The U.S. Fifth Circuit Admitted the Systematic Misapplication of the Income Tax

May 13, 2017

This will indeed be “new news” for some, but it’s great to see it break into the independent media in a form we can slather all over the Internet.

As a reader pointed out, this was news decades ago, but the psychopaths ignore the law so it continues today.

It’s a “misapplication” is it? “Abusive”? How can trillions of misappropriated funds be considered merely a misapplication or merely abusive?

Wait until the masses hear the truth about their utility bills, birth certificates, mortgage documents, et al, and the difference between “legal” and “lawful”.

“Legal fraud”. There’s an oxymoron, but the controllers defraud The People at every opportunity, all the while pointing the finger at them over a small minority who may cheat the system.

Take their, “See something, say something” campaign to get The People to turn against each other, rather than looking at what the government has done which eclipses anything a few million US residents may have tried.

Where do people think all the money goes? Trillions! What is there to show for it?

The bullies have done it all, and until recently almost no one realized it, questioned it, or opposed it. Many victims “gave away the farm” as a result of this sort of fraudulent behaviour on the part of the federal government. These practices have sent people to their graves, utterly destitute and broken.

I think I heard a few folks sharpening their pitchforks and there will be nowhere for the criminals to hide. Why do you think they tried to take the guns?

Thanks for the heads up, L.  ~ BP



BREAKING NEWS: The U.S. Fifth Circuit admits the systematic misapplication of the income tax!

Posted on May 11, 2017

by David Robinson

THE FIFTH U.S. CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS has issued a stunning ruling admitting that the United States and the federal courts have been systematically misapplying the income tax as a non-apportioned direct tax for decades. The clear implication is that literally trillions of dollars have been improperly taken from their rightful owners.

The further implication is that hundreds of men and women– perhaps even thousands– have been victims of legal harassment and intimidation, property seizures, character assassination and even imprisonment, all based on a fraud. At the same time, it is clear that the explosive (and, some would say, republic-eroding) growth of the federal government over the same period has been financed by this same scheme.

THE PARADIGM-SHATTERING ADMISSION by the panel of the circuit court (which has since been replicated in other circuits, as well) came in a ruling reported as Parker v. Comm’r, 724 F.2d 469. Alton Parker, an otherwise unremarkable “Fifth Amendment” tax protestor, had appealed a Tax Court decision finding him liable for taxes on conceded taxable activity.

In the appellate court, Parker raised an additional argument beyond the confused notion that completing a tax form amounted to “self-incrimination”. Parker also squarely challenged the appellate court with the assertion that, as put by the panel, “the IRS and the government in general, including the judiciary, mistakenly interpret the sixteenth amendment as allowing a direct tax on property (wages, salaries, commissions, etc.) without apportionment.”

The circuit court panel found itself unable to dispute Parker’s allegation, and ultimately admitted its accuracy.

THE ADMISSION BY THE COURT IS (perhaps unsurprisingly) circumspectly and even deceptively made. It takes the form of a complete misrepresentation of an old (but still standing and widely-cited) ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, declaring the high court to have said exactly the opposite of what it actually says. (See the misrepresentation, and what the Supreme Court actually says, here.)

Despite the awkwardness of this approach, however, the circuit court’s evasion of Parker’s allegation constitutes a definitive admission of its accuracy under routine principles of law. As the Supreme Court puts it,
…”Indeed, as Mr. Justice Brandeis declared, speaking for a unanimous court in the Tod case, supra, which involved a deportation: “Silence is often evidence of the most persuasive character.” 263 U.S. at 263 U. S. 153-154. And just last Term, in Hale , supra, the Court recognized that “[f]ail…

Plainly, an outright falsehood in response to an assertion is the equivalent of silence as meant in these statements of the law by the high court. In fact, falsehood such as that resorted to by the Fifth Circuit panel simply makes clear that the circuit court recognized its duty to have validly objected to the assertion presented had it been able to do so, thus making its failure to do so that much more plainly an admission of the assertion’s accuracy.

IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO PREDICT how extensively the Parker court’s admission of the misapplication of the income tax will be called upon in legal actions for redress sure to come from victims of what is now acknowledged to have been abusive– if not criminal– behavior by government, tax agency, and judicial officials under the auspices of tax law. No doubt the clamor will be very loud indeed.

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NOTE: I posted all the evidence of the Parker court admission discussed above here, two days ago (and at that, just a week after posting an in-depth exposé of a long-running IRS fraud about “frivolous return penalties”). The internet generally, and all social media should be BURIED in articles like the one above by now. Where’s yours?

Where are the products of your scramble to discover and expose other instances of courts running the same scam, and making the same effective admission, as the Parker court?

C’mon people! LET’S GO!!

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