Famspear wrote:Patriotdiscussions wrote:Nonresident aliens and dual-status aliens. These rules also apply if you were a nonresident alien or a dual-status alien and both of the following apply.
You were married to a U.S. citizen or resident alien at the end of 2013.
You elected to be taxed as a resident alien. See Pub. 519 for details.
Wow. We stand in awe of your ability to find IRS publications on the internet.
Is there some reason you think we would be impressed with this?
Under what circumstances can someone living on top of a mountain in Tibet who is not a United States citizen, has never been a United States citizen, and has never been to the United States, and has no relatives or friends in the United States, and doesn't even know how to find the United States on a map, be subject to the U.S. federal income tax?
Cite the Internal Revenue Code provisions, Einstein.
First off, before ANY part of the is would have jurisdiction they would need to have meet the minimum contacts doctrine. If they don't, the IRS or the courts don't have jurisdiction.