SteveSy wrote:The Observer wrote:Famspear wrote: Many of those people seem to have no idea that their ideas are so goofy.
Like the people who think that the 16th amendment doesn't actually mean that Congress has the right to tax the incomes of everyone, just licensed professions?
Lol...
I think saying you can rob a bank without punishment because FRN's have "no value" is a little more far fetched. What you're talking about above has at least some foundation due to all the Supreme Court cases that talk about things being identified as a privilege and thus taxable. . . .
I agree with you Steve, but only in the sense that at least there is actually a physically printed
word in the text of a case somewhere that these people read (such as "excise" or "privilege"); at least it's not completely made up.
But in a larger sense, that problem also illustrates the intellectual bankruptcy of those people. Some legal logicians refer to this fallacy as
whole word equivocation -- taking words out of context, essentially, and falsely arguing that because "excise" means
this over here in Case A it must also mean
the same thing over there in Case B, etc., etc. How did these people make it past the sixth grade operating at that level of "reasoning"? (Oops, don't get me started about The Educational System; I don't want to hijack the thread, either.)
And it's not just the knuckle-draggers at places like "sooey" that engage in this kind of "goofy-ness."
The so-called "gurus" make the most fundamental errors as well. For example, Peter E. Hendrickson, Robert Schulz and Dave Champion have cited
Coppage v. Kansas for the "wages are not taxable" argument with respect to the following quote from the text of the case:
Included in the right of personal liberty and the right of private property-partaking of the nature of each- is the right to make contracts for the acquisition of property. Chief among such contracts is that of personal employment, by which labor and other services are exchanged for money or other forms of property.
Yet the Court in that case never ruled that an income tax cannot be imposed on contracts of personal employment, etc., etc.
Coppage was a
criminal case involving a
defendant convicted, under a
Kansas statute, of
firing an employee for refusing to resign as a member of a labor union. As I have noted elsewhere, no issues of
taxation of any kind were presented to or decided by the Supreme Court in this case. Indeed, the word "tax" is
not even found in the text of the Court's decision. The
Coppage case is cited by these loons over and over and over and over and over.
Another is the famous
Merchants' Loan argument (Irwin Schiff and many other crooks have cited this one) where the crooks argue that the U.S. Supreme Court decision in that case stands for the proposition that "income" somehow means
only "corporate profits" or "corporate gain" -- ignoring the points (1) that the income ruled
by the United States Supreme Court to be
taxable in that very case was NOT corporate profit, (2) that the taxpayer was a decedent's estate, not a corporation, (3) that a decedent's estate cannot have "corporate profit," and (4) that the phrases "corporate profit" and "corporate gain" aren't even mentioned in the text.
I could never have gotten away with this kind of tactic in grade school. I mean, can you imagine? I had an eighth grade teacher English teacher who would have humiliated me for trying something like that. It would never have even occurred to me in grade school to be that intellectually dishonest.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet