Sorry,
But to say that the book outlines a premise "
ALL excises must involve the exercise of a federal privilege" is simply put, a straw man argument developed by "someone" to be easily refuted.
Please provide evidence, as so far you have not, that he contends
ALL excises must involve the exercise of a federal privilege.
Another question regarding this qoute
Peter Hendrickson wrote:
What is called "income" in the internal revenue laws (that is, what is taxed under those laws) is NOT "money" or "receipts" or "earnings", etc.. It is the exercise of federal privilege, which is measured, for purposes of determining the tax, by the receipts brought in by that exercise. Thus, it is only receipts resulting from the exercise of federal privilege that are relevant to those laws and the related taxes.
Just wondering how you guys can make the logical leap that since he relates the excise tax of "income" to being valid only if it involves the exercise of federal privilege, to ALL excises being valid taxes if and only if they involve the exercise of federal privilege. This is called a slippery slope fallacy. (not to mention a straw man logical fallacy)
Did you not read my example of shopping? This is direct evidence that he does not hold this contention you guys claim.
And along comes yet another poster whose contribution to the dialogue consists of, "No, no, that's not what Petey says". Is this part of the indoctrination ritual into the cult - whenver the subject comes up, just tell people that they didn't get the gibberish exactly right?
I would refer to this as thinking critically, debunking logical fallacies, something to that effect.
OK, Ducky, here's your big chance - tell us why the salary of someone working for Microsoft isn't taxable. Try to avoid "Read the book". We've noticed previously how Pete's acolytes can't even explain what he says, let alone defend it.
One more thing, the question I ask of everyone who comes in here from LH: Assume that the Sixth Circuit rules against Hendrickson in his own case, and the Supreme Court denies cert. Will you then agree that he is wrong about the law?
Geez did I stumble upon the land of assumptions, I haven't come here from LH, I have seen the site but never actively participated.
If you would like to start another thread I will address the Microsoft question, but for now it is advisable to stay on the topic outlined by the OP.
I didn't ever say I espouse these ideas or follow them myself, infact I still pay my taxes. I have read the book and to me the argument follows rather logically. As far as the case pending and making assumptions about its outcome, I honestly haven't followed it closely. Actually, could somebody perhaps link all the relevant literature regarding the case, I would like to inform myself.