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Therefor taxable.

2007-06-16 09:46:12 · 4 answers · asked by Jose R 6 in Politics & Government Other - Politics & Government

Wouldn't that be an equal exchage of values? Therefor no capital gain nor taxes?

2007-06-16 09:56:11 · update #1

Tony I've seen it before but in pieces. Since you brought it up I decided to bring some questions.

2007-06-16 09:57:26 · update #2

4 answers

You learn quick.

Thanks for the plug.
Did you watch the whole thing??

But labor can't be taxed... From The Treasury, and
Internal Revenue Code: (IRC - Title 26)

"Gross income excludes the items of income specifically exempt by statute or fundamental law, free from tax."

http://w3f.com/patriots/serious.html

2007-06-16 09:49:49 · answer #1 · answered by Cookies Anyone? 5 · 0 0

fairly that the IRS would not incredibly care how reasoned of a controversy you could positioned jointly, they purely elect their funds. which you will possibly be able to desire to aim to redefine earnings, yet that element era has already been 'defined' legally and that's what they bypass via employing. you could not bypass in an argue with a elect (for representation) concerning to the actuality that the approved definition of revenues is 'mistaken'. he will chortle you out of the courtroom docket (after he fines you with each approved fee allowed below legislations). In life, we the two whinge and manage it, or we purely take care of it. It takes much less attempt to do the latter.

2016-12-08 11:03:56 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

slave labor is traditionally taxed to the max.

2007-06-16 10:24:36 · answer #3 · answered by acid tongue 6 · 0 0

Huh?

2007-06-16 09:53:05 · answer #4 · answered by regerugged 7 · 0 0

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