Micheal360 wrote:Thus, only capitation taxes and real property taxes are "direct" taxes. An income tax is an excise or duty.
Moron Alert! Moron Alert!Micheal360 wrote:My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly.
Micheal360 wrote:Thus, only capitation taxes and real property taxes are "direct" taxes. An income tax is an excise or duty.
Moron Alert! Moron Alert!Micheal360 wrote:My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly.
Micheal360 wrote:Thus, only capitation taxes and real property taxes are "direct" taxes. An income tax is an excise or duty.
(sigh.....)Micheal360 wrote:My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly.
I'm sorry, I missed where posted the proof that "income which is taxed directly is not consitutional".Micheal360 wrote:Because my personal income is not taxable under the provisions of the 16th amendment nor is it within the meaning of our Constitution. My income is ... being taxed directly.
Ok... so next question: how is the IRS misinterpreting the 16th amendment?Micheal360 wrote:I believe that my income should be exempted because I believe that the IRS it is misinterpreting the 16th amendment.
And so an income tax can be imposed without apportionment.Micheal360 wrote:Springer v. United States, 102 U.S. 586, 602 (1880). Thus, only capitation taxes and real property taxes are "direct" taxes. An income tax is an excise or duty.
How is the income tax that is applied to your income different from the income tax that was ruled to be constitutional in Brushaber v. Union Pacific R.R. Co., 240 U.S. 1 (1916)?Micheal360 wrote:Because my personal income is not taxable under the provisions of the 16th amendment nor is it within the meaning of our Constitution. My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly. The IRS is misusing the 16th amendment by interpreting it their own way.
You have to be able to elucidate in clear and concise detail(something you have not and have refused to do here) as to why you believe that your income "is not taxable under the provisions of the 16th amendment nor is it within the meaning of our Constitution", and then, the really hard part, you have to prove to the satisfaction of the court that your belief is valid(the part where you will fall flat on your face).Micheal360 wrote:Because my personal income is not taxable under the provisions of the 16th amendment nor is it within the meaning of our Constitution. My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly. The IRS is misusing the 16th amendment by interpreting it their own way.
Let us stick to logic:Micheal360 wrote:Because my personal income is not taxable under the provisions of the 16th amendment nor is it within the meaning of our Constitution. My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly.Micheal360 wrote: Thus, only capitation taxes and real property taxes are "direct" taxes. An income tax is an excise or duty. (A "capitation" tax is a fixed tax imposed on every person regardless of income or wealth.)
Gregg wrote:enough to spay the bills.....
wserra wrote:Spaying bills is fun. Spaying bill collectors is even more fun......
I know whutchoomean. Thomtimes when I dwink too much (hiccup) -- too much of (hiccup) -- too much of my thooper theecret thpehshul thawth, I thtart lithping -- and I drool, too!Gregg wrote:....I'm rambling in Ambien again, so I may wake up tonight and read this and delete it all because sometimes my "impaired" writhing is pretty out there....
I would frame it as the following probably being the categories of direct tax:Colonel_Buck wrote:After reading this post about a 1000 times, my observations. Please correct as needed.
The only 2 taxes that can pass constitutional muster as a direct tax are
1) a tax on people (capitation), and
2) a tax on real estate (property tax).
I don't think there was a carve out from the uniformity requirement. What the Court did was to treat taxes on income from property as taxes that were required to be apportioned.From the beginning of the republic down to Pollock, the Supreme Court had always considered a tax on incomes as an indirect tax, subject only to uniformity. And it didn't matter from whence the income was derived.
The Supreme Court in Pollock "carved out" an exemption from the uniformity requirement ....
There were two Pollock decisions. Taxes on incomes from any kind of property (not just real property) were deemed to be subject to the apportionment requirement.......for taxes on certain incomes only, income derived from real property. So, from the time of Pollock until the 16th Amendment was ratified, we had two kinds of income taxes;
1) indirect income taxes (wages, salaries, etc.), and
2) direct income taxes (rents, royalties, etc.).
Sort of. The Brushaber court explained it that way. However, subsequent court opinions have pointed out that it no longer matters (with respect to apportionment) whether a given income tax is considered "direct" or "indirect." Under the Amendment, if it's an income tax, it's not required to be apportioned. Period.Now, along comes the 16th Amendment and from the time of its ratification down to the present, we are now back to considering all taxes on income to be indirect, regardless of the source. The only thing the 16th Amendment did was to prevent the courts from doing what they did in Pollock ever again.
I believe that is essentially correct. The term "direct" when used in the Constitution in the phrase "direct tax" is a way of describing a category of taxes, and not the collection process and procedures. So, as you said, an "indirect tax" (such as an income tax on amounts received as compensation for services) can be imposed on and collected directly from the person receiving the income.There is a difference between the essence of a given tax and how that tax is collected. The constitution cares only for the essence, not the collection process and procedures. This is how an indirect tax can be directly collected.
Thus, a tax on income is NOT a tax on the source of that income. That destroys the entire basis in Pollock for claiming that an income tax is a direct tax."Neither analysis of the two types of taxes nor consideration of the bases upon which the power to impose them rests supports the contention that a tax on income is a tax on the land which produces it. The incidence of a tax on income differs from that of a tax on property."
The Supreme Court effectively has overruled Pollock and the Supreme Court will NEVER rule that a tax on income is a tax on the underlying source of that income. Consequently, the 16th Amendment is unnecessary - we are back to the Springer decision and an income tax will always be considered an excise tax.The theory, which once won a qualified approval, that a tax on income is legally or economically a tax on its source, is no longer tenable.
Of course, it's also why all these calls for repealing the 16th Amendment are irrelevant ... for repealing the 16th Amendment will result in a big fat Nothingburger.Finally, in the case of New York ex rel. Cohn v. Graves, 300 U.S. 308, 57 S.Ct. 466, 81 L.Ed. 666 (1937), the Supreme Court in effect overruled Pollock, and in so doing rendered the Sixteenth Amendment unnecessary, when it sustained New York's income tax on income derived from real property in New Jersey.
Your theory of direct/indirect taxation was specifically refuted 115 years ago in the case of Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U.S. 41 (1900) ... start reading at page 81 of the decision for your edification (although I doubt it will truly help) ....Micheal360 wrote:Because my personal income is not taxable under the provisions of the 16th amendment nor is it within the meaning of our Constitution. My income is not being taxed indirectly. It is being taxed directly. The IRS is misusing the 16th amendment by interpreting it their own way. The only interpretation of the 16th amendment matters, is Chief Justice Whites.
My income should be exempted, not me. Can't exempt a person. If I was personally exempted from paying a income tax. That would mean that I can go out and buy apartment buildings and not pay income tax on the rents received as income.