SteveSy wrote:
So please quote me anyone during or shortly after the ratification of the constitution that said so. If it was so widely known surely you can find someone, anyone saying so.
Here, I'll start off by quoting a few people I know that said otherwise, you are welcome to post a quote from someone arguing these people were wrong:
While this doesn't say that income taxes are direct taxes it makes it clear a general tax on earnings isn't a indirect tax.
Sorry, Steve, I’m talking about
the law. Not the Elliott Debates, not Gallatin, and not something someone wrote “during or shortly after the ratification of the constitution”. Constitutions are not ratified in the Elliott Debates or by Gallatin, etc., etc. Statements that somebody made at the time of ratification are interesting. These sources, however, are examples of what we call Secondary Authority. To determine the meanings of terms in the Constitution, we do
not look
first to the verbiage from the Elliott Debates or Gallatin (although they could of course be considered and even cited in court cases). Under the U.S. legal system, we
first look to Primary Authority. Court decisions are Primary Authority, and court decisions (and even, probably, obiter dicta) will be more authoritative than Secondary Authority, including the Elliott Debates, etc., and will also be more authoritative than your arguments.
And on the Hylton case, you yourself provided this quote:
Indirect taxes are circuitous modes of reaching the revenue of individuals, who generally live according to their income.
(bolding added).
How did you think that we would interpret that statement (and the material in which it is found) as a statement that a tax on the earnings of a McDonalds worker is a “capitation”?
I and the rest of us do not need to cite any more court cases to you. We’ve already cited the dicta in Pollock for the point that an income tax on employments is an excise, an indirect tax. You can dance around that language and re-interpret it and split hairs all you want, but you can’t escape the point that the most of the rest of us here are basing our positions on court cases, not Elliott Debates or Gallatin for heaven’s sake. The law is what the courts rule the law to be, not what you argue someone intended by something in the Elliott Debates.
Further, when we do cite Secondary Authority, such as the Elliott Debates, or Black’s Law Dictionary, or a legal encyclopedia, or a law review article, or a treatise by a law professor, we do so in a proper manner and we know whereof we speak. We know how to use Secondary Authority.
No one is sidestepping any issues here except you, Steve. By rejecting court cases, by arguing that the decisions (and the dicta) in court opinions mean something other than what the courts have uniformly said they mean, by trying to substitute Secondary Authority where Primary Authority is needed, by arguing that the Secondary Authority means something other than what it says, and by trying to decide for yourself what the law is, you present a totally unpersuasive argument.
Steve,
go look for a Federal court case where an individual argued that the Federal income tax on his or her earnings was a “capitation” and that the tax was unconstitutional, and the court upheld that argument.
Hint: This is would be a fool’s errand, Steve. There is no such case.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet