Flowers by Nolee. Photo by Susan Freedman.


Our endorsement.



Our endorsement.



Excellent tunes -- free! And on your browser right now. Just click on Radio Bojack!


Meter updates every 30 seconds. Click here for
an instant update.
Our complete Portland debt series linked here.



E-mail us here.

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on April 29, 2006 3:31 AM. The previous post in this blog was Your "kicker" from the City of Portland. The next post in this blog is My night as a rapper. Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Links

My home page

Law
How Appealing
Bag and Baggage
TaxProf Blog
Mauled Again
The Fire of Genius
OrCon Law
Ernie the Attorney
JD2B
The Volokh Conspiracy

Hap'nin' Guys
Tony Pierce
Parkway Rest Stop
Utterly Boring.com
The Vig
Various Observations...
The Daily E-Mail
Portland Freelancer
Saving James
Bob Borden
Dan Zanes
Dingleberry Gazette
The World's Maddest Dog
The Rural Bus Route
Another Blogger
The World of Today
William Bragg
Bradach Blog, The War on Error
Jeremy Freese
Izzle Pfaff
Jeremy Blachman
Straight White Guy
Furious Nads (b!X)
The Grich
HinesSight
Onfocus
Kevin Allman
Jalpuna
MTPolitics
The Naive Optimist
Beerdrinker.org
As Time Goes By
AboutItAll - Oregon
Quark Soup
Alas, a Blog
GusBlog
Worldwide Pablo
Misterblue
Tales from the Stump
Two Pennies
Scott Hendison
Mikeyman's Computer Treehouse
Rusty
Comentario Loco
Appliance Blog
The Bleat
Rosenblog

Hap'nin' Gals
Pinktalk
My Whim is Law
One Fish, Two Kids...
Mellow-Drama
I Count to 4 (Nth of Pril)
I Could Kill Her
Ready or Not
I am a Fish
Raging Red
Sarah Bott
That Black Girl
Posie Gets Cozy
Lao Ocean Girl
Here Today
{A}
Cat Eyes
View from the North
Chantel Williams
Althouse
Frytopia
Menagerie
Ragwaters, Bitters, and Blue Ruin
This Stony Planet
Heather Bea
What If...?
Superinky Fixations
GirlHacker

Portland and Oregon
Isaac Laquedem
Portland Gentrification and Other Problems
Jeff Mapes
Our PDX Network
Amanda Fritz
PolitickerOR.com
O City Hall Reporters
RoguePundit
Metroblogging Portland
Old Town by Larry Norton
Bend Blogs
Lost Oregon
Cafe Unknown
Tin Zeroes
Another Portland Blog
Mark Nelsen's Weather Blog
Oregon Media Insider
Portland Food and Drink.com
Dave Knows Portland
Idaho's Portugal
Alameda Old House History
ORblogs Site News

Retired from Blogging
1221 SW 4th
Twisty
Jim Treacher

Wonderfully Wacky
Dave Barry
Borowitz Report
Blort
Stuff White People Like
The Dullest Blog in the World
Worst of the Web
The Ultimate Insult
Scrabo's Mad World
Lancow's E-mail

Valuable Time-Wasters
My Gallery of Jacks
Litterbox, On the Prowl
Litterbox, Bag of Bones
Litterbox, Scratch
Maukie
Ride That Donkey
Singin' Horses
Rally Monkey
Simon Swears
Strong Bad's E-mail

Oregon News
KGW-TV
The Oregonian
Portland Tribune
LocalNewsDaily.com
KOIN
Willamette Week
KATU
The Sentinel
Southeast Examiner
Sellwood Bee
Mid-County Memo
Eugene Register-Guard
OPB
Topix.net - Portland
Salem Statesman-Journal
Portland Business Journal
Daily Journal of Commerce
Oregon Business
KPTV
Portland Info Net
McMinnville News Register
Lake Oswego Review
The Daily Astorian
Bend Bulletin
Corvallis Gazette-Times
Roseburg News-Review
Medford Mail-Tribune
Ashland Daily Tidings
Newport News-Times
Albany Democrat-Herald
The Eugene Weekly
Portland IndyMedia
Not the Oregonian, the Oregonion
Oregon's Future
Brainstorm Northwest
The Columbian

Music-Related
The Beatles
Bruce Springsteen
Seal
Sting
Joni Mitchell
Ella Fitzgerald
Steve Earle
Joe Ely
Stevie Wonder
Lou Rawls

E-mail, Feeds, 'n' Stuff

Saturday, April 29, 2006

It's bigger than all of us

An impossibly busy schedule (including an upcoming appearance at Candidates Gone Wild this Monday evening) has combined with other considerations to cause the Complete Internal Revenue Code Podcast Project to go on hiatus.

However, this important project continues to inspire others, even in its dormant state, and now our moving reading of one of the early tax code sections has been put to music, with spectacular results. As Neil Young says, there's no holding this back -- let's get it out there on the internet to the whole world right away. Go here for the mp3 file, and be transformed. As always, it's free. (Courtesy Tom Ono.)

Comments (6)

Will you ever get to the provision. if there be one, that says it is a federal crime for an IRS agent to lie?

A 2k loss in each of two years from stock trades can, via arbitrary assessment, be converted to 138K in tax liability and penalties.

Suppose that Ameritrade delivered info on both buys and sells, with the consent and at the direction of the gullible, to the IRS . . . would the IRS still plead ignorance to the existence of the buys and assert that the arbitrary-assessment-victim must have lied. "You must have something to hide" is all that the IRS guy hears in his head and blurts out reflexively. It is like clean money . . . Book-Em Dano . . . or we will be accused of not "just doing our job."

Being lazy just does not cross the mind of the IRS folks.

I was behind an Maserati Spyder with Ron Tonkin license plates yesterday (got picture too, as proof that they exist). It only costs 90K. Toss in an off-road hummer for 50K, to boot. (This "stone" must have one of each, I suppose.)

Ah, the power of just being a bureaucrat . . . a cog.

Will your reading clarify whether the standard deduction for the poor, with neither savings nor much income to speak of, should be raised to match the highest possible exclusion from taxation for retirement savings accounts for certain special folks, or roughly 135k per year? Is that rich persons "future" financial security of greater value than the poor slobs "present" and immediate living expense on essentials? Forget the future, what about TODAY!

Supplement your "busy work" in the tax code with analysis and critique. There is talk of "law and economics" but it is largely filled with tripe from cogs that are at best half-wits. It needs some vigor in the debate, as in unrestrained skepticism. Check out this Mother Jones piece by James K. Galbraith titled "The Predator State."

Economics, in historical contexts, was a discipline for semi-old farts with lots of accumulated knowledge to integrate . . . not like today with nutshell series style reductions of a few core phrases to guide all analysis, as if it were like the literalists approach to reading the bible . . . or the IRS code . . . or the constitution.

Give a humanistic perspective, not that of a robot. (I have not listened to your podcast yet so I really do not know if you have added color commentary to make it worthwhile and entertaining.)

I was blown away by the Section 5 remix. You could end up being the next big thing on the rave circuit Jack!!!

By the way, what in the world was that Ron guy talking about? Maseratis, Ameritrade, and literalist bible readings???

Could someone expand upon the comment "should be raised to match the highest possible exclusion from taxation for retirement savings accounts for certain special folks, or roughly 135k per year"?

miltm,

How much can a "key employee" put into a retirement account in a given tax year? It looks like one rather large bit of disposable income to me. Are we to believe that they are being invited to avoid buying luxury goods?

If someone can craft a little bit of IRS code to define, but limit, this unusually large deduction for a very small set of taxpayers then it surely must also be OK, in terms of equity, to simply make it an option to anyone and everyone with income below that threshold.

It is like a standard deduction from the perspective of a "key employee" that had a salary of 500,000 dollars. They would have already met all their living expenses, and more, and then have this bit of extra cash that they would plan on saving anyway, without encouragement. The encouragement is not to save, for the sake of saving, but to direct that saving to a third party class of folks that offer investment services; and offer the benefit too of anti-alienation protection of such assets. If the limit were set at X for all then some investment services folks could not tap into this pool of savings dollars in the hands of some high income folks.

It is an example of gross inequity in the code, but with an arguably equitably-neutral explanation for its' existence.

I'll be at CGW too - as a volunteer. (Dude, I just got a call from them as I was typing this post - how bizarre?!?) Anyhow, is there any hope that you'll be resurrecting your rapper costume for the event?

Jack's been Fark'd. Yes, that's a compliment.

TrackBack

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference It's bigger than all of us:

» PDX blog scene; weekend edition from Metroblogging Portland
Oh maaan - looks like Bojack's gonna go all hip hop on our asses at Candidates Gone Wild - but I'm already committed to attend a school board meeting that evening, damn it all!JD's giving his immigrant employees time off... [Read More]

» Dang It...We'll Never Know How It Ends Now from The American Princess
The professor who was recording the entire Tax Code for podcast playback has called it quits after only thirteen days. "...Jack has put the podcasts "on hiatus while the author seeks the guidance of a mental health professional. Check back... [Read More]

Sponsors



We accept advertising through Blogads. If you're interested, click the "Advertise here" link above, or go here to place your ad through Blogads. For assistance, e-mail me here; I'd be glad to help. Reach lots of viewers -- we're up to about 2,400 unique visits a day, and more than 48,000 page views a week (as of April 19). Our rates are dirt cheap for the exposure you'll get!

In Vino Veritas

Robert Mondavi Solaire, Cabernet 2005
Castello Monaci, Liante, Salice Salentino 2006
Ricardo Santos, Malbec 2006
Quinta da Espiga, Tinto 2006
Charles Smith, Holy Cow Merlot 2006
Charles Smith, Boom Boom Syrah 2006
Charles Smith, The Honorable Pinot Gris 2007
Santa Rita, Cabernet Reserva 2005
King Estate, Pinot Gris 2007
Gloria, Douro, Tinto 2002
Bogle, Petite Sirah Port, Clarksburg 2005
Cardwell Hill, Pinot Noir 2004
Silkwood, Red Duet Cabernet-Syrah 2004
Portuga, Vinho Branco 2006, 2007
Osborne, Solaz 2004
Santa Rita, Cabernet, Reserva 2005
Penfold's, Koonunga Hill, Shiraz Cabernet 2006
Chateau Ste. Michelle, Cabernet, Indian Wells 2004
Chateau Ste. Michelle, Merlot, Horse Heaven Hills 2004
Hannah Nicole, Red 2004
Penfold's, Koonunga Hill Shiraz Cabernet 2005
Protocolo, Red 2005
Woodbridge, Chardonnay 2006
Portuga, Vinho Branco 2006
Beaulieu, Cabernet, Rutherford 1998
Beaulieu, Cabernet, Rutherford 1996
Kirkland, Roogle Shiraz 2004
Garda, Classico Chiaretto
A to Z, Oregon Pinot Gris 2005
I Giusti & Zanza, Nemorino 2006
Treana, Marsanne-Viognier, Central Coast 2005
Fife, Syrah, "Stanford" 2000
B.R. Cohn, Silver Label Cabernet 2005
Marques de Casa Concha, Cabernet 2005
Santi, Sortesele Pinot Grigio 2006
Al Muvedre, Tinto Joven 2006
Layer Cake, Shiraz 2006
Gritti, Ca' Andrea, Umbria red 2005
Altos de Luzon, Jumilla 2004
Thomas Leithner, Zweigelt 2004
Cain Cuvee NV 3
Chateau Ste. Michelle, Merlot 2003
Meridian, Sauvignon Blanc 2005
Canoe Ridge, Merlot 2003
Paringa, Shiraz 2005
King Estate, Pinot Gris 2005
Canoe Ridge, Merlot 2003
Maculan, Pino & Toi 2005
Kris, Pinot Grigio 2006
Silvan Ridge, Pinot Gris 2006
Fife, Mendocino Syrah, "Stanford" 2000
Castle Rock, Cabernet, Paso Robles 2005
Willakenzie, Pinot Gris 2006
The Show, Cabernet 2005
Essencia Valdemar, Rioja Rose 2006
Chateau Ste. Michelle, Merlot, Horse Heaven Hills 2004
Beaulieu Vineyard. Napa Valley Cabernet 2004
Irony, Cabernet, Napa Valley 2003
Rosenblum, Petite Sirah, Heritage Clones 2005
Fra Guerau, Montsant 2002
Barefoot Chardonnay
Kana, Syrah 2004
Castell Salegg, Chardonnay, Alto Adige 2004
Fetish, The Watcher Shiraz 2004
Gold Note, Fair Play Zinfandel 2005
Chateau Ste. Michelle, Canoe Ridge Estate Cabernet 2003
Ponzi, Pinot Noir 2004
Red Diamond, Merlot 2003
Mateus, Rose
Benton Lane Pinot Noir 2004
Penya Cadiella Vins de Comtat 2003
Kamiak, Cellar Select Red 2003
Anselmi, San Vincenzo 2005
Rubrato, Aglianico dei Feudi di San Gregorio 2004
Le Grand Noir (Black Sheep) Cabernet-Shiraz
Woodbridge, Chardonnay 2005
Los Vascos, Cabernet, Reserve 2004
Jackaroo, Shiraz 2003
Paul Jaboulet Aine, Crozes Hermitage Syrah, "La Jalet," 2001
Paul Jaboulet Aine, Cotes du Rhone, "Parallele '45,'" 2003
Rolf Binder, Barossa Valley Shiraz 2003
Oyster Bay, Sauvignon Blanc 2006
Woodbridge Chardonnay 2005
Barnard & Griffin, Columbia Valley Cabernet 2004
Quinto do Carmo, Alentejano Red 2000
Forefathers, Alexander Valley Cabernet 2001

The Occasional Book

Oscar Hijuelos - Mr. Ives' Christmas
Madeline L'Engle - A Wrinkle in Time
Steven Hart - The Last Three Miles
David Sedaris - Me Talk Pretty One Day
Karen Armstrong - The Spiral Staircase
Charles Larson - The Portland Murders
Adrian Wojnarowski - The Miracle of St. Anthony
William H. Colby - Long Goodbye
Steven D. Stark - Meet the Beatles
Phil Stanford - Portland Confidential
Rick Moody - Garden State
Jonathan Schwartz - All in Good Time
David Sedaris - Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim
Anthony Holden - Big Deal
Robert J. Spitzer - The Spirit of Leadership
James McManus - Positively Fifth Street
Jeff Noon - Vurt

Road Work

Miles run year to date: 18
At this date last year: 74
Total run in 2007: 113
In 2006: 100
In 2005: 149
In 2004: 204
In 2003: 269