SquatloosianTroll wrote:
So if Defendant [sic] did not engage in a taxable activity i.e. selling alcohol, tobacco or firearms, then he/she is/are not liable per the "gibberish code" per the assessment statute [ . . . ]
--Troll's citations to assessment statutes -- which have nothing to do with the concept or definition of a “taxable activity” -- not reproduced.
wserra responded:
What is a "taxable activity", and where do you find it in the law?
SquatloosianTroll responded to wserra with this:
Really you need me to explain “taxable activity”?
Selling (an activity) alcohol tobacco and firearms.
That looks like the Troll’s definition of “taxable activity”. And, since the Troll had previously indicated that because “Defendant” did not engage in a “taxable activity,” Defendant is “not liable” under the “gibberish code,” the Troll is effectively saying that the U.S. Federal income tax can be imposed only in the presence of a “taxable activity.”
The Troll’s argument is frivolous.
wserra responded with:
....Feel free to cite the section of the IRC that defines it [“taxable activity”]. Or the case or reg, for that matter.
And The Observer asked:
Are you suggesting that only the sale of alcohol, tobacco and firearms is a taxable activity? Are there other activities that are taxable?
And why is the sale of, say tobacco, a taxable activity? I am asking this since you really didn't answer wserra's question. That may be because you didn't understand what he was actually asking.
The Troll responded with:
I believe I did answer Mr Wesley Serra's question:
Selling (an activity) alcohol tobacco and firearms.
And yet, Troll later states, in a “response” of sorts directed to me:
I hate to break the news to YOU but I never said that "the Federal income tax is imposed only on "activities".
I hate to break the news to you, Troll, but you can’t seem to keep track of your own arguments.
If something is not an “activity,” then that something cannot be a “taxable activity.” And, when you claim that if someone did not engage in a “taxable activity” followed by the abbreviation “i.e.” and then using the phrase “selling alcohol, tobacco or firearms,” then claiming that “he/she is/are not liable”, the meaning or your claim is that
that the Federal income tax is imposed only on activities.
You are quite wrong.
Further, your knowledge of ordinary logic is just as bad as your knowledge of how to understand legal materials such as statutes and regs.
Further, as noted above, you cited a provision of the Federal Register (which includes regs codified in the Code of Federal Regulations) which included a list of certain statutes (including the assessment statutes of the Internal Revenue Code) and you mistakenly claimed that the statutes derived their authority from the regs -- instead of the other way ‘round.
You’re now waffling, and you still have not come up with a single correct answer to any question posed to you.
What a surprise.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet