Trey Gowdy Announces: We Are A Kingdom.

I couldn’t believe my eyes when I read about Trey Gowdy’s radio interview. Will we ever learn that when the government investigates itself, the results are ALWAYS the same?

Alternatively you can listen to “Trey Gowdy Announces: We Are A Kingdom” on  YouTube

Watch Out! Liberty is Rising!

Our right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizure is violated with greater and greater frequency. But watch out! Liberty is Rising!

Alternatively you can listen to “Watch Out! Liberty is Rising” by KrisAnne Hall on YouTube

The Income Tax is Immoral and Unconstitutional – and Not (Just) for the Reason You Think

taxes

Guest Post by Robin Koerner

I have just paid my biggest bill of the year. The invoice was for a cool 9% of my entire annual income – or my “Adjusted Gross Income” (AGI) as it appears on my tax returns, which have just been filed. And that invoice was from my accountant who just filed them for me.

I have a pretty modest income – so modest, in fact, that my AGI is of the order of a half of the median household income across the United States – the kind of income that triggers significant subsidies under the Affordable Care Act. Even the “top line” of my income falls short of that median: so it’s not as if I’m earning loads and deducting huge amounts.

My financial life last year was pretty simple: my earnings derived from a modest real estate portfolio and some freelance/consulting work. My income is earned through my small business, which, for those who know about these things, is an S-corporation. I have no employees. I do no payroll.

Yet, I have just paid my accountant more than a month’s worth of income to complete my tax returns.

How many pages of tax returns do you think that I, a single individual, and my S-corporation (a small business) had to file, bearing in mind the small amount of income in question?

Frankly, there’s no good reason the answer is not one or two. But you already know the answer is more than that, don’t you?

Ten? Try again.

Twenty? Keep going.

Surely not 50?

You’re still not close.

Did I hear you say 100 – you’re going for three digits now? Wow.

Still not there.

The answer, my fellow American tax victims, is 149.

Just take a moment to absorb that. A sub median-earning American taxpayer, engaged in simple business activities, has a 149 page tax return. And if he doesn’t get it right, his error is punishable. Of that 149, about 100 go to the Feds.Business Woman Climbing a Pile of Files

Completing 149 pages of tax forms/schedules/supporting statements is a lot of work. And I know exactly how much it is, because of that big invoice from the accountant that I already mentioned.

It’s $2000 of work – my aforementioned largest bill of the year. And it’s $2000 of work I in no way could have done myself.

I’m no high school drop-out. I have a first class degree in physics from one of the best universities in the world. I like numbers. I like logic. I like intellectual rigor. I even have a nerdy love of spreadsheets (which tells me, for example, exactly how much I spent on groceries this month five years ago ($173.41, as it happens. I’m low-maintenance)).

But I could not reverse engineer those 149 pages of tax returns if my life depended on it. And I would defy anyone without a CPA qualification to be able to do so.

I have no complaint about my accountant, who provided very good service this year, but even he couldn’t get it right first time. As I type this article, I am awaiting “corrected” state returns (which are no shorter).

Moreover, as any small businessman knows, my accountant can only generate those 149 pages of returns after I have compiled all the necessary numbers and data in neat spreadsheets, nicely itemized and comprehensively annotated (two or three days’ work, right there, perhaps?). I know for sure that most tax payers are not as proficient with Excel as I am – so my accountants have an easy time of it with me. (He even told me so.)

Here’s the reality of the American tax system for modestly earning individuals who run small businesses:

My government has put me in a position where I must either pay 9% of my income to a professional just to enable me to avoid punishment, asset garnishment and even imprisonment. Supposedly, I can “do my own taxes”, but that is a joke. No one who has not gone to school for it could accurately complete those 149 pages with any honest degree of confidence – and I don’t care what software he’s using. Moreover, even if it were do-able, the time taken lots of benjaminsto learn how to do it and then do it properly would be measured in weeks, not hours. And we don’t get to invoice the IRS for our time.

Look in wonder, America, at the most regressive aspect of any taxation system in the world – its utter complexity to the point of Kafkaesque absurdity. And if you think it must be like that, literally a few days ago, the British chancellor announced the abolition of the annual tax return in the United Kingdom.

Can anyone, conservative or progressive, justify the need for self-employed individual to spend 9 percent of his income just to remain a free citizen in good standing or, should he not have the money to spare, to go to school to navigate his way through whichever of the 74,000 pages of the tax code apply to him?

If the tax code were sufficiently sensible that I could do my own taxes (which, as someone who likes money, spreadsheets and math, I’d be very happy to do), I could have paid the Feds double my actual tax bill – and still have been a thousand dollars better off on the money I’d have saved on tax preparation. Relative to the current situation, both I and the country would have been significantly better off.

It is established Constitutional Law (by Supreme Court precedent), basic morality and simple common sense that the government may not place an undue burden on a fundamental right – such as the right to stay out of prison even if one doesn’t have an accounting degree and the right not be forced to expend one’s property on anything other than actual taxes owed.

To quantify the absurdity, here’s a comparison I’ve never seen made before.

In the course of a year, my assets and non-business activities generate nine times as much tax (in the form chiefly of property taxes and sales taxes), as my end-of-year check to the IRS. The cost to me of compliance on that first nine-tenths of my tax burden is zero, while the cost to me of compliance with the other one tenth is about double the amount I actually owe.

You really can’t make it up.

Let me offer these thoughts, then, not as an article, but as an open letter to our government, the IRS and any Constitutional attorneys out there.

To the government, I am notifying you of the undue burden that you are placing on law-abiding citizens whose income, it happens, is deemed by recent legislation to be sufficiently modest that it wishes to subsidize my healthcare: the cost of this undue burden more than cancels out all such subsidies.

To the IRS, I ask this question. What will you do if I save my $2000 in preparation fees, pay you 50% more than I did this year, and I don’t complete those forms? A bonus to me of doing this would be that I don’t have to lie any more. Because we all know that you are forcing me to lie when I sign that paper saying “I declare that I have examined a copy of my electronic individual income tax return and accompanying schedules and statements for the tax year ending December 31, 2014, and to the best of my knowledge and belief, it is true, correct, and complete.”

end irs2… The real truth is that, “to the best of my knowledge and belief”, no person who is not trained, certified and engaged in daily work in the business of tax preparation, could possibly expect that he could generate a correct 149 pages of this stuff – regardless of how well he tried. And, moreover, the fact that he cannot is exactly why he can’t be expected to vouch for the work of the accountants whom he’d not have to hire if he did understand what on earth was going on in the first place.

Finally, and most importantly – to any Constitutional attorney: I can’t pay you (see above), but I have a tax return that will make your eyes bleed. Get me in front of a jury or, better yet, the Supreme Court, and let us ask 12 or nine reasonable people if the burden of completing this particular tax return – a requirement I must meet to retain my liberty and my property – is reasonable or not. And if just one of the jury or bench believes that a reasonably educated person could accurately complete my tax return in a reasonable period, I’ll be happily defeated – as long as he shows me how.

Otherwise, use me as a legal guinea pig to pull down this entire rotten structure that turns good people into unwilling law breakers or liars of both, reserving its very worst for those of us on modest means who wish to rise in the spirit of the American Dream, which our government and its agents seem all too willing to crush.

Our tax code is so complex that people our government deems too poor to buy their own health insurance must fork over nearly a tenth of their income just to comply with it. I cannot be the only one.
If I could reasonably compute my own tax – and it’s a matter of common law, surely, that a typical citizen must reasonably be able to meet all impositions of the state by his own means – I’d willingly pay double my current income tax because of all the money I’d save on compliance: I’d save enough to visit my family in England twice in a year; I’d save almost my entire year’s grocery bill; I’d save the cost of the roof over my head for two months.

I can afford my tax bill. I just cannot afford to calculate it. And as you can see from my short list, the complexity of this calculation has a very real impact on my life.

This complexity of our Federal tax system is crushingly regressive; it is impoverishing, and it is morally indefensible.

Simplifying the tax code would be simply the most immediately effective, progressive and moral low-hanging fruit Congress could pick. More importantly, the Constitutional requirement of not attaching undue burdens to our fundamental rights – whose protection, according to our Declaration of Independence, is the very justification of the existence of the state – legally and morally demands it.

 

robinwsRobin Koerner is a political and economic commentator for the Huffington Post, Ben Swann, the Daily Paul, and other sites. He is best known for coining the term “Blue Republican” to refer to liberals and independents who joined the GOP to support Ron Paul’s bid for the presidency in 2012. His article launched the biggest coalition for Ron Paul and a movement that outlived his candidacy, which now focuses on winning supporters for liberty (rather than just arguments), by finding common ground among Americans of various political persuasions. He is also the founder of WatchingAmerica.com, where 300 volunteers translate opinion about the US from all over the world.

Constitutional Activism 101

Elections change NOTHING these days. There is only ONE THING that is going to fix this mess, and it is NOT changing the person in the White House or Congress…

Alternatively you can listen to “Constitutional Activism 101” by KrisAnne Hall on YouTube

Our Youth & Liberty: What They Want to Know

Listen to 3 different demographics of young people describing the value of Liberty lessons and their frustration and disappointment in the failure of our adults to teach them the truth.

Righteous Resistance To Civil Authority

Pastor JC Hall presents the Biblical teaching on Righteous Resistance to Civil Government. The Bible is replete with examples of the saints carrying on a long tradition of resisting the so-called higher powers when those powers become immoral and corrupt. Romans 13 has long been understood to teach a Christian’s submission to lawful authority, but a new generation asserts that such submission applies to lawless and tyrannical authority as well. How could this be true? Find out what the Bible says about that.

Obama Declares State of National Emergency

As a matter of fact there 30 current States of National Emergency. Do Americans know what that means? Do we understand the magnitude of the power conveyed through these acts? The Obama administration says, “Don’t worry, there is really no emergency, these are just formalities.” Listen to the real danger of what is going on and get a very special interview with 15 yo Garrett who has more GUTS and a better understanding of Liberty than ANYONE in Congress!

Lighting Up Liberty In Washington State

Today I interview Rep. Matt Shea and Rep. Graham Hunt from the State of Washington. Matt Shea is the founder of the Freedom Coalition in the Washington State House and you WILL be inspired by what they are doing to preserve Sovereignty and ensure Liberty for our Posterity! Inspirational Show! Contact them and encourage them! Matt Shea: matt.shea@leg.wa.gov Graham Hunt: graham.hunt@leg.wa.gov

Standardized Testing For The Office Of President of the US

 

In Federalist Paper #69 Alexander Hamilton lays out the difference between a President and a King.  At the time of the creation and ratification of the Constitution, many were concerned that the office of president, being held by one person, would become nothing more than a King in disguise.   Hamilton takes the time to point out the extremely limited nature of the President to rest any alarm that the office of president would function as a King.

What if we created a standardized test to evaluate our presidents using the standards by which the office was created?  Would our presidents pass or fail?

 The President or King Standardized Test as authored by Alexander Hamilton:

  • A President of the United States would be an officer elected by the people for four years;
  • A King is a perpetual and hereditary prince;
  • A President, as commander-in-chief,  would amount to nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military and naval forces, as first General and admiral of the Confederacy;
  • A King’s power extends to the declaring of war and to the raising and regulating of fleets and armies;
  • A President would be amenable to personal punishment and disgrace;
  • A King is sacred and inviolable;
  • A President would have a limited power upon the acts of the legislative body;
  • A King has an absolute power;
  • A President would have a concurrent power with a branch of the legislature in the formation of treaties;
  • A King has the sole possessor of the power of making treaties;
  • A President would have a concurrent authority with a branch of the legislature in appointing to offices;
  • A King is the sole author of all appointments;
  • A President can confer no privileges whatever;
  • A King can make denizens of aliens, noblemen of commoners; can erect corporations with all the rights incident to corporate bodies;
  • A President can prescribe no rules concerning the commerce or currency of the nation;
  • A King is in several respects the arbiter of commerce, and in this capacity can establish markets and fairs, can regulate weights and measures, can lay embargoes for a limited time;
  • A President has no particle of spiritual jurisdiction;
  • A King is the supreme head and governor of the national church and can dictate what is lawful and unlawful for the subjects to believe or not believe;
  • A President’s power is in the hands of the People;
  • A King’s power is limited only by his own will, the power of his throne, and is despotism.

Now score your occupant of the White House; is he president or King?  _______________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Another Letter From Congress

ICE is about to release an illegal alien into our communities that has been diagnosed with “drug resistant tuberculosis. How does congress respond? Not with threats of impeachment but a letter asking policy questions. Seriously. You can’t make this stuff up.

Alternatively you can listen to “Another Letter from Congress” by KrisAnne Hall on YouTube