Steve, you just wrote, in the same post above:
Uh, Steve, the last time I looked, the argument that a "tax on the earnings of an average worker is unconstitutional" was a tax protester argument. I'm gonna go out on a limb and say I think that would be an example of an argument that you are making. Are you going to back off from that now, and say that you're NOT making the argument that a tax on the earnings of an average worker is unconstitutional?Like what, that a tax on the earnings of an average worker is unconstitutional? You're a joke.....don't need to read TP material to arrive at that conclusion.
You keep accusing me of exactly what you are doing. I have cited case after case, decision after decision, supporting my arguments, Steve. (And don't deny that unless you want to be humiliated again.) You, by contrast, have yet to come up with a single case where a court ruled that an income tax on ordinary wages is a direct tax that must be apportioned. (Reason: There is no such case.) You have yet to come up with a single case where a court ruled that a tax on the earnings of an average worker is unconstitutional. (Reason: There is no such case.) Do you think it's reasonable for anyone to think that you have somehow come up with logic or facts to support your position? (Hint: That's a rhetorical question.)