Well, I.... I.... I guess I could try to lure some good-lookin' female trollettes over here...Quixote wrote:Yeah, Famspear. We need a troll rainmaker.
.... you know, with my good looks and everything.......
Well, I.... I.... I guess I could try to lure some good-lookin' female trollettes over here...Quixote wrote:Yeah, Famspear. We need a troll rainmaker.
Yup, after only four posts, Brave Sir Robin bravely ran away...Imalawman wrote:Hey, come on - you've run off the first good troll we've had around here in months in just a day!! You could have at least let the rest of the forum have some fun first. Not fair.
wserra wrote:A compulsive poster named Famspear
Could never resist kicking troll rear.
When summoned to bed,
By a comely redhead,
He'd say, "Sorry, I'm busy on Q, dear".
But according to the late Robert Asprin*, the correct term for a female troll is trollop.Famspear wrote:Well, I.... I.... I guess I could try to lure some good-lookin' female trollettes over here...
Imalawman wrote:All in favor of "promoting" Famspear to assignment in the quatloos station in Antarctica, say "aye". Reasons for "promotion" will be precipitous shaming of trolls and excessive poetry.
Ah, the story of my life. I can never get the words right -- that's why I don't get the girls.....The Observer wrote:But according to the late Robert Asprin*, the correct term for a female troll is trollop.
If I were farm machinery,The Observer wrote:I move that we put him into the same witness protection program scheme that your red stapler is in. Admit it, nothing would be more fun than watching Famspear having to employ himself as a piece of farm machinery.
Famspear wrote:wserra wrote:A compulsive poster named Famspear
Could never resist kicking troll rear.
When summoned to bed,
By a comely redhead,
He'd say, "Sorry, I'm busy on Q, dear".
Holy Toledo, Wes! You've been holding out on us! That's the best poetry I've seen in this forum!
I'll give you a hint. It involves 2:40 am and having your face drooled on.[/quote]Cathulhu wrote:You don't want to find out.Arthur Rubin wrote:Why? What happens?Never misquote the CATS.
Uh, um, it's OK. I think I got it out of my system.... For now..... I think.....notorial dissent wrote:Wes, you just had to encourage him, couldn't just leave bad enough alone, now we're going to subjected to an inundation of his verbal wanderings, like he needed encouragement to begin with, of course, on the other hand, it far exceeds anything we were likely to get from Eastman, so I guess it is an improvement...... I think the comealong and the rice swamps explains a whole when it comes right down to it.
Well, I would pay to watch it! Done. Let's ship him out to my parts here in the midwest, I'll get him harvesting corn in a couple months.The Observer wrote:Imalawman wrote:All in favor of "promoting" Famspear to assignment in the quatloos station in Antarctica, say "aye". Reasons for "promotion" will be precipitous shaming of trolls and excessive poetry.
I move that we put him into the same witness protection program scheme that your red stapler is in. Admit it, nothing would be more fun than watching Famspear having to employ himself as a piece of farm machinery.
Sure you have!! Now where have I heard that before? You keep promising and promising, and yet you keep falling off the wagon, and who suffers???? I ask you, is that fair???Famspear wrote:Uh, um, it's OK. I think I got it out of my system.... For now..... I think.....
The first error I see is in proposition 4. Congress has legislative power and authority. The IRS authority to collect taxes is executive. Congress has delegated legislative authority of a sort to the Sec. Treas. by allowing him to write regulations, but the IRS's basic administrative authority is executive, not legislative. That authority can not have been delegated by Congress because Congress has no executive power. The authority of the IRS to collect taxes derives from its position within the executive branch, not as a delegation of authority from Congress.1. In order to enforce or collect a tax, the IRS in general, must have authority.
2. The authority for the IRS to collect a tax is suffused throughout Title 26 of the United States Code, known as the Internal Revenue Code (IRC).
3. The authority imbued within the IRC or the Statutes-At-Large is a delegation of authority from Congress.
4. Congress gets its authority from the Constitution.
5. The Constitution gets its authority from “The People”.
6. The People (as a collective) can NOT delegate any authority to the Constitution that The People (as a collective) does not have.
7. No individual in the collective can delegate an authority to the collective that the individual does not have.
8. If nobody in the collective has the authority of taxation, then such authority can not be delegated to the collective, to the Constitution, to the Congress, to the IRC, and finally, to the IRS.
I, Dale R. Eastman, do hereby certify under penalties of perjury, that the affidavit of the forgoing eight ( 8 ) facts is true and complete to the best of my knowledge.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------