President Teddy Roosevelt suggested the United States should “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” What
did he mean by that? He meant he knew he was weak, and he thought he needed
to pretend to be strong. Get down into the root of it and you will hear this
respected president admit that the U.S. Federal government has limited power.
It is weak, limited by the chains of the U.S. Constitution. Somebody with less
than total power does not speak loudly. So, he spoke softly. However, he found
ways to get what he wanted through the clever threat of force. Government has
been copying his method ever since.
When the US State Department wants another nation to do something, can the
Secretary of State expect the head of government of that nation to click
his or her heels and snap to? Not really. The US Government has no authority
over foreign governments. So how does the US government get other governments
to do things “our way?” How about our fifty state governments? They are supposed
to have their own authority separate from D.C. Why do they all bow to D.C.?
The question puzzles a lot of people. We know the Federal government seems
always to get its way, but we have been taught that the constitution
limits the power of our central government. What tool does Washington use
to break
the ropes that are supposed to tie its hands?
The tool is called mandatory volunteerism. The US Treasury puts a few
hundred million dollars on the table, and foreign potentates along
with state governors
usually volunteer for anything. They know they must volunteer to do
as they are told or they will lose privileges granted by Washington. Look
what happened to Iraq if you want to see what happens when a nation
fails
to volunteer.
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
People who know how to think believe that when you have to do something,
that means you have to do it, and when you have a choice, you can do
it or not do it. They believe that when you are offered the chance
to volunteer
for a worthy cause that means you can take a look at the project and
if you are interested in helping, you help. If not, you don't. It seems
so
simple.
However, when it comes to government, volunteering is complicated.
Those weak, powerless people who work for government sometimes
have trouble
getting people to do things for them. They know their power is
limited, that the
US Constitution keeps them from having absolute authority over
people. That has been a problem for people working for the US government
for
a long time.
If you work for government and you need to get something done,
how do you get people to cooperate?
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
If you command fighter pilots at war, you get your flight surgeon
to prescribe a pill that will enhance the pilots' ability to
stay sharp,
to make sure
he will not fall asleep and crash his valuable jet into a mountain.
That surgeon will put a contract in front of the pilot. It will
describe the
evil side effects of the pill. Then, it will tell the pilot he
has the right to refuse the pill. He can volunteer out. That
seems fair
enough.
Forget the fact that if the pilot gets hooked on that otherwise
illegal drug, his life will be ruined. But let's say the pilot
refuses the
pill. What happens then? He does not fly his mission. If he does
not fly his
mission what happens? He is court martialled, and he will probably
spend time in the brig. He is mandated to volunteer.
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
Go back to when that pilot might have been drafted by Selective
Service. Do we have a requirement in the US Constitution that
nobody can be
placed under involuntary servitude? Yes, we do. So, when the
new recruit is
called with his buddies to be inducted into the service, they
are lined up. They
are given a pep talk, and they are asked to take one step forward.
That step forward is their voluntary act that makes the draft
legal. They
are mandated to volunteer.
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
For decades the booklet taxpayers received with their 1040 forms
explained that our personal income tax system is “voluntary.” Try
not filing, though. Unless you are very careful you will find
that you are mandated to volunteer.
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
Get into an IRS audit: the tar baby of all legal headaches. If
the three year statute of limitations will soon expire, what
will the auditor ask
you to do? He or she will put before you a formal paper that says
you do not
have to waive time, but they would appreciate it if you would.
It is voluntary. Tell them you are ready to write a check immediately for
a deficiency if the result of the audit makes sense. What will
they do? They will construe your bookkeeping backward. If you
are on
a cash basis,
they
will place you into accrual. They will find every tool available
to them to charge you the highest unfair amount they can, and
then they will
within ten days place you in collection if you refuse to accept
their unfair assessment.
You are mandated to volunteer.
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
So, you hire an attorney and tell the attorney he is to try to
get you out of the collection stage of the audit and back into “administrative remedies” so you can correct the errors made by the auditors. He tells the supervising office of the IRS that he is sure he can get you to waive time if they will only rescind the assessment. They send the taxpayer the rescission document in one envelope. In a separate envelope they send the taxpayer the “voluntary offer to waive time.” From
the point of view of your attorney it is okay to be mandated
to volunteer. He has long ago forgotten about the Constitutional
guarantee
stating
we are not bound to servitude.
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
What does the IRS office do when they see that the taxpayer has
accepted the rescission of the assessment but that the taxpayer
has not volunteered
to waive time? Stay tuned. I am that taxpayer. We shall see.
Meanwhile, our attorney is having a fit because we refuse to waive
time. It is not necessary. Time does not expire for another
six months. Why
agree to stretch out something that can be settled in a week?.
When government says, “Volunteer, or else!” what should you do? That depends. If you take seriously your respect for government, your honor for the U.S. Constitution and your trust in your ability to think clearly, you will volunteer if you agree with the concept set before you – but
you will refuse to volunteer if logic demands.
In the IRS audit case embroiling our personal lives for the
past three months we have continually told the IRS we will
waive time
if they
give us a valid
reason to waive time. When we are willing to pay an accurate
and fair assessment NOW – what rational person would believe
an extension of time is necessary?
If time is not the issue, what IS the issue? The issue
is
Government says, “Volunteer, or else!”
If the government puts you in a situation like this,
ask the government agent to admit in writing that the
agency
is not
telling you the
truth when they
say you can volunteer or not. Get them to admit that
they are using a devious method to violate the authority
of
the U.S.
Constitution, to
add to their
limited powers. If our government is not bound by the
U.S. Constitution, why do they
set up false threat-structures to get more power than
the Constitution gives them? Why do they insist upon
telling
us “Volunteer, or
else!”
Most important, when someone tries to force you to volunteer,
recognize that the reason is that he or she is weak,
incapable of doing a
job without threatening
to use force.
By Richard Palmquist
March 20, 2006