Will the Credit Bureaus Crumble?

Have you ever wondered why credit bureaus are entitled to share your personal information without your permission for profit? Did you know that TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian are all multi-billion-dollar businesses traded on the stock exchange?

Think about all those earnings gained at the taxpayer’s expense. These establishments flourish by selling the public’s data for profit. There is not even an illusion of privacy; they have access to all your information with or without your consent and can dictate what you can buy and own.

Naively, we believe in our privacy and rights, while large conglomerates hold the puppet strings, to control access to loans, fair rates, homes, college tuition and much more. Clearly, the system must go, but like all the other corrupt systems we detest, the credit agencies seem to continue to thrive.

How Will Credit Crumble?

Imagine how quickly the system would come crashing down if suddenly the credit bureaus ceased to exist. If no one worried about consequences resulting from non-payment of their credit cards, loans, and mortgages, undoubtedly, they would stop paying these bills and the institutions would quickly go bankrupt.

Perhaps you have heard the white hats took over the IRS and, in fact, many people have stopped paying taxes. But how can we tell if the credit bureaus have been seized if they continue to report our liabilities?

We see evidence of white hats moving in slow drips designed to dismantle various parts of the system organically. Take, for instance, what is happening to the medical system. Recently, a Dallas-based hospital group owning thirty-one hospitals went bankrupt. How did that happen?

According to Inside Arm1, a California dermatologist recently filed a class action lawsuit against all three credit bureaus, Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion, alleging a conspiracy to omit unpaid medical bills below $500 from consumer credit reports.

If you have been wondering what the downfall of the medical system would look like, there is evidence to show it is happening organically, so people have time to adjust. Most medical bills are less than $500. This seemingly minor change to credit reporting practices can potentially drive many medical practitioners out of business.

What if Gesara is a slow process of alleviating debt, one corrupt area at a time?

A slow but steady approach gives people time to adapt and the systems an opportunity to improve themselves, even if it is not by their own volition. The white hats are quietly revamping these systems without the public’s knowledge to make the transition smooth and seamless.

Expect financial changes to be subtle, thus easier for people to acclimate. There is no benefit to allowing panic and fear to disrupt the plan to rescue humanity. That strategy would only serve to perpetuate a dark agenda.

Although my recent credit card charges continue to be reported to the credit bureaus, surprisingly the credit bureaus seem not to be keeping up with my place of employment for the past five years. Are the credit bureaus still fully operational or have they been commandeered by the white hats?

If you add incremental debit forgiveness to class action lawsuits, you have a recipe for credit crumble pie. Class action lawsuits cost corporations billions of dollars and serve as very logical explanations for corrupt systems to self-destruct. Take, for instance, the government investigation into all three bureaus regarding their negligence in removing inaccurate information.2

“A House of Representatives subcommittee investigation has shown that there has been an increase in credit report disputes and a significant decrease in action taken to resolve those disputes on the part of the big three credit reporting agencies. The subcommittee has called for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to investigate this conduct as a potential violation of the Fair Credit Reporting Act.”2

Findings revealed longstanding problems with the agencies complying with the Fair Credit Reporting Act. In fact, they have collectively ignored millions of consumer disputes.

You are not their customers. The banks are their customers; your personal information is their product. What incentive do they have to rectify inaccurate information when it does not affect their bottom line?

So, is the demise of the credit bureaus on tap for the white hats? I would say, they have already taken over the system and are rolling out a controlled collapse. Watch the news for incremental changes such as banks going out of business, more class action lawsuits and new laws and regulations. This is information you can find and verify yourself to distinguish between truther misinformation and brilliant plan the white hats are executing behind the scenes.

1 https://www.insidearm.com/news/00049410-blocking-medical-debt-credit-reports-harm/#:~:text=The%20Lawsuit%20and%20the%20Harm,Dr

2 https://consumerattorneys.com/article/government-investigation-finds-equifax-transunion-and-experian-failed-to-address-errors-in-consumer-credit-reports

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