WOMD. Now Available at Your Nearby Staples!

I read with interest, recent reports of a 3-D printed hand gun, created by Defense Distributed, being test-fired at a gun range just south of Austin, Texas. Defense Distributed, whose website bills itself as “The Home of the Wiki Weapons Project,” fired the gun in front of an observer from Forbes, and you can view the gun, named The Liberator, being test-fired in a video taken during the test and posted on YouTube. Defense Distributed also announced it would post the gun’s blueprints and construction details on the company’s own DefCAD design site. For you history buffs, the “Liberator” was also the name of a single-shot pistol designed to be distributed by dropping them from airplanes flying over France during World War II.

The gun isn’t completely plastic – the firing pin is a common metal nail that can be purchased at a hardware store and can be detected by metal detectors – and that single metal nail apparently makes it legal under U.S. law (the Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988; Pub.L. 100–649, H.R. 4445, 102 Stat. 3816). The 3-D printer used to make the rest of the plastic components is a Dimension SST 3D printer made by Stratasys, which apparently now has a U.S. federal license to manufacture firearms.

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“No taxation without representation”

In the mid-1700s, British colonists in the 13 Colonies, which eventually became the original United States of America, began to summarize their primary grievance against British rule with the slogan, "No taxation without representation." Although certainly not the only cause, many historians agree this was one of the primary grievances that led to the American Revolution. Well this year – 2013 – marks a Centennial which I suspect not a single citizen of the United States will hail as worthy of celebration. This is the 100th anniversary of the tax law.

Tax laws in the United States did exist before 1913. In fact, Congress passed the Revenue Act of 1861 during the Civil War to help pay for the expense of war, but this tax was repealed 10 years later. Then in 1894, Congress enacted a "flat rate" income tax, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that law unconstitutional the very next year since it constituted a direct tax that was not allocated on a pro rata basis by each state’s population.

The modern day income tax on individuals arises from the 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that was passed by Congress in 1909, and that legislated the state apportionment requirement out of existence, giving Congress the authority to enact what has become the individual income tax we all know and love today. Since any amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires ratification by at least three-fourths of the states, the Congressional legislation did not actually become the 16th Amendment to the United States Constitution until February 1913, when it was ratified by the state of Wyoming.

Until World War II, income tax applied to less than 10 percent of the U.S. population, and since the tax brackets were graduated, tax historian Joseph Thorndike has noted that in 1935, when the threshold for reaching the top tax bracket was income of $5 million, the top bracket applied to only one person in the United States – John D. Rockefeller, Jr. One last bit of IRS trivia – the filing date for income tax in the United States used to be March 15, but the date was pushed to April 15 when Congress overhauled the income tax statutes in 1954.

I’m sure every U.S. citizen now believes that one of the results of the American Revolution remains that each of us feel absolutely represented by our federal government and therefore we don’t mind paying taxes. Right? Just in case you did want to have your own personal celebration of the 100th anniversary, please feel free to print your own copy of the original 1913 IRS Form 1040 and do with it what you wish. I might just fill it out and send it in today!