in re: the courthouse fires and the leases Springmeier I think is spot on with connecting the dots but his conclusions are up for question. Here's what I mean: recently while digging I discovered a book from the late 1990s (the last days of dialup and bbs if anyone remembers those). I knew I wanted a copy when I saw the few used copies for sale on Amazon priced in the upper hundred dollar range. Not small batch publication, more like a case of easy to "lose" due to the time of publication being on the cusp of hardcovers beginning to lose favor to other editions of print (pdf, etc) and the rise of new demands for no printed formats requiring cost-prohibitive technology (at the time) for publishing runs in efile formats. I intend to link back to the post where I dropped it here in case any want to have a look after what I am about to mention in summary form from memory.
The author of that book ended up digging and in the process unknowingly discovered proof of the cabals existence. She had been a personal assistant for an executive prior to the research and author process. She had reason to trace titles and transfers of ownership of various assets and estates, which back in the 1990s required way more gumshoe and shoeleather than our efforts at digging today. travel arrangements, per diem costs, incidentals , etc… we're not optional but mandatory as most primary evidence existed in printed archival form often in county courthouse all over the country. And all over she did go following this trail. Like Springmeier and we ourselves, she found d the peysuer links, Rockefellers, Rothschild's, the 99 year leases, railroads and estates entrusted in the hands of others, and the rash of courthouse fires. so same dots we connect here and Springmeier connects on his, but she found before Springmeier and before we here; without much help; or knowledge of what she was setting out to find. Her conclusion was that these courthouse fires occured during the early part of the reconstruction era and primarily south of Mason-Dixon. Her conclusion (apologies for not recollecting the rationale that leads her to conclude this) is that one of the trustees had found a way to take estate from P for themselves as burnt courthouses entailed to nonexistent proof of actual ownership / title P point to, and they in turn would gain benefit from the more about "possession being 9/10ths of the law". skipping forward for brevity and candor in what I do recall from the read, P responded with the campaign of repossessing assets and estates that had been entrusted with others, and once in control of them, a project of consolidation and further obfuscation began leading to much of PS ownings falling under the umbrella of only a handful of pocket conglomerates (my term had to coin it just now). the final result was all of PS wealth coming under the umbrella of railroad company's. 1 in particular that I can't recall.
an aside for my interpretation of her account: it seems P was motivated by the threat of further betrayal, so obviously while most times when firms rationalize and consolidate, it is to grow market share for the parent company in additional sectors, simultaneous diversification and growth (bloat)In this case P was more than likely seeking a manageable way to make the vast wealth of estates 1, manageable 2, portable so that at least until he could sort friend from for in his own house, the family itself could reasonable oversea the day to day requirements involved, without drawing attention through the very act of mergers and acquisitions necessitated given the circumstances (M&As draw attention).
back to recalling her writeup, even in the 1990s the estates remained under control of an under the radar railway form and the leases were expiring on those that were still under such arrangements. she extrapolated and wondered in her conclusion whether the lease expirations would coincide with a resurfacing of the P clan and possible public resurfacing of the true nature of the Peysuers.
link back in this bread to where I posted the pdf.
woman's name Alex Christopher
book Pandora's Box