bobhurt wrote:No. This is an old, old tax protester misconception – that the reference to "apportioned among the states" means "apportioned among the state GOVERNMENTS", and that somehow the state governments are the entities liable for the tax. Totally false.
I'd like to see some proof of that assertion.
Other people don't need to give you "proof" of that assertion. If you assert that the phrase "apportioned among the states" means "apportioned among the state governments," it's up to YOU to find support for that in the text of the Constitution or in a court ruling. It's not up to others to "prove" to you that your assertion is incorrect.
"Apportionment among the states" seems to put the state governments in control of raising their share of the dough.
No, it doesn't "seem" to do that.
As to whether the income tax is direct, I think I remember a supreme court ruling putting in the class of an excise, so any "modern" court calling it a direct tax is plain wrong.
Completely incorrect.
IF it is a direct tax, it MUST be apportioned, unless you don't believe 1.2.3 or 1.9.4.
Wrong. Read the Sixteenth Amendment. If it's an INCOME tax, it's not required to be apportioned. Nowhere in the Amendment does it say "this Amendment does not apply to a income tax if it's a direct tax."
Sure, a court might have a different opinion. But panel courts have proven USDC and TAX COURT rulings wrong MANY TIMES, and the Supreme Court has overruled lower panel courts MANY TIMES because (obviously) those judges didn't know the law. So don't get too hard on tax protesters. They might know the law better than those judges.
No, tax protesters never know the law better than "those judges." Tax protesters are still batting absolute zero, after literally hundreds, perhaps thousands of court cases since 1975, when the the term "tax protester" started popping up in Federal court decisions.
Ultimately, unrighteous or abusive taxation can lead to violent rebellion, as US history clearly shows.
Ultimately, engaging in tax protester activities to the extent of filing tax returns using tax protester theories can -- and should -- and does -- lead to jail time.
Take note. Abusive direct collection of taxes from the people constitutes the main reason for the founders TWICE saying direct taxes must be apportioned among the states. That is so important that the Congress would specifically surely have overturned apportionment if it meant the 16th Amendment to have that effect. That's one of the reasons (in addition to common sense) I believe income tax is not and cannot be a direct tax.
The Congress proposed -- and 42 states ratified -- the amendment precisely because they INTENDED the Sixteenth Amendment to remove the apportionment requirement for any federal income tax -- REGARDLESS of whether that tax was considered to be "direct" or not. That's the whole purpose of the language in the Amendment: to refer to the SOURCE problem that cropped up in the Pollock case.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet