More drool from "Weston White" at losthorizons:
This is not verfied but there is a theory based upon supposed copies of actual documents which show that the IRC was actually Repealed on February 10th, 1939 through H.R. 2762 Public, No 1 and then later Revised on August 16th, 1954 through Public Law 591-Chapter 736, The Internal Revenue Code of 1954: “Bill H.R. 8300 an Act to Revise the Internal Revenue Laws”.
From my understanding as the functions of the Rule of Law, that a Repealed Act is not eligible or capable of being Revised. A new Act or Bill must first be reenacted through the appropriate legal process by Congress, thereby creating a new independent Act or Bill which is separate and distinct form the prior Repealed law. With this being true, the current Internal Revenue Act as it stands was obtained by way of a blatant and outright violation (perversion) of our Nation’s Due Process of Law.
This all serves to prove why nobody in the government including the courts can show the actual law as it stands.
http://www.losthorizons.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=765
(bolding added).
Weston White apparently labors under the delusion that the 1939 Internal Revenue Code was
repealed in 1939 -- and that the
1954/1986 Code, which he incorrectly believes was intended to "revise" a supposedly already-repealed Code - is therefore somehow invalid. Weston White is wrong. (Note: I assume that Weston is not referring to a repeal, if any, specified in the 1939 Code with respect any revenue acts enacted prior to 1939. I believe that even prior to 1939, various revenue acts were indeed "codified" in the United States Code. There may or may not have been various such repeals in the text of the 1939 Code. Either way, that would not seem to be germane to Weston's goofy, erroneous point.)
Clue to Weston White: Various revenue acts (which may have been codified in the United States Code prior to 1939 may indeed have been repealed in February of 1939. However, the
Internal Revenue Code of 1939 was not "repealed" on February 10, 1939. It was ENACTED on that date.
And the 1954 Code was enacted by an Act of Congress, and was signed into law. As amended about a gazillion times (and as renamed the "1986" Code),
the 1954/1986 Code is the law today. You yourself provided a citation to the original 1954 enactment (see above)!
Weston's argument -- that the 1954 Code is invalid because it somehow attempted to "revise" an
already-repealed law -- is simply incorrect. The Internal Revenue Code of 1939 was very much "the law" at the time the 1954 Code was enacted.
Later, a loserhead user named "kilbey" writes:
One of the problems with the tax honesty community is that many believe that the government is obliged to show us the law or educate us. I don't believe they are under any such obligation, especially in the context of determining liability [ . . . ]
Excellent point, kilbey.
Kilbey continues:
Certain people (Joe Banister, Tom Cryer) have chosen words that can lead to confusion, saying "there is no law that makes me liable" for the income tax. This is true, but I have real disdain for people who take off from there and spread the word that "there is no law", rather than looking into it for some first-hand knowledge.
Except for the incorrect assertion that it's "true" that there is "no law" making you liable, you may be on to something here, kilbey.
But, now, alas, kilbey runs the train off its rails:
I would simply say "the law is Title 26, and only applies if you have 'income', which is not necessarily 'all that comes in'." Emphasize that anyone can be liable for the income tax, but mere work-for-pay in the private sector does not give rise to liability.
Sorry kilbey, but "mere work-for-pay in the private sector"
does indeed give rise to federal income tax liability. You are wrong. Peter Eric (Blowhard) Hendrickson is wrong.
kilbey writes:
The average person also needs to know the difference between rights and privileges.
No, the average person does
not need to know the difference between "rights" and "privileges". However, the average person
who gets caught up in a tax protester scam like
Cracking the Code does need to know that for federal income tax purposes, there is essentially
no need to distinguish between "rights" and "privileges" (can you say "red herring"?).
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet