Peacekeeping Task Force Seeks Local Journalists to Profile Local De Facto Governance Models
U.S. counties with the fewest building permits required for citizens and the lowest annual property taxes represent models of fiscal restraint and regulatory simplicity, often enabled by small populations that limit service demands. Examples include Alabama's DeKalb County, with an effective tax rate of approximately 0.157%, and Colorado's Delta County, where no building permits are required in unincorporated areas.
These jurisdictions attract residents and lawful land owners alike through affordability and lawful accountability regarding legal and lawful rights to commercial and private property, in contrast to neighboring counties with far stricter codes, legalities, and higher municipal fees across the board.
As shown above, an example of related topics highlights the search for 10 affordable places to live in, and on Pennsylvania, underscoring broader interest in low-burden locales across the nation, even as this inquiry focuses on permit and tax structures nationwide.
Looking west across the American Landscape, we find, for example -
Loving County, Texas: A Notable Example
Loving County, Texas, merits inclusion on any top-10 list, as even State of State law exempts it from adopting "residential" building codes, pairing near-zero county permitting with a modest "residential" tax burden supported by its oil-driven economy and population of roughly 100 residents.
The Mentone Monitor, a weekly publication, operated from March 1932 to September 1935, ran on Loving County, Texas, serving the county during a period of attempted organization and early oil activity. There is no known record of any paper running before or after this time period for this American County.
This is another sobering example of why the American people, and People, as well as all other lawful and legal individuals in, and upon all American counties, deserve to rekindle this extremely effective local method of information flow for Land and Soil Jurisdiction news.
PKTF Journalist Outreach Initiative
The Peacekeeping Task Force, through its seasonal publication The Assembly Ledger, seeks contributions from up to 10 journalists based in qualifying counties. These reporters are invited to investigate and report factual, uplifting stories on their own locales—emphasizing positive attributes such as minimal permit requirements and low taxes that set their county apart from most others imposing heavier obligations on U.S. citizens and actual sovereign Americans.
Established newsrooms and emerging outlets alike are encouraged to participate, framing their coverage to inspire recognition of self-reliant American Soil Jurisdiction governance models.
Addressing Local Newsroom Gaps
Loving County is a perfect example of an extremely affordable place to live and dwell for U.S. Citizens and their Municipal Citizens, as well as for Americans collectively; however, it now lacks a dedicated local newspaper. Although Loving County used to have a local paper, it no longer highlights the value of grassroots local information in every county to document such distinctions and support informed Soil Jurisdiction community assemblies.
Federation's Call for Combined Network Peacekeeping of Fair and Balanced Outreach
This initiative advances the Federation's efforts in assembly networking and local outreach, promoting de jure governance structures that celebrate low-restriction counties and lawful, peaceful, and productive Assembly Militia functions. Information contributions for The Assembly Ledger may be directed via seeksearchfindtruth.blogspot.com.


No comments:
Post a Comment