INCOME TAXES ARE ILLEGAL: so don't pay.

Loftiest

Member
The question is not whether or not their local constitution was violated except as it pertains to violating the laws governing ratification of amendments of the Constitution of the United States. Violating ones own constitution for obvious political gesturing was frowned upon and it was a measure to prevent such votes being bought for favor on something so principled as THE constitution. Either one holds principals or they do not. A man without principal should never represent ours.


I promise from here on out I will site sources. I have very limited time these days.
Sorry, I forgot that the title of this thread was 'Income Taxes are Unprincipled, So Don't Pay.' Neither of us have a clue as to the circumstances regarding the ratification of the 16th; we haven't fully researched it at this point, or you simply haven't provided the proof.
 

Loftiest

Member
nope there is no answer there
Sorry, I was confused. Here: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/26/usc_sec_26_00006012----000-.html


§ 6012. Persons required to make returns of income

(a) General rule
Returns with respect to income taxes under subtitle A shall be made by the following:
(1) (A) Every individual having for the taxable year gross income which equals or exceeds the exemption amount, except that a return shall not be required of an individual— (i) who is not married (determined by applying section 7703), is not a surviving spouse (as defined in section 2 (a)), is not a head of a household (as defined in section 2 (b)), and for the taxable year has gross income of less than the sum of the exemption amount plus the basic standard deduction applicable to such an individual,
(ii) who is a head of a household (as so defined) and for the taxable year has gross income of less than the sum of the exemption amount plus the basic standard deduction applicable to such an individual,
(iii) who is a surviving spouse (as so defined) and for the taxable year has gross income of less than the sum of the exemption amount plus the basic standard deduction applicable to such an individual, or
(iv) who is entitled to make a joint return and whose gross income, when combined with the gross income of his spouse, is, for the taxable year, less than the sum of twice the exemption amount plus the basic standard deduction applicable to a joint return, but only if such individual and his spouse, at the close of the taxable year, had the same household as their home.

Does that clear it up for you?
 

what... huh?

Active Member
Sorry, I forgot that the title of this thread was 'Income Taxes are Unprincipled, So Don't Pay.' Neither of us have a clue as to the circumstances regarding the ratification of the 16th; we haven't fully researched it at this point, or you simply haven't provided the proof.

CHRIST I hate lost posts. I just spent two hours putting resources together and it says I cant log in because I am logged in and the words eventually went away. Yes I am aware of copy and paste. I have a glitchy ctrl key on this laptop. Dammit.

In a nutshell, I don't just vomit forth arguments I don't believe based on facts. Mostly I post here on my blackberry, and it is inconvenient to reproduce research in a single window. It just takes too long. When I get to a screen I will give you what I can get... which was...

Bill Benson's rather famous exploitation of the non-ratification is pretty extensive... there is a lot of material. It is best summed up with the following I guess...


  • The federal government claims Kentucky was the second state to ratify the 16th Amendment, on Feb. 8, 1910. However, the records of the State of Kentucky show that after the Kentucky House proposed a resolution to adopt the amendment and sent it to the Senate, on Feb. 8, 1910 the Kentucky Senate voted upon that resolution, but rejected it by a vote of 9 in favor and 22 opposed. Apparently, the Kentucky Senate never did ratify that amendment. Federal officials, who had possession of documents showing this rejection, nevertheless claimed Kentucky had ratified the amendment.
  • In Oklahoma, the proposed amendment was passed by the Oklahoma House and the language of the resolution perfectly matched the one passed by Congress. However, the Oklahoma Senate obviously disliked what Congress had proposed, so it amended the language of the 16th Amendment in such a fashion as to have a precisely opposite meaning.
  • The California legislative assembly never recorded any vote upon any proposal to adopt the 16th Amendment. And whatever California did adopt bore no resemblance to what Congress had proposed. Several states engaged in the unauthorized activity of amending the language of the amendment proposed by Congress, a power that these states did not possess.
  • Minnesota sent nothing to the Secretary of State in Washington, but this did not deter Philander Knox from claiming that Minnesota ratified the amendment, regardless of the absence of any documentation from the State of Minnesota.
  • Article V of the U.S. Constitution controls the amending process, which requires that three-fourths of the states ratify any amendment proposed by Congress. In 1913, there were 48 States in the American union, so to adopt any amendment required the affirmative act of 36 states. In February 1913, Knox issued a proclamation claiming that 38 states had ratified the amendment -- including Kentucky, California and Oklahoma. But since Kentucky had rejected the amendment, California had not voted on it, and Oklahoma wanted something entirely different, the amendment was not legally adopted, the number of ratifying States being only 35. Then again, a total of 11 states failed to vote on the amendment, 33 changed the language of the amendment and Minnesota sent in nothing. In the final analysis, if the process of the adoption of the 16th Amendment is subjected to strict legal scrutiny, the amendment was never adopted.

I view it as a legal curiosity... not a defense. Much like Ohio not being declared a state until 1956 or so... and then retroactively, which is a violation of some contract law... meaning at the end of the day there is a legal argument for succession... and then you have Texas...

Our constitution is held with almost unparalleled reverence. There are a lot of t's to cross and i's to dot before you get to write on it... as their should be.

As I said... there is a lot of material... some of them... I just cant be bothered to redo the whole post again... here is what was still open... leading to the argument of conflicting constitutions.

In Town of South Ottawa v. Perkins, 94 U.S. 260 (1877), the Court succinctly stated:

"There can be no estoppel in the way of ascertaining the existence of a law. That which purports to be a law of a State is a law or it is not a law, according as the truth of the fact may be, and not according to the shifting circumstances of parties . . . And whether it be a law or not a law is a judicial question, to be settled and determined by the courts and judges", Id., at 267.

Collier v. Frierson, 24 Ala. 100, 109 (1854)
"It has been said, that certain acts are to be done - certain requisitions are to be observed, before a change can be effected. But to what purpose are these acts required, or these requisitions enjoined, if the Legislature or any other department of the government, can dispense with them. To do so, would be to violate the instrument which they are sworn to support; and every principle of public law and sound constitutional policy requires the courts to pronounce against every amendment, which is shown not to have been made in accordance with the rules prescribed by the fundamental law."
 

Tyrannabudz

Well-Known Member
I am not educating myself on youtube. Just becoming informed of all the lies that are the foundation of this false free country. There is no way that your so-called leaders could be decieving you. If you want to think that everything is peaches and cream that is your prerogative.

Where does the gov't get it's power from? Or did you forget. Or are you wrong? Most people think that they get thier power from us, the voters who elect them. Wrong. It is all a big game and we are the pawns. Banksters run the world. We are slaves to debt and made to believe it is a good thing. In this society you are nothing if you don't have a mass of material items that you owe ridiculous amounts of money for. Taxes are all fine and good as long as they are being used for the benefit of the people as a whole. There are taxes on just about everything we consume. Property taxes pay for schools. Vehicle registration taxes go towards fixing roads, so on and so forth.
This is all good. But where does all the money that we pay in allegiance to the 1040 form go. Ask your representative that question. He probably doesn't even know. It goes to the ruling families of the world that have our so-called leaders on puppet strings. Of course that can probably never be proven, but does that mean it can't be true.

FEAR is the reason people won't stand up. Fear? Why should you fear your gov't, didn't you elect them? Didn't you give them the right to vote on bills on your behalf? Are they voting on your behalf or do they have other more important interests in mind? We have the power to change this country. Instead we pass off the responsibility to an elected leader who has already re-nigged on his campaign promises. Honestly income taxes are just the tip of the iceberg. There are much bigger things we need to be concerned with. Like how the gov't and environmentalists closed a canal feeding irrigation water to the entire San Juaqion farming community for a little fish the size of a minnow. Fuck the farmers they are only growing food that feeds our people and sells to distributors, grocery stores which contributes to our economy and our GDP. Which by the way is tanking at a rapid rate, all while the economy sinks. China is trying to convince the rest of the world to reconsider the American dollar as the reserve currency for the world. IMF funds will soon be the world currency. They are already selling billions of options to China, Russia. Soon all that money we all hold so highly won't be worth the paper it is printed on. But they are not talking about that on CNN so I guess it must not be true. Are you aware that a former senator from Georgia has been illegally detained in Israel. Probably not. Did he say Israel? Yes I did. That's what happens when you try to help suffering people in the Gaza Strip. It just so happens that Cynthia McKinney former georgia senator was one of the only gov't officials who believed that the 9/11 investigations were a sham and she openly questioned the 9/11 commision's findings. Just wait till this fall when they tell you have to get a vaccination against H5n1. Or when they come to your door and ask you to give up your firearms. It is coming. They can have my bullets first, one at a time, out of the end of the BARREL! WAKE UP SLAVES!!!!!!!!!!:evil::cuss:
 

snowmanexpress

Well-Known Member
If you are single, anything over 8 grand will start to be taxed.....
So if I am single, and I made just over at, 8,001.00 dollars, am I taxed on my one dollar over, or do I have to pay tax on the whole 8,000 now?


Or if I made 20g's, I could minus the 8? = 12,000 taxable......no way? The whole amount becomes taxable after 8 grand?

8 grand lol, what the hell can you do with 8k hahahah...That aint enough to live these days.
 

CrackerJax

New Member
No, the first 8 grand is tax free, then you start to pay 10% on every dollar after and above. I think it is 8,075...don't ask me why the xtra 75 is there tho...:lol:
 

TheBrutalTruth

Well-Known Member
no taxes. lol

sure, who needs an infrastructure.
Difference between income taxes and property taxes, most property taxes (state/local level) are used to pay for infrastructure.

A better question is, who needs an over-reaching socialistic parasite of a government?
 

TheBrutalTruth

Well-Known Member
So if I am single, and I made just over at, 8,001.00 dollars, am I taxed on my one dollar over, or do I have to pay tax on the whole 8,000 now?


Or if I made 20g's, I could minus the 8? = 12,000 taxable......no way? The whole amount becomes taxable after 8 grand?

8 grand lol, what the hell can you do with 8k hahahah...That aint enough to live these days.
Tiered Tax System, the more you make the more they steal as you cross income levels.

Which is why I've seen my taxation move from 1/16th of my income at 16K a year to 1/6th at 30K to 1/3rd at my current income level, which isn't really that much higher.

Income tax is just a tool to oppress the middle class.
 

ViRedd

New Member
The current tax code is 66,000 pages long. It has evolved into a vehicle that enables the ruling elite to reward friends and to punish enemies.

Vi
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
You have to have millions to afford the tax guys that know all the cheats and all the loopholes. Many big US corporations pay no income tax whatsoever due to these loopholes. In fact Goldman Sachs paid only 16 million in tax last year. GoldMan Sachs was making a profit of 16 million dollars per 8 hours during the bubble. What if your total tax bill was only 8 hours of your pay? The biggest richest most elite of companies and individuals pay a mere pittance of the tax that we pay.
 

jrh72582

Well-Known Member
Yes we should, really flat, like 0%.
Where would money for basic services come from? I like trash collection, parks, roads, etc...

I'm all for lower taxes and think that it is currently a burden for the middle class. I'd love to see corporations contribute like the little man has to. Shift some money around and take the burden off the middle and lower class. But everyone has to pay some taxes - just a little...
 
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