By: David Deschesne
In 1902, just a few years prior to our nation
surrendering its money supply to a private cabal of
international banks, Congress created the Bureau of Census
to begin the laborious task of cataloging, serial
numbering and tracking all of the personal and business
property in the United States, as well as the humans
therein for the purposes of appraising the value and
compiling statistics thereon.
Census, in Latin, means "to appraise or to assess
a value thereon." (in Roman history) a registration
or count of citizens and their property to determine
taxation." - World Book Dictionary/Thorndike
Barnhart; 1969 ed. ©1969 Doubleday & Company
Inc., p. 333. The spirit of the word 'Census' does not
appear anywhere in the U.S. Constitution, only an
'enumeration' (counting) of people every ten years in
order to appropriate Representatives evenly.
In 1903, the Bureau of Appraisal (Census) was absorbed
by the newly created Department of Commerce and Labor. Ten
years later, in 1913, the Department of Commerce was
restructured as a stand-alone entity separating Labor into
its own Department (15 USC 1501) The Federal Reserve
System was formed in the same year as the restructuring of
the Department of Commerce. Under the new Federal Reserve
System's plan, all new money would be brought into
existence via loans. The Bureau of Appraisal, as a
division of the Department of Commerce, is charged with
keeping track of the number of human chattels, plus it
appraises and keeps track of manufacturers, mineral
industries, distributive trades, construction industries,
agriculture, religious organizations and transportation.
All towns, cities, and municipalities are required to
annually submit a report of all new construction,
multi-family units, new businesses, and any losses to the
Bureau of Appraisals for the purposes of keeping a current
valuation of all property in the United States.
All property and humans are tracked and traced via a
very efficient certificate system. "Certificate: a
paper establishing an ownership claim." - Barron's
Dictionary of Banking Terms, ©1990 Barron's
Educational Series, Inc. The Birth Certificates, Marriage
Certificates, automobile Certificates of Title, etc. are
all warehouse receipts, conforming to the requirements of
Article 7 of the Uniform Commercial Code - the universal
law that regulates business transactions - that the States
use to claim ownership of a person's body and all of his
property for the purposes of using its "full faith
and credit" as collateral against national, state,
and local bonds.
"Beginning in 1880, the Bureau of Census
recognized a 'registration area' within which death
figures were collected suitable for the bureau's purposes.
Birth figures were added in 1915. By 1933 all states were
included in the registration area for both deaths and
births." - Lincoln Library of Essential
Information, ©1965 Frontier Press, Vol. II, p. 2116.
Just prior to the bankruptcy of the United
States in 1933, the Bureau of Appraisals undertook a bold
new venture: "During the month of April, 1930, over
100,000 persons were engaged in taking the census. At that
time the usual questions regarding race, color, sex, age,
occupation, whether married or single, and whether able to
write were asked. In addition were such questions as the
value of your home and whether owned or rented, whether
you were the owner of a radio, and detailed questions
regarding unemployment...Biennially it takes a census of
manufactures; and annually it compiles statistics of
births, death, marriages, and divorces, and also financial
status of States and cities." - MacGruder's
American Government, ©1939 Allyn and Bacon, p.
285-286.
While the Bureau of Census doesn't actually keep birth
certificates, the Under Secretary for Economic Affairs
does compile data derived from the Secretaries of State
where those certificates are filed and makes it available
to those who are in need of it - such as banks seeking to
determine how well a state or geographic area of people
are able to collateralize a bond issue (loan) with their
currently existing labor and property.