OK.Weston White wrote:No I am not talking about show me that law. I never said that. No, that is not what I meant.
I mean get on there and say basically American citizen or resident, if you work at Mcdonalds, if you work at 7-11, if you work at Wal-Mart or Costco or SaveMart or Pepboys or Kragen or BurgerKing or Carls Jr. or Walgreens or FedEx or UPS or Dell, if you work at Macy's or Target or Taco Bell or Kinko's or Ross or Denny's, if you are a self-employed consultant, baby sitter, plumber, lock-smith, gardener, landscaper, mechanic, taxi driver, bus driver, or HVAC specialist, or any other such similar business or corporation or facility, no matter what your position is that money you make for doing those tasks is fully taxable by the federal government, that is it end of story.
I mean get on there and say 26 USC 3121 and 3401 and 7701 means exactly what the IRS says it means; that income means all the money in the USA exchanged between however many parties and for whatever reason is fully taxable by the federal government, unless it is specifically exempted within 269 USC itself, period.
And I mean get on there and use common English words like money, cash, checks, revenue, labor, laborer, laboring, worker, and not specialized terms such as wages, income, employee, trade or business, and services.
I mean get on there and say that capitation taxes or other direct taxes do not mean taxes in consideration of labor. That Wealth of Nations had nothing to due with the determination of established tax principles within the U.S. Constitution, that our entire system of federal taxation is entirely coincidental.
That is what I mean. Now that simple enough to do, right?
I still contend that many, many people in the tax protester community would not even accept that.