Obviously borrowed from the ChEAr$ reference in another thread...
Well, what about it folks? Like most of us, I have come to the board several times for advice and have been told "No, you have no cite to support your position."
In some of these situations I had no cite to support me, but also no cite to DISALLOW me either. It's like if I can't find a cite that allows me to go to the bathroom, then I can't go.
There are two ends of this spectrum - one wants to stifle creative thinking by limiting the activity to what is given a blessing by the cites. The proverbial "box" that stops people from "thinking outside the box." The other end of the spectrum espouses positions which may not be specifically cited, but flies in the face of existing cites and clearly violates their spirit and thought process.
Are all of us somewhere on this spectrum? Tax symposium lecturer Guido van der Hoeven says all of us have a "chicken" factor, meaning all of us have some degree of liberal position but also a limit beyond which we will not go.
Asking for a cite is common among us, and is usually the result of someone shooting from the hip instead of offering authentic information that will resolve the query with authority. In some cases maybe we DO ask for a stinkin' cite when it is unnecessary.
Comments?
Well, what about it folks? Like most of us, I have come to the board several times for advice and have been told "No, you have no cite to support your position."
In some of these situations I had no cite to support me, but also no cite to DISALLOW me either. It's like if I can't find a cite that allows me to go to the bathroom, then I can't go.
There are two ends of this spectrum - one wants to stifle creative thinking by limiting the activity to what is given a blessing by the cites. The proverbial "box" that stops people from "thinking outside the box." The other end of the spectrum espouses positions which may not be specifically cited, but flies in the face of existing cites and clearly violates their spirit and thought process.
Are all of us somewhere on this spectrum? Tax symposium lecturer Guido van der Hoeven says all of us have a "chicken" factor, meaning all of us have some degree of liberal position but also a limit beyond which we will not go.
Asking for a cite is common among us, and is usually the result of someone shooting from the hip instead of offering authentic information that will resolve the query with authority. In some cases maybe we DO ask for a stinkin' cite when it is unnecessary.
Comments?
Comment