PA Tax Amnesty TV ad "We Know Who You Are" | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 957148 United States 05/05/2010 09:13 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | can you believe this shit Avian? Quoting: maluthe IRS has always known where we live, there is nothing new there, but with the ad showing where we live with new technology, which we have been shown time and time again on cnn bombing people, it makes it extra creepy i would imagine most of our homes are now downloaded on a military data base , i get the feeling they are implying this subconciously I believe that's exactly what they are letting us know. |
malu
(OP) User ID: 800077 United States 05/05/2010 09:51 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | can you believe this shit Avian? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 957148the IRS has always known where we live, there is nothing new there, but with the ad showing where we live with new technology, which we have been shown time and time again on cnn bombing people, it makes it extra creepy i would imagine most of our homes are now downloaded on a military data base , i get the feeling they are implying this subconciously I believe that's exactly what they are letting us know. and i believe they can make GPS guided munitions which would level a home for a couple of hundred bucks they could confirm your thermal signature and vaporize your ass, and no one would know what the hell happened, it would be virtually untraceable "By way of deception, thou shalt do war." Israel's Mossad "The truth shall set you free." U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Motto |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 750855 United States 05/05/2010 11:34 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Everybody should call and say Marc Rich owes 50 million and lets not forget about Timothy Geithner. Americans Seeking Reward Money Inform IRS on Others May 4 (Bloomberg) -- Americans seeking reward money are turning in neighbors, clients and employers they suspect of cheating on taxes to the IRS at a rate of nearly eight per day, the director of the agency’s whistleblower program said. Steve Whitlock, the director, told an audience of about 200 lawyers, investigators and government officials at a Miami Beach conference on offshore banking that his office receives 40 to 50 tips per month alleging tax liability in excess of $2 million. Americans submit another 200 per month alleging smaller violations, he said. Whitlock said submissions have surged since the enactment in 2006 of a law that requires the Internal Revenue Service to pay awards of between 15 percent and 30 percent in cases where more than $2 million is collected. Prior to the law, both the decision on whether to make an award and the amount of payment were discretionary. “Right after we got the new law” containing the minimum award, “the fax machine was running the next day,” Whitlock told the Offshore Alert Financial Due Diligence Conference. The rate of submissions is on pace to eclipse the 476 applications filed in 2008, a number that was four times the previous year. Whitlock said the submissions have “stabilized.” [link to www.businessweek.com] |
Thnder
User ID: 947397 United States 05/06/2010 09:35 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Everybody should call and say Marc Rich owes 50 million and lets not forget about Timothy Geithner. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 750855Americans Seeking Reward Money Inform IRS on Others May 4 (Bloomberg) -- Americans seeking reward money are turning in neighbors, clients and employers they suspect of cheating on taxes to the IRS at a rate of nearly eight per day, the director of the agency’s whistleblower program said. Steve Whitlock, the director, told an audience of about 200 lawyers, investigators and government officials at a Miami Beach conference on offshore banking that his office receives 40 to 50 tips per month alleging tax liability in excess of $2 million. Americans submit another 200 per month alleging smaller violations, he said. Whitlock said submissions have surged since the enactment in 2006 of a law that requires the Internal Revenue Service to pay awards of between 15 percent and 30 percent in cases where more than $2 million is collected. Prior to the law, both the decision on whether to make an award and the amount of payment were discretionary. “Right after we got the new law” containing the minimum award, “the fax machine was running the next day,” Whitlock told the Offshore Alert Financial Due Diligence Conference. The rate of submissions is on pace to eclipse the 476 applications filed in 2008, a number that was four times the previous year. Whitlock said the submissions have “stabilized.” [link to www.businessweek.com] Traitors. |