All of which was abolished in 1872. Yes, the year 1872. This is really the death knell for the things you believe.
Progressives never allow progressivism to be abolished.
But, there's the rub. Progressives didn't exist until 1900.
(Note: Funnily enough, the income tax was actually abolished twice. SCOTUS did it again in 1894. Pollock v. Loan. And why was the income tax allowed to be abolished twice? Not once, but twice - it's because there were no progressives around to defend it. They wouldn't exist until 1900.)
"The Lincoln administration created the then unconstitutional unapportioned income tax, and the Internal Revenue Bureau, later renamed Internal Revenue Service, to enforce the unapportioned income tax."All of which was abolished in 1872. Yes, the YEAR 1872. THIS IS REALLY THE DEATH KNELL FOR THE THINGS YOU BELIEVE.
1872 was really the death knell for all brain activity within your cranium.
(Note: Funnily enough, the income tax was actually abolished twice. SCOTUS did it again in 1894. Pollock v. Loan. And why was the income tax allowed to be abolished twice? Not once, but twice - it's because there were no progressives around to defend it. They wouldn't exist until 1900.)
Having been abolished by the Supreme Court in 1894, it never occurred to you that it was not abolished before 1894. The previous unconstitutional unapportioned income tax was allowed to expire when the war debts were paid off. However, those addicted to other people's money soon found a reason to reinstitute the unconstitutional unapportioned income tax. With no civil war to excuse the violation of the constitution, the simple addiction to other people's money was deemed insufficient justification for the continued unconstitutional unapportioned income tax, and it was abolished by the court.
The Bureau of Internal Revenue, or Internal Revenue Service, has been with us continuously since 1862. It has not been abolished yet.