Registration:

Government departments, which are all corporations and therefore dead entities, offer a service of registration.
Although most people believe they have an obligation to register their property and children, they do not.
The act of registering anything with the corporation called government, transfers property ownership to that corporation, leaving you with nothing more than the user rights.
For example: In the U.K. which in itself is a corporation, there is a government agency called DVLA, which stands for Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency.
When you register your property, such as your car, you have allowed a trust to manage the property rights of said car.
The car is now issued with a government property number in the form of a Licence Plate, and you now have use of the car Under Licence.
Although the DVLA are in fact the trustee, they once again trick the unsuspecting individual that they are the trustee and are liable for all the costs of using the car.
This means as the Registered Keeper, you are now liable for all taxation costs, mot costs, and all traffic related fines.
If you fail in your obligations the DVLA can now seize the car, which is government property, using “The Police”, as they are just policy enforcers, working for an agency controlled by the same corporation called government.
If you fail in your obligations the DVLA can now seize the car, which is government property, using “The Police”, ...
Even if you're driving without a license or registration and the police show up, the car will be seized. The same can happen with houses.
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Very good! Here in Portugal, a car without registration would be towed away, but there would be no one to pay the towing bill to.
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it depends: if you see the notice on the non registered car window, it removes the possibility of the policy enforcers to make presumptions. if there is no notice, they can presume, then if nobody rebuts the presumption, it becomes truth in law
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