Yes, there is some desperation here, Steve, but the rest of us see clearly who is feeling the desperation. It's you.I already see some of you trying desperately to try and claim Pollock sustained income taxes on the average employee.
You are desperately trying to cling to your position that a passing reference to a tax on occupations or employments as that term is used in Pollock somehow cannot be shorthand for, and cannot mean, a tax on INCOME from occupations or employments.
That's pretty desperate, Steve.
Before we continue with that, though, let's split some legal hairs: You would be correct to say that an income tax on the the income of the average employee was not specifically at issue in Pollock, so the Court didn't specifically "rule" on an income tax on the income of an average employee. The Pollock Court's statements on taxes on income from employments, etc., were arguably dicta. Unfortunately for your delusion, that does not help you.
The Pollock Court did indeed reiterate the point that the tax on income from employments, etc., is an indirect tax. How do we know this?
In part, by reading what the Court later wrote about what it had said in Pollock.
In Brushaber,the Supreme Court reiterated its own understand about what the Court had said in the Pollock case:
(bolding added)[ . . . ] the conclusion reached in the Pollock Case did not in any degree involve holding that income taxes generically and necessarily came within the class of direct taxes on property, but, on the contrary, recognized the fact that taxation on income was in its nature an excise [ . . . ] Nothing could serve to make this clearer than to recall that in the Pollock Case, in so far as the law taxed incomes from other classes of property than real estate and invested personal property, that is, income from 'professions, trades, employments, or vocations', its validity was recognized; indeed, it was expressly declared that no dispute was made upon that subject, and attention was called to the fact that taxes on such income had been sustained as excise taxes in the past. [ . . . ] The whole law [i.e., the whole 1894 tax law] was, however, declared unconstitutional on the ground that to permit it to thus operate would relieve real estate and invested personal property from taxation and 'would leave the burden of the tax to be borne by professions, trades, employments, or vacations; and in that way what was intended as a tax on capital would remain, in substance, a tax on occupations and labor' ( id. p. 637),-a result which, it was held, could not have been contemplated by Congress.
--from Brushaber.
Despite the fact that SteveSy struggles mightily to pretend that a tax on occupations or employments cannot be an "income tax," the Supreme Court itself, in 1916, views its own opinion in the Pollock case not the way Steve views Pollock, but instead the way the Quatloos regulars view Pollock. The Brushaber Court, in referring to its opinion in Pollock, equated "income from professions, trades, employments, or vocations" and "a tax on occupations and labor", and did this all in the same paragraph, essentially using the latter phrase as shorthand for the former phrase.
I guess that in SteveSy's mind, the 1916 Court was just "desperate." People who do not accept SteveSy's view of the universe are "desperate". And federal judges -- whose rulings uniformly contradict Steve's view -- are just corrupt people appointed by other people trying to "usurp" the Constitution -- or, at least, that's what SteveSy CLAIMS he believes.
Steve, I think you stated a while back that you do pay your federal income taxes. If so, I'm glad. I think you would have a hard time convincing most juries about your Cheek defense. You do not suffer from a good faith belief based on a misunderstanding caused by the complexity of the Internal Revenue Code. You suffer from having studied the law on your own and having made your own incorrect, idiosyncratic conclusion that the law is what you say it is.
Yes, Steve, if I were you I would definitely report all my income, get my return prepared properly, and pay those taxes on time. You don't want to have to fall back on the kind of pseudo-logic you post here in Quatloos.