New Arguments...
New Arguments...
Wow, it's been a long time since I've been on this board. Are there any new crazy arguments these days, or are the TP's still spouting 861 nonsense and Citizen v. citizen garbage?
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- Grand Exalted Keeper of Esoterica
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- Quatloosian Master of Deception
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- Grand Exalted Keeper of Esoterica
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I've been seeing a new argument all week and it's spreading like wild fire. The 16th Amendment was ratified but Congress forgot to pass the bills to implement it, so even if there is authority for an income tax, Congress has never chosen to take advantage of it.
I've come across four posts on different forums in just the past few days spouting this nonsense.
I've come across four posts on different forums in just the past few days spouting this nonsense.
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- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
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Oh, no! They must be close to finding that it was my great grandfather's doing. The day before he retired from the Government Printing Office, he slipped the original IRC - his own creation - into the Statutes at Large just to prove that no one in Congress or the White House paid any attention to what was actually being published under their supposed authority. Subsequent Congresses just assumed that the implementing legislation had been enacted.The 16th Amendment was ratified but Congress forgot to pass the bills to implement it, so even if there is authority for an income tax, Congress has never chosen to take advantage of it.
Just before he died, he told me he did regret "taxing" wages.
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- Illuminati Obfuscation: Black Ops Div
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Oh, now you're just being preposterous. Those three dwarves are easier than a two piece wooden puzzle - with handles!Investor wrote:a blessing by three virgin dwarves
If you really want a legal amendment, you have to take 50 mimeographed copies, marinade them in finest Masonic Rum, then sauté them in some butter with Caribbean spices. Drain. Separate onto a plate and leave on your kitchen counter to cool overnight. Once cool, you must mail one of the 50 pieces (certified, return receipt) to the Designated Masonically Blessed Virgin Lesbian Belching Canary in each state. Don't get that Canary confused with the Puking Pigeon of Parthenon. They're easy to mix up. So refer to the contact list on page 4576 of your Illuminati Handbook.
So anyway, once the Canaries get the amendment, they'll sing a woeful tale of death and peppermint to the fleas in the weeds who will then tear the amendment to shreds and carry it to the Illuminati State HQ. From there, it will be delivered to the maid with the hot pink undies who will then tape it back together. He will then pass it onto janitor with the see-through tutu who will then drop it off in the secret mail chute buried behind the ugly sofa that no one wants to sit on. Later that evening it inducted into the state's constitution via a secret meeting in the bowels of the public bathroom in the capital building. I cannot say who will be in attendance, since they're chosen based on chili consumption within the past 24 years.
When chosen for jury duty, tell the judge "fortune cookie says guilty" - A fortune cookie
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Re: New Arguments...
Nothing new here, Investor. We losthorizons.com types are just busy upholding the laws and regulations as written, like 26 USC 7701(c) and 26 CFR 403.5. May Heaven forbid that we should ever nonsensically construe these authorities to mean other than what they say (CT National v Germain, 503 US 249).Investor wrote:Wow, it's been a long time since I've been on this board. Are there any new crazy arguments these days, or are the TP's still spouting 861 nonsense and Citizen v. citizen garbage?
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- Khedive Ismail Quatoosia
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Re: New Arguments...
Investor - May I introduce you to our resident King of Irony.John J. Bulten wrote: May Heaven forbid that we should ever nonsensically construe these authorities to mean other than what they say (CT National v Germain, 503 US 249).
I don't think Mr. Bulten was around when I was last here. I am interested (for lack of a better word) to hear his gripe with the "fascist tax system".Investor - May I introduce you to our resident King of Irony.
And don't get me wrong, Bulten, I have serious issues with the tax system as well. One of them is not that it is unconstitutional or illegal, however.
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- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
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A Constitutional Amendment does require some legislation in order for it to be effective. What good is an Amendment if there's no penalties for violating it? Prohibition, with no penalties for selling alchohol, isn't really prohibition. Income taxes, with no penalties for tax evasion, isn't really an income tax.Nikki wrote:Okay, am I missing something here?
Does a ratified constitutional amendment require enabling legislation?
The IRS Code gives the 16th Amendment it's teeth.
True enough, but in the context of Demo's stated TP argument, this is irrelevant. That is, unless the TP population is claiming that Congress never passed the tax code?A Constitutional Amendment does require some legislation in order for it to be effective. What good is an Amendment if there's no penalties for violating it? Prohibition, with no penalties for selling alchohol, isn't really prohibition. Income taxes, with no penalties for tax evasion, isn't really an income tax.
The IRS Code gives the 16th Amendment it's teeth.
I don't get it. There are so many legit things that can be done to modify the tax system for the better. Don't the TP's realize that they are actually hindering those legit avenues?
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- Grand Exalted Keeper of Esoterica
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And the Code was put into law with the Revenue Act of 1913.silversopp wrote:A Constitutional Amendment does require some legislation in order for it to be effective. What good is an Amendment if there's no penalties for violating it? Prohibition, with no penalties for selling alchohol, isn't really prohibition. Income taxes, with no penalties for tax evasion, isn't really an income tax.Nikki wrote:Okay, am I missing something here?
Does a ratified constitutional amendment require enabling legislation?
The IRS Code gives the 16th Amendment it's teeth.