Posts by ftsig-admin
How SIMPLE Income Tax Would be if the IRS Told THE WHOLE TRUTH in their publications and forms
1. Introduction A frequent complaint most people have about the income tax is that it is SO COMPLICATED and convoluted to understand and comply with. About this subject, we remind our readers, however, that ALL of this needless complexity is a product of a desire on the part of the IRS to: In doing the…
Read MoreCopilot: How Courts Defend the Theft of Property Through Taxation
QUESTION 1: Please itemize all the ways that courts defend the theft of property through taxation, including such things as: 1. Refusing to apply property law. 2. How taxation always involves converting private property to public property. 3. How the conversion from private to public must always be consensual. 4. How government’s main job is…
Read MoreStanding to Sue a Bank for Refusal to Open a Nonresident alien Unenumerated Account with No withholding or reporting
1. Forms that may prevent the need to litigate for use in opening the account 2. Enumeration of Standing 3. Situational concerns 4. Sample court complaint Here’s a sample pleading formatted as a Verified Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief and Damages. It synthesizes the claims under statutory, constitutional, and jurisdictional frameworks: IN THE UNITED…
Read MoreCopilot: Deception about “foreign” found in 26 U.S.C. 911
QUESTION 1: So if Form 8840 is used by an alien in a constitutional state who wants to associate with the state instead of the national government, and 26 C.F.R. 301.7701(b)-2 refers to 26 U.S.C. 911, does that mean 26 U.S.C. 911 applies to people in a constitutional state? ANSWER 1: You’re asking a beautifully…
Read MorePROOF OF FACTS: Enforcing INVOLUNTARY “resident alien” status against those with a CIVILLY foreign domicile is criminal identity theft
EDITORIAL: More on this subject at: BEGIN PROOF 1. The Internal Revenue Code Subtitles A and C are silent on domicile, but it does come into play. Domicile only becomes relevant for the purposes of Estate Taxes in Subtitle B. 2. The presence test found in 26 U.S.C. §7701(b) permits the national government to impute…
Read MoreThe End Game in the Book of Revelation Played Out in REAL LIFE
The Bible book of Revelation predicts the path to subjugation of all under the Beast: 1. The “Beast” is the governments of the world. Rev. 19:19. See: Socialism: The New American Civil Religion, Form #05.016https://sedm.org/Forms/05-MemLaw/SocialismCivilReligion.pdf 2. Everyone will receive the MARK, which in the context of this website is the SSN. Rev. 13:16-18. See: Social…
Read MoreCopilot: Analysis of Tax Status Diagram
EDITORIAL: “Federal preemption converts an otherwise foreign civil status established through domicile in a local jurisdiction, to that of a domestic status, when elected, within United States jurisdiction.” [FTSIG] This analysis deals with the following article and diagrams therein: Nationality, Citizenship, and Tax Status – How They Differ, FTSIGhttps://ftsig.org/civil-political-jurisdiction/nationality-citizenship-and-tax-status-how-they-differ/ The above diagram + the AI…
Read MoreThe Income Tax Is and Always Has Been on Nothing But Voluntary Privileges
The income tax under I.R.C. Subtitle A is and always has been upon VOLUNTARY privileges that you have to ask for and receive. Thus, it is avoidable. That’s the nature of all excise taxable privileges: The tax under consideration, as we have construed the statute, may be described as an excise upon the particular privilege…
Read MoreCopilot: Are aliens standing on constitutionally protected land protected from direct taxes on private property in Article 1, Section 2. Clause 3?
EDITORIAL: This interchange is very useful in learning ways to attack MANDTORY participation in franchises. A “resident alien” under 26 U.S.C. 7701(b)(1)(A) is a COMPELLED franchisee. At the moment, if you are an alien who meets the presence test, the ONLY way you can file as a nonresident alien is to be married to one…
Read MoreStatutes of Limitation for Tax Crimes
The statute of limitations for tax crimes depends on the nature of the offense—civil or criminal—and the specific violation under the Internal Revenue Code. Criminal Tax Offenses (Title 26 U.S.C. § 6531) Most criminal tax violations have a 6-year statute of limitations, including: The clock typically starts ticking from the date of the last affirmative…
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