Sean Martin
December 5th, 2005, 04:51 PM
It’s ok for white children to go to public school for indoctrination and torment by mud skins, but Jews are not allowing that to happen to heir children and are making ZOG pay.
LA couple suing IRS to win deduction for religious school tuition
LOS ANGELES - An Orthodox Jewish couple barred from writing off tuition paid to the religious school attended by their children are claiming the decision by the Internal Revenue Service violated the First Amendment.
In their lawsuit, Michael and Marla Sklar of Los Angeles contend the IRS erred by disallowing their tax deduction while permitting Scientologists to write off the cost of spiritual counseling and instruction on that religion's tenets.
"I feel this is setting a very dangerous precedent because you have a particular sect that's being favored by the state based on religion," said Michael Sklar, an accountant. "It will have enormous ramifications whatever the ruling is. I didn't do this for the $3,000 that's at stake."
The IRS told the couple they forbid the deduction because it was considered payment for service, not a charitable contribution.
The case had been scheduled to begin last week in U.S. Tax Court in Los Angeles but was delayed until October for procedural reasons.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/northern_california/8322048.htm
LA couple suing IRS to win deduction for religious school tuition
LOS ANGELES - An Orthodox Jewish couple barred from writing off tuition paid to the religious school attended by their children are claiming the decision by the Internal Revenue Service violated the First Amendment.
In their lawsuit, Michael and Marla Sklar of Los Angeles contend the IRS erred by disallowing their tax deduction while permitting Scientologists to write off the cost of spiritual counseling and instruction on that religion's tenets.
"I feel this is setting a very dangerous precedent because you have a particular sect that's being favored by the state based on religion," said Michael Sklar, an accountant. "It will have enormous ramifications whatever the ruling is. I didn't do this for the $3,000 that's at stake."
The IRS told the couple they forbid the deduction because it was considered payment for service, not a charitable contribution.
The case had been scheduled to begin last week in U.S. Tax Court in Los Angeles but was delayed until October for procedural reasons.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/northern_california/8322048.htm