Proof the IRS Didn't Target Just Conservatives

Synthaholic

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2010
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Proof the IRS Didn't Target Just Conservatives



Almost one third of the tax-exemption applications selected for additional scrutiny by the IRS were from groups that were not conservative.




Screen%20Shot%202013-06-05%20at%2012.29.43%20AM.png



Close to a third of the advocacy groups named by the Internal Revenue Service as recipients of special scrutiny during tax-exempt application reviews were liberal or neutral in political outlook, a leading nonpartisan tax newsletter reported after conducting an independent analysis of data released by the agency.


All told, around 470 groups were flagged as "potential political cases" between 2010 and 2012, including 298 whose experiences were analyzed in a Treasury Department inspector general's report. Because the IRS by law must not name groups that have not yet been approved or which were rejected, only a subset of their names was made public in May by the agency -- 176 cases.


Of these, "the majority of the groups selected for extra scrutiny probably matched the political criteria the IRS used and backed conservative causes, the Tea Party, or limited government generally," wrote Martin A. Sullivan in a June 3 piece in Tax Notes, a newsletter published by the Tax Analysts group. "But a substantial minority -- almost one third of the subset -- did not fit that description."


Non-conservative advocacy groups given special scrutiny by the IRS in or after 2010 included the Coffee Party USA, the alternative to the Tea Party movement that got a bunch of press in 2010, as well as such explicitly progressive groups as the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada; Rebuild the Dream, founded by former Obama administration official Van Jones; and Progressives United Inc., which was founded by former Wisconsin senator Russ Feingold.


Also included in the special scrutiny were Progress Texas and Progress Missouri Inc.; Tie the Knot, which sells bow ties to raise money to promote same-sex marriage; and ProgressNow, which describes itself as "a year-round never-ending progressive campaign."


The targeting also rolled up centrist groups, such as the Across the Aisle Foundation -- the educational and cultural arm of No Labels, which worked to build momentum for an independent ticket for the presidency -- and politically neutral ones, such as The East Hampton Group for Good Government Inc., formed to encourage better leadership and management of the New York vacation town, and the League of Women Voters of Hawaii.


All of these groups were flagged by the IRS along with the Tea Party class of groups as "potential political cases" and were part of the 31 percent of groups given special scrutiny that were not clearly conservative.




*snip*







Wingnuts: "But...but...but...OBAMA!!!!!" :lol:
 
Why are they targeting anyone?

Clearly you dont have a problem with the government targeting groups and people they see as political enemies, why is that?
 
Why are they targeting anyone?

Clearly you dont have a problem with the government targeting groups and people they see as political enemies, why is that?
Actually, they didn't "target" anyone. That's the point! Groups from both sides, and the middle, were further scrutinized. That's not "targeting". That's being thorough.
 
Why are they targeting anyone?

Clearly you dont have a problem with the government targeting groups and people they see as political enemies, why is that?
Actually, they didn't "target" anyone. That's the point! Groups from both sides, and the middle, were further scrutinized. That's not "targeting". That's being thorough.

The IRS, the administration, and even you have already admitted they did target. The IRS "apologized" for it.

The issue isnt whether they targetted conservative groups or not. We already know they did. The question is how far did this run and how high in the government did the orders come.

Nice try. You might want to figure out your own arguments before you contradict yourself in the future. May I suggest trying to tell the truth? Then you dont have to try to keep your lies straight.
 
Quick Synthaholic get your information to the new Chief of the IRS.

He's obviously wrong and making a fool of himself for apologizing for the behavior of the IRS.

Your source just must know more than the IRS itself!

:lol:

Danny Werfel, the newly minted acting commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, crept close Monday to offering a governmental apology for his agency's long-held habit of targeting conservative organizations, including many tea party groups, with aggressive and intrusive inquisitions after they applied for tax-exempt status during President Barack Obama's first term


Stop him from admitting wrong doing!!! :lmao:

Werfel insisted that the IRS 'stands ready to confront the problems that occurred, hold accountable those who acted inappropriately, be open about what happened, and permanently fix these problems so that such missteps do not occur again.

But any reform, he told Florida Republican Rep. Ander Crenshaw, 'has to start with a recognition that the trust [of taxpayers] has been violated.'

Most Americans agree with that assessment, judging from a Quinnipiac University poll released last week. In that survey, 66 percent said they 'disapproved' of the IRS's performance of its core duties.

'My primary mission,' Werfel said, 'is to restore that trust.'



article-2335422-1A217794000005DC-66_634x412.jpg


It's a good read. More at link.

New IRS chief Danny Werfel says his agency 'violated' Americans' trust | Mail Online
 
This is like the 11th thread Syntha has started trying to spin the IRS story.

Then the next day another damaging piece of evidence comes out, or someone else gets fired.

But it's always entertaining to watch liberals hopelessly try to save their party.
 
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This is like the 11th Syntha has started trying to spin the IRS story.

Then the next day another damaging piece of evidence comes out, or someone else gets fired.

But it's always entertaining to watch liberals hopelessly try to save their party.

How many threads in total now claiming the IRS scandal isn't a scandal and honest really truly it really isn't a scandal and Issa is a bad man do we have going now?

I'm losing track. :lol:
 
This is like the 11th Syntha has started trying to spin the IRS story.

Then the next day another damaging piece of evidence comes out, or someone else gets fired.

But it's always entertaining to watch liberals hopelessly try to save their party.

How many threads in total now claiming the IRS scandal isn't a scandal and honest really truly it really isn't a scandal and Issa is a bad man do we have going now?

I'm losing track. :lol:

Perhaps it's my weakness, but i am a bit curious, what would it take for Syn to actually believe the administration was in a scandal? I mean I'd ask if people dying would cause him to recognize a such as a scandal, but at least two of the scandals the administration is involved in resulted in people dying.
 
Proof the IRS Didn't Target Just Conservatives



Almost one third of the tax-exemption applications selected for additional scrutiny by the IRS were from groups that were not conservative.




Screen%20Shot%202013-06-05%20at%2012.29.43%20AM.png



Close to a third of the advocacy groups named by the Internal Revenue Service as recipients of special scrutiny during tax-exempt application reviews were liberal or neutral in political outlook, a leading nonpartisan tax newsletter reported after conducting an independent analysis of data released by the agency.


All told, around 470 groups were flagged as "potential political cases" between 2010 and 2012, including 298 whose experiences were analyzed in a Treasury Department inspector general's report. Because the IRS by law must not name groups that have not yet been approved or which were rejected, only a subset of their names was made public in May by the agency -- 176 cases.


Of these, "the majority of the groups selected for extra scrutiny probably matched the political criteria the IRS used and backed conservative causes, the Tea Party, or limited government generally," wrote Martin A. Sullivan in a June 3 piece in Tax Notes, a newsletter published by the Tax Analysts group. "But a substantial minority -- almost one third of the subset -- did not fit that description."


Non-conservative advocacy groups given special scrutiny by the IRS in or after 2010 included the Coffee Party USA, the alternative to the Tea Party movement that got a bunch of press in 2010, as well as such explicitly progressive groups as the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada; Rebuild the Dream, founded by former Obama administration official Van Jones; and Progressives United Inc., which was founded by former Wisconsin senator Russ Feingold.


Also included in the special scrutiny were Progress Texas and Progress Missouri Inc.; Tie the Knot, which sells bow ties to raise money to promote same-sex marriage; and ProgressNow, which describes itself as "a year-round never-ending progressive campaign."


The targeting also rolled up centrist groups, such as the Across the Aisle Foundation -- the educational and cultural arm of No Labels, which worked to build momentum for an independent ticket for the presidency -- and politically neutral ones, such as The East Hampton Group for Good Government Inc., formed to encourage better leadership and management of the New York vacation town, and the League of Women Voters of Hawaii.


All of these groups were flagged by the IRS along with the Tea Party class of groups as "potential political cases" and were part of the 31 percent of groups given special scrutiny that were not clearly conservative.




*snip*







Wingnuts: "But...but...but...OBAMA!!!!!" :lol:

Hey doofus loser, your graph doesn't match your article.
 
The IRS didnt target anyone. No one died at Benghazi. Susan Rice never said a Youtube video was responsible for the rioting. The AG never had reporter Rosen's phone wiretapped. The Justice Dept never monitored phone logs at AP. Fast and Furious was the name of a movie and no one died in Mexico.

See. The GOP is just making this stuff up! It. Never. Happened.
 
Why are they targeting anyone?

Clearly you dont have a problem with the government targeting groups and people they see as political enemies, why is that?
Actually, they didn't "target" anyone. That's the point! Groups from both sides, and the middle, were further scrutinized. That's not "targeting". That's being thorough.

You have not proven that conservative groups were not given above average scrutiny. You have a huge chunk of evidence missing.

No one is claiming that all liberal groups were given a pass. The claim is that conservative groups were targeted for closer scrutiny unfairly.

If one third of the groups given special attention were liberal/moderate, and two thirds were conservative, you would need to show that ratio holds up for ALL applications submitted.

You would need to show that conservative organizations submitted two thirds of ALL applications, and liberal/moderate organizations submitted a mere one third of all applications.

Understand?

Your opening post is actually some pretty strong circumstantial evidence that conservative groups were targeted 2 to 1. Unless conservative groups applied for tax free status at a 2 to 1 rate, that does not bode well for your case, and actually strengthens the conservative one.
 
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This is like the 11th Syntha has started trying to spin the IRS story.

Then the next day another damaging piece of evidence comes out, or someone else gets fired.

But it's always entertaining to watch liberals hopelessly try to save their party.

so true. synthy is truly desperate. he ignores obama saying we have a right to mad, the IRS admitting they unfairly targeted conservative groups, two people getting canned....but yeah....according to synthy...the irs and obama are lying.

:lol:
 
"other" necessarily means there were no conservatives in that group

:lol:

poor synthy
 
really, how funny they didn't call ANY of these other groups to testify..

couldn't find them I guess..
 
the op is going to spin himself into a pretzel over this administration..

all the proof given to him and he still spins spins spins

that's a loyal subject there.
 
So Lois took the Fifth for nothing?

People plead the fifth all the time when they have nothing to hide.

Lol. Yes, even when the truth will clear them of all charges and allegations, people still like to plead the fifth as a sort of benign exercise of 5th amendment rights.

Totally common.

.

A mob on a witch hunt has a bad habit of finding what they are looking for. Just ask the women executed in Salem as witches.

When government and partisan hack witch hunters have the power to utterly destroy you, it is often prudent to take the Fifth.

The whole point of us having a Fifth amendment is to avoid the PRESUMPTION OF GUILT which the mob is clearly making.
 
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