I REALLY want to become a tax attorney. And although I haven’t started law school and wont start law school till I get my bachelors in 2025. I have a few questions, I heard that getting a job as a tax attorney is incredibly hard, is that true?? I will start uni this fall as a business admin major, do you think I should change it to accounting to better understand tax ??
@@ihadtotaketheredpill I’m in this exact same position. I chose to major in accounting since that seemed to be the closest to tax law I could get. I’ve got 2 years left on this degree, but I didn’t get started until later in life so I won’t graduate with my bachelors until 2023-2024 (I’ll be 33-34 y/o by then). I assume you’re somewhere in Europe/Australia( because you called it uni)?
@@ihadtotaketheredpill My mistake haha, I lived with a few Australians in my early 20s and that was the first time I heard someone call it uni so I just assumed. Either way, to answer your question about job prospects, I would say keep pushing! I have several close friends who are attorneys (only one specializes in tax) and they have all advised that, no, it isn’t easy but if it is something you are passionate about you have a great chance of being highly successful. You should look into not only tax law but also structuring businesses/general business law, and mergers and acquisitions. Hope this helped
@@bryantthomason3664 Well no career is easy really if you want to bring in big bucks. I know the lawyer market is very saturated but, I believe that if I go to a T14 like Irvine I can stand out more. I appreciate the tips and will look into it as I go through college and get my degree. If you dont mind I have 2 more questions. If you dont mind me asking, how much money does your friend make that specializes in tax. Also, how should I start researching business/general business law. I plan on changing my degree to Accounting instead of business admin so I dont think ill learn it in college
Tax Law should be easy to defend ANY client.....because TAXABLE YEARS ENDED AUGUST 16 1954! 26 CFR 1.0-1 of the IRC of 1954 paragraph (d) clearly says TAXABLE YEARS began December 31 1953 and ENDED AUGUST 16 1954. Any Subtitle F compliant enforcement provisions took effect the day AFTER the date of ENACTMENT which was August 17 1954 but on that day there was NO TAX TO ENFORCE AS the tax died expired the day before... August 16 1954 passed into LAW by the 83rd Congress AS LAW and published AS LAW in Volume 68A of the United States Statutes at Large and Federal Register. There has NOT BEEN AN ENFORCEABLE LEGAL INCOME TAX FOR 70 YEARS!!!
I start law school in January and I want to get an LLM in tax. Although this is 6 years old, I found this extremely beneficial
I REALLY want to become a tax attorney. And although I haven’t started law school and wont start law school till I get my bachelors in 2025. I have a few questions, I heard that getting a job as a tax attorney is incredibly hard, is that true?? I will start uni this fall as a business admin major, do you think I should change it to accounting to better understand tax ??
@@ihadtotaketheredpill I’m in this exact same position. I chose to major in accounting since that seemed to be the closest to tax law I could get. I’ve got 2 years left on this degree, but I didn’t get started until later in life so I won’t graduate with my bachelors until 2023-2024 (I’ll be 33-34 y/o by then). I assume you’re somewhere in Europe/Australia( because you called it uni)?
@@bryantthomason3664 No lol im in the United States.
@@ihadtotaketheredpill My mistake haha, I lived with a few Australians in my early 20s and that was the first time I heard someone call it uni so I just assumed. Either way, to answer your question about job prospects, I would say keep pushing! I have several close friends who are attorneys (only one specializes in tax) and they have all advised that, no, it isn’t easy but if it is something you are passionate about you have a great chance of being highly successful. You should look into not only tax law but also structuring businesses/general business law, and mergers and acquisitions. Hope this helped
@@bryantthomason3664 Well no career is easy really if you want to bring in big bucks. I know the lawyer market is very saturated but, I believe that if I go to a T14 like Irvine I can stand out more. I appreciate the tips and will look into it as I go through college and get my degree. If you dont mind I have 2 more questions. If you dont mind me asking, how much money does your friend make that specializes in tax. Also, how should I start researching business/general business law. I plan on changing my degree to Accounting instead of business admin so I dont think ill learn it in college
Why is the board behind the panel moving?
First dude is a horrible public speaker. Not someone to represent as a sharp and quick witted tax lawyer.
That's racist
@@notarussianbot8157 looks like they saved the best for second to last.
I thought he did well,,, very personable, friendly
Tax Law should be easy to defend ANY client.....because TAXABLE YEARS ENDED AUGUST 16 1954! 26 CFR 1.0-1 of the IRC of 1954 paragraph (d) clearly says TAXABLE YEARS began December 31 1953 and ENDED AUGUST 16 1954. Any Subtitle F compliant enforcement provisions took effect the day AFTER the date of ENACTMENT which was August 17 1954 but on that day there was NO TAX TO ENFORCE AS the tax died expired the day before... August 16 1954 passed into LAW by the 83rd Congress AS LAW and published AS LAW in Volume 68A of the United States Statutes at Large and Federal Register. There has NOT BEEN AN ENFORCEABLE LEGAL INCOME TAX FOR 70 YEARS!!!
you're an idiot