If you pay taxes with gold coins at their face value instead of paper dollars (i.e. taxes total being equal coins face value total), you effectively end up paying more than you would pay if you previously sold your coins at their market price and paid the original tax plus the tax due to the commodity value of your coins.
And who would be stupid enough to do that?
People are stupid, but that not that stupid. Most of them can count.
This doesn't render payment of taxes with gold coins at their face value either impossible or eligible for taxing the commodity value of them (which was your point). You can't pay an income tax on an income that you didn't get (that was my point)...
Actually your entire thesis is incorrect and you missed the point of the links I provided in a prior post.
If someone pays you face value for your gold coins, you and they will both be taxed as if you gave them incremental commodity value as a gift. So they will pay income taxes on that portion.
My links showed someone tried to pay payroll using face value of coins and it was ruled he under-reported payroll.
I didn't miss the point of the links you provided. They are just not relevant to the issue of paying taxes with gold coins
I wasn't talking about someone paying somebody gold coins as wages or whatever (which I mentioned
specifically), I was talking about paying
taxes (not wages) with gold coins at their face value (total taxes = total face value of coins) and nothing beyond that. I hope I made it clear at least now. Why you raised the point which is not relevant to the issue what I had been talking about (i.e. paying taxes with gold coins,
not wages) is beyond my understanding...