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March 21, 2006

IRS plan would allow sale of tax data to marketers

Interesting. After having been on the receiving end of many IRS blunders (some of which cost considerable amounts of money), I can only hope that if they decide they're going to make such sensitive personal information public, that we can sue them for libel when they mess up.

IRS plan would allow sale of tax data to marketers:

PHILADELPHIA -- The Internal Revenue Service is quietly moving to loosen the once-inviolable privacy of federal income-tax returns.

If it succeeds, accountants and other tax-return preparers for the first time would be able to sell information from individual returns -- or even entire returns -- to marketers and data brokers.

The change is in a set of proposed rules the Treasury Department and the IRS published in the Dec. 8 Federal Register, where the official notice labeled them "not a significant regulatory action."

IRS officials portray the changes as housecleaning needed to update outmoded regulations adopted before it began accepting returns electronically. The proposed rules, which would become effective 30 days after a final version is published, would require a tax preparer to obtain written consent before selling tax information.

Critics call the changes a dangerous breach in personal and financial privacy. They say the requirement for signed consent would prove meaningless for many taxpayers, especially those hurriedly reviewing stacks of documents before a filing deadline.

"The normal interaction is that the taxpayer just signs what the tax preparer puts in front of them," said Jean Ann Fox of the Consumer Federation of America, one of several groups fighting the changes. "They think, 'This person is a tax professional, and I'm going to rely on them.'

"Criticism of the proposal also came from U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. In a letter March 14 to IRS Commissioner Mark Everson, Obama warned that, once in the hands of third parties, tax information could be resold and handled under even looser rules than the IRS sets, increasing consumers' vulnerability to identity theft and other risks.

The IRS announced the proposal in a news release the day before the notice was published, headlined: "IRS Issues Proposed Regulations to Safeguard Taxpayer Information."

The announcement did not mention potential sales of tax information.

IRS spokesman William M. Cressman said, "The heart of this proposed regulation is about the right of taxpayers to control their tax return information. The idea is to emphasize taxpayer consent and set clear boundaries on how tax return preparers can use or disclose tax return information."

March 15, 2006

The DC Speeding Ticket Scam

Why should anyone bother to go into the District these days? Their lovely administration has decided now that the Constitution is optional, and they can make tons of money, hand over fist, without even involving the police?

A few days ago, the hubby got a letter addressed to him, saying that our truck was speeding down a road in DC, complete with pictures of the truck, demanding 200.00. TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS! And their evidence for this? Tick marks on the road that say that they measured the time it took the truck to pass... not 100 feet... not 200 feet... but 20 feet.

So why do I say this is unconstitutional? First, your accuser is not a person, but a device. This device is not being run by a person who then can be cross examined as to his or her training in interpreting this information, etc. As this is the ONLY evidence provided, without an officer to say "I observed the driver doing this or that" how can you tell who is driving?

The "who is driving" issue is likely the most interesting part of this. One of the check boxes you can use in responding to the ticket is the "I wasn't driving the car" box. In this case, they want you to sign a notarized statement that you were not the driver, and turning in the person who WAS driving. You must swear this under penalty of purgery. So, if you aren't in the car, or observing the car being driven, how can you swear who was driving the car at that place at that time?

In this age of alien abductions, perhaps it's the aliens who are speeding to bring media attention to their plight as unpaid comedy objects?

March 05, 2006

Idiots Reasses Fairfax County Taxes

My house value didn't change in one year. However, my LAND value went up almost 30%. Why? It could be because the idiots in Fairfax County continue to believe that it's a great idea to crowd as many houses as possible onto as little land as possible, regardless of the impact on the environment, wildlife, traffic congestion, school capacity, and other services. Land is valued so highly because it can then be subdivided ad infinitum, and houses can be piled on top of each other.

One would wonder "why would someone pay 2 million dollars for a cookie cutter McMansion on 1/8 acre of land?" Answer - Lots of idiots would, and DO. A pristine field across from our house is stacked with 2 million dollar crapola houses, adding more wells tapped into our existing awful water supply, more traffic stacked up at our intersection (where the VDOT won't put in lights or other traffic safety devices despite the fact that we have an elementary school bus stop at the end of our road, despite the houses driving the deer, fox, possums, raccoons, and other assorted wildlife into people's back yards, causing them to whine and complain that living in the woods would actually mean they might have to put up with *gasp* ANIMALS!

Greed. Selfishness. Inability to understand that they are part of a connected whole. Me Me Me. All of these reasons and more cause this ridiculous urban sprawl, obviously encouraged by ridiculous tax assessments making one's land SO valuable that people are encouraged to attempt to subdivide and make some money by saying "to hell with everyone else."

*ARGH*

Spammers Are Lower Than Dirt

So, I decided to check to see how many spams I got in a 24 hour period. 626 were filtered by my junkmail filter. 236 were not. 862 spams in 24 hours = approximately 1 spam every 2 minutes. Every two minutes some idiot is using my resources to send me crap about prescription drugs, penis enlargements, and how to give money to all of these people dying of horrible diseases.

And what has "Can Spam" done about this? Not a damned thing. So instead, AOL wants to charge businesses .01 for every single commercial email sent to AOL members while AOL members can spam at will for free. AOL doesn't differentiate between DESIRED commercial emails for which their members sign up, and unsolicited mail. So how is AOL going to figure out what email is commercial and which is some get rich quick scumbag claiming fatal disease to glom money off of well meaning individuals who want to help?

AOL's "solution" is just as bad as the "Can Spam" act, except that legitimate businesses will pay, and spammer twits will continue their free ride off of the rest of us.

March 04, 2006

Even After Waiting Ten Years For Approval....

Wiccans have waited over 10 years for approval of their "Emblem of Belief" so that they can have the pentacle on headstones of veterans who have died for their country. Applications had been filed in complete accordance with ALL rules and regulations. Those applications had been received although the Department of Cemetery Administration under the Veterans Administration office had denied even receiving them (although they sent them to me when I filed a FOIA request). Finally, they told Wiccan groups that they had to REFILE and start all over again once they had an actual Wiccan veteran who had died and wanted the pentacle symbol. Well guess what.... unfortunately, it has happened and there are TWO thus far who have spoken out. Yet what has the Cemetery Administration office done? Still nothing!

reviewjournal.com -- News - Sergeant's space left blank:


FERNLEY -- Nevada National Guard Sgt. Patrick Stewart gave his life for his country when the Chinook helicopter he was in was shot down in Afghanistan in September.

But those wishing to honor Stewart, who should have his name on the memorial wall at the Northern Nevada Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Fernley, 34 miles east of Reno, would have a difficult time doing so.

The space reserved for Stewart, right next to Chief Warrant Officer John Flynn, his comrade from Sparks who also died in the attack as part of Operation Enduring Freedom, is vacant.

Stewart was a follower of the Wiccan religion, which is not recognized by the Department of Veterans Affairs for use in its cemeteries.

Stewart's widow, Roberta, said she will wait until her family's religion -- and its five-pointed star enclosed in a circle, with one point facing skyward -- is recognized for use on memorials before Stewart's plaque is installed.

"It's completely blank," Roberta Stewart said, pointing to her husband's place on the memorial.

She said she had no idea the pentacle could not be used on her husband's memorial plaque until she had to deal with the agency after the death of her husband.

"It's discrimination," she said. "They are discriminating against our religion.

"I had no idea that they would decline our veterans this right that they go to fight for," she said. "What religion we are doesn't matter. It's like denying who my husband is."

Patrick Stewart's dog tags, which Roberta Stewart wears around her neck, carry the word Wiccan on them to identify his religious beliefs. But she said he was never told the Wiccan religion was not officially recognized during his 13 years of military service in different capacities.

"By they way, if you die for your country, your religion won't be recognized, that would be nice to know," Roberta Stewart said.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and its National Cemetery Administration prohibit graphics on government-furnished headstones or markers other than those they have approved as "emblems of belief." More than 30 such emblems are allowed on gravestones and makers in veterans cemeteries, from the Christian cross to the Buddhist wheel of righteousness. A symbol exists for atheists too.

Roberta Stewart said she has decided to make the issue a public one because many Wiccans serve in the armed forces who might want the symbol included on a headstone or memorial marker.

Some Wiccans are private about their religion because of the concern their practices and beliefs might be misunderstood, she said. But Roberta Stewart said she and her husband were strong enough to let their beliefs be known in the community.

Patrick Stewart's religious preferences were made clear at his memorial service, which was held at Rancho San Rafael Park in an oak grove. Some of those speaking at the service talked of Stewart's beliefs and how, while they held different views, respected him for his values. Stewart was cremated, and his ashes have been scattered.

Roberta Stewart said those beliefs state that Wiccans must do no harm, give to the community and worship the Earth.

"I can't see anything bad in it myself," she said.

Community support for Patrick Stewart in Fernley, where the couple bought a home together a year ago, is strong, she said. Stewart's military colleagues are circulating a petition in Afghanistan that supports his right to use the symbol, she said.

She said she wants the memorial plaque at the veterans cemetery because "my husband needs to be remembered somewhere besides in my heart."

While Roberta Stewart is frustrated by the situation, a chance exists that her husband's memorial plaque might be in place soon, with the symbol of his beliefs.

An application seeking recognition of the Wiccan religion, and the use of the pentacle as an emblem of belief on memorials in veterans cemeteries, is working its way through the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The Rev. Selene Fox, senior minister of a Wiccan group called Circle Sanctuary, said the group filed the application for the use of the emblem with the Department of Veterans Affairs in January by using a new administrative process. The group filed the application with the widow of a Korean War veteran who wanted the symbol for her husband's memorial, she said.

Efforts have been under way for a decade to win the recognition, Fox said.

Speaking by telephone from Wisconsin, Fox said the application has passed through one level of review.

"I truly hope the approval process will come to a quick and successful conclusion very soon," she said. "It saddens me that there is, from my understanding from Roberta, a hole in her husband's memorial where the plaque is to go with the pentacle on it."

Officials with the Department of Veterans Affairs could not be reached for comment on whether the application will be successful.

Fox said her group has worked to follow every detail of the application process. The 24-page application that was submitted included information showing that the Wiccan religion complied with every requirement the agency has before it would consider the approval of a new emblem of belief, she said.

Roberta Stewart said she is checking with the veterans agency on a regular basis to find out the status of the application.

The couple's daughter, age 12, wrote a letter asking for approval for the symbol's use.

"Why won't you put my dad's religion sign on a plaque," Alexandria Maxwell-Stewart wrote to R. James Nicholson, secretary of veterans affairs, on Feb. 27. "He respected you and your rules and went and fought for our country and died for our country and this is how you treat him and his family."

Patrick Stewart, 34, and four other National Guard members died Sept. 25 when their Chinook helicopter was shot down by a rocket-propelled grenade while returning to their base for refueling. They had finished dropping off troops.

He was a Nevada native, born in Reno on Oct. 21, 1970. He attended Washoe County schools, graduating from Wooster High School in 1989.

He enlisted in the Army after graduation, serving in Desert Storm and in Korea and completed active duty in 1996. He moved to Ohio, where he and his brother owned a construction company.

He returned to Nevada in 2001, where he met his future wife, Roberta, and her daughter, Ali. He is survived also by his son, Raymond Stewart of Spring, Texas.

Patrick Stewart enlisted in the Nevada Army National Guard and went to Afghanistan with Task Force Storm in early 2005.

He was posthumously awarded the Air Medal, the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, the Nevada Distinguished Service Medal and the Combat Action Badge.

Roberta Stewart said she remains optimistic that the Department of Veterans Affairs will recognize the Wiccan symbol for use in its cemeteries.

"I am going to have faith in my government to do what's right and give us the freedoms that our soldiers have earned for us," she said. "But should they deny it, I will be ready to stand firm on my beliefs."

She said she has held off on contacting members of the Nevada congressional delegation about the issue to give the veterans agency time to act on its own.

"I would like to lay my husband to rest," she said. "Me and the children would like to move on. It's been very traumatic for us. I won't let my husband be blank on a wall for too long."