i never claimed it was systemic; howeover, it provides a good basis for outlyers of what the IRS is capable of when they really start power-tripping. Just like >99% of police actions don't involve kids randomly executed by uniformed in subway stations who then proceed to attempt to enact a cover-up by confiscating all cameras, that doesn't mean we live with jackbooted thugs patroling the streets who will gun you down on a whim; but it does mean there's a terrifying extreme of outlying cases that can be reached. And by all accounts, Joe Stack got the Royal Soddomy Treatment from the IRS. That depressing shit can and does lead people to take their own lives - is it surprising that eventually one of the ones driven to the point of suicide will decide he's going to take some poor bastards down with him? It doesn't surprise me - sickens me - but doesn't surprise me.bobalot wrote:What this bullshit link? A bunch of unverified one sided stories? How do we know they are even true? How do even know they aren't arseholes like this Joe Stack guy, who turns out to be a tax cheat?
600 unverified "abuses" over 15 years (I note one of the complaints were from the 80's, so the time period maybe longer) is apparently evidence enough that an organisation that does that is responsible for the tax collection and tax law enforcement for millions of individuals and businesses has a systematic culture of reprehensible bullying?
What the fuck is this bullshit?
If you think about it, it really was inevitable. Some lunatic's going to snap and target everyone eventually, but the IRS has a way of turning people who wouldn't otherwise be desperate, desperate.
The KGB was a legal institution enacting their legal proceedures when they dragged enemies of the Party off to the Gulag, too. That doesn't mean they weren't bad and nasty. Is the IRS as bad as the KGB - of fucking course not. But that doesn't mean they're not nasty motherfuckers when they start power-tripping.SirNitram wrote:I call it a legal institution enacting it's legal procedures to deal with those violating laws. You're clinging hard to this notion that the IRS is bad and nasty, but it's doing it's part to ensure the General Welfare clause of the Constitution, by making sure it's paid for.
Falling back on the legality of an organization is an appeal to authority, pure and simple. It doesn't mean that their abuses and nastiness should be excused ignored or mitigated, any more than those of Joe Arpaio's crazy-prison should be because the taxpayers of Maricopia County keep electing him and he has the force of law behind him.
It's not irrelevant. Does it excuse him, absofuckingloutely not! What Joe Stack did was horrific terrorism and I doubt even our civilized european members would pipe up at the hordes baying for his swift execution when captured if he'd rigged his plane with a remote control and did the deed remotely. I wouldn't, and I am opposed to the death penalty. But that doesn't mean that the abuses the IRS heaps on people can be excused - if only because in this time of recession and fear, it's liable to drive even more degenerate, desperate assholes to acts of terrorism.Which is completely irrelevent to a situation where this asshat knowingly and blatantly violated the law, and was butthurt because screaming 'AMERICA' and 'MAFIA' didn't get him out of his legal position.
I am neither. I am not opposed to taxes, I am not opposed to a centralized tax-collection agency. I am not opposed to laws binding that agency to enforce, investigate, and if need be prosecute violations of that law.'They follow the laws they are required to follow! HOW DARE THEY! I SHALL CALL THEM MAFIA'.
Fuck off. You're an angry child or a selfish retard. Your argument boils down to 'I hate the legal duties of the IRS, therefore it's wrong, and I can excuse ANY level of active, flagrant lawbreaking by screaming IRS=MAFIA over and over again'. That's not a real argument. Try backing your argument up with facts, not your personal dislikes.
I am opposed to the way the IRS has almost no oversight owing to the judges who have jurisdiction over them literally being on their pay-roll.
I am opposed to the tactics they sometimes use to enforce those laws - in the hands of private collections agencies every one here would call their behavior criminal at best. In the hands of the Family, we call them 'business as usual'.
When the normal judicial system levies a fine upon someone, they give them 30 days to pay or go to jail. If they do not appear with money or to surrender within 30 days, a warrant is issued for their arrest, they are hauled into court, given a jumpsuit, and tossed in the cooler for however long they decided to throw them in for.
When the IRS finds a discrepancy, they respond by heaping penalties upon penalties. You can easily wind up owing over a quarter-million on an actual debt of ten fucking grand. This creates a huge incentive for the IRS to enforce the tax shoddily - if they can use legal wrangling and red tape and delays of notices to fuck someone up and trip them up, they can heap more and more penalties upon them. For the IRS, this is a winning scenario, since they're chronically underfunded and if they can make someone's debt mushroom, they can collect that much more.
Instead of, you know, simply telling them to pay up or go to jail. The IRS doesn't want people in jail - people in jail aren't paying their debts and accrueing penalties because the IRS has arbitrarily decided to slap exponential penalties upon them. They want people desperate, harassed and squirming, because people who are squirming and harassed tend to pay, no matter what they have to do to get that money.
Who else operates like that? Oh yeah, drug lords and mobsters. Just because you wear a black suit, white shirt, black tie, black slacks, black shoes and carry a briefcase doesn't mean you're any less a thug when you behave like one.
If you'll note, that section is an archive of a different website entirely. I passed several other links looking for that one in specific because it was the archive of the one I recalled from years ago.SirNitram wrote:A website which bills itself as the 'Highest IQ's(Integrating Qoutients) In The World'. Which includes articles like:
The Formula For Immortality.
Zonpower From Cyberspace.
Riches From Another World.
It is called 'The Society Of Secrets' with a 12 level categorizing some sort of ascention of mankind.
What a credible source![/Sarcasm]
Just because something is co-sited with garbage doesn't mean it's garbage itself.
Hence my point when I call 'Mafia tactics' on the IRS. They also like to go after spouses and family members, claiming that the debt of <unreachable or dead person> is now <family member's> debt. And like the IRS, they also don't give a goddamn whether the spouse or family member had anything to do with the debt.Simon_Jester wrote:Yes, they should have known. But there's still something morally objectionable about pursuing a debtor's spouse for payment of taxes even after they divorce the debtor. It may be lawful, but I don't think anyone should be expected to like or approve of it. Especially bearing in mind that it's possible for the debtor to try to hide the evidence from someone they hope to marry.
I don't think "You ought to know that your intended owes the IRS money, and either not marry them, or be prepared to pay their debts even if you divorce them later on" is as good an argument as "you ought to know that money taken from an IRA is taxable." The latter is pretty much ironclad; the former... not so much.
It's funny how people can be of non-easily defined pollitical views, isn't it? In this case, Stack was basically batshit, with a dollop of anti-large-anything, private or public, apparently.This guy's a weird case because he combines a lot of political views from one wing with a specific few political views from the other. I wouldn't place him on the right or the left myself; I think he's just an opportunist who grabs whatever mass of random incoherent political catch phrases that justifies his own actions. Since his greatest troubles in life revolve around taxes and large corporations, that means both anti-tax and anti-corporate stuff... which are on opposite ends of the political spectrum in the US for historical reasons.Count Chocula wrote:Plus the obligatory Bush-bash, natch, on top of all the other groups/people he hated. Of course, that didn't stop Time Magazine, Michelle Malkin, The Daily Kos, or the Wahington Post from claiming he was a Tea Party/Tea Bagger/Republican. Oooopppsss. I eagerly await their retractions.
Turns out crazies can be of any political stripe. THAT's a revelation, *I'm a smarmy asshole*?
Crazies tend to get pigeonholed on whichever side hails them the loudest.
I never called the IRS a mafia, I said that they can and do sometimes resort to the Mafia's play-books. Just like how our intelligence services aren't the KGB, but occasionally (more frequently in recent years; Gitmo, extraordinary rendition,) they resort to the KGB's playbook.SirNitram wrote:...This is a little troubling, because I'm not sure how it can be used without justifying everything the government does that nominally fulfills one of the objectives in the Preamble. A similar argument could (wrongly) be used to justify waterboarding at Guantanamo because it involves the military trying to "provide for the common defense." Even if there were laws that said the Army could (Hell, must) do that, those laws would be wrong- they wouldn't make it morally acceptable for the Army to be doing that, and they wouldn't make it childish to criticize them for doing that.
So while I'm not calling the IRS a mafia, I think it's fair to say that the IRS should face limits on things like "unwarranted search and seizure," similar to what the police face. They should at least have to make a credible case to an outside authority that you've been cheating taxes and depriving them of money before they can turn around and deprive you of money. Otherwise, it's too easy for them to blame you for problems you bear no responsibility for.
Again, I never said they were the Mafia, but they do on occasion excercize powers the Mafia wishes it has in ways the Mafia would be proud of. Is that their standard operating proceedure - no, it is not. But it can happen, and that troubles me.Since I was curious, I went looking myself.SirNitram wrote:A website which bills itself as the 'Highest IQ's(Integrating Qoutients) In The World'...What this bullshit link? A bunch of unverified one sided stories? How do we know they are even true? How do even know they aren't arseholes like this Joe Stack guy, who turns out to be a tax cheat?...
What the fuck is this bullshit?
What a credible source![/Sarcasm]
I found a lot of stuff by political-fringe types that I'm not sure whether to trust, of course. I can't prove they made up their allegations of IRS abuse, but I can't prove they can't. Most other things I found were old, and can therefore be called into question by a skeptical audience.
On the other hand, there are undeniable problems with some of the ways the IRS enforces its own attempts to collect taxes- such as the predictable effect a lien has on a delinquent taxpayer's ability to pay their back taxes in the future. Comparing them to the Mafia is grossly excessive; saying there is a problem... may not be.
It should be clear from this and the school wiretapping thread that when it comes to abuses of authority, I err on the side of presuming the worst of the authority until proven otherwise. Is the entire IRS a corrupt, morally bankrupt entity, no. But they can and do on occasion behave that way, and as many are trying to excuse, they often pull out all the stops when someone provokes them.Simon_Jester wrote:When you say "this guy," do you mean Stack, or ShadowDragon?SirNitram wrote:I do support IRS reform, I should point out. However, that's a far cry from this guy's insane frothing, so I didn't feel the need to point it out to the fellow sane people.
While I disagree with ShadowDragon about the extent of the problem with the IRS, I don't think ShadowDragon's posts are outside the bounds of sanity.
I'm not, I should note, actually anti-authority. I am anti-authority-abuse.
How many times do I have call him all kinds of shitstain douchebag piss-infected cumbubble waste of blood and oxygen deserving to burn in the fires of a Hell I don't believe in before people will realize I am not defending or excusing the actions of Joe Stack.Although I think we've got a groupthink problem here. Everyone reads all the other posts with accusations that ShadowDragon is defending the indefensible, and it colors their attitude towards those same posts. People are seeing a lot more defense of Stack's actions than I think is really there, and they seem to be selectively ignoring statements critical of Stack.
I'm just saying that if he aroused the ire of the IRS as strongly as everyone including him alleges he did, they likely gave him the royal butt-fuck treatment repeatedly and maliciously, which is sad; I'd be sad to see anyone being victimized, even a douchebag shitstain who proves himself unworthy of the title of human being afterwards. I'm also saying it goes a long way to explaining why an apparently otherwise assholish but nonviolent person can literally fly off the deep end, given how malicious and harassing the IRS can be. Frankly, they should've just tossed Joe Stack into prison from about 04-06 and been done with it, called his debts paid with time served.
I believe that's exactly what I said. When most people fly off the handle and decide to go down in a blaze of what they imagine is glory, they just decide to start shooting up as many innocent people as they can because they want to shed the most blood they can.Patrick Degan wrote:What "inaction"? Selecting his target somehow qualifies as "inaction" because it wasn't a non-IRS potential victim?
This fuckhole at least had the quantum of nobility to attack the institution instead of random (or even affiliated) people, and chose a time so as to minimize the loss of like. Is that noble, no, but it does keep him at a higher teir of shitlog than your average terrorist who simply wants to blow up as many people as possible.
I think it's blatently fucking obvious I said it, you're simply not reading it!DID YOU OR DID YOU NOT SAY THIS:You keep pretending that Stack's not choosing to target a school, hospital, daycare centre, city hall, whatever, offers this "modicum of nobility" to his action. You keep trying to have it both ways: claiming that you're not excusing Stack while at the same time trying to argue that his reasons were understandable and somehow a bit more noble as a result of his choices.It was a direct attack on the IRS, not IRS agents, not other involved parties. Does that excuse it, no it does fucking not and I'll thank you to fucking stop saying that I am trying to excuse it. However, what I am saying is that it explains it, and even offers it a modicum of nominal nobility compared to, say, if he had decided to crash into a day care or the city hall or a fire department or a hospital or whatever.
I'm not saying it was noble, but I am saying that at least this shitstain managed to stay on target instead of deciding to just cause as much havok as possible.
Something being "understandable" doesn't excuse it. But it does make it more inevitable in the light of hindsight; Archduke Ferdinand's murder, for example. Frankly, there were probably assassins hiding behind every corner in Serbia when that moron went on a tour of a country Austria had been grossly fucking over. Does it make shooting the guy and his wife and driver justifiable - no, it doesn't. But it makes it understandable.
Understanding the reasons are not the same thing as justified or excusable. Nor is feeling sympathetic to the plight the poor bastard driven to extremism found themselves in the same as justifying or excusing it. And stating that someone is noble in keeping their eyes on the target doesn't mean they're noble overall, just in a higher class of extremist.
To go back to my analogy, Gavrilio Princip might have decided to sneak into Austria and start torching orphanages and hospitals, but he kept his eye on the target; an important face of a regime he blamed for victimizing his country and countrymen. Does that mean that shooting an unarmed man, his wife and the fucking minimum wage bastard in the driver's seat was noble, no it does not.
Get it right - he was a would-be revoloutionary. The shitstain didn't want to murder people indiscriminately, he wanted to spark a wave of violence narrowly targeted at the Internal Revenue Service with the intention of forcing pollitical change by violence. If he wanted only to be a mass murderer, he could have brought that plane down on a crowded city center or something.Bullshit. The man was a would be mass-murderer, plain and simple.
He targeted the office at lunchtime, and everybody knows that government workers abandon their offices like rats from a fucking sinking ship at lunchtime. Before business hours, he probably would not have been able to see well enough to be sure of his target.He targets an IRS office after the beginning of business hours when IRS staffers would at their jobs in that office and you somehow think this was not intentionally targeting IRS staffers simply because of his chosen method to kill them? Are you insane?
If he'd wanted to maximize casualties, 10:30 or 1:30 would have been around the optimum times.
Ten? CNN said it was 12:45 when he did it.Bullshit. If he'd really been so hot-shit eager to minimise his casualties while striking at "the Man", he'd have picked dawn as his time of attack, when the building really would have been empty except maybe for a cleaner or two. The Weather Underground terrorists took more care in their bombings than Stack could be bothered to do, so this so-called "objection" doesn't obtain. Especially as he did crash his plane into the building at 10am local time. Try again.
If it was ten, then... Huh. I wonder why the casualties were so low, but you're right. Nevermind that, I was wrong.
I am not trying to excuse the shitstain. I am, however, stating that, monstrous though it was, he could have been much moreso.And your so-called point makes no point, which renders any argument based on it spectacularly irrelevant. But you will just keep trying to play this game of yours to have it both ways: claiming that you're not excusing Stack while at the same time trying to argue that his reasons were understandable and somehow a bit more noble as a result of his choices.
It's one thing to tax a person, and to levy a fine for noncompliance, culminating in imprisonment for continued noncompliance. It's quite another to maliciously harass someone the way the IRS is allowed to. Frankly, Joeseph Stack deserved incarceration a long time ago, but he didn't get it because he was a stone they could keep bleeding into their own coffers.The worst thing the IRS supposedly did to Joseph Stack was to fuck up his financial life —and that because Stack, as it becoming increasingly evident, was incapable of doing what millions of ordinary independent businessmen and contractors find themselves quite capable of doing with regard to keeping up with their records and tax obligations, and in fact appeared to have contempt for doing so. The worst thing Joseph Stack did in reply was to destroy a building, kill two people in the process, put everybody else who worked in that building out of work, burned out his own house which rendered his family homeless, and undertook all these actions with no regard to collateral deaths or damage he might cause. To take your fundamentally broken analogy to the parent of a bullied child as a true comparison to Joseph Stack, that's the same as if said parent beat the bully to death with the ball bat, then set fire to the bully's home and tried to run over the bully's family as they fled the house, without caring if the fire he set might spread to other houses on either side. You have no argument.
No, I'm fully capable of percieving the hint.That's because you're obviously too stupid to take a hint.Gee, like I've never been flamed for winding up in an unpopular position before.I really do suggest you rethink your entire position on this thread before the curbstomping begins.
The hint is "Your stance on this matter is wildly unpopular, publicly renounce your stance and swallow your true feelings and intellectual stances, take a knee and beg for forgiveness, or face ostracization and jeering."
FUCK you and your hint!
I've reached my conclusions on this matter by a path of logic, albiet one colored by prejudices. When I've been proven wrong on facts I admit it, and when the facts bear a different story than my conclusions, I retract them - if Joe Stack really did hit the building at 10:45 when it was packed, then that does not support my conclusion that he hit it at 12:45 to minimize the loss of life whilst still hitting the IRS, and I admit that and retract it.
But if you think I'll take a knee because you threaten me with your fucking displeasure, you go take a flying fuck onto a rusty burning dildo.
You can go after someone without being horrifically abusive. If someone slugs an officer, yes, they have the right to grab him, throw him in cuffs and toss him against a wall. They don't then have the right to pull out a gun and execute him. The IRS has the capacity for horrific abuses of power, and given their lack of oversight, they can and will use abuse of power as a punitive and retributive measure.Except the IRS might not have come after Stack as they did if Stack hadn't repeatedly attempted to evade paying his taxes over the course of multiple years or kept up his business records to prove his liabilities, as any competent businessman manages to do every fucking day of the week. And as for Stack screaming "MAFIA BRRRRRRRRR", frankly, the rantings of a clearly immature mind hardly constitute a substantive charge against anybody.
Or perhaps you're not intelligent enough - or honest enough - to perceieve my position, choosing instead to flame me because I'm not 100% excusing anything everyone ever did to Joe Stack because he went and commited an act of fucking heinous terrorism most high. How many flavors of motherfucker do I have to call the shitwad before you believe I am not on his motherfucking side.And there you go again, trying to have it both ways while claiming you're not. You're position fundamentally contradicts itself.
the IRS will quite cheerfully take your house and car, rendering you homeless and unable to work, instead of working out a plan for you to pay off over time, and their actions can and do drive people to suicide. Let's play together!Last I heard, the IRS weren't burning people out of their homes, their businesses, or actually killing anybody. Go play in traffic.
Read #105. It's the only one long enough to have it's own page.Destructionator XIII wrote:Some of the stories are surely misplaced blame over misunderstanding too. The second one in the link has someone complaining about being asked to pay on $20k about a $10k note. But, the bill came 6 years after the purchase - in that time, the asset would have appreciated in value, and interest and penalties would have added up over the years on the unpaid taxes.
This isn't a nice situation to be in, but that person made an accounting error, then got bit by compound interest - could happen to almost anyone, also for unpaid private debt. It really isn't the IRS' fault. I didn't read through them all, so I don't know how many are similar to this, but the list of complaints are pretty poor on details and evidence presented.
Yes it is, and I said, it's indicitive of outlyers, not an average.ShadowDragon8685 wrote:Not very - there's about 100 million taxpayers in the US. Assuming all stories are legit, that's still a small percentage, like bobalot said.
Joe Stack's case was not an average, either. He pissed them off royally, so they turned the abuse up to 11 on him. Was he right to piss them off - no. Were they right to break out the rack and thumbscrews? No.
If you're in a position of arbitrating the dispute between two parties, and one of them is the one funding you, there's the implicit understanding if you don't find in favor of us, you'll be finding new employment. It can't be remotely considered impartial.There's thousands of disputes done through the IRS office of appeals each year (again a small percentage of people), and most of these are resolved - this is a sign that they operate fairly. Outside that, there's also the rest of the court system that can be used to question the tax laws themselves, or any criminal action of IRS agents - it is hardly a self-contained system.
And while you could argue that it is all on the IRS's payroll, this isn't really relevant - the IRS can't unilaterally fire someone in the appeals process; they don't exercise control over the whole process.
Interesting. A conflict here - Joe Stack alleges that Bill Ross knew about the money, and he fucked him over maliciously by pointing it out in the middle of the audit, whereas Ross says that Stack never bothered to inform him of the money and he's not the one who pointed it out.Broomstick wrote:The accountant Bill Ross has released a statement, from this article on CNN
The rest of the article is prior information. Sounds like the accountant is claiming Stack withheld information, ignored an audit notice, and failed to heed the advice of professional. Apparently the IRS has nothing against Ross (it would if they suspect he, Ross, had withheld information or done anything hinky)."Mr. Stack contacted my firm to help with his personal taxes in 2008. He failed to provide me with all his income and other information resulting in an IRS audit," Ross said in a written statement Saturday. "Unfortunately, Mr. Stack ignored the audit and my advice which only complicated his situation, at which time our firm disengaged our services with Mr. Stack whom we have not been in contact with since October 2009."
Ross did not provide any further details in the statement on his work with Stack. Wilbanks said Ross, who has worked as a CPA for at least 30 years, thinks Stack located him in the phone book. They only met four times and did not have a personal relationship, Wilbanks said
I'm more inclined to take Mr. Ross' word on this matter. As someone involved in law, he'd know damn well that if he released nothing at all, he'd be safe because he'd be standing mute - the fact that he piped up on the record tells me he's probably sure he's right. Another mark in the "Joe Stack was a douchebag" category. Objection that he was betrayed by his accountant withdrawn.
Excuse me,Broomstick wrote:It was "incidental" that there was a daycare center in the Alfred P. Murrah Federal building in Oklahoma City, too, but that was no consolation to the parents of dead children, and no comfort to the maimed children. Timothy McVeigh was convicted for murdering those children, along with his intended adult targets, and he was executed for his crimes.
Saying "but it was collateral damage!" doesn't get you off the hook.
Are you under the impression that I possessed Joe Stack and forced him to commit these acts?
Of course you're not, so please stop addressing me as if his acts were mine. I never claimed that his intent remotely excused his actions. I never claimed it made him - or Timothy McVeigh - any less of the monsters they are.
Hm. In light of the time of the attack being 10:45 and not 12:45, you're most likely right.More likely, the low death toll was because 1) some people inside the building saw Stack's kamikaze approach and sounded the alarm before the actual impact and 2) because there are 900+ threats against the IRS and its employees in an average years, some of which become actual attacks, the agency and its personnel are serious about disaster drills so when the alarm was sounded the evacuation commenced immediately. Since 9/11 did bring awareness of the possibility of airplane attack on a building to general awareness there was probably no hesitation on the part of people to get out of the way of danger.
Mistakenness. I mistakenly believed he had struck at 12:45 when the building would have been nigh-empty. Want a hit?"Hey Mr. IRS man" - that's not directed at the IRS employees? WTF are you smoking?
When I've been proven wrong, I have. When all I have is others' beliggerance in demanding that I accept their views instead of my own and their prejudices instead of my own, I bloody well will not.LEARN. Fucking LEARN. Admit your fuck-ups and make the effort to improve.
Public relations. In the current environment, if they go after Mrs. Stack after her husband went off the deep end, torched the house and dove an aeroplane into their offices whilst ranting about the horrific injustices and abuses of the IRS, the right-wing media will fucking crucify them for proving Joe Stack, a misguided hero of the common man, to have ultimately been right.What he HELL makes you conclude that the IRS won't go after Stack's estate? (What's left of it) Mrs. Stack needs to hire a good tax lawyer right now to minimize the damage to her. She needs to convince the IRS that she had no part of her husband's wrong-doing which might be possible but won't be automatic.
My guess, from what I know of the IRS, is that there was already a lein on the house for back taxes and the household bank and other accounts and assets frozen. If the house is insured they'll have a claim on the insurance money. No doubt you will wail about that, but like it or not those actions are LEGAL for the IRS under current law.
Not saying she shouldn't retain a lawyer immediately, but I am saying that there's probably an order coming down from On High to immediately forgive any and all debts owed by Mr. and Mrs. Stack. The IRS are sleazebags, but they'll remember what bad media can do to an organization. Remember the time Wal-Mart tried to sue a woman who was paralyzed in their care to claim the money she won in a settlement with the trucking company who's truck had paralyzed her, how they got fucking crucified and ultimately backed off from their stance of 'it's the rules as written' in light of the fact that the media was aiming the big guns at them?
That. And remember that Wal-Mart was a fucking towering bastion of capitalism - what are they gonna do to a fucking monolithic entity of left-wing evil librul socializm?
I never said that he was a fucking robin hood up against evil prince john, but it's not as clear as "IRS = white, Joe Stack = Black" here. Joe Stack is without a doubt pitchblack, but that doesn't mean the IRS are fucking gleaming marble.And it sounds like the grievences were entirely legitimate. Taxes are an obligation of being a citizen. There is evidence Stack did not fulfill those obligations.
In a court of the IRS' choosing, no. In the court of public opinion, however, the fact is much different. If they go after her, she'll be able to cause havok to them far, far out of proportion to what blood they can wring from her - she'd be all the excuse that every right-wing asshole on the fence about whether or not he should get a gun and tell the gubmint they can have his taxes when they pry them from his cold, dead hands to grab that gun and sandbag the windows.No, his death does not, unfortunately, get his family off the hook.
It would simply be impractical of them to try and squeeze blood from her stone after this mess.
I agree, however I doubt there's going to be anybody at the IRS leaping at the chance to roast poor, traumatized Mrs. Stack and squeeze her psychopath husband's debts out of her. Quite the opposite - I wouldn't be surprised if it came down from On High that if anyone tries, they'll be tossed summarily under the bus in order to save the agency.However, given the circumstances, and with a good lawyer, Mrs. Stack could make her case to the IRS. It will certainly go better for her if she takes the initiative here instead of waiting for them to show up at her door.
I don't think you can ever define murder-suicide as the acts of a rational actor. He was a madman, backed into a corner. Does that excuse him, no, of fucking course not. He knew right from wrong, he knew it was wrong and he did it anyway. But that doesn't mean it was a rational act, either. He was a fucking psychopath.You're saying he's a "madman" like that somehow excuses his action. From what I see he wasn't mentally ill at all. His actions were illegal, not irrational. When he found himself so far backed into a corner he couldn't get out of it he decided to kill people rather than face the music.
And I never said they were. The IRS as a whole is not, but the outlying cases absolutely can be batshit psycho jackbooted thuggery. And Joe Stack apparently brought out the asshole in everyone. But a cop's not allowed to beat in someone's teeth with their baton just 'cause the guy calls them names and spits at them, whereas the IRS gets away with the financial equavilent of doing just that when someone torques them.Remember my contractor friend I mentioned? He was audited by the IRS at one point and notified he owned $186,000 - an amount FAR in excess of the $40,000 Stack claimed he lost. Hell, yes, my friend disputed it. He was told he couldn't sell his house until the matter was settled, and there was a pile of other horseshit, but he didn't have his business shut down, he wasn't turned out of his house, he was able to pay his bills in the meanwhile and even take out a loan to finish a project while the matter was being settled. The result? They cleared up all but $82 of the IRS's claim against him. Eighty-two dollars! Even in my current destitute state I could handle that amount. Granted, that's just one anecdote, but it demonstrates that the IRS is NOT a cadre of jack-booted thugs who enjoy kneecapping for its own sake.
The plural of anecdote is not data. That said, I never claimed that the IRS was a monolithic entity of goose-stepping jackbooted uniformed thugs with briefcases instead of machine-pistols. I did, however, claim that sometimes the IRS can behave that way, and that Joe Stack apparently bought himself the royal treatment with his misdeeds. I'm not saying it was wrong to have made Joe Stack pay up, and I am in fact stating that he should've been hurled in prison a long time ago. But I am saying that it's almost certain that they brought out the royal treatment on him, and that if so, it was wrong.My parents were audited at one point when I was young. Again - they were told they couldn't sell their house, but again, they could pay their bills, they had a place to live, we were fed....
Funny, isn't it, how my own life and those of my friends/acquaintances seems to run counter to your repeated assertions that the IRS descends upon the helpless and picks their bones clean.
Another friend/business acquaintance fucked up his taxes for ten years running - he was a freelance artist who decided to save money by NOT consulting a professional accountant and wound up making costly mistakes. After the audit was over he owed something like $30,000 plus interest. He immediately started negotiating a payment plan. It took him a long time to pay it off, but he did and, again, his life wasn't "ruined" nor was he pursued subsequently by the IRS.
Yes, it is, but there's no garuntee the IRS will give a fuck. Again, outlying cases, they can and will leave you homeless, carless and jobless if they take umbridge to your continued existance.I know it fucks with your preconceptions, but MOST tax disputes are settled without people being stripped of all assets and without attacks on IRS agents. After all, the IRS wants the money - and if you're left homeless and jobless they ain't getting nothing, are they? It really is in the interest of BOTH sides to work out a solution.
Yes, yes they do. I never claimed that Joe Stack was right.No one likes paying taxes. No one like audits. But most people cope with all of that without resorting to violence.
I am saying he was the wrong psychopath, given the wrong treatment, a perfect storm of asshole and assholes colliding in a heinous explosion of shit.
Generally, when one of the 'quiet ones' starts ranting and raving, the cops, if tipped off, will presume that something is Up and take steps to be sure that if something goes Down, they'll be there to mitigate it. Hell, even a patrol cruiser lurking on his block in the morning could have responded when he lit the place up and tackled him before he got to the plane, since I presume it wasn't parked out back.If he hadn't, at that point, actually DONE anything there would be nothing for the cops to do. Should she wait until she or her daughter are actually hurt, or should we praise her intelligence for leaving BEFORE violence occured?
Regardless, she didn't, and she wasn't wrong in not calling, so there's no blame there. She was goddamned smart to GTFO Dodge while the getting was good.
Get a fucking gallon of motherfucking propwash and use it on your fuckity fucking eyeballs, Broomstick, I WAS FUCKITY FUCKING AGREEING WITH YOU that it was a goddamned act of premeditated murder, not fuckity fucking excusing it!What the FUCK do you think happens when you crash a vehicle into an bunch of offices during business hours? What kind of apologetic bullshit are you spewing? Fuck yes he intended to kill people - that's why he crashed into an office building at 10 am on a weekday!
Piss-poor planning is a failure to plan. Not a complete lack of planning.Your own words are the problem. By the way - although the attacks failed, the Glasgow attacks and Mr. Toasted Nuts did, in fact, plan their attacks in advance. Holy shit, are you stupid. Not to mention ignorant and uninformed.Never. I never suggested this was unplanned, it was quite fucking obviously planned. Only a retard fails to plan, and that gets you shit like the glasgow jeep attack or Mr. Incindiary Underwear. I never suggested it was a fucking whim, please stop placing words on my keyboard.
Well... Hock your aeroplane if you still own it and buy a rally car to get your kicks instead? It's probably cheaper, anyway.Two points here. First, if you're playing devil's advocate here YOU NEED TO STATE THAT CLEARLY, IN ADVANCE. Try starting with "I'm playing devil's advocate here...." Second, a lot of us are entirely UNsympathetic to this piece of shit. Especially the 700,000 pilots in the US who are getting sick of the shit that falls on us everytime some shitstain decides to use an airplane in a bad way.
More seriously, Joe Stack was a piece of shit. But I'm not a callous enough bastard to feel entirely unsympathetic to someone who found themselves in the IRS's gunsights and targeted for abuse. I'm not saying it remotely justifies what Stack did, but that that doesn't excuse their actions, either.
And yet, there are people whom that has happened to. And by your own admission, he 'poked the beast' and they had a vengenance-grudge against him.YOU have not proved that. Whereas I, in my own personal life, have evidence to the contrary. No, the IRS is not your friend, but neither is it the vendetta-loving draconian monster you portray it to be. I've know many people who were audited - none who were stripped of everything.
[citation needed]It's not hidden. End of story. You're wrong. Deal with it.
A scan of a relevant form would be a good start.
Put up or shut up. As I've never seen such a form in question, and as you've taken a hardline hostile stance towards me owing to Joe Stack's very real threat to your personal interests, I am disinclined to take your word for it.You can't miss it. You're wrong. Deal with it.
I was speaking metaphorically. The IRS may not break you physically directly, but they can and will do it indirectly if you piss them off enough. What else would you call it if they decide to take everything you have and heave you out on the street? I'd call that harm.Actually, believe or not, the IRS is not actually permitted to break any part of your body. Strictly speaking, the mafia isn't permitted to do it either, but they do it anyway, which is why they're a criminal organization.
And I believe I've explained adequately to what specific aspect of the heinousness I was referring to with those words, so stop trying to apply them to everything.Your own words condemn you. You were wrong. These are YOUR WORDS:However, what I am saying is that it explains it, and even offers it a modicum of nominal nobility
Without being an accountant, I'd have no idea what to look for. I already said it was a byzantine mess that needs a team of tax ninja to get through. IANATN, either. And from indications, YARATN, either, despite having read parts of the tax code.I am not an accountant, either, yet I have made some attempt to read and understand at least somewhat those tax laws that apply to me. So I don't have to go with "commonly accepted", I have seen the tax code and can draw my own conclusions. You might try getting out of mom's basement a little more often. For free, here's how you do it: go to your local library. Ask to see the tax code - the reference librarian will probably ask you to specify Federal, state, or local. Pick any one. Start reading. Or, if that's too difficult, go to the IRS website and start there.
Um, someone else already managed to point that out. They're right.You FUCKING MORON!!! Do you listen to the news? Can you fucking read? He DID crash at 10 in the morning! You goddamed, retarded turd. He deliberately chose a time of day when people were most likely to be in the office!!! Holy shit, are you digging yourself a hole. Stack REALLY DID mean to kill people. Period. End of Story.
I was mistaken. I conceded that. Kindly stop flaming me about it.
The police have to have probable cause to suspect the lunatic's family aided and abetted. If they don't, they can't go after them, let alone convict them. They can't 'assume' it - the IRS doesn't even assume. They don't care if you were provably innocent - you were tied to him, therefor they will go after you.Goddamn, are you fucking naive - if someone commits a crime their family sure as hell can be compelled to spend time with the police as potential accessories. The family and friends can be arrested on suspicion of aiding and abetting a criminal. How the fuck are you going to survive in the real world being that damned ignorant?
HOW MANY MOTHERFUCKING TIMES do I have to say it: those 600 alleged cases represent outlyers, not statistics relating to institutionalized assholery!Your "proof", consisting of about 600 alleged cases over 15 years, 15 years where the IRS dealt with over 100 million households? 600 fuckups in 1,500,000 interactions with the public is .0004%. That's a fucking low rate of problems. Of course, abuses and errors should be rectified, but get real - even if every single incident on that website was true it is hardly proof of some sort of institutionalized sadism.
I am, however, saying that this case was without question an outlyer.
And marrying someone automatically makes you privvy to information they've taken pains to hide? I doubt anyone would knowingly hitch their wagon to someone if they casually said "Oh, by the way, every April the IRS likes to come 'round and give me some free procotology that inevitably ends up costing me a whole shitload of money."If you file jointly you're also assuming joint responsibility - that's why BOTH parties have to sign the tax form. Now, if a married couple files separately then there is a stronger argument for saying "I didn't know." IF you marry someone with extensive debts then, among other things, filing separately helps protect your assets from being applied to the other parties' debt.
I agree, and here's hoping. My money's more on the IRS backing off for fear of being crucified and burned at the cross by the media if they go after her rather than any legal-fu ninja she hires. Still, it wouldn't hurt to retain a clan of tax-ninja.If fraud occurred then there is recourse to get the spouse off the hook - but it has to be proved. Mrs. Stack is not doomed to be raked over the coals, but she needs a lawyer right now. Given the publicity of this particular case she might even get one pro bono.
It is. Maybe if more people considered things, there'd be a lot less fucking fucked-up marriages.The fact remains, though, that you should get to know someone before you marry them. Whirlwind romances of just a few months resulting in a Las Vegas drive through marriage is a recipe for disaster. The older the parties involved in a wedding the more caution should be exercised because both parties have more history. Second, third, etc., marriages might well have legal complications from prior marriages, such as child support. I'm sorry if it kills some of the romance, but yes, this sort of stuff SHOULD be considered prior to saying "I do". I'm well aware that people don't do this, but then that's one reason a lot of marriages turn into nightmares.
But attraction and attachment are not governed by rational action or thought, they're governed by emotion and hormones. The day that stops being true is the day I weep, for the human race I know and love to hate and hate to love will truely be dead.