Follow the Law

Based on the official legal websites of the U.S. Government: No law requires 99% of Americans to file and pay income taxes.

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  1. Attempting to evade or defeat tax (tax evasion), sending you to prison for up to 5 years for each 1040 form or other document, per Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 7201.
  2. Various forms of "fraud and false statements", sending you to prison for up to 3 years for each 1040 form or other document, per IRC § 7206.
  3. Filing fraudulent returns, statements, or other documents, sending you to prison for up to 1 year for each 1040 form or other document, per IRC § 7207.
  1. you can show that you have relied on the official legal websites of the U.S. government to conclude that you are not required to file and pay federal income, self-employment, or payroll taxes,
  2. you wrote to your federal lawmakers asking whether they can show you that you are in error and show you the law that requires you to file and pay federal income taxes, and
  3. your federal lawmakers were unable to show you that you are in error.

Get more details in the 4-10 minute videos below

  1. Attempting to evade or defeat tax (tax evasion), sending you to prison for up to 5 years for each 1040 form or other document, per Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 7201.
  2. Various forms of "fraud and false statements", sending you to prison for up to 3 years for each 1040 form or other document, per IRC § 7206.
  3. Filing fraudulent returns, statements, or other documents, sending you to prison for up to 1 year for each 1040 form or other document, per IRC § 7207.
  1. you can show that you have relied on the official legal websites of the U.S. government to conclude that you are not required to file and pay federal income, self-employment, or payroll taxes,
  2. you wrote to your federal lawmakers asking whether they can show you that you are in error and show you the law that requires you to file and pay federal income taxes, and
  3. your federal lawmakers were unable to show you that you are in error.

Learn the full story from these complete videos ranging from 17 to 48 minutes.

Why do we only use U.S. Supreme Court decisions and not lower court decisions? According to the Internal Revenue Manual, "A case decided by the US Supreme Court becomes the law of the land and takes precedence over decisions of lower courts. The IRS must follow Supreme Court decisions. Decisions made by lower courts ... are binding on the IRS only for the particular taxpayer and the years litigated."

Importance of Court Decisions
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