Its all tied together. First this video with Scott McKay:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/PWAjJxAKrL9L/
He mentions NESARA being active Monday and fully in place by the 15th of March. Then, in this next video, Dr. Charlie Ward discusses Nesara with two other gentlemen, and what it will be like for everyone:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/LGULn8SFQ9bl/
And, they're talking about the process documented at this website:
https://theamericanstatesassembly.net/correct-your-status
By the end of March, all the BULLSHIT federal, state and local CORPORATE governments will lose their jurisdiction, and America will be free again!!!
I have had this very thought. Of course the answer is you if I am correct about how NESARA would be implemented and not you otherwise.
I have considered buying a house real quick, but its so costly (in CA), takes a lot of time to close, and I tied up a lot of my assets in silver, so it would not be easy. If I KNEW that would happen I would do it in a heartbeat.
I agree, but now what about the people living in apartments?
I'm not really understanding. Why is this an issue? Why would rent disappear?
I supposed my question is who would pay back the 80% owner of the house.
If its a bank, no one.
Things may be different for different countries.
Do some googling about NESARA and GESARA.
I'm trying real hard to understand the dilemma. I own a house, I rent it to you, I own 20% of the house. Its in my name, you are my renter. We have a rental agreement. You own 0% of the house.
All debt owned by the fed is cancelled. I now own 100% of the house. You are still my renter. We still have a rental agreement, You still own 0% of the house. Why would you own any? I can't think of a single reason. Can you?
Having said that, your rent would almost certainly go down, no matter how I felt about it because rents would almost certainly go down everywhere, at least during the adjustment period. With lower costs of maintenance (no mortgages on the rental property in the short term immediately after) there would be a market adjustment in rent, and all renters would have to adjust prices in the newly competitive marketplace, even if only temporarily. By temporarily I mean for a decade or so. Eventually the market would readjust. There would be future loans for property. Such costs would enter back into the rental property market, etc.