Returning to the original question:
travis wrote:What evidence do you rely upon that the US Constitution, Code and Regulations apply to anyone, past, present and future?
Still not sure what question you (travis) are asking, but the following are possible answers:
1. The actual language of the US Constitution, Internal Revenue Code, and Regulations.
2. The voting records of the ratification of the Constitution, and the records of the elections of the Congresses that enacted the Internal Revenue Code.
3. Court decisions that applied that Constitution, those statutes, and those regulations to citizens and residents of the United States (meaning the citizens and residents of the states of the United States).
4. Legislative histories showing that Congress was aware of, and approved, the court decisions described in #3.
5. Newspaper and other public records showing that voters knew of, and approved of, the decisions described in #3 and #4.
6. Academic papers, academic journals, news reports, and other public records reporting and confirming the decisions described in items #2, #3, #4, and #5.
Please explain why the evidence described above is irrelevant, immaterial, or unreliable. (And those are three different questions.)
To the extent that you believe that voting records are irrelevant or immaterial, the counter-question is: Do you believe in democracy or democratically elected republics?
If you do not believe in democratic systems, would you prefer: (a) anarchy, (b) monarchy (with you as the monarch, of course), (c) oligarchy (with you as one of the ruling class, of course), (d) a monarchy or oligarchy in which you are a peasant, or (e) none of the above (to be explained).