26USCisafraud wrote:Fact #1. You and I both know that RRA98 is used for the basis for the current IRS topography where Secretary O'Neill chose to eliminate rather than modify the internal revenue district structure in 2001.
No, I don't know that.
So "Fact #1" is not a fact at all.
26USCisafraud wrote:Fact #2. After millions in public money was spent on this re-org, the structure that exists today was itself cancelled by the current Treasury Order 150-02. The IRS is totally operating outside the law as a result.
I don't know what you mean by "current Treasury Order 150-02," but according to
the website of the Treasury Department, Treasury Order 150-02 was replaced by Treasury Directive 21-01, and Treasury Order 150-02 was canceled in May of 2006.
And I don't understand how the IRS could be operating "outside the law" if the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 gave the Secretary of the Treasury the power to "develop and implement a plan to reorganize the Internal Revenue Service" while specifically providing that the plan developed and implemented by the Secretary would "supersede any organization or reorganization of the Internal Revenue Service
based on any statute or reorganization plan applicable on the effective date of this section."
If the Secretary can implement a plan that supersedes statutes, then why isn't the organization of the IRS as dictated by the Secretary automatically valid, regardless of any conflict with any statute or regulation?
26USCisafraud wrote:Fact #3. There is a multitude of Public Law, USC and CFR sections that rely on the district director position that are not being obeyed by the IRS, thereby denying every American 'due process' every year. Must I list them for you?
As noted above, section 1001 of the "Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998" specifically allows the reorganization plan of the Secretary to over-ride any organizational structure required by statute.
And "due process" is not denied by a federal officer having the wrong title. If you believe otherwise, you need to find some case or other authority that supports what you claim.
26USCisafraud wrote:Fact #4. The IRS was never created by statute. CHRYSLER CORP. v. BROWN, 441 U.S. 281 (1979) footnote 23. It has grown since 1862 like a cancer on the butt of Uncle Sam. The civil war may have ended racial slavery, but it gave birth of taxation slavery which we have to this day.
As wserra has already pointed out, that's not what Chrysler Corp. v. Brown says.
Tip: If you want to be taken seriously, you should actually take the time to read the authorities you cite, and make sure that they say what you claim, and not just cut-and-paste what other morons have published on the Internet.
And what makes you think a statute is needed to have something called the "Internal Revenue Service"?
26USCisafraud wrote:Fact #5. When the legal 'experts' on this board get their collective brains stomped in through argument using facts, they resort to name calling, bed wetting, belly aching and towel crying.
You're imagining something that has never happened. The "legal 'experts' on this board" have never had their "collective brains stomped in."
You may be drawing the wrong conclusions from the reactions to your ignorance and obstinate stupidity. You wouldn't be the first to think that being laughed at makes you a Galileo and not a Bozo.