Thank you for posting the link. I will look this over because I agree that taxes are unconstitutional, especially property taxes. Do you really own your property if the government can take your property when you don't pay their tax on it? It is extortion. We are feudal slaves and don't know it. Honestly, there needs to be a movement in o…
Thank you for posting the link. I will look this over because I agree that taxes are unconstitutional, especially property taxes. Do you really own your property if the government can take your property when you don't pay their tax on it? It is extortion. We are feudal slaves and don't know it. Honestly, there needs to be a movement in our country in which every person decides not to pay taxes. Change your 1099 so that you keep all your money and have to pay the government at the end of the year, instead of the other way around. A LOT of people would start to realize just how much money is being stolen from them if they had to pay one lump sum each year in taxes. Furthermore, our government collects more than $1 trillion dollars in taxes every year (and I think that is a statistic from 2020). Put into perspective that is $1,000,000,000,000+.
Yep, anyone that "owns" property is, by law, leasing it from the county (in most jurisdictions), subject to taxes. It's one scheme after another. Hendrickson stops at the federal income tax in the book. Again, the read is SO worth the investment of your time. I have a paper copy (I think it's out of print now) with so many sticky tabs hanging off the pages it's nuts.
Something Hendrickson doesn't get into relative to your observation on collections (he does point out that the IRS is the Federal Reserve's collection agency) is that for every dollar issued by the Fed, there is interest due. Look at any greenback on the face side. Right at the top it says in plain sight, "Federal Reserve Note". The terminology "note" is financial short hand for "promissory note," like the note you signed for the loan you got for your home (oh boy, there's another scam - fractional reserve banking and the creation of money out of thin air, particularly with respect to mortgage lending: every mortgage loan is fraudulent. I'm pretty sure you weren't informed that the bank would deposit your note - that's right, deposit pages of 8.5 x 11" / 8.5 x 14" paper with your signature - in a transaction account, with a ledger entry as a liability, meaning it is something the bank owes [it is n͟o͟t recorded as an asset], like any deposit a customer makes, in a savings or checking or CD or other demand account. A liability. Wait a minute... what? you might be asking. Oh yes. The bank has taken your signed promise and counted it as something it owes YOU. The other side of the balance sheet, the asset, is money created out of thin air, because the bankers wrote the laws and they're legally allowed to do it. This is fractional reserve banking. That money that the bank created out of thin air, is what they "lend" you, with interest due. THEN, they pool your note with other notes and sell them for cash on the secondary mortgage market. Yep. They created cash out of thin air based on the value of your note - free money - and then traded/sold your note for cash - double their money, for free. They put up nothing in exchange. They "loaned" you back the value of your signed note at interest. They do not lend other depositors' money, despite what you many think. Look into it. This sequence of events is not disclosed in your carefully reviewed (one hopes) promissory note. It's fraud. But try to go up against the bank and accountants and judges. They're all in on it. Whew. Long parenthetical. Where was I? 🤪 Oh right, greenbacks... dollars issued by the Fed.)
Every dollar has interest due on it, payable to that private entity, the Fed. What the government collects via income tax primarily goes to that interest but doesn't come close to covering it. More scam. Central banking, that final coup in 1913, is the source of every manipulation with regard to money in the economy and, as Ed Dowd has observed, is near the end of its life cycle, now at 110 years. Thus the push for CBDCs to replace the fiat dollar. I could go on but you get the gist.
As for your 1099, oh yeah, you can change it all right. And you should. And never have to pay a dime. I can't explain it here. Read the book. With keen attention. You'll probably be shocked. You also need a sustainable source of chutzpah, but there's lots of help on the website to give you juice. Their code, Title 26, decoded, tells you everything every IRS collection agent doesn't know. Yadda. Best wishes. It's quite the journey...
Thank you for posting the link. I will look this over because I agree that taxes are unconstitutional, especially property taxes. Do you really own your property if the government can take your property when you don't pay their tax on it? It is extortion. We are feudal slaves and don't know it. Honestly, there needs to be a movement in our country in which every person decides not to pay taxes. Change your 1099 so that you keep all your money and have to pay the government at the end of the year, instead of the other way around. A LOT of people would start to realize just how much money is being stolen from them if they had to pay one lump sum each year in taxes. Furthermore, our government collects more than $1 trillion dollars in taxes every year (and I think that is a statistic from 2020). Put into perspective that is $1,000,000,000,000+.
Yep, anyone that "owns" property is, by law, leasing it from the county (in most jurisdictions), subject to taxes. It's one scheme after another. Hendrickson stops at the federal income tax in the book. Again, the read is SO worth the investment of your time. I have a paper copy (I think it's out of print now) with so many sticky tabs hanging off the pages it's nuts.
Something Hendrickson doesn't get into relative to your observation on collections (he does point out that the IRS is the Federal Reserve's collection agency) is that for every dollar issued by the Fed, there is interest due. Look at any greenback on the face side. Right at the top it says in plain sight, "Federal Reserve Note". The terminology "note" is financial short hand for "promissory note," like the note you signed for the loan you got for your home (oh boy, there's another scam - fractional reserve banking and the creation of money out of thin air, particularly with respect to mortgage lending: every mortgage loan is fraudulent. I'm pretty sure you weren't informed that the bank would deposit your note - that's right, deposit pages of 8.5 x 11" / 8.5 x 14" paper with your signature - in a transaction account, with a ledger entry as a liability, meaning it is something the bank owes [it is n͟o͟t recorded as an asset], like any deposit a customer makes, in a savings or checking or CD or other demand account. A liability. Wait a minute... what? you might be asking. Oh yes. The bank has taken your signed promise and counted it as something it owes YOU. The other side of the balance sheet, the asset, is money created out of thin air, because the bankers wrote the laws and they're legally allowed to do it. This is fractional reserve banking. That money that the bank created out of thin air, is what they "lend" you, with interest due. THEN, they pool your note with other notes and sell them for cash on the secondary mortgage market. Yep. They created cash out of thin air based on the value of your note - free money - and then traded/sold your note for cash - double their money, for free. They put up nothing in exchange. They "loaned" you back the value of your signed note at interest. They do not lend other depositors' money, despite what you many think. Look into it. This sequence of events is not disclosed in your carefully reviewed (one hopes) promissory note. It's fraud. But try to go up against the bank and accountants and judges. They're all in on it. Whew. Long parenthetical. Where was I? 🤪 Oh right, greenbacks... dollars issued by the Fed.)
Every dollar has interest due on it, payable to that private entity, the Fed. What the government collects via income tax primarily goes to that interest but doesn't come close to covering it. More scam. Central banking, that final coup in 1913, is the source of every manipulation with regard to money in the economy and, as Ed Dowd has observed, is near the end of its life cycle, now at 110 years. Thus the push for CBDCs to replace the fiat dollar. I could go on but you get the gist.
As for your 1099, oh yeah, you can change it all right. And you should. And never have to pay a dime. I can't explain it here. Read the book. With keen attention. You'll probably be shocked. You also need a sustainable source of chutzpah, but there's lots of help on the website to give you juice. Their code, Title 26, decoded, tells you everything every IRS collection agent doesn't know. Yadda. Best wishes. It's quite the journey...