No, Steve, you DO believe them. You just DISAGREE with them. You are trying to transmute your awareness of what the law is (i.e, your awareness that the courts have ruled the way they have ruled) into a "belief." You can call it your own "belief," but that does not change the point that your so-called "belief" is not the kind of "belief" to which the text of the jurat on a tax return is referring. Also, your "belief" is not the kind of "belief" that negates willfulness under the criminal tax statutes.SteveSy wrote:That's fine...however, how can the government force someone to sign something saying they believe something to be true and correct when they don't. I can sit here and tell you right now, I've read all the court cases and what the IRS has said and I still do not believe them.
Huh? Wanna run that by me again?It's ridiculous to conclude someone didn't file, and then charge them with failing to file, when they did file just because what you wrote is not in accordance with the IRS's or the courts beliefs or becuase you refused to sign a jurat stating you personally believe what they said is true and accurate.
Sorry, but you don't "honestly believe" it. A mere "SteveSy" belief, if you will, is not sufficient. You must have a GOOD FAITH belief, an HONEST belief. If you are aware that your so-called "belief" about the tax law does not comport with what the courts have ruled, then you do not have a good faith belief based on a misunderstanding caused by the complexity of the tax law, no matter how strongly your "SteveSy belief" that the courts are wrong may be. Instead, what you have is an actual awareness of what the law is -- coupled with a DISAGREEMENT with that law in the form of a "SteveSy belief" that the real law is somehow not really the law, and that the "SteveSy law" is somehow real. That's not a good faith belief based on a misunderstanding caused by the complexity of the tax law. That's a "studied" but incorrect conclusion that the law is something other than what you are aware the courts have ruled the law to be.And if you honestly believe the "bow and arrow" theory[,] why should you be forced to lie and sign something saying you believe something else?
Yes it is. That's exactly what you, Steve, do. And that's exactly what Hendrickson does.It's not a matter of making up your own legal rules.
No, sorry, it's not a question of what the courts "believe." The law is what the courts rule the law to be. The law has no "SteveSy existence" separate from what the courts have ruled, regardless of how strongly you, Steve, argue that the courts are "wrong."That specifically says "I", not the court, IRS or Famspear but the person signing it. Just because the courts, IRS or you believe differently does not require everyone else to also believe it.
Oh, what a tragedy! Petey is required to file federal income tax returns under penalty of perjury in accordance with what he is aware the courts have ruled! We won't let him use his own "law" to argue that he shouldn't have to sign under penalty of perjury regarding his "belief" about his "Peter Hendrickson law."I mean this is so fundamentally wrong its pitiful.
Sell it to Irwin Schiff, Steve.
Again, the "belief" to which you refer is not the "belief" that the perjury statute covers, and it's not the "belief" that the tax statutes cover. Your "belief" is nothing more than a disagreement with a known legal duty -- a duty of which you are aware. When you try to decide for yourself what the law is, you, like any defendant in a criminal case, must take the risk of being wrong. That's the law. Sorry.Maybe he [Hendrickson] is wrong and maybe he knows it and is only trying to scam. It certainly doesn't mean everyone believes the court or the IRS concerning the income tax.
No, if I argue that a particular court was "wrong," what I mean is that I disagree with its rationale, or that other courts have ruled another way, and that maybe this court is in the minority. But I do not delude myself into "believing" (in the SteveSy sense) that the court's ruling is not an authoritative ruling on the law. You don't seem to handle these nuances very well, Steve.I can post several examples right now, that weren't overturned by the Supreme Court where a circuit court got it completely wrong concerning the income tax. Many of you will even admit they were wrong which proves they are not incapable of being wrong.