bobhurt wrote:I maintain that three simple realities clarify the income tax dispute:
1. The income tax as implemented by the IRS is Unamerican, crooked, and does not comport with the Constitution as I understand it. As I understand it, Congress MUST impose the income tax through an excise-like mechanism, and must NOT collect it directly from people OR implement it as a direct tax on property.
Your understanding of the Constitution has nothing to do with reality, and the phrase "excise-like mechanism" is gibberish.
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress had no power to impose taxes, and could only "requisition" money from the states. The most important, and most fundamental change that was made by the Constitution that was proposed by the convention of 1787 was that Congress would have the power to impose taxes on the people and property of the United States. It was heatedly debated in the ratification process, with the Federalists arguing in favor of the power to tax, and the Anti-Federalists arguing against.
News flash: THE FEDERALISTS WON, and the Constitution was ratified.
Fast forward to 1913: Because of a 5-4 decision of the Supreme Court, Congress had effectively lost the power to tax all kinds of incomes. Congress proposed, and the states rapidly ratified, a constitutional amendment that stated (in its entirety) that “The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.”
Tax protesters (or "tax deniers") spend their entire lives (in many cases literally) arguing that the framers of the Constitution did not actually intend to give Congress the power to impose taxes on citizens of the United States, and that the 16th Amendment (quoted above) does not actually give Congress the power to impose taxes on incomes earned by citizens of the United States.
Those arguments ARE INSANE.
The idea that there is some unexpressed, mystical "excise-like mechanism" that Congress must use to impose taxes on incomes, which "mechanism" appears no where in the Constitution or in any debate about the ratification of the Constitution or the 16th Amendment to the Constitution, IS INSANE.
And by "insane" I mean completely lacking any basis in reality, delusional, or the product of a diseased mind.
bobhurt wrote:I see, any contrary interpretation of the tax code as dead wrong, and as an essential element of establishing a Communist dictatorship.
I am quite sure that you see almost all interpretations of the tax code as an essential element of a communist dictatorship.
bobhurt wrote:2. The Congress (through the convoluted tax code), IRS (through refusal ever to discuss the laws they follow and enforce), DOJ (through finagling judges to disallow discussion of law), and courts (through disallowing discussion of law) seem to have conspired to allow a mafia-like operation to squeeze money out of people wrongfully, destroying many families as a consequence.
That's not a "simple reality," but a paranoid delusion.
bobhurt wrote:3. In view of the foregoing, Income taxation is a POLITICAL matter, for no litigation means exists to challenge it successfully.
Right.
As I've explained above, the present Internal Revenue Code is the product of the democratic ratification of the Constitution, and the democratic ratification of the 16th Amendment, following by the democratic enactment of the Internal Revenue Code by a lawfully elected Congress. The Internal Revenue Code is therefore the "supreme Law of the Land" within the meaning of the Constitution.
Any other result would be an essential element of establishing a communist dictatorship.
bobhurt wrote:I personally believe nothing short of violent rebellion will repair it because 25% of the voter base is too stupid to graduate from high school, much less vote intelligently, another 25% is just as irresponsible, owing to apathy about government and to deficient educations, and another 15% or thereabouts is brainwashed into believing the USA actually needs the income tax when Congress borrows all it needs to run the country, fight endless no-win wars, and sustain the irresponsible through unconstitutional largess.
Yes, up-and-coming dictators always believe that they are smarter than the "proletariat." That belief is an essential element of establishing a communist dictatorship.
bobhurt wrote:As for those tax protesters who delude, misinform, deceive, etc, it should suffice to identify them on Quatloos and eruditely show the errors in their pronouncements WITHOUT the hatefulness and carping snidery.
Consider yourself identified. Your errors in pronouncements have been eruditely shown without hatefulness or carping snidery.