SteveSy wrote:
Famspear you make the same mistake every other TA does because you squint your eyes really, really hard and see what you want to see rather than what they said.
The
Sitka "quote" in the posting above appears to be a fake. I just did a word search on the text of the case as printed in CCH, and the language simply does not appear. I haven't checked
Sloan yet. But that's a bit beside the point.
No, Steve. I didn't make a mistake.
But you keep making the same mistakes, over and over.
One of the mistakes you seem to make -- over and over -- is to forget that the Quatloos regulars have already studied these cases a thousand times. You flail around, figuratively waving your emotional "arms", and acting like your hair is on fire about my supposed erroneous reading of the "employments" passage in
Pollock. You just can't accept that the Supreme Court was talking about INCOME FROM EMPLOYMENTS. Yet you forget that the Supreme Court -- and other courts like the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit -- have interpreted the "employments" language of Pollock case
in precisely that way - tax on INCOME from employments.
You, like many other tax protesters (or in your case, quasi-tax-protesters, I guess), still can't seem to get your brain around the concept that these teachings that are presented to you are
not merely the personal opinions of the Quatloos regulars. We are reporting to you on
what the law is, NOT on what WE THINK THE LAW SHOULD BE, and NOT on WHAT WE WISH THE LAW TO BE, and NOT what we believe the MOST LOGICAL INTERPRETATION SHOULD BE. Where a particular point of law has been decided in a court, when we use the phrase "what the law is," we mean WHAT THE COURT HAS RULED.
And, in the case of Pollock, where the statement (the one about taxation of "employments" that we've been arguing about) is perhaps "dicta" rather than "holding", the rule is similar: the subsequent interpretations of courts of law are authoritative -- not the supposedly "logical" interpretations of "SteveSy" or "Famspear."
Steve, you waste a lot of time and energy constructing your elaborate, supposedly "logical" arguments about why the Quatloos regulars are "wrong" about what the courts mean in these texts. Your approach is invalid. It's not proper legal analysis.
As many readers here know, I am an attorney-CPA and I have been practicing only as a CPA for some years. A while back, my accounting colleagues and I were in our CPA office one day. An attorney friend of ours from a law firm in the building came in to borrow some of our tax research materials. He was sitting there in our office, studying the materials.
One of my CPA colleagues walked over and asked the attorney what tax issue he was researching. The attorney told him.
My CPA colleague responded with something like "Oh, I can tell you, that XXXX [fill in blank] is indeed the correct answer."
The attorneys' response was absolutely on point. He said, "The main issue is not so much whether that answer is correct. I'm looking for
authority for the answer."
Before trying to "logic" your way through understanding a court opinion with
your own idiosyncratic "reasoning," what you should be doing -- at least at some preliminary stage of your analysis -- is ALSO looking at how
the courts interpret that opinion in subsequent, actual cases. A-U-T-H-O-R-I-T-Y. That's how the U.S. legal system works.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet