mentallydatingahotcelebrity:previewofthoughts: under-the-arch:greater-than-the-sword: mentallydating
mentallydatingahotcelebrity:previewofthoughts: under-the-arch:greater-than-the-sword: mentallydatingahotcelebrity: greater-than-the-sword: mentallydatingahotcelebrity: greater-than-the-sword: mentallydatingahotcelebrity: greater-than-the-sword:mentallydatingahotcelebrity:You can sue them, actually. For fraud lol. And you can just stop paying. Cuz it’s voluntary. Citation needed. It’s literally in their codebook. Which tax is voluntary? By my knowledge they come after you hard if you evade a single penny Income Tax. Totally voluntary. It was “temporarily” begun as an emergency measure in, I believe, 1913, but the government liked all the greenstuff too much to terminate it. They do come at you hard. Cuz the government is a corrupt nightmare and they like their lil con game. It’s not voluntary if you are guaranteed to get in severe legal trouble for not paying it. Also, there was a constitutional amendment (which I do not like or support) authorizing the federal government to collect income tax. Afaik there is no opt out clause. Yes, in times of war or extreme hardship. Hence 1913 and the first time the Income Tax was implemented. It is absolutely voluntary—but the government scares you with threat of imprisonment and liens, thus people are too scared to stand up and fight back. But if American citizens as a group got together and collectively said “fuck off this is my money” and cited a couple laws (which I don’t know so can’t reference, unfortunately), the government would have to leave us alone. Sorry; call me “under duress”, but I would have to be very convinced that I was on extremely solid legal footing. “(which I don’t know so can’t reference, unfortunately)”so they’re talking bullshit and cant back up anything they’re saying Yeah, um. None of what @mentallydatingahotcelebrity is saying is correct.For starters, income tax didn’t start in 1913. A temporary income tax was implemented in 1861 with the Revenue Act to raise funds for the civil war. It was a 3% tax on annual incomes over $800. The U.S. Constitution never explicitly forbade income taxes. It forbids direct taxes not in proportion to the Census or enumeration (Article I, Sec 9, Clause 4). The 16th Amendment (1913) amends this clause by permitting taxes on incomes not in proportion to the Census or enumeration. The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.Permanent income taxes were then established in 1913 with Revenue Act of 1913.Taxes are not voluntary. The requirement to pay taxes is not voluntary. Section 1 of the Internal Revenue Code clearly imposes a tax on the taxable income of individuals, estates, and trusts, as determined by the tables set forth in that section. (Section 11 imposes a tax on corporations’ taxable income.) Case law establishing this include: United States v. Schiff, 379 F.3d 621 (9th Cir. 2004), Keenan v. Commissioner 233 F. App’x 719, 720 (9th Cir. 2007) (this held that claims that “assertions that the tax system is voluntary” are frivolous), Banat v. Commissioner, 80 F. App’x 705 (2d Cir. 2003), United States v. Gerads, 999 F.2d 1255 (8th Cir. 1993), and many more. Lastly, there is a slight truth to “taxes are voluntary”, but that refers to the manner that people submit their own taxes as opposed to the payment, as established above. The U.S. tax system is voluntary in that our system of allowing taxpayers initially to determine the correct amount of tax and complete the appropriate returns, rather than have the government determine tax for them from the outset. You are required to file an income tax return (26 USC 6011(a), 26 USC 6012 et seq, 26 USC 6072 et seq).In United States v. Tedder, 787 F.2d 540, 542 (10th Cir. 1986), the court stated that, “although Treasury regulations establish voluntary compliance as the general method of income tax collection, Congress gave the Secretary of the Treasury the power to enforce the income tax laws through involuntary collection … . The IRS’ efforts to obtain compliance with the tax laws are entirely proper.” The IRS warned taxpayers of the consequences of making this frivolous argument in Rev. Rul. 2007-20, 2007-1 C.B. 863 and in Notice 2010-33, 2010-17 I.R.B. 609. Yeah you can site all of that and…. While it sounds good, you’re still wrong. It’s a scam. It’s fraudulent. And it needs to be stopped.Thanks tho for pointing out the thing about 1913. I couldn’t remember when it was enacted, but there was some key thing that occurred in 1913. Can’t remember what cuz, again, it’s not my field. Then you’re talking out of your ass bc US constitutional law and statute very clearly states that taxes are not voluntary and you must pay them. Show your sources or sit down. Sincerely, Someone who’s field this is -- source link