Here is Weston's reply at the losthorizons web site:
Now, if SCOTUS is quoting a lower court ruling, they are doing so for the purpose of factual consideration within their own trial, regardless of how brief the quote is, correct? Thus, the context of that quote becomes a decision pertaining to SCOTUS, no? So far as the case being vacated, unless it was vacated for reason pertaining to the quoted text, it is still standing, no? Or is this quote ineffective and should it just be removed, all together?
I am wondering if this is just yet one more desperate attempt on the part of the Quacklosians?
http://losthorizons.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=1237
So, where are you addressing your fakery on Lucas v. Earl, Weston?
More from Weston:
That is the way I understand it as well. SCOTUS simply adopts the findings of the lower court. After all the court is a venue in which one stays on precise and exact topic, it is not meant as a soapbox for wild baseless, speculative, unsupported tangents.
That is an even better idea, just quote the paragraph as stated within the SCOTUS case and most of all their argument then dissolves. Thanks for pointing that out, heh.
So, where are you addressing your fakery on Lucas v. Earl, Weston?
Thanks that is also very helpful, do you by chance have a link and is the whole portion the quote or only between the "..."'s?
Main Entry: beneficial
1 : conferring benefits : conducive to personal or social well-being 2 : receiving or entitling one to receive advantage, use, or benefit <a beneficial legacy>
— ben·e·fi·cial·ly Listen to the pronunciation of beneficially adverb
— ben·e·fi·cial·ness noun
So, where are you addressing your fakery on Lucas v. Earl, Weston?
Now generally speaking serving as an attorney is a federal privilege.
Main Entry: privilege
: a right or immunity granted as a peculiar benefit, advantage, or favor ; especially : such a right or immunity attached specifically to a position or an office
So regardless of the reversal in decision, unless one is in a similar occupation, the content of 13, 14, and 15 are still withstanding. Besides that it seems that this case is based more to due with an inheritance or the transfer of such remuneration through a trust or private contract than the cumulative earnings or gains. Though the reference to such and the context is pertinently clear.
The thread concerning this issue has exploded over at Quackloss, in a negative capacity of course, though they seem to be ensconcing. A real shocking surprise, right?
So this issue is pretty much resolved and therefore established that the majority of those at Quackloss are simpletons.
Weston, a statement by one of the parties in the case is not an opinion of the Court itself. And a statement or position that the Court REJECTED is certainly not an opinion of the Court itself.
EDIT: For those who haven't read the original, Weston White created a web site that asks the question: What Does SCOTUS Have to Say About 'Incomes'?
Weston responds with the statement:
The following are historical Court's Findings of Fact, Rulings and Determinations from the Supreme Court of The United States (SCOTUS) as directly pertaining to the Internal Revenue Code.
And, Weston includes this "quote" from Lucas v. Earl:
It is to be noted that, by the language of the Act, it is not salaries, wages, or compensation for personal services that are to be included in gross income. That which is to be included is gains, profits, and income derived from salaries, wages, or compensation for personal services."
Clearly, Weston is trying to leave the false impression that this quote is a "Findings of Fact, Rulings and Determinations from the Supreme Court of The United States." Weston is wrong. This is an argument in the taxpayer's brief filed with the Court. The taxpayer, Mr. Earl, LOST THE CASE. Mr. Earl's income was ruled to be taxable to him, even though he had already transferred ownership of that income -- by a legally valid assignment -- prior to the time he realized the income. This is the famous Assignment of Income Doctrine. The Court in this case made no distinction whatsoever between "salaries, wages, or compensation for personal services" and "gains, profits, and income derived from salaries, wages, or compensation for personal services". That was the language of Mr. Earl's attorneys, not the language of the Court.
EDIT 2: Here is the link to Weston's web site with his fakery:
http://defendindependence.org/scotuscases.html
As of approximately 12:55 pm Central Daylight Time on Monday, April 20, 2009, the fakery is still there (Weston has not yet removed it).
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet