Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
I have no problem with that if a delinquent taxpayer fails to answer a demand for payment, or is in default on balances clearly owed and there is no ongoing contact between the IRS and the taxpayer's counsel such that any potential dispute may be resolved in due course.
What I have a problem with is the possibility that the IRS, merely pursuant to "assessing a levy" for an amount they say you owe, can advise the passport office (or anyone else) that your travel privileges should be suspended. They can "assess a levy" even if they are completely wrong and unwilling to take the matter to Tax Court, as I found out from personal experience.
At the very least, I think the language in any possible legislation should be tightened up in such a manner that no one should have any concerns about these issues. Judging from the article timpage linked, I don't have much confidence that that's likely to be the case.
Of course, a lot of the crap shoveled out today is written in such a way that nobody has any idea what the hell it says. Just look at Dodd-Frank, for example.
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If we had a simple, understandable tax code, this wouldn't be necessary. Tax regulations take up over 700,000 pages in the CFR. It's insane, and yet there are people, including some on this board, that actually defend that monstrosity. It has to go. It is an affront against freedom, and morality.