The Dialectical Path of LawAnthropological structuralism and law -- Towards more memes of theories -- Is there a "Jungian archetype" of government? : structuralism and constitutional forms of government in a post-modern world -- What is money? The debt-promise to pay - answer to anthropological legal and historical analysis -- An example discussed -- Complication : compare and contrast the policies of the U.S. precedent as outlined in regard to risk allocation to BEPS Action 9 Report on risk allocation -- The swerve to the future -- Reason (1) U.S. constitutional policy regarding international law and the concept of stare decisis -- Reason (2) : following the concept of stare decisis: summary of U.S. Tax Court precedent on transfer pricing regarding risk allocation -- Reason (3) The U.S. Tax Court will not apply Action 9 : Amazon re-examined, and the IRS's unwillingness and inability to apply OECD's Action 9 recommendations on risk analysis -- Compare and contrast current U.S. precedent to BEPS Action 9 report on risk allocation -- The conclusion and possible answers to Chapters 5 through 11 -- Policy questions for the future -- Can the system of money and debt be a sanctuary legally? -- Conclusion : Gödel, Escher, and Wittgenstein? The end of philosophy and linguistic analysis of law. |