>>18806333
Springmeier has repeatedly talked about how well these bloodlines and their vast financial holdings have been hidden. That (((They))) have been working at erasing their footprint for centuries, (if not millennia). Apparently going as far as to hide the births of many of their progeny.
Payseurs were not only related to intelligence, but the intelligence apparatus was founded with its employees.
The fricking Payseurs ARE the CIA/OSS/etc
Everything is wheels inside the wheels, family within the family organized a great deception that has given everyone the impression that they are no longer players in the game, even when they changed their names again (Payseur was not even his real name) and went even further.
While the Payseurs were busy buying property during the Civil War, the Union government was actively seizing all property and public records. The reason for this search and seizure was to find out who owned what property, so it (The Government) could seize more property. All of the public records were seized from each county court house in every Confederate State and taken to Bradford, North Carohna, where they were meticulously studied, some of them totally rewritten, thence to be returned to their original places (if they had not been destroyed) at a later date. This information was found out afterdoing research in the southern court
In order to conceal the family interests from both the government and Quantrill's Raiders. (Quantrill had married into the Springs Family) the Payseurs bought things in family names, (fathers-in-laws, brothers-in- laws etc., etc..) such as Smith, Giles, Moore. Poore, Hawkins. Coon, Payseur, Bashore, Bason. Hudson, Kaiser, Lettson, Reed. Throughout all of it, when forming corporations, he always held Stock Certificate number one (1). Which was always a special type of voting, "Class "A" type" preferred stock and always signified prime ownership. Jonas W. Payseur married Harriette Smith and their eldest son was Lewis Cass Payseur. Lewis Cass is on record in the library of congress as being a postmaster from 1877 to 1883 in North Carolina.