reprint of what I wrote:
Weston, my boy, either you didn't read what I wrote back in February, or your memory ain't so good. As you can see, back as early as February 13th, I clearly identified your Lucas v. Earl fakery as being from the taxpayer's brief, and I clearly provided the link to the University of Cincinnati Law school web site.In a sense, this quoted language is both "fake" and "real." It is "real" in that it actually is found somewhere and, as explained below, this is very unfortunate for Weston White and the many other tax protesters who continue to be caught quoting it because they don't do their homework and, indeed, do not know how to do their homework when it comes to legal analysis.
Weston White's fakery here is that the quoted words are not the words of the U.S. Supreme Court. Instead, this language is an almost direct quote from page 17 of the taxpayer's brief filed in that case. Guy C. Earl was the taxpayer, and the brief was written by Mr. Earl’s attorneys: Warren Olney, Jr., J.M. Mannon, Jr., and Henry D. Costigan. In some printed versions of the case, this statement and other quotes and paraphrases from pages 8, 10, 14, 15, 17, and 18 of the taxpayer's brief are re-printed ABOVE the opinion of the Court. The Respondent's (taxpayer's) brief is available in PDF format at the web site for the College of Law of the University of Cincinnati. See the file
http://www.law.uc.edu/taxstories/chap09/earl07.pdf earl07.pdf
In the case reprints that include this language (and many of them do not even show it), these excerpts are not identified as being from the taxpayer's brief in a way that non-lawyers would be able to tell. And 99.9% of all tax protesters are NOT lawyers. Tax protesters like Weston White are doomed and they don't even know it, because they lack the skills to be able to analyze legal materials, and this is a classic example. As illustrated below, the quoted words that the protesters claims are part of the ruling of the Court ARE ACTUALLY THE TAXPAYER'S LOSING ARGUMENT IN THE CASE. Tax protesters like Weston White continue to make fools of themselves by copying and pasting these materials blindly from tax protester web sites.
Another point that sails right over the heads of tax protesters is that Lucas v. Earl IS A LEADING CASE. EVERY LAW STUDENT WHO TAKES FEDERAL INCOME TAX STUDIES THIS CASE. When a tax protester cites this case for a proposition which is the VERY OPPOSITE of the Court's ruling, it's all the more hilarious.
Yes, Lucas v. Earl is a leading case in the area of U.S. income taxation, and stands for the ''Anticipatory Assignment of Income Doctrine''. In the case, Mr. Earl was arguing that because he and his wife, in the year 1901, had made a legally valid assignment agreement (for state law purposes) to have his then-current ''and after-acquired income'' (which was earned solely by him) be treated as the income of both him and his wife as joint tenants with right of survivorship, the legally valid assignment agreement should also determine the federal income tax effect of the income he earned (i.e., only half the income should be taxed to him).
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected that argument, essentially ruling that under federal income tax law all the future income earned by Mr. Earl was taxable to him at the time he earned the income, even though he had already assigned part of the income to his wife, and regardless of the validity of the assignment agreement under state law. And obviously, the Cracking the Code issue -- of whether the private-sector compensation received by an individual for personal services in an activity unconnected with a federal privilege is non-taxable -- was neither presented to nor decided by the Court.
Weston appeared to be so proud of his web site -- with his fake quotations and his quotations taken out of context......
And Weston -- regardless of the fact that you copied and pasted the fakery from somewhere else -- it's still YOUR FAKERY AS WELL when you put it on your own web site (as you did) and you falsely identify it as being a Supreme Court ruling (as you falsely did).