Cspeter8 wrote: ↑Wed Nov 22, 2023 12:56 pm
Hmm. Seems my viewpoint is not so welcome in this forum. Perhaps I should leave and not come back.
You, as well as your viewpoint, are welcome here.
However, we ask a few things of those who post here. First and foremost, are verifiable facts, not unproven theories.
Conventional wisdom and case law has it that US law requires everyone to pay income tax.
If you wish to argue that this belief is unfounded, you are welcome to do so. But, you must first demonstrate an understanding of the US Constitution, as interpreted by the duly constituted courts of the United States. To argue against the tax code, you must use actual facts and actual law, not pipe dream theories.
Please cite even one court decision which ruled that paying income tax is NOT required, or that it is voluntary, or that the tax laws contradict the Constitution or the Bill of Rights (this is actually redundant, because the BOR is PART of the Constitution). It must be a case that was not been overruled by an appeals court.
If you can not cite such a case, then I suggest that you do the following: refuse to file a return and pay the tax that the law would seem to require you to pay. When the IRS and the DOJ come after you, go into court, present your arguments to the judge, and convince him or her of the validity of your arguments. Then, wait for the inevitable appeal and convince the appeals court of the same. You may have to ultimately convince the US Supreme Court.
That is how the law works in the US. You are certainly welcome to hold the belief that taxes are somehow unconstitutional or not required, but you are not the one who gets to make that decision. The courts have that responsibility. Like it or not, the law, including the Constitution are what the courts say it is. You may feel that they decided wrongly. I personally feel that they have decided a couple of cases wrongly in the last ten years, but their rulings in those cases are still binding law, as is the tax law.
No one has come up with a new theory as to why taxes are unconstitutional in a long time. Virtually all recent cases have been rehashes ideas that have been thoroughly denounced by the courts.
Our system of jurisprudence is based on a couple of things: statutes as enacted by Congress, and case law in which the courts have decided cases involving those statutes. As I said, it is the courts, not you or me, that have the power to make rulings that are binding on the rest of us.