Title 26 is the law. I just gave it to you. You can't cite a website in a tax matter, even if the website is that of the IRS.
It also depends on the section of the law you're looking at. For example, the website you're referencing has to do with non-profits.
0 sats \ 2 replies \ @jeff 3 Jan
IANAL. Sounds like you get my point.
So... for this...
Meaning: this regulation is meaningless
Did they just draft something incompetent, and this is some kind of "who's gonna point out their mistake?"-moment? Or, what comes next? Surely coin center also would have caught the incoherent definition.
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The tax code is entirely about semantic deceit. Almost all law is, that's how you've voluntarily let them trample your rights for your entire life.
I'm not going to explain myself again. See here: #373769
Keep in mind, most lawyers and many judges don't even know about ejusdem generis in statutory construction.
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Semantic Deceipt
Love it. Have some sats.
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