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Unbridled Power: Inside the Secret Culture of the IRS

Unbridled Power: Inside the Secret Culture of the IRS

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $18.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wake up America -- this is the tip of the iceburg
Review: An excellent book by a very brave author. It kept me awake all night -- in fact, I may never sleep again. After searching far and wide -- but failing to find many other books on the inner secret workings of the IRS -- this one hit the spot. Does anyone really know how to audit these 'servants' of ours? Mrs Davis has given us so many more questions to ask. Forget volunteering -- this should be required reading for all taxpayers

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The most feared government agency? If so, with good reason.
Review: Before I read this book, I assumed that it was the story of a single individual's plight inside of the IRS. I thought it could be a questionable account, perhaps based on unsubstantiable facts. In fact, the book's subject matter is much broader than only Shelley Davis' experience. Ms. Davis, in true historical form, describes as reality an organization that should only exist in the minds of science-fiction writers. Even if only a fraction of her allegations are true, this work represents an irrecoverably scathing indictment on an admittedly powerful government agency. Although she never makes the connection, she paints a picture of official organized crime, a government body out of control, operating in the underworld of power and intimidation, where the law is openly despised. It is clear that the IRS requires immediate and extensive reform, in order that it might be made accountable to the people of the United States

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: If it were a movie I'd give it "Two Thumbs Up."
Review: Congratulations on a great book! That rattling sound across the country is from the bones of all the unearthed skeletons tumbling out of their long sealed crypts. In its entirety, the book is a call to action for the Congress. I very much enjoyed the order of presentation, concert-like. It starts out in innocence with just a dash of naivete'. One can almost hear the soothing strains of Rites of Spring. By chapter three, however, Beethoven's Fifth Symphony begins to dominate. Ever intensifying, the concert moves into Wagner's Ride of the Valkeries by the time the reader arrives at chapter ten. The final chapters (hopefully) represent a funeral dirge for IRS mismanagement and corruption. Insults to executives? If truth is insulting, so be it. IRS management (an oxymoron) is getting a long overdue comeuppance for years of arrogance, insensitivity and outright duplicity.

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: send a message to the IRS: make this book a bestseller!
Review: Everyone I talk with asks, "But what can I do to fix the IRS?" A simple answer is to buy Unbridled Power. If the IRS knows that people are concerned, ready to learn, ready for change, they might

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read... a great case for abolishment of the IRS
Review: For anyone who wants to see a Govt. Bureacracy in meltdown, and that is still on going read this! With the recent retirement of Mr. Gross and the new IRS Commissioner Rossotti's idea to redo everyting, coupled with the attempts by Congress to "simplify" it on the one hand --by making it more difficult, to the other extreme of abolishing it altogether, you will soon see we are headed to another 1985. Considering this kind of book was never done before on the IRS, it stands by itself. All of our legislators should be required to read it and take a test on it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Must read to find out why Govt. does not work!
Review: For anyone who wants to see a Govt. Bureacracy in meltdown, and that is still on going read this! With the recent retirement of Mr. Gross and the new IRS Commissioner Rossotti's idea to redo everyting, coupled with the attempts by Congress to "simplify" it on the one hand --by making it more difficult, to the other extreme of abolishing it altogether, you will soon see we are headed to another 1985. Considering this kind of book was never done before on the IRS, it stands by itself. All of our legislators should be required to read it and take a test on it!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Most boring book I have read
Review: I, along with others of you, are scared to death of the intrusive ways of the IRS. That was the reason I wanted to read this book, by someone on the inside. From the start all Ms. Davis could do was tell us how many times a fellow employee said, "Oh, you're the historian." I was hoping to hear more on how this government department works and the dirt about how things are handled. I did not learn anything new that has not been written before. I would not recommend this book to anyone looking for the dirt on the IRS

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Book should be retitled Unfulfilled Promises
Review: Let me start by saying that I do not condone the present state of the IRS and that, like a recent presidential candidate, I would like to see the IRS abolished as we know it. However, I feel that Unbridled Power did not even come close to delivering on what is promised in the synopsis and cover flaps. Shelley Davis states that unethical, and even unlawful, behavior is rampant within the IRS. Yet, within 260 pages of text, she provides us with only a few such examples, and the frequency with which she refers to these few examples undermines her claim that such behavior is commonplace. The author's descriptions of her own actions toward the end of her employment at the IRS further erode her credibility regarding the severity of the problem. Davis claims that often times the IRS has a blatant disregard for federal laws and that certain actions by IRS employees could be construed as a violation of these laws. However, when she was asked point blank by an IRS investigator if charges should be brought, Davis reponds that what she really wants is "change". Also, just prior to her departure, Davis is asked to submit a report detailing her experiences at the IRS, a report which she readily admits would be the perfect opportunity to memorialize the atrocious actions she has witnessed and the people responsible for these actions. Once again, Davis demurs and decides to "not burn any bridges." If the actions of the IRS are so egregious, why isn't an outside agency such as the FBI involved? Davis complains that the IRS is incapable of policing itself, yet all her efforts to "whistle blow" (a favorite phrase of hers) were conducted along the very same reporting channels Davis derides as being inadequate and ineffective. Much of what Davis talks about in her book can better be described as "entrenched bureaucracy". In the end, her efforts to change the status quo did not succeed because she was a victim of this bureaucracy and, more importantly, because she herself became a part of this same bureaucracy. Rather than a scorching expose, this book is, at best, food for thought

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A must read for anyone with an interest in the IRS
Review: Shelly Davis has written a book that reveals some of the internal workings of the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS as revealed by Davis is a corrupt, paranoid organization that goes to more trouble to cover up its own failings and illegal activities than it expends doing its legitimate job. Davis shows that the law is no barrier to IRS proceedings. In particular she describes the IRS repeated and apparently systematic efforts to conceal its operations by destroying internal records in violation of the Federal Records Act. Davis writes in a straightforward narrative style suitable for an account of bureaucratic bumbling by one of the nations most important governmental agencies. If you have had an interest in the Internal Revenue Service, tax problms or an interest in how bureaucracies work this book is essential reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read... a great case for abolishment of the IRS
Review: This is not some lunatic fringe wacko attacking the government, but someone who truly wanted to work to improve the IRS. The reports of serious lack of morals or ethics by hign ranking government employees was scary. The highest praise I can give this book is that it reads like a true history... documented and detailed... trying to be objective even when the IRS turned on her. In the end, you realize that the only 'reform' possible is to abolish the whole system.


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