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 A contract requires consideration, I.e. value, for both parties in order to be valid. Key is - consideration is for you what you consider to he consideration. No one can tell you what consideration is for you. If you think paying property tax isn't consideration for you, you can send the county an affidavit saying so, and dissolve your contract.
Property tax is a contract. Any bills from government or any corporation stems from a contract. Contracts are based on consideration to be valid. You decide what consideration is for you. All government corporations can be found on Dunn & Bradstreet, even United States.
If the county sues you after you notified them of rescission and dissolution of your contract, you win easily because there is no valid contract. County requires a contract to extract money from you - it is voluntary - you agree to it. 
 Thanks for this.

I’m familiar with (essentially) the three levels of law:

1. Equitable (what’s fair and right)
2. Common (God given)
3. Contract (what we agree to)

I’m in the process of moving from the public to the private with our business; via private express trust functioning as a UBO/PMA.

My question as it pertains to real estate I guess is this:

We are looking to buy a home in the coming Months.

This would be via a private seller who will hold the “mortgage” (note).

Seller has already offered some initial terms such as they would hold the note at 7% interest with a certain amount down payment.

In a perfect world I want that 7% to be simple interest (not amortized). I think that is merely a matter of us clarifying that with seller.

Likewise I think we can just do a private bill of sale with seller having a lien on the property (as the “mortgage”).

I assume the home is listed with the county register and property taxes are being paid by the current owner.

Once we purchase (via bill of sale with lien) the home, isn’t there steps we have to (are supposed to) take with the county to record the transaction?

Or is this where you are saying, in lieu of recording the sale with the county we send an affidavit attesting we as the new owners do not contract with the county?

Lastly, I do know if we have our trust be the owner of the property (do the transaction with the seller instead of us personally) we should be able to just record with the county an internal private transaction ID number but leave the details of which property was acquired inside the trust’s transaction records (thus keeping it private instead of public)…is that enough to eliminate the property taxes? 
 Almost guaranteed that Nothing you do will "eliminate" your property taxes. The county is extorting you and will attempt to foreclose no matter what if you don't pay - its a matter of preparing for and defending the foreclosure lawsuit when it comes along from the county.

1. You can indorse the property tax bill and send it in as a negotiable instrument payment pursuant to UCC article 3
2. You can rescind all contract with the county by an affidavit stating so, and that you are not receiving what you consider consideration from whatever contract they may have
3. I would still file the new deed in the property records if you buy, in the name of your trust or whoever.

See onestupidfuck.com for details about payment of bills via indorsement. 
 You have to study the principles of contract law and have enough braincells to see your defense from those principles (which I'm sure you do) and perform that defense in court.

Or you have to understand bills as negotiable instruments, namely UCC article 3 (codified in FL statutes too, just google it) and know how to perform on the bill with an indorsement and negotiate it by mail to the county  

Ideally both. You can win the foreclosure lawsuit easily if you stand your ground on these facts of law. 
 So I’ve seen a few TikTok vids on paying credit cards, buying cars, and paying utility/services bills by endorsing the “coupon” to have it paid via our cesti vie trust (if I recall how it was explained)

Also a vid about endorsing estimated income tax payments and getting a return on the 1040 (there is another form too involved but I don’t recall)

I just struggle to connect all the dots as well as identify the process from a reliable source other than Joe in his mom’s basement 
 Yeah you really want to find the time to watch Brandon's Contract Killer 2.0 course. It is free. That would "connect the dots" better than anything else. Don't bother asking attorney-at-law because they don't have a fucking clue, or they wouldn't be working for a paycheck.

Taxes are braindead easy to pay with indorsed bills and/or a revocation of election. Again, you have to watch brandons videos if you want to understand.

"He who knows more pays less. He who knows less pays more." GL