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Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A charge against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

  • If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?
  • If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?
  • How much does that permission cost?
  • Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?
  • If you want to build a farm on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?
  • If you want to build a home on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?
  • If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?
  • Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

  • Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.
  • If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns almost the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question:

  • If you can’t reside on property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?
2 years ago
0 score
Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A charge against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you want to build a farm on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?

If you want to build a home on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns almost the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t reside on property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A change against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you want to build a farm on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?

If you want to build a home on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns almost the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t reside on property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A change against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you want to build a farm on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?

If you want to build a home on your land and it's not zoned for it, can you?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns almost the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t hold on to property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A change against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns almost the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t hold on to property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A change against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns almost the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t hold on to property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A change against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

Legally speaking (as in, by law) the BIS owns the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t hold on to property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

It’s best to not start out with “Wrong.” Instead, present your argument.

Here is mine:

From Black’s Law Dictionary (BLD) sixth edition:

Lien: A change against or interest in property to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation.

What does it mean to have “interest” in something? It means ownership on multiple levels.

BLD has a whole lot more on “liens”, because its a big deal (our whole world revolves around liens), but in each case, a lien is ownership.

Let me ask you a few questions.

If you owe money on your loan and you don’t pay it, do you get to keep your home?

If you want to build a new permanent structure on your property, do you have to ask permission?

How much does that permission cost?

Who really gets the money from that permission payoff?

If you don’t pay property taxes, do you get to keep your home?

Who gets the money from those property tax payments?

I’ll tell you, since most people don’t know.

Property taxes are municipal bond interest payments. Who owns the bonds? The banks. The banks own or manage (which is hidden ownership which takes a bit to prove but can be done) nearly all of the loans to municipalities that we call “bonds”. We think that bonds don’t provide “ownership”, that is a lie, but again, that takes a bit of explanation beyond the scope of this post.

Did you know that if you are suspected of any tax crime by anyone at the IRS they can, without warrant, or any corroboration come and take your home? You don’t have to have done anything, they just have to say they think you might have and they can come and take your home.

If someone can take your home on a whim do you really own your home?

The following list assumes you have paid off your loan, if you haven’t, you can’t even pretend to own shit:

This is the real ownership jurisdiction of your home (in order of least to most ownership):

  1. you
  2. The immediate municipality (town or county)
  3. The state you live in
  4. The bank (hint, there is only one bank in the world)
  5. The IRS, which is an agent of the Federal Reserve, which is an agent of the Bank of International Settlements (BIS).

The BIS owns the whole of the world. Everything else is an illusion of ownership. A game they let us play to keep us as unwitting slaves.

Final question, if you can’t hold on to property without paying payments (mortgage or “tax”), and can’t build on it what you want to build, and can’t use it for whatever purpose you want, and it can be taken from you on a whim, do you own it, or are you merely a steward?

2 years ago
1 score