It really does not matter what the date is, that is just so not relevant, being that is the most current update dealing with this specific issue. As well you entirely miss the point, the process begins with correspondence and then makes its way towards varying letters and notices. As well concerning this issue there are many other related requirements implemented throughout both the IRC and the Regulations, these can be seen in their entirety in following FOIA request document:WW was SO close, except that he missed the fact that the IRM section he cited (besides being 10 years out of date) applies to "Basic Examiner Responsibilities for Examination of Returns" and has absolutely nothing to do with computer-generated notices.
Examination "correspondence" as opposed to Collection Notices managed by the Automated Collection System (ACS). There's a difference between "correspondence" and "notice."
http://defendindependence.org/OIF/IRS-FOIA.DOC
Also I find it amusing that you reference the intentions of a statue on one hand, yet you entirely discard Congressional Testimony on the other, for example the intention for establishing the XVI Amendment itself:
http://defendindependence.org/OIF/CR_XVIA_V44.PDF
...You people have posted that Congressional Reports are meaningless and do not matter, yet it is established legal doctrine that reviewing such testimony is highly important in determining the intention of an Act.
It is also quite telling that you all appear to hold the honest belief that levies can be justified and binding through a completely automated process, that no contact of any type is needed, no review, oversight, or authority of any kind. Just zap out a dozen digitized letters and the levy is all good, regardless.
As well it is nice to see you posting the reason for a statutes to clear up an existing issue from the year 1879, because according to you all the only IRC that matters is the version from 1986. So if that were actually true, which I have been shouting from the sky to you all about, this that the Revenue Acts are concurrent unless specifically stated otherwise, there would be no need for this section, now would there be!
Also your citation really does not serve to prove me wrong, not on any level, namely for the very obvious fact that the statute [6065] does in fact say so much more than what the original reason you posted says. Now sure that may have been the original reason for establishing this specific statute, but the fact remains that this statute [6065] attests to so much more than just that singular reason you had posted does.