You are completely full of shit and I seriously doubt what you have posted is true. On the off chance that it is, if you have had taxable and reportable income during the time period you are discussing, the IRS will eventually find you and begin probing your ass and your finances for the past ten years with a bullet shaped flashlight. You will owe tens, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties and will be lucky if you are not sent to federal prison for a lengthy vacation.
Good luck.
http://taxfoundation.org/blog/law-sa...ral-income-tax
The Law That Says We Have to Pay Federal Income Tax
March 02, 2010
By
Joseph Henchman
Last month, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) released
a 2010 update of its discussion/rebuttal of various "tax protestor" arguments (PDF). The IRS advises that "[a]nyone who contemplates arguing on legal grounds against [paying taxes] should first read the 80-page document." Wikipedia
also has a reference page, as does
Professor Jonathan Siegel at George Washington University Law School.
There's hardly a constitutional amendment, law, or supposition that hasn't been used in an attempt to prove that income tax collection is invalid. As a constitutional lawyer who works for a tax policy organization, I'm often asked whether the Sixteenth Amendment was properly ratified or (often more rudely) to show where the law is that requires people to pay income taxes.
I find these arguments, like most constitutional law discussions, interesting. But ultimately the truth is that the Secretary of State
proclaimed the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment on February 25, 1913,
26 U.S.C. § 1 imposes tax on taxable income,
26 U.S.C. § 63 defines taxable income as gross income minus allowed deductions,
26 U.S.C. § 61 defines gross income as all income from whatever source derived, and
26 U.S.C. § 6012 requires the filing of returns by every individual with gross income for the year (with some exceptions).
Dozens of cases have upheld the federal government's power to collect income taxes against just about every argument.
Judges have little tolerance for tax protestors, particularly ones who convince other people not to pay taxes while being deceptive about the enormous legal consequences. Adherents who practiced what they preached are in jail for tax evasion, many for dramatically hefty sentences. And while the IRS may be less sinister than it was a few years ago, there's no doubting their willingness to use enormous power against individuals to collect tax revenue.
As I tell people, the current federal income tax has a lot of problems. We at the Tax Foundation are no stranger to its complexity, favoritism, non-transparency, and the burden it imposes on the economy. But claiming that the tax doesn't actually legally exist hasn't been a productive avenue. Since our founding in 1937, we've had hundreds of brilliant economists, lawyers, accountants, and policy analysts here, and they all paid their income taxes. If there was a way out, one of them would have found it.