rachel wrote:None of you morons have yet to demonstrate effectively that anything outside of "employment" is not cash.
There must be one or more nouns, and perhaps also verbs, missing from that sentence, because "anything outside of employment is not cash" is gibberish.
rachel wrote:And to answer your question about section 61.
TITLE 26 > Subtitle A > CHAPTER 1 > Subchapter B > PART I > § 61 Prev | Next
§ 61. Gross income defined
(a) General definition
Except as otherwise provided in this subtitle, gross income means all income from whatever source derived, including (but not limited to) the following items:
(1) Compensation for services, including fees, commissions, fringe benefits, and similar items;
(b) Employment
For purposes of this chapter, the term “employment” means any service, of whatever nature, performed
Do see any difference between "any service, of whatever nature, performed" and "all income from whatever source derived"?
I dont do you?
Ignoring for the moment that a question does not answer a question, you don't seem to have understood the question about section 61 at all. The question is how you can use a definition from section 3401 to affect the meaning of section 61 when section 3401 specifically states that its definitions are ONLY for the purposes of section 3401 and its related sections, of which section 61 is not part.
But still, what you have written does provide some insights into your mental processes. (I started to write "thought processes," but then changed it to "mental processes" because I'm not sure that anything you do can be called "thought.") You seem to believe that:
1. Section 61 uses the words "service" in defining "gross income" and
2. Section 3401 uses the words "service" in defining "wages" and "employer" so
3. Therefore, the *limitations* or *exclusions* from "wages" in section 3401 also apply to limit the definition of "income" in section 61, even though section 3401 does not define or limit the meaning of the word "service" in any way.
That makes NO sense whatsoever. It's like saying that barns are painted red and fire trucks are painted red, so therefore barns should be able to fight fires. Demonstrating that two definitions (or two objects) have similar characteristics does not mean that they must automatically be identical in every other way.
I am reminded of Woody Allen's example of logic: All men are mortal; Socrates is mortal; therefore, all men are Socrates. The difference between you and Woody Allen was that Woody Allen was being intentionally funny.
Your response to this will be that I'm a moron, and this thread is approaching the magic 100 number, so I'm locking it. Anyone wishing to continue to beat this dead rachel can start another thread.