Mac,
And at least 90% of the time, "yes you can" is the right answer. Just have to know some obsure provision not commonly known or structure something in a different way that gets to the same end-result but has a different tax impact. The other 10$ of the time it's uninformed or idiot advice and you're lucky if you don't get thrown in jail thanks to the moron!
I think specialization is more common in the legal and medical professions than accounting but it is certainly there also. What's more unusual about me is not that I have a speciality, but what that speciality is. Very narrow indeed.
Good luck with your tax-effect on your new Hummer!
Nancy
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Nancy
\"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.\" -Benjamin Franklin, 1759
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