Dear Weston: Let me break this down in terms that you and your associates may be able to understand.Finally, I found the law, after my two years of researching, I finally located it! Man don't I feel like a dounce, I mean it was right there in front of our faces all along, with the first 63-Sections to! Gee, well, thanks guys, well it has been fun, see ya!
OK, seriously, refute time! I came across this and thought well this is great, finally something somewhat original and quasi serious on this freak show of a site. Then I though we should put together a throughout dunking page for this to reference it to... not that is will be much of a challenge, I mean come on, now (I figured I would begin a few of em):
"Comment: Article I, Section 8 gives Congress the “Power To law and collect Taxes” without further restriction in this Section. Note that the uniformity requirement only applies to “Duties, Imposts and Excises” and not to taxes. This means that “Taxes” are treated differently than “Excises” under the Constitution, since Taxes are not required to be uniform. Those who would equate “Taxes” and “Excises” are simply wrong, and demonstrably so."
(HINT: This is because the use of the word "Taxes" is simply a generic reference two either other of the two (2) classes of established "Taxes", with those being Direct and Indirect. This Clause begins by first establishing the Congress the power to "Tax", being as this was a grave issue that existed with the originating Articles of Confederation, Shhhhh... it is a secret through, OK?
P.S. I think they meant to write 'lay taxes' not 'law taxes'... but hey since I am really ignorant, am unable to comprehend, and am exceptionally dumb and idiotic, it might just be my error.)
"Comment: Article I, Section 9, does not ban direct taxes, but merely says that such taxes must be “in Proportion to the Census of Enumeration”."
(HINT: Besides leaving out Article I, Section 2, Clause 4 and pointlessly making a strange reference pertaining to the cited Section "not banning" such taxes... this point proves positively nothing, serves no purposes, other then to further confuse the reader.)
"Comment: Whether or not Article I, Section 9 applies to income taxes, its requirement that such taxes be “in Proportion to the Census of Enumeration” is eliminated. Note that no new power of taxation is created (Congress already had all the power it needed for the income tax) but a potential restriction (if it existed at all) was abolished."
(HINT: Oh not again, you forget to mention: Article I, Section 2, Clause 4 and Article I, Section 8, Clause 1. However, to continue, Article I, Section 9, Clause 4 does pertain to 'income taxes' and no Amendment XVI did not eliminate any other existing clause within the Constitution, nor could it if it wanted to, because to do so would destroy the established fundamentals of the Constitution, thereby rendering it a broken contract. What Amendment XVI did do was to legally clarify exactly how 'incomes' were to be treated as a tax.
They are semi-correct on one aspect Congress did have all the taxing power they needed, that is until the Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust SCOTUS ruling ended it, which is why Amendment XVI was Ratified (presumably, not that it is relative to ones remuneration for time or labor anyway); By the by, the Pollock case had nothing to do with taxes on ones time or labor, that was not the issue being addressed, the issue was pertaining to... excises and duties, specifically 'incomes' (i.e. gains and profits).
"The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several states, and without regard to any census or enumeration. "
meaning that 'incomes' are to exist within the class of Indirect Taxes, either while being in the form of a Duty or an Excise Tax, i.e. a tax on ones assessed activity or privilege. If Amendment XVI was in fact addressing ones remuneration for time or labor, then the obvious subject of this Amendment would have been 'Capitation Taxes' not some obscured word not prior referenced or accounted for within the Constitution, that being 'incomes' or now called 'Income Taxes'.
Also important to further note that the original name of the Federal Income Tax or Internal Revenue Code or Income Tax or IRC, et al, was The Tariff Act, also the Underwood Tariff; a Tariff is essentially a Duty Tax.
FUN FACT: The Congress did not tax the compensation for (personal) services of average working American citizens prior to the Ratification of the XVI Amendment. In fact prior to the Victory Tax in 1942 (which is 29-years after the Ratification of the XVI Amendment) not more then 8-percent of American filed Federal Income Tax returns in any given year, after-which in 1943 that figure dramatically rose to 38-percent and steadily upwards thereafter, this was attested by President Harry S. Truman himself in 1952.)
See here: http://www.quatloos.com/hereisthelaw.htm
Anybody else sort of see how these "Q" peoples logic is entirely flawed (I mean besides the persistent misuse of the word "tax protester" and over used of petty name calling)?
"As has been explained numerous times, a not guilty verdict in a criminal case only means that the government failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants were WILLFULLY violating the tax laws, and were not acting out of a good faith mistake. It does NOT mean that the tax laws are not valid, or do not apply, because the defendants will still end up paying the taxes owed, with interest and penalties.
You might as well claim that murder is legal because OJ Simpson was found not guilty." - LPC
I am really starting to like this Famspear person, cracks me up!
"Many of the people here at Quatloos are pretty "heavy hitters" in the world of exposing scams, including tax protester scams." - Famspear
LOL, I am sort of having a hard time believing they are actually even serious with this stuff, though. Though I was thinking it would be fun for a laugh, while we can keep it professional for reference.
First of all, Quatloos is a web site that exposes scams.
Peter Eric Hendrickson is a scammer. He is a convicted criminal, and he is in criminal trouble again.
All of you who actually use Hendrickson's Cracking the Code scam are criminals. You are the bad guys.
We here at Quatloos are the good guys.
Hendrickson's Cracking the Code theory has absolutely no legal merit. It has been shot down in court every single time. It didn't even work for Hendrickson. The details on the many court case losses by Hendrickson and his followers are found elsewhere here in Quatloos, and in at least one other place on the internet.
Regarding name calling, I just want to repeat for emphasis: You people who actually use Cracking the Code are criminals. Hendrickson is a scammer, and you who follow him are criminals.
More to come.......