Cooperative Assault

Monday, February 13, 2006

Letter to the IRS

[originally posted April 15, 2005]
(don't know who wrote it)

Dear Sirs:

I am responding to your letter denying the deduction for two of the three dependents I claimed on my 2004 Federal Income Tax return. Thank you. I have questioned whether these are my children or not for years. They are evil and expensive.

It's only fair that since they are minors and not my responsibility that the government(who, evidently, is now taxing me more to care fore these waifs) knows something about them and what to expect over the next year. You may apply next year to reassign them to me and reinstate the deduction. This year they are yours!

The oldest, Kristen, is now 17. She is brilliant. Ask her! I suggest you put her to work in your office where she can answer peoples' questions about their returns. While she has had no formal training, it has not seemed to hamper her knowledge of any other subject you can name. Taxes should be a breeze. Next year she is going to college. I think it's wonderful that you will now be responsible for that little expense. While you mull that over, keep in mind she has a truck. It doesn't run at the moment so you have the immediate decision of appropriating some Department of Defense funds to fix the vehicle or getting up early to drive her to school.

Patrick is 14. I've had my suspicions about this one. His eyes are a little too close together for normal people. He may be a tax examiner himself someday if you don't incarcerate him first.

In February I was rudely awakened at three in the morning by a police officer who was bringing Pat home. He and his friends were TP'ing houses. In the future would you like him delivered to the local IRS office or sent directly to Ogden, UT? Kids at 14 will do almost anything on a dare. His hair is purple; permanent dye, temporary dye, what's the big deal? Learn to deal with it. You'll have plenty of time, since he is sitting out a few days of school after instigating a food fight.

I'll take care of filing your phone number with the vice principal. Oh yes, he, and all his friends, have raging hormones. DO NOT leave any of them unsupervised with girls, explosives, inflammables, inflatable, vehicles, or telephones.

Heather is an alien. She slid through time warp and appeared quite by magic one year. I'm sure this one is yours. She is 10, going on 21. She came from a bad trip in the sixties. She wears tye-dyed clothes, beads, sandals and hair that looks like Tiny Tim's. Fortunately you will be raising my taxes to help you offset the pinch of her remedial reading courses. Hooked on Phonics is expensive so the schools dropped it. Good news! You can buy it yourself for half the amount of the deduction you are denying! It's quite obvious we were terrible parents (ask the other two) so they have "helped" raise this one to a new level of terror: she cannot speak English. Most people nder twenty understand the curious patois she fashioned out of valley girl/boys in the hood/reggae/yuppie/political double speak; I don't. The school sends her to a speech pathologist who has her roll her R's. It added a refreshing Mexican/Irish touch to her voice. She wears hats backwards, pants baggy and wants one of her ears pierced four more times. There is a fascination with tattoos that worries me but I'm sure you can handle it. Bring a truck when you come to get her; she sort of "nests" in her room and I think it would be easier to move the entire thing than find out what it's really made of.

You denied two of the three deductions, so I guess it's only fair you get to pick which two you will take. I prefer you take the two youngest; I still go bankrupt with Kristen's college expense but then I'm free! If you take the two oldest at least I have time for counseling before Heather becomes a teenager. If you take the two girls, I won't feel so bad about putting Patrick in a military academy. Please let me know of your decision as soon as possible, as I have already increased the withholding on my W4 to cover the $395 in additional tax and made a down payment on an airplane.

Sincerely,
***

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