Written by Scott Allen

Five Suggestions for Happy Living Despite Having an IRS Problem, Part 11

  1. Do not pursue what is illusory—property and position: all that is gained at the expense of your nerves decade after decade and can be confiscated in one fell night.  Live with a steady superiority over life—Don’t be afraid of misfortune, and do not yearn after happiness; it is after all, all the same: the bitter doesn’t last forever, and the sweet never fill the cup to overflowing.—Alexander Solzhenitsyn
  2. Do not speak of your happiness to one less fortunate than yourself.—Plutarch
  3. The secret of happiness is to make others believe they are the cause of it.—Al Batt
  4. When you relinquish the desire to control your future, you can have more happiness.—Nicole Kidman,  The Scotsman
  5. It is not easy to find happiness in ourselves, and it is not possible to find it elsewhere.—Agnes Repplier
If you are a Mesa Arizona taxpayer struggling on what to do about filing back tax returns please consider Tax Debt Advisors as your first choice.  Click here to be transferred to our homepage to learn more about our company and the path to an IRS Resolution in filing back tax returns in Mesa AZ.  For the last 37 years our niche has been filing back tax returns for Mesa AZ residents.  We we prepare your back tax returns timely and accurate minimizing the chance or any IRS or Arizona audit.  Start sleeping again and call Tax Debt Advisors.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Five Suggestions for Happy Living Despite Having an IRS Problem, Part 10

  • Happiness is always a by-product.  It is probably a matter of temperament, and for anything I know it may be glandular.  But it is not something that can be demanded from life, and if you are not happy you had better stop worrying about it and see what treasures you can pluck from your own brand of unhappiness.—Robertson Davies
  • Those who can laugh without cause have either found the true meaning of happiness or have gone stark raving mad.—Norm Papernick
  • Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.—Ernest Hemingway
  • To be without some of the things you want is an indispensable part of happiness.—Bertrand Russell
  • The happiness of a man in this life does not consist in the absence but in the mastery of his passions.—Alfred Lord Tennyson
IF YOU ARE EXPERIENCING IRS PROBLEMS HERE IN ARIZONA THAT IS KEEPING YOU FROM LIVING THE HAPPY LIFE YOU DESERVE GIVE US A CALL TODAY TO SEE HOW WE CAN ASSIST.  DID YOU RECEIVE A MESA AZ IRS NOTICE OF INTENT TO LEVY?  IF SO, DO NOT WAIT ANY LONGER.  THIS IRS NOTICE OF INTENT TO LEVY IN MESA AZ IS THE FINAL NOTICE THE IRS IS REQUIRED TO SEND OUT BEFORE A LEVY OR GARNISHMENT CAN TAKE PLACE.  MESA ARIZONA IRS NOTICE OF INTENT TO LEVY WILL GET SENT TO YOU CERTIFIED MAIL SO IF YOU ARE NOT HOME TO SIGN FOR IT, IT GET SENT BACK TO YOUR LOCAL POST OFFICE AND THEN BACK TO THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE.  CALL SCOTT ALLEN EA TODAY FOR A FREE CONSULTATION TO STOP IRS ACTION IN MESA AZ.
THANK YOU

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Five Suggestions for Happy Living Despite Having an IRS Problem, Part 9

  • Money can’t buy happiness, but neither can poverty.—Leo Rosten
  • A lifetime of happiness!  No man alive could bear it: it would be hell on earth.—George Bernard Shaw
  • One of the indictments of civilizations is that happiness and intelligence are so rarely found in the same person.—William Feather
  • If there were in the world today any large number of people who desired their own happiness more than they desired the unhappiness of others, we could have paradise in a few years.—Bertrand Russell
  • Happiness is not achieved by the conscious pursuit of happiness; it is generally the by-product of other activities.—Aldous Huxley
There are several options available to settle your Mesa AZ IRS tax debt.  Each settlement options has pros and cons—something good about it as wells as something not so good.  However, one is always better that the rest and is usually quite obvious once the facts have been presented to you without prejudice towards any one solution.  That is why Scott Allen E.A. should be your choice when confronted with a serious Mesa AZ IRS problem. Call 480-926-9300 to schedule your free initial consultation.

Dont let you recent Mesa AZ IRS Tax lien get you down any long.  Lets meet today and see what resources are available to satisfy the Mesa AZ IRS Tax Lien recently filed against you.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

We are Mesa Arizona’s Top IRS Problem Solvers for Tax Preparation

Over 80% of our Mesa AZ IRS tax resolution clients need back tax returns filed.  The IRS requires all delinquent returns to be filed before they will agree to a settlement.  That is why your choice on who represents you before the IRS will prepare your Mesa AZ back tax returns as aggressively as the tax law allows.  Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. has filed over 105,000 late returns since 1977.  Each of those returns has been accepted as filed and included in a settlement option.

Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors is the right choice and now is the time to act.  You will only work with Scott and he provides a free initial consultation.  Call his office today at 480-926-9300 and schedule your appointment.  Scott Allen E.A. is licensed to represent you in all 50 states.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Jewish Teshuvah and Mesa AZ IRS Tax lien Problems

We all make mistakes and one of the hardest things is to forgive ourselves.  Making amends for mistakes and moving forward is explained beautifully with the Jewish belief in Teshuvah or repentance.  Hopefully this subject matter is not so much about a religion as it is about resolving past mistakes.  IRS tax lien problems in Mesa AZ are serious but with proper professional assistance, it is a  matter that can be resolved and settled.  Call Scott Allen E.A. for a free initial consultation regarding your Mesa AZ IRS tax lien problem today at 480-926-9300.  He offers a free initial consultation and will make that day a great day for you.

And now you can learn a little about Jewish Teshuvah

Jewish Teshuvah (Repentance)

Repentance to the Jew is called teshuvah.   Teshuvah literally means “to return” or “to respond.”  To return to a place you have been to or to respond to someone who had been speaking to you.   In Rabbinic Judaism, the idea of repentance or teshuvah is the central concept of Rabbinic Judaism, because Rabbinic Judaism emerges after the Second Temple has been destroyed by the Romans in the year 70 AD.  One of the primary functions of the Temple was to achieve atonement for one’s sins by bringing an animal sacrifice to the priest and the priest would serve as an intermediary and the priest would slit the throat of the animal.  Then you would pledge not to do whatever you had done before—but it was that animal sacrifice that effected atonement.

Once the Temple had been destroyed, the location for atonement no longer existed.  So how do you get clean?  How do you get pure before God from those transgressions that we all commit?  The idea of teshuvah becomes absolutely central in the Rabbinic mind and in Rabbinic religion.
Teshuvah—return or responding is the idea of returning to be in a right relationship with God and responding to God’s call for us to heed the divine commandments that were revealed at Mount Sinai.  These commandments subsequently went through a process of interpretation that was passed down by the Pharisees and the scribes and finally re-interpreted by the Rabbis.
The Rabbis say that teshuvah preceded creation.  In other words, the world could not exist without some way for the people that inhabit this world to rectify their transgressions, or feel as though they are now back again in a right relationship with God.  So before even creation, the world could not exist without teshuvah.
Repentance preceded creation because whenever we inevitably falter or stumble, we need a way to right ourselves and a method to accomplish this.  Jews believe that God wants us to right ourselves by doing teshuvah.
The noun form teshuvah does not appear in the Hebrew Bible, only the verb.  Jews believe that the primary biblical character to exhibit the characteristics of teshuvah  was King David.  King David had an affair with Batsheva.  He sees her from his rooftop.  Batsheva’s husband is away at war.  He has Batsheva brought into his house where they engage in sexual relations which is a capital crime.  It is adultery because she is a married woman.  She gets pregnant and has a child that ends up dying as a punishment for Batsheva and King David.
King David is confronted with what he has done by Nathan his prophet.  All the kings had prophets.  Back then prophets tell the king what the king needs to hear in order to keep him on the straight and narrow.  So when Nathan challenges King David’s behavior with Batsheva, King David immediately confesses, “I stand guilty before the LORD.”  He took responsibility for his actions and regretted what he had done.  To the Jews, David is the model of teshuvah.  King David is the ancestor of the Messiah.  The Messiah is going to be part of that lineage.  So here in the Hebrew Bible, there is a connection between teshuvah and redemption—redemption that only the Messiah can bring.
Leviticus 4 and 5 contain lots of examples of different kinds of sacrifices that the person who has transgressed is responsible for bringing to the priest.  In Leviticus it is not the Temple that the sacrifices are brought to, but the Tabernacle or forerunner of the Temple.  The Tabernacle is a portable Temple that the Israelites used in the desert.  Later on one would go to the temple in Jerusalem and bring an animal sacrifice.
The right religious behavior was a required element of teshuvah.  It was not enough to just bring the animal to be sacrificed.  If you brought them with dirty hands, then that was not good teshuvah.  You had to still bring the animal sacrifice, but you also had to change your evil ways.  When we move into the Rabbinic period, the question then becomes “What do we do?  We can change our evil ways, but we can not bring back animal sacrifice because we no longer have a temple.  The early Jewish Christians answered that problem of not having the Temple anymore through the vicarious atonement of Christ, who died on behalf of their sins.  That was not available to the Rabbinic Jews.

Let me read to you from Moses Maimonides.  He summarized Rabbinic Judaism’s approach towards teshuvah when he said the following:

At the present time, when the Temple no longer exists and we have no altar for atonement, nothing is left but teshuvah.  Teshuvah atones for all transgressions.
“Teshuvah atones for all transgressions.”  In Rabbinic Judaism there are two different kinds of transgressions.  You have those between me and other human beings.  And you have transgressions between me and God where other human beings are not involved.  The Mishnah writings from the first, second and third century of the Common Era which was after the destruction of the Second Temple says that when you harm someone, you need to make restitution, in order to effect teshuvah that involves a transgression with another person—YOU CAN NOT JUST SAY YOU ARE GOING TO DO TESHUVAH.  If you have wronged someone, you need to apologize.  If you have stolen from someone you need to restore their lost property.  In other words, you need to provide restitution for the transgression so that no one else is holding on to bad feelings.
The Rabbis developed this idea of teshuvah.  The Rabbis distinguished teshuvah from fear and teshuvah through love—love of God and wanting to do right, as opposed to fear of punishment in the afterlife.
What the idea of teshuvah is for the Rabbis, is not necessarily or not primarily
a return to God, as we saw in the Hebrew Bible, but a return to God’s will as expressed through Jewish law.  So there are specific lists of things that we are not supposed to do and specific lists of things that we are supposed to do.  When we violate either of those lists, whether it refers to God or refers to other human beings, in order to do teshuvah we must right our ways.  It is about deeds, rather than about devotional posturing or piety in God’s presence.
Once the Temple was destroyed, it was no longer about being in God’s presence.  The Temple was God’s address, but for Rabbinic Judaism it is more about following God’s ways or following God’s will.  The emphasis is on deeds and what people should be doing to maintain themselves in a right relationship with God.
One of the statements in the Talmud about the power of teshuvah is as follows:
Where a b’al teshuvah (one who is engaged in teshuvah) stands, a totally righteous person [who has not transgressed] cannot stand.
I can not stand there because what the b’ al teshuvah has gone through, someone who has never succumbed to temptation can not possibly know.  The person who is completely righteous and who has never transgressed does not know the exhilarating thrill of giving in to sin or evil, whether it is to women or men or drugs or any other vice, there is a kind of pleasure to it.  If the person who is completely righteous has not experience that temptation, then, according to the Talmud, they are on a lower level.  The person who has experienced that temptation and is strong enough to know that thrill and to overcome it, and manifest self-restraint and self-control—for the Rabbis, they are at a higher level.
Another statement of the Talmud, by Resh Lakish, is that “teshuvah is so great that premeditated transgressions are accounted in the great ledger of your deeds as though they were merits,” that premeditated sins in the past, once that person has done teshuvah, are accounted as though they were merits.
This doctrine is transformative in that a person who has gone through the process of teshuvah can help others benefit from that experience.  Not only am I stronger, but I can help other people who have not yet gone through the process of teshuvah.  I can shepherd them through the process, because I have more credibility in their eyes than the person who has never transgressed.
It is like someone who was arrested for breaking into a car.  He goes through the prison system and he repents.  He atones.  Then he becomes a locksmith and helps the auto industry figure out ways to make more ingenious locks that can not be picked.  He is helping other people in a roundabout sort of way by making it less likely they will break into a car.
One of the greatest religious thinkers of the 20th century, Rav Joseph Baer Soloveitchik, said that “Teshuvah is an act of creation, of self-creation.”  Jean-Paul Sartre, a French existentialist, said a similar thing: “that your future is virgin.”  Your future deeds should not be predicated on your past deeds.  You always have an opportunity to recreate yourself.  Haven’t we all moved to a new area or a new job where no one knows the problems of our past and felt that we could have a fresh start from the ground up.  That is the idea of recreating yourself.  So often we get stuck in a rut and do not take advantage of the principle of recreation.  As a non Jew I can say without reservation that too many of my fellow Christians who sin become so weighed down with guilt and remorse that they never recover.
During medieval times Jews observed a code of law by Moses Maimonides.  He asks the question, “What defines teshuvah?”  His answer:
When the straying one leaves his error and removes it from his thoughts, and resolves in his heart never to repeat it…and he regrets it…He needs to make oral confession and say that these matters are finished from his heart.
To Jews it is important that it is done orally.  They feel a need to hear themselves say it for it to have maximum impact.  It is not just about thinking, but it is also saying it out loud.  It does not have to be an oral confession to someone else.  God created the world through his speech according to Genesis 1.  For the Rabbinic tradition, words are very powerful.  We need to hear those words that we are leaving this forever.
Many early Zionists believed in the notion of return (teshuvah) to the Land of Israel as part of teshuvah.  Joni Mitchell, a popular singer put it this way in one of her songs:
We are stardust.
We are golden
And we have to get ourselves back to the garden
We are stardust.
We are golden
And we have to get ourselves back to the garden
Is it the garden of goodness?  Is it the Garden of Eden? Is it the garden of teshuvah?  Or is it the garden of Palestine?  I believe she is referring to all of them.

Jewish Teshuvah and IRS Problems
We all make mistakes and one of the hardest things is to forgive ourselves.  Making amends for mistakes and moving forward is explained beautifully with the Jewish belief in Teshuvah or repentance.  Hopefully this subject matter is not so much about a religion as it is about resolving past mistakes.  IRS problems are serious but with proper professional assistance, it is a  matter that can be resolved and settled.  Call Scott Allen E.A. for a free initial consultation regarding your IRS problem today at 480-926-9300.  He offers a free initial consultation and will make that day a great day for you.
And now you can learn a little about Jewish Teshuvah
Jewish Teshuvah (Repentance)
Repentance to the Jew is called teshuvah.   Teshuvah literally means “to return” or “to respond.”  To return to a place you have been to or to respond to someone who had been speaking to you.   In Rabbinic Judaism, the idea of repentance or teshuvah is the central concept of Rabbinic Judaism, because Rabbinic Judaism emerges after the Second Temple has been destroyed by the Romans in the year 70 AD.  One of the primary functions of the Temple was to achieve atonement for one’s sins by bringing an animal sacrifice to the priest and the priest would serve as an intermediary and the priest would slit the throat of the animal.  Then you would pledge not to do whatever you had done before—but it was that animal sacrifice that effected atonement.
Once the Temple had been destroyed, the location for atonement no longer existed.  So how do you get clean?  How do you get pure before God from those transgressions that we all commit?  The idea of teshuvah becomes absolutely central in the Rabbinic mind and in Rabbinic religion.
Teshuvah—return or responding is the idea of returning to be in a right relationship with God and responding to God’s call for us to heed the divine commandments that were revealed at Mount Sinai.  These commandments subsequently went through a process of interpretation that was passed down by the Pharisees and the scribes and finally re-interpreted by the Rabbis.
The Rabbis say that teshuvah preceded creation.  In other words, the world could not exist without some way for the people that inhabit this world to rectify their transgressions, or feel as though they are now back again in a right relationship with God.  So before even creation, the world could not exist without teshuvah.  Repentance preceded creation because whenever we inevitably falter or stumble, we need a way to right ourselves and a method to accomplish this.  Jews believe that God wants us to right ourselves by doing teshuvah.
The noun form teshuvah does not appear in the Hebrew Bible, only the verb.  Jews believe that the primary biblical character to exhibit the characteristics of teshuvah  was King David.  King David had an affair with Batsheva.  He sees her from his rooftop.  Batsheva’s husband is away at war.  He has Batsheva brought into his house where they engage in sexual relations which is a capital crime.  It is adultery because she is a married woman.  She gets pregnant and has a child that ends up dying as a punishment for Batsheva and King David.
King David is confronted with what he has done by Nathan his prophet.  All the kings had prophets.  Back then prophets tell the king what the king needs to hear in order to keep him on the straight and narrow.  So when Nathan challenges King David’s behavior with Batsheva, King David immediately confesses, “I stand guilty before the LORD.”  He took responsibility for his actions and regretted what he had done.  To the Jews, David is the model of teshuvah.  King David is the ancestor of the Messiah.  The Messiah is going to be part of that lineage.  So here in the Hebrew Bible, there is a connection between teshuvah and redemption—redemption that only the Messiah can bring.
Leviticus 4 and 5 contain lots of examples of different kinds of sacrifices that the person who has transgressed is responsible for bringing to the priest.  In Leviticus it is not the Temple that the sacrifices are brought to, but the Tabernacle or forerunner of the Temple.  The Tabernacle is a portable Temple that the Israelites used in the desert.  Later on one would go to the temple in Jerusalem and bring an animal sacrifice.
The right religious behavior was a required element of teshuvah.  It was not enough to just bring the animal to be sacrificed.  If you brought them with dirty hands, then that was not good teshuvah.  You had to still bring the animal sacrifice, but you also had to change your evil ways.  When we move into the Rabbinic period, the question then becomes “What do we do?  We can change our evil ways, but we can not bring back animal sacrifice because we no longer have a temple.  The early Jewish Christians answered that problem of not having the Temple anymore through the vicarious atonement of Christ, who died on behalf of their sins.  That was not available to the Rabbinic Jews.
Let me read to you from Moses Maimonides.  He summarized Rabbinic Judaism’s approach towards teshuvah when he said the following:
At the present time, when the Temple no longer exists and we have no altar for atonement, nothing is left but teshuvah.  Teshuvah atones for all transgressions.
“Teshuvah atones for all transgressions.”  In Rabbinic Judaism there are two different kinds of transgressions.  You have those between me and other human beings.  And you have transgressions between me and God where other human beings are not involved.  The Mishnah writings from the first, second and third century of the Common Era which was after the destruction of the Second Temple says that when you harm someone, you need to make restitution, in order to effect teshuvah that involves a transgression with another person—YOU CAN NOT JUST SAY YOU ARE GOING TO DO TESHUVAH.  If you have wronged someone, you need to apologize.  If you have stolen from someone you need to restore their lost property.  In other words, you need to provide restitution for the transgression so that no one else is holding on to bad feelings.
The Rabbis developed this idea of teshuvah.  The Rabbis distinguished teshuvah from fear and teshuvah through love—love of God and wanting to do right, as opposed to fear of punishment in the afterlife.
What the idea of teshuvah is for the Rabbis, is not necessarily or not primarilya return to God, as we saw in the Hebrew Bible, but a return to God’s will as expressed through Jewish law.  So there are specific lists of things that we are not supposed to do and specific lists of things that we are supposed to do.  When we violate either of those lists, whether it refers to God or refers to other human beings, in order to do teshuvah we must right our ways.  It is about deeds, rather than about devotional posturing or piety in God’s presence.
Once the Temple was destroyed, it was no longer about being in God’s presence.  The Temple was God’s address, but for Rabbinic Judaism it is more about following God’s ways or following God’s will.  The emphasis is on deeds and what people should be doing to maintain themselves in a right relationship with God.
One of the statements in the Talmud about the power of teshuvah is as follows:
Where a b’al teshuvah (one who is engaged in teshuvah) stands, a totally righteous person [who has not transgressed] cannot stand.
I can not stand there because what the b’ al teshuvah has gone through, someone who has never succumbed to temptation can not possibly know.  The person who is completely righteous and who has never transgressed does not know the exhilarating thrill of giving in to sin or evil, whether it is to women or men or drugs or any other vice, there is a kind of pleasure to it.  If the person who is completely righteous has not experience that temptation, then, according to the Talmud, they are on a lower level.  The person who has experienced that temptation and is strong enough to know that thrill and to overcome it, and manifest self-restraint and self-control—for the Rabbis, they are at a higher level.
Another statement of the Talmud, by Resh Lakish, is that “teshuvah is so great that premeditated transgressions are accounted in the great ledger of your deeds as though they were merits,” that premeditated sins in the past, once that person has done teshuvah, are accounted as though they were merits.
This doctrine is transformative in that a person who has gone through the process of teshuvah can help others benefit from that experience.  Not only am I stronger, but I can help other people who have not yet gone through the process of teshuvah.  I can shepherd them through the process, because I have more credibility in their eyes than the person who has never transgressed.
It is like someone who was arrested for breaking into a car.  He goes through the prison system and he repents.  He atones.  Then he becomes a locksmith and helps the auto industry figure out ways to make more ingenious locks that can not be picked.  He is helping other people in a roundabout sort of way by making it less likely they will break into a car.
One of the greatest religious thinkers of the 20th century, Rav Joseph Baer Soloveitchik, said that “Teshuvah is an act of creation, of self-creation.”  Jean-Paul Sartre, a French existentialist, said a similar thing: “that your future is virgin.”  Your future deeds should not be predicated on your past deeds.  You always have an opportunity to recreate yourself.  Haven’t we all moved to a new area or a new job where no one knows the problems of our past and felt that we could have a fresh start from the ground up.  That is the idea of recreating yourself.  So often we get stuck in a rut and do not take advantage of the principle of recreation.  As a non Jew I can say without reservation that too many of my fellow Christians who sin become so weighed down with guilt and remorse that they never recover.
During medieval times Jews observed a code of law by Moses Maimonides.  He asks the question, “What defines teshuvah?”  His answer:
When the straying one leaves his error and removes it from his thoughts, and resolves in his heart never to repeat it…and he regrets it…He needs to make oral confession and say that these matters are finished from his heart.
To Jews it is important that it is done orally.  They feel a need to hear themselves say it for it to have maximum impact.  It is not just about thinking, but it is also saying it out loud.  It does not have to be an oral confession to someone else.  God created the world through his speech according to Genesis 1.  For the Rabbinic tradition, words are very powerful.  We need to hear those words that we are leaving this forever.
Many early Zionists believed in the notion of return (teshuvah) to the Land of Israel as part of teshuvah.  Joni Mitchell, a popular singer put it this way in one of her songs:
We are stardust.We are goldenAnd we have to get ourselves back to the garden
We are stardust.We are goldenAnd we have to get ourselves back to the garden
Is it the garden of goodness?  Is it the Garden of Eden? Is it the garden of teshuvah?  Or is it the garden of Palestine?  I believe she is referring to all of them.

Written by Scott Allen

We are Mesa Arizona’s Top IRS Problem Solvers to Stop an IRS Bank Levy

It is almost against human nature to take corrective action on a past mistake until it reaches a moment of crisis.  When a Mesa AZ taxpayer receives a notice from their bank that all of their funds have been frozen and will be applied towards their IRS tax debt, the situation becomes a crisis.  Invariably the Mesa AZ IRS levy on your account will come at the most inopportune time.  And when this occurs, you know you need professional help but don’t have any money to retain a qualified IRS resolution expert.  Hopefully you are reading this before your bank account has been levied.

If you have unfiled tax returns, filing your back tax returns is your first step.  You need to get all delinquent returns filed.  The IRS wants to put all of your past tax debt into one IRS settlement.  Often the Mesa AZ IRS levy is due to returns that were not filed but, if they had been filed, there would have been a refund.  By filing the back tax returns, you are qualifying for an IRS levy release as long as you don’t owe any past IRS debt.  If you do owe, the IRS will issue a levy release as soon as you have entered into a settlement option.

Scott Allen E.A. is the right choice to help you catch up on filing your past due returns, enter the correct IRS settlement option and get your Mesa Arizona IRS bank levy released.  Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors offers a free initial consultation and can be reached at 480-926-9300.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. cautions you on the “Pennies on the Dollar” IRS Advertisements

Although it is rare to hear or read about “Pennies on the Dollar” settlements with the IRS anymore, they still exist.  The reason is that phrase was used by predators taking money and advantage of vulnerable Mesa AZ taxpayers looking for an escape from their IRS tax debt.  Another reason is that most of these predator companies are out of business.  The few that still lure unsuspecting taxpayers in Mesa AZ with pennies on the dollar promises are employees of these defunct companies still trying to take advantage of taxpayers.  If you received a phone call from a company not in your area—out of state—you are best to hang up and find someone local who has been in business for a significant time and who you can meet with face to face.

Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. offers a free face to face consultation about all of your IRS settlement options.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Arizona’s Tax Debt Advisors—Why are most IRS Offer in Compromise (OIC) Rejected?

Let’s just state the facts frankly.  Almost every taxpayer and most tax advisors are not competent and/or knowledgeable about the OIC filing requirements and the follow through needed to get an OIC accepted.  Many proper OIC applications are rejected because the IRS loses information or reassigns OIC cases to new agents and the hand off is not communicated properly.  The IRS is a huge bureaucracy that needs professional outside assistance to keep their attention on cases that will qualify for acceptance.

Consider Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors as your Arizona professional to file and monitor your OIC through the IRS maze.  Tax Debt Advisors in Arizona will not take your case unless it is in your best interest.  Tax Debt Advisors offers a free initial consultation and can be reached at 480-926-9300 for an appointment.  Call today for an appointment and find out why they have settled over 105,000 tax debts since 1977.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Five Suggestions for Happy Living Despite Having an IRS Problem, Part 8

  • Happiness isn’t something you experience; it’s something you remember.—Oscar Levant
  • One of the keys to happiness is a bad memory.—Rita Mae Brown
  • Happiness is nothing more than good health and a bad memory.—Albert Schweitzer
  • The pursuit of happiness is a most ridiculous phrase; if you pursue happiness you’ll never find it.—C. P. Snow
  • Happiness is having a large, loving caring, close-knit family in another city.—George Burns
To discuss how we can assist you in your quest for happiness in life despite having an IRS problem here in Arizona call and schedule to meet with Scott Allen EA for a free evaluation.  Tax Debt Advisors, Inc has fixed over 105,000 tax debts and has filed an equal number of tax returns for Arizona taxpayers. Don’t let you Arizona IRS debt problem affect another day of your life.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

Five Suggestions for Happy Living Despite Having an IRS Problem, Part 7

  • Evaluate the amount of time you spend in pursuing those things of fleeting pleasure versus that which will bring you lasting happiness.
  • The greatest decision of life is between good and evil.—Boyd K. Packer
  • True happiness is not made in getting something.  True happiness is becoming something.—Marvin J. Ashton
  • “Yesterday is dead, tomorrow hasn’t arrived yet.  I have just one day, today, and I’m going to be happy in it.”—Groucho Marx
  • One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one’s work is terribly important.—Bertrand Russell
There are many ways settle your Tempe AZ IRS tax debt.  Each settlement options has pros and cons—something good about it as wells as something not so good.  However, one is always better that the rest and is usually quite obvious once the facts have been presented to you without prejudice towards any one solution.  That is why Scott Allen E.A. should be your choice when confronted with a serious IRS problem in Tempe AZ.

There are also several options available to you with filings back tax returns in Tempe Arizona.   Sometimes when a taxpayer fails to file the IRS can file the Tempe AZ back tax returns for them causing unwanted IRS balances due.  We can protest those return by preparing correct Tempe AZ back tax returns in and getting them filed and accepted by the IRS.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

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