What law does this?
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- Conde de Quatloo
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Re: What law does this?
I guess this is all my fault. Somewhere else I posited that no one could be as truly stupid as Harvester, and that he was just a troll. Looks like someone just had to prove me wrong.
Welcome to Quatloos, looser.
Oh, and when we call you "maroon" we're not misspelling moron, it's a local term we have just for people like you.
Welcome to Quatloos, looser.
Oh, and when we call you "maroon" we're not misspelling moron, it's a local term we have just for people like you.
Supreme Commander of The Imperial Illuminati Air Force
Your concern is duly noted, filed, folded, stamped, sealed with wax and affixed with a thumbprint in red ink, forgotten, recalled, considered, reconsidered, appealed, denied and quietly ignored.
Your concern is duly noted, filed, folded, stamped, sealed with wax and affixed with a thumbprint in red ink, forgotten, recalled, considered, reconsidered, appealed, denied and quietly ignored.
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- Fourth Shogun of Quatloosia
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Re: What law does this?
As I said, you cannot read.26USCisafraud wrote:All you high-priced liaryers conveniently overlook thing when you need to continue your fraudulent behaviour.Famspear wrote:Oh, what's the matter "26"? Not as easy as it looked, is it?26USCisafraud wrote:Wronng again, Batman!
Scoll down to section 3445 of that very same P.L. that directs the commissioner to "eliminate or substantially MODIFY" the structure of the IRS. Had he paid attention, he would have realized he needed to modify rather than eliminate the districts. The requirement to do so in in the very same law! A district director's gotta sign levies Idiots!
BTW, under the new organization, authority to levy has been delegated to various IRS employees holding certain positions under the new structure.A principal residence is not exempt from levy if a U.S. district court judge or magistrate approves the levy; similarly, trade or business assets are not exempt from levy if an IRS district director or assistant district director personally approves the levy or where collection is in jeopardy, but only after a determination that the taxpayer's other assets are insufficient to satisfy the liability
Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak.
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- Fourth Shogun of Quatloosia
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Re: What law does this?
I think you have a problem with your brain being missing. You are depriving some village of its idiot.26USCisafraud wrote:The silence is DEAFENING!
Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak.
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Re: What law does this?
Not so much silence as quiet contempt and maybe a little pity.26USCisafraud wrote:The silence is DEAFENING!
Supreme Commander of The Imperial Illuminati Air Force
Your concern is duly noted, filed, folded, stamped, sealed with wax and affixed with a thumbprint in red ink, forgotten, recalled, considered, reconsidered, appealed, denied and quietly ignored.
Your concern is duly noted, filed, folded, stamped, sealed with wax and affixed with a thumbprint in red ink, forgotten, recalled, considered, reconsidered, appealed, denied and quietly ignored.
Re: What law does this?
EDIT: Here's what the statute actually says (in relevant part):
Under penalty of perjury, section 6065, right?
--Internal Revenue Code section 6334(e)(2), as amended by section 3445(b) of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-206, 112 Stat. 685, 762-763 (July 22, 1998).[/quote]....Property (other than a principal residence) described in subsection (a)(13)(B) shall not be exempt from levy if--
(A) a district director or assistant district director of the Internal Revenue Service personally approves (in writing) the levy of such property.....
Under penalty of perjury, section 6065, right?
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- Knight Templar of the Sacred Tax
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Re: What law does this?
I think what you meant to say was: "Is a notice of intent to levy required to be signed under penalty of perjury?"26USCisafraud wrote:Under penalty of perjury, section 6065, right?
No. Section 6065 does not require that.
And that has nothing to do with the nonsense you've already written. Please do not wander off into other, unrelated nonsense.
EDIT: Or maybe you meant to ask, "Under section 6065, is the levy itself required to be authorized by a statement made under penalty of perjury?"
The answer to that would also be no.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet
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Re: What law does this?
Sorry, but that list and the maps are woefully out of date. The IRS no longer has 33 "districts" but now has split up their organization to align with the different areas of tax administration such as exempt organizations, large business, small business and wage earners. Each of those operating divisions in turn divide the country up into areas and territories depending on the size of their staffs and the requirements of the particular taxpayer population.CaptainKickback wrote:And then there are these, which name and show the 33 IRS districts:
But that doesn't mean that our new troll is any less wrong than he originally was. It is very clear from the statutes, regulations and delegations that the IRS has the authority and mandate to determine how they decide to administer the taxation of the country. usc26isfraud is hung up on "magic" words.
"I could be dead wrong on this" - Irwin Schiff
"Do you realize I may even be delusional with respect to my income tax beliefs? " - Irwin Schiff
"Do you realize I may even be delusional with respect to my income tax beliefs? " - Irwin Schiff
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Re: What law does this?
Under penalty of perjury, section 6065, right?[/quote]26USCisafraud wrote:EDIT: Here's what the statute actually says (in relevant part):
--Internal Revenue Code section 6334(e)(2), as amended by section 3445(b) of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-206, 112 Stat. 685, 762-763 (July 22, 1998).....Property (other than a principal residence) described in subsection (a)(13)(B) shall not be exempt from levy if--
(A) a district director or assistant district director of the Internal Revenue Service personally approves (in writing) the levy of such property.....
And if you read very carefully, the only levy that the director must sign must be for property that is described under (e)(2) as business assets that are defined as being tools of the trade. In other words, if the IRS wants to seize a painter's brushes, the revenue officer needs to get the director's signature on the levy paperwork. If the revenue officer wants to seize the painter's personal vehicle, he or she does not need the director's signature.
"I could be dead wrong on this" - Irwin Schiff
"Do you realize I may even be delusional with respect to my income tax beliefs? " - Irwin Schiff
"Do you realize I may even be delusional with respect to my income tax beliefs? " - Irwin Schiff
Re: What law does this?
And if you read very carefully, the only levy that the director must sign must be for property that is described under (e)(2) as business assets that are defined as being tools of the trade. In other words, if the IRS wants to seize a painter's brushes, the revenue officer needs to get the director's signature on the levy paperwork. If the revenue officer wants to seize the painter's personal vehicle, he or she does not need the director's signature.[/quote]The Observer wrote:Under penalty of perjury, section 6065, right?26USCisafraud wrote:EDIT: Here's what the statute actually says (in relevant part):
--Internal Revenue Code section 6334(e)(2), as amended by section 3445(b) of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-206, 112 Stat. 685, 762-763 (July 22, 1998).....Property (other than a principal residence) described in subsection (a)(13)(B) shall not be exempt from levy if--
(A) a district director or assistant district director of the Internal Revenue Service personally approves (in writing) the levy of such property.....
So you admit that a district director is needed....hmmm. Hard to do since they don't exist anymore. You guys are a bunch of fraudsters sucking off the government teat. No wonder the country's going down the crapola hola with legal bozos like yourselves fattening your own wallets because you've made a pact with the devil and continue to make these specious arguments protecting the fraud.
How much was spent on the wonderful new IRS organization that doesn't even exist anymore? (Hint: T.O. 150-02) It's all a big fraud!
The next thing I know is that some yahoo on this board is going to tell me that the IRS was created by statute.
Anybody want to make a small wager on that one?
Re: What law does this?
Famspear wrote:I think what you meant to say was: "Is a notice of intent to levy required to be signed under penalty of perjury?"26USCisafraud wrote:Under penalty of perjury, section 6065, right?
No. Section 6065 does not require that.
And that has nothing to do with the nonsense you've already written. Please do not wander off into other, unrelated nonsense.
EDIT: Or maybe you meant to ask, "Under section 6065, is the levy itself required to be authorized by a statement made under penalty of perjury?"
The answer to that would also be no.
You better read 6065 again fambozo. Is a levy a DOCUMENT made under ANY provision of the internal revenue laws or regulations? yUp
Re: What law does this?
The Observer wrote:Sorry, but that list and the maps are woefully out of date. The IRS no longer has 33 "districts" but now has split up their organization to align with the different areas of tax administration such as exempt organizations, large business, small business and wage earners. Each of those operating divisions in turn divide the country up into areas and territories depending on the size of their staffs and the requirements of the particular taxpayer population.CaptainKickback wrote:And then there are these, which name and show the 33 IRS districts:
But that doesn't mean that our new troll is any less wrong than he originally was. It is very clear from the statutes, regulations and delegations that the IRS has the authority and mandate to determine how they decide to administer the taxation of the country. usc26isfraud is hung up on "magic" words.
Hey blindobserver, it means I am more correct than before because you just made a stupid and ignorant statement, just like every other statement propping up this fraud. The 'magic' words are called Public Law.
So now you are spouting falsehoods like the IRS is divided up into all these 'new' divisions, areas and territories. Better check again, blindguy.
The IRS is operating outside the law, ie., OUTLAWS!
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- Supreme Prophet (Junior Division)
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Re: What law does this?
[quote="26USCisafraud]
All you high-priced liaryers conveniently overlook thing when you need to continue your fraudulent behaviour.
Scoll down to section 3445 of that very same P.L. that directs the commissioner to "eliminate or substantially MODIFY" the structure of the IRS. Had he paid attention, he would have realized he needed to modify rather than eliminate the districts. The requirement to do so in in the very same law! A district director's gotta sign levies Idiots![/quote]
You are so dumb you make Van Pelt and Harvester look smart -- and that's Hall of Fame dumb -- maybe even gets you onto the medalist's podium. You yourself supplied the statutory clause which directs the commissioner to eliminate OR modify the districts. In plain English, he can eliminate the districts, OR he can modify them. He chose Door #1.
All you high-priced liaryers conveniently overlook thing when you need to continue your fraudulent behaviour.
Scoll down to section 3445 of that very same P.L. that directs the commissioner to "eliminate or substantially MODIFY" the structure of the IRS. Had he paid attention, he would have realized he needed to modify rather than eliminate the districts. The requirement to do so in in the very same law! A district director's gotta sign levies Idiots![/quote]
You are so dumb you make Van Pelt and Harvester look smart -- and that's Hall of Fame dumb -- maybe even gets you onto the medalist's podium. You yourself supplied the statutory clause which directs the commissioner to eliminate OR modify the districts. In plain English, he can eliminate the districts, OR he can modify them. He chose Door #1.
"We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture." -- Pastor Ray Mummert, Dover, PA, during an attempt to introduce creationism -- er, "intelligent design", into the Dover Public Schools
Re: What law does this?
Nikki wrote:Perhaps troll-du-jour could consider looking at delegation orders?
o.k. nIKKI bABY, i'M fROM mIssOURI. SHOw ME WHAT to lOOk AT! Got anything GOOD? Show ME thosE delEGAtion orderS for POSitions that don't exist!
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- Fourth Shogun of Quatloosia
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Re: What law does this?
I am fairly certain that 'The Observer' was pointing out that a director's signature was only needed in the event that exempt business or trade property needed to be seized. The same section does provide an alternative to a director's signature, therefore a district director is NOT needed.Moron of the week wrote: So you admit that a district director is needed....hmmm. Hard to do since they don't exist anymore.
Typical moron jumping to conclusions. I do not work for the IRS. I do not complete tax returns for others. I do not advise people on their tax issues. I do not receive any compensation that is related in any way to the administration or operation of the tax laws. BTW, the only one making specious arguments here is you.Moron of the week wrote:You guys are a bunch of fraudsters sucking off the government teat. No wonder the country's going down the crapola hola with legal bozos like yourselves fattening your own wallets because you've made a pact with the devil and continue to make these specious arguments protecting the fraud.
Blah, blah, blah. I think you weren't burdened with an overabundance of schooling.Moron of the week wrote:How much was spent on the wonderful new IRS organization that doesn't even exist anymore? (Hint: T.O. 150-02) It's all a big fraud!
The Office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was created by statute long ago. The Commissioner was given the power to hire as many people as he/she deemed necessary for the administration and enforcement of the Internal Revenue laws.Moron of the week wrote:The next thing I know is that some yahoo on this board is going to tell me that the IRS was created by statute.
Anybody want to make a small wager on that one?
Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak.
Re: What law does this?
Let's assume, for the sake of argument that the troll of the day is correct.
First, why hasn't a single Tax or District court case raised this issue and won? Is troll of the day some kind of prescient legal genius?
Second, if there were any validity to its exposing this massive loophole in the IRS' authority and procedures, why hasn't Congress taken fifteen minutes away from honoring classic car collectors and corrected this oversight as they regularly do with all other errors in the tax laws?
Answer: We have reached reductio ad absurbidum --- troll's allegations are incorrect.
Perhaps it should add a new type of razor to its shaving kit --- the single blade type manufactured by Occam, Inc.
First, why hasn't a single Tax or District court case raised this issue and won? Is troll of the day some kind of prescient legal genius?
Second, if there were any validity to its exposing this massive loophole in the IRS' authority and procedures, why hasn't Congress taken fifteen minutes away from honoring classic car collectors and corrected this oversight as they regularly do with all other errors in the tax laws?
Answer: We have reached reductio ad absurbidum --- troll's allegations are incorrect.
Perhaps it should add a new type of razor to its shaving kit --- the single blade type manufactured by Occam, Inc.
Last edited by Nikki on Fri May 14, 2010 2:13 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: What law does this?
Pottapaug1938 wrote:[
So he violated 6091, 7621 and a host of other CFR regs by eliminating the district director position along with the internal revenue districts and the service center serving the districts
Checkmate!
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- Fourth Shogun of Quatloosia
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Re: What law does this?
Yes, the IRS is subject to and guided by the Internal Revenue laws. The problem here is that YOU do not understand those laws. You THINK you do, but you are mistaken because you do not know how to properly read statutes and you have a reading comprehension problem.26USCisafraud wrote:The Observer wrote:Sorry, but that list and the maps are woefully out of date. The IRS no longer has 33 "districts" but now has split up their organization to align with the different areas of tax administration such as exempt organizations, large business, small business and wage earners. Each of those operating divisions in turn divide the country up into areas and territories depending on the size of their staffs and the requirements of the particular taxpayer population.CaptainKickback wrote:And then there are these, which name and show the 33 IRS districts:
But that doesn't mean that our new troll is any less wrong than he originally was. It is very clear from the statutes, regulations and delegations that the IRS has the authority and mandate to determine how they decide to administer the taxation of the country. usc26isfraud is hung up on "magic" words.
Hey blindobserver, it means I am more correct than before because you just made a stupid and ignorant statement, just like every other statement propping up this fraud. The 'magic' words are called Public Law.
So now you are spouting falsehoods like the IRS is divided up into all these 'new' divisions, areas and territories. Better check again, blindguy.
The IRS is operating outside the law, ie., OUTLAWS!
Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak.
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- Supreme Prophet (Junior Division)
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Re: What law does this?
Only it's against you, Moron. He had the power to eliminate, as you yourself pointed out. As for the rest of your ravings, they are not worth any more of my time to rebut -- for one thing, you are incapable of understanding any such rebutals, or of forming a coherent response to them.26USCisafraud wrote:Pottapaug1938 wrote:[
So he violated 6091, 7621 and a host of other CFR regs by eliminating the district director position along with the internal revenue districts and the service center serving the districts
Checkmate!
You really ought to stop sneaking into the nurses' station and using their computers, or else they'll take you to the Time Out room and give you some of that "special juice", after they put you into the Special Jacket.
"We've been attacked by the intelligent, educated segment of the culture." -- Pastor Ray Mummert, Dover, PA, during an attempt to introduce creationism -- er, "intelligent design", into the Dover Public Schools
Re: What law does this?
Nikki wrote:Let's assume, for the sake of argument that the troll of the day is correct.
First, why hasn't a single Tax or District court case raised this issue and won? Is troll of the day some kind of prescient legal genius?
Second, if there were any validity to its exposing this massive loophole in the IRS' authority and procedures, why hasn't Congress taken fifteen minutes away from honoring classic car collectors and corrected this oversight as they regularly do with all other errors in the tax laws?
Answer: We have reached reductio ad absurbidum --- troll's allegations are incorrect.
Perhaps it should add a new type of razor to its shaving kit --- the single blade type manufactured by Occam, Inc.
I'll answer that. Because Congress doesn't give a damn about doing what's right, only what gets votes. Why do you think that haven't enforced the immigration laws for 50 years?
Vote a few of the bums out, then they get the message. When the teaparties spread the truth about the fraud of Title 26, congress might just wake up and get rid of this slavemaker.
Of course, the cottage industry built up around the fraud, the H&R Blocks, Liberty tax service, tax lairyers, etc, will have to find another source of corruption.