Wednesday, July 7, 2021
3230: Meltdown in Michigan from Lincoln County Watch
By Anna Von Reitz
What happened is pretty easy to explain when taken in context.
A
couple months ago, we suddenly had some inappropriate paperwork being
posted and recorded on the Land Recording System (LRS).
Only
Recording Secretaries who have been properly versed and trained to use
this system are supposed to have access to it, as I confirmed with our
LRS Director.
So, the logical surmise was that some of our Recording Secretaries were off track and recording bad documents.
Next,
we looked at where these documents were coming from --- which States,
and we contacted Recording Secretaries from those States and basically
asked--- what is going on here?
The Recording Secretaries in the States impacted by this were all confused. They hadn't posted those documents.
As near as anyone can tell me, the system was hacked for a short time. The breach was closed, and that was that.
I
sent out a second message, back to the Recording Secretaries in the
States that were involved, explaining the situation and apologizing for
assuming that they had anything to do with it.
That should have been the end of that episode, and at least for me, it was quickly forgotten. A blip in the road.
One
of Michigan's Recording Secretaries took offense, didn't see the logic
of the situation, and thought that he was being attacked and that the
quality of his work was being called into question.
The
fact that this incident had nothing whatsoever to do with our normal
paperwork, and wasn't unique to Michigan, apparently never got through
to him.
So,
he began a "paperwork review process" determined to uncover and exploit
every out-of-place comma, every possible typo, anything and everything
that he could possibly question or criticize.
At
the end of these investigations, he had a handful of trivia and a
couple misunderstandings to expose. During this entire process, he
refused to record anyone's paperwork, which was causing delays and
disservice to the people in Michigan. The Michigan Coordinator became
concerned.
He
also became alarmed when he realized that all the recording fees were
still going into this Recorder's personal PayPal account, months after
the Assembly elected a Treasurer and established a bank account. The
Coordinator was, again, concerned. He wasn't accusing anyone of
wrong-doing, just not seeing any logic in the situation. Once you have a
Treasurer and a bank account, fees should be going into that account,
right?
Strangest
of all, this Recorder was expressing concerns about publishing "private
information" --- which is the whole point of creating a public record
of your political status, your marriage, your land ownership, or any
other private matter that we normally establish in the public record.
So
the Recorder's job wasn't getting done and the Coordinator asked me to
come to a meeting and answer the questions posed by this man, which I
did.
All
this was a good faith effort on my part to get to the bottom of why
this was happening and what we could do to get the Recorder functions
back on track.
After
the meeting, from a Third Party's comments about "me telling Michigan
that their paperwork was wrong" I finally pieced together where this all
started, but up until that time, I hadn't a clue why anyone was pawing
through our paperwork with such a very fine-toothed comb.
Our
paperwork was never the problem. The problem was unknown,
unauthorized, and quite possibly harmful paperwork being recorded on the
LRS. But if you think that the normal paperwork is the problem, you
would naturally start doing what the Paperwork Committee did.
Crossed-wires with a capital "C".
And
then more gossip surfaced, about this one Michigan Recording Secretary
stomping around and asking, "What do we need Anna for?" and saying that
he would "discredit me" and that he "had no faith in the paperwork".
So,
the question naturally arises ---- what's he doing occupying a seat as
a Recording Secretary? He's not doing the work, he doesn't believe in
what he is doing, but he's been pocketing the money for the recording
fees all along?
The Coordinator had had enough. The next day he quit. Who wants to be responsible for a situation that doesn't make any sense?
So
we've dissolved The Michigan Assembly for now, pending their own
efforts to adjust their attitude and sift the grain. New Coordinator
candidates are being sought.
Unfortunately,
because of this brou-ha-ha, Michigan doesn't have a Voice, and people
who live in Michigan will, for the time being, have to record their
political status declarations through the International Recording
Secretaries, or try to find a State of State County Recording Office
that is still open.
This
is especially unhappy for me, as Michigan is one of the States that has
been hardest hit by all the economic and financial corruption. It has
some of the worst land regulations in the entire country, some of the
highest taxes and highest foreclosure rates, and as we have seen over
the past two years, some of the most oppressive and inept political
leadership.
Unfortunately,
there's nobody that can help Michigan, but Michigan. It's their State
to mess up or run right, to defend or surrender, to get the job done, or
not.
The
seeds they plant result in the crops they yield. A little more love
and a little less pride, a view of the Bigger Picture at stake, and just
a tiny amount of grace would have gone a long way toward a happy
resolution.
We
look forward to the day when Michigan has recouped its losses and is
reorganized and moving forward again, as it should be, with people who
understand why we must record our political status, who cooperate with
the Treasurer and the Coordinators, and who want to have an effective
and fully functional Assembly. ASAP.
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