Written by Scott Allen

Suggestions for Happy Living Despite Having an IRS Problem, Part 4

Tempe AZ IRS Tax Lien

  • I’ve learned that a smile is an inexpensive way to improve your looks.—Andy Rooney
  • A smile increases your face value.—Anonymous
  • Some people smile very naturally.  Some may be happy but haven’t told their faces about it yet.—Dr. Joe J. Christensen
  • Find a volunteer agency, school, or church that could use your help and volunteer your services for a few hours a month.
Do you have a IRS tax lien in Tempe AZ upsetting your marriage?  Are you tired of the Tempe AZ IRS sending you “love letters”?  There are several options available to resolve your IRS tax debt.  Each settlement option has pros and cons.  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 tax lien problem in Tempe AZ.  Call 480-926-9300 to schedule your free initial consultation.

Scott Allen E.A. has witnessed the success of his family’s IRS resolution practice first hand and is carrying on the tradition to the second generation.  Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. has been helping individuals like you with IRS tax problems since 1977.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Albert Camus’ Myth of Sisyphus and your Sedona AZ IRS Problem

Sedona AZ IRS Problem

Read our thoughts on this and how philosophy can help you through your Sedona Arizona IRS problem.  We all have “rocks” in our life whether its the IRS, a bad divorce, or eating too much candy.  Hopefully these thoughts we have written down here for you can be of some help or some inspiration.

Albert Camus (1913-1960)

Finding Meaning in Life through Engagement not Reflection.

The Myth of Sisyphus

Sisyphus was a character in Greek Mythology.  He was condemned by the gods to a truly pointless task.  He had to roll a rock up a mountain and when he got it to the top it would roll down from its own weight, and Sisyphus would have to do it over again and again and again.  This condemnation of the gods was for all eternity.  Camus refers to this as “the absurd.”  The task assigned to Sisyphus has reference to what we do in our lives.  Don’t we all at some time look at our lives and ask, “What does this all add up to?”  In the case of Sisyphus, I cannot think of anything more absurd than a lifetime filled with futile labor.

The absurd to Camus is a confrontation between the rational human mind and the mind that deserves and demands justice and expects the universe to be comprehensible.  Camus says that the conflict comes when we realize that we live in “universe of benign indifference.”
We are all born with a sense of justice and fairness.  Even young children know how they want to be treated.  We project this longing for justice and fairness onto the universe, and we expect the universe to fulfill our demands.  We think, for example that evil should be punished and goodness rewarded.
Sisyphus is immortal.  What makes his life absurd is the fact that he is condemned to an eternity of futility.    To be condemned to a life with eternal futility is even more absurd than the life we live.  I remember learning about our city and state and country and being amazed by the size of the world.  Then I learned about our solar system and the Milky Way galaxy and that there are billons of stars larger than our earth in our galaxy.  And then I learned that there were billions and billions of galaxies.  I started to feel very insignificant especially when I realized that the universe was over 15 billion years old and that my life time was so infinitesimally short compared to the age of the universe.

I am always intrigued when my children would come to me with something they don’t understand and they ask, “Why?” And that is followed by another and another “Why?”  Eventually I have to say to the child that I don’t know.  Eventually we run out of answers for all of their whys and have to eventually accept that we just don’t know.  There is a limit to what our reason can justify in life.  Eventually we will always be back into the corner of the absurd.

One must eventually ask, “How does Sisyphus cope with the absurd?”  Camus makes it very clear, in telling this story that he refers to Sisyphus as “the absurd hero.”  While we might readily agree that the situation is absurd, but what makes him a hero?”

Camus says that “Sisyphus makes his rock, his thing.”  He puts his whole self into his labor, and one can imagine Sisyphus as he rolls the rock up the mountain coming to notice, appreciate, and even love the various contours and markings on the rock itself.  He comes to study and appreciate, and even become very fond of, the various bumps and levels that the rock has to proceed along.  There is a sense, in which, what he does, is throw himself into his labor.  The consequence of this, Camus tells us, is that Sisyphus must be considered happy.  He can be content and satisfied with his situation through engagement.

There is a way of guaranteeing that you will hate any routine task at home or work.  By always looking at the clock and seeing how much more time you have to go—or looking at the task itself and saying, “I am only half way through,” as you reflect on what you are doing, you in fact undermine it.  Reflection poisons the experience.
Insofar as we get into what we do—make ourselves simply love every moment of it; we love the process, even though it might be painful or tedious at times—to the extent we live our lives to the fullest we are happy.  What is interesting here is that the role of reflection—reason—is a problem insofar that reflections has to do with asking ourselves the question, “What does this amount to?”  The answer is going to be deeply unsatisfying.  You read in Ecclesiastes in the Bible that our lives amount to essentially nothing.
One of the themes of Camus’s philosophy is rebellion.  Sisyphus rebels, but what is interesting is he does not do what we would expect him to do; to drop the rock and refuse to push it any further.  He continues to push the rock.  That is his fate.  As he does it, he rebels in the sense that he refuses to accept the absurdity that has been imposed upon him by the gods.  Nietzsche calls this “amor fati”—love of fate.
Sisyphus must say, “This is what I do, and I am not going to think about the fact that for eternity it will add up to nothing.”  To Dostoevsky consciousness is not a blessing.  Consciousness is not our aim.  Consciousness is the problem.  Camus says of Sisyphus: “If his story is tragic, it is tragic because the hero is conscious.”  Conscious means self-conscious or reflective.  The universe is absurd and does not satisfy our moral demands or our demands for understanding it as well.

To Camus, we either find the meaning of life, in our lives, or we are not going to find it at all.  The message of The Myth of Sisyphus is that insofar as you are wholly engaged in your life and you taste the experience that you have, that is what gives it  meaning.  Once you elevate yourself to a philosophical level and start reflecting, and start asking yourself the questions, “What does it all amount to?  What is its meaning?’—then suddenly you don’t have any answers.

What we get in Camus is a very interesting perspective on our lives in which the idea is not to look at our lives objectively from a distance.  When we do that –detach ourselves from our own experience and engagements—the result is something that is utterly unsatisfactory.  If you watch a couple kissing, there is a sense in which it looks ridiculous.  It is only when you are the one that is engaged in that activity that it becomes meaningful.  Camus wants to see that it is only when we are fully engaged in our lives that life makes sense.

So what is your rock in life?  Each of us has at least one rock and most of us have a  bagful.  The admonition of Jesus to “take up your cross, daily” is a directive to get engaged in positive activity and to do it to the point that we become unaware or even concerned what your activity adds up to.   Sisyphus’ rock is the equivalent to taking up our cross.

I have read stories of ordinary citizens in Germany, after their city was devastated by Allied bombers during World War II, would be stacking bricks, putting the rubble into piles, sweeping the sidewalks and streets and cleaning up the debris the very next morning.  Those who could play a musical instrument would accompany the work being done with Mozart and Beethoven.

The German people did this even though they knew their city would be bombed the very next day and the day after that.  Is it any wonder that Germany, despite the terrible devastation brought against them by the American and Russian armies was the first country to successfully restore its economy after the war?

Conclusion

I guess it is pretty easy to guess if you are reading this blog that your IRS problem in Sedona AZ is your rock.  The only difference is that it is a temporary event, not one for eternity.  However Albert Camus shares with us in his great story, The Myth of Sisyphus the importance of getting engaged in resolving your IRS matter and not just sitting around reflecting on it.  May I suggest that you contact Scott Allen E.A. and schedule a free consultation to determine the best way to take action to resolve your Sedona AZ IRS problem.  Scott can be reached at 480-926-9300.  It will be the best engagement action you can take and he will make sure that your “rock” (IRS) goes away.

 

Written by Scott Allen

How long does it take for the IRS to release a tax lien after I pay off the liability?

The IRS has 30 days to release a federal tax lien in Peoria Arizona after it has been paid off or the statute of limitations has passed.  IRS Code Section 6325 (a) also requires the IRS to send you a copy of the Certificate of Release of Federal Tax Lien.  But this is not a perfect world.  So if you do not have the release within 35 or 40 days, you need to contact the IRS and remind them of their duties.

If you are in dispute with the IRS over your IRS tax lien, call Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. for a free Peoria AZ initial consultation.

info@taxdebtadvisors.com

Written by Scott Allen

What options do I have now that the IRS has filed an Arizona Notice of Federal Tax lien?

Arizona Notice of Federal Tax Lien – IRS

If you want to sell an Arizona asset that has a tax lien, the IRS will discharge the property so that you can sell your property free of the tax lien.  All of the proceeds of this sale must go towards the AZ tax debt.  If you want to get a loan on real estate you can request a subordination which leaves the tax lien on the property but allows the creditor to be ahead of the claim that the IRS has with the tax lien.  The process of the loan must be applied to the tax debt.  A withdrawal of the tax lien eliminates the public notice of federal tax lien and gives creditors assurance that the IRS has no claim against the asset.

If you are considering selling an asset in Arizona or borrowing against an asset and have an IRS tax lien, consider a free initial consultation with Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors.  Tax Debt Advisors has the expertise to work with the IRS on your behalf.  Call 480-926-9300 to schedule your appointment.

 

Written by Scott Allen

IRS Audit Myth Number 2: By Tax Debt Advisors, Inc of Glendale AZ

IRS Audit Myths Glendale AZ

I know now that I made a mistake on my tax return, but I’m reluctant to amend the error for fear of being audited.—in reality the filing of a correct amended return may reduce the chances of being audited, especially if you omitted reporting income that was also reported to the IRS on your original return.

Most of the amended returns prepared by Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors are not audited—perhaps as many as 95% are processed without any further review by the IRS.  If there is an item being amended that is a red flag for a Glendale AZ IRS audit but it is a correction of an error, the auditor will be much more lenient if you amend the return rather than have the auditor discover the error.  If you desire a free consultation near Glendale AZ regarding how to amend your return(s) call Tax Debt Advisors at 480-926-9300.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Is it Possible to Remove an Arizona IRS Tax Lien?

Remove an Arizona IRS Tax Lien

Depending on the facts and circumstances, an IRS lien can be withdrawn, subordinated, discharged or released.  A tax lien will be withdrawn if it was filed without just cause.  A tax lien will be subordinated in cases where the taxpayer is financing real property and able to use the loan proceeds to pay down the tax debt.  A discharge is possible when the taxpayer is selling real property and agrees to pay all the equity towards the tax debt.  And finally an Arizona IRS tax lien will be released when the tax debt has been paid in full, or settled with an accepted Offer in Compromise, or the statute of limitations has expired, or when a tax debt is discharged in bankruptcy and there is no equity in the asset.

Removing an Arizona IRS tax lien under each of these four scenarios will require professional help. TaxDebtAdvisors.com offers a free initial, in office, consultation.  Call Scott today at 480-926-9300 to schedule your appointment.

 

Written by Scott Allen

Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. knows Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Audit Requirements

Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Audit

Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. knows that it is frightening to receive a Phoenix AZ IRS Tax Audit Notice.  It is important to retain a professional who knows how to respond to IRS auditor questions.  It’s best to let your representative respond to the letter and attend the appointment.  It is really hard for taxpayers not to keep talking more than they should when the auditor asks questions.  For over 40 years Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. has represented clients in hundreds of Phoenix AZ IRS tax audit cases.  Most of the time the IRS Auditor will not request you to be present at the audit if you have a representative.  But there are times the auditor can demand your presence and it is best not to fight that and appear you have something to hide.

Successful audits are conditioned upon having adequate and complete records to substantiate deductions taken on your tax return(s).  Do not throw away bank records until you are past the time period that your returns are likely to be audited—three years past the due date.  The important thing to keep in mind is that the auditor is a hired bill collector and they decide amount of the bill.  That doesn’t mean that they will be impossible to work with but it does mean that they are serious about collecting money—YOURS.  Scott Allen E.A. offers a free consultation on Phoenix AZ IRS tax audits and can be reached at 480-926-9300.  He will make your appointment a great day for you!

 

Written by Scott Allen

Who do you call when you need Gilbert Arizona Tax Debt Reduction

Gilbert Arizona Tax Debt Reduction

Tax debt reduction in Gilbert AZ is a reality but only when you are able to file and full pay on time your current taxes.  Often clients will seek tax debt reduction but have not developed their “tax muscles” sufficiently to stay current.  All settlements with the IRS will be voided out if you do not continue to file and full pay on time.  Anyone can get in trouble with the IRS—there are situations in life that cannot be avoided.  But it is another matter to be able to break the cycle of getting back in trouble.  IRS statistics show that almost 80% of installment arrangements are voided out due to non-compliance with filing and paying on time within the first year.

Scott Allen E.A. has the expertise to not only get you the best settlement allowed by law but also to help you get back into compliance and stay there.  Scott offers a free consultation for Gilbert AZ taxpayers and can be reached at 480-926-9300.  He will make your appointment worth your time and be ready to discuss your possible Gilbert Arizona Tax Debt Reduction.  Come prepared with all recent IRS notices and Scott will put your mind at ease.

 

Written by Scott Allen

The IRS has filed a tax lien; can Tax Debt Advisors, Inc still help me?

IRS Tax Lien Mesa AZ

A tax lien in Mesa AZ will make it miserable for you to get a loan.  And if you are given a loan the interest rates will be outrageous.  So if you are being faced with the IRS filing a tax lien against you in Mesa AZ, consider getting professional help and requesting a hearing before the IRS Office of Appeals.  Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. has the expertise to represent you and will meet with the Appeals Officer if he feels the IRS should not file a tax lien against you.

Many clients are under the assumption that they have a tax lien against them still in effect, when in fact the lien expired under the statute of limitations.  IRS tax liens Mesa AZ are self-releasing but if you have not paid off the tax, the IRS will not inform the credit bureaus that the tax lien has expired.

Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. in Mesa, AZ offers a free initial consultation to prevent an IRS tax lien or getting it released.  Call 480-926-9300 to schedule an appointment.

 

www.TaxDebtAdvisorsInc.com

Written by Scott Allen

Tax Debt Advisors, Inc.—Offer in Compromise Facts

Avondale AZ IRS Offer in Compromise Facts

An Offer in Compromise (OIC) allows Avondale AZ taxpayers to settle their tax debt including interest and penalties for less than the amount owed under certain circumstances.  If there is no way you are going to pay the tax debt owed or the IRS liability creates a financial hardship the IRS will consider a lower payback amount.  The IRS takes into consideration your ability to pay, your income and necessary living expenses and any equity you have in assets.

The IRS must be convinced that the government is better off accepting a lower amount than trying to collect the full debt over the remaining statute of limitations.  Not everyone in Avondale AZ qualifies for an OIC or the OIC amount is higher than what the taxpayer can afford.  All taxpayers should consider all other available settlement options before selecting an OIC.

Scott Allen E.A. of Tax Debt Advisors, Inc. has been representing taxpayers before the IRS on all settlement options including OIC.  If you are interested in a free consultation, call 480-926-9300 to schedule an appointment.

 

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