To Whom It May Concern,
There are those today who speak loudly about “making America great again,” yet they seem to have forgotten that true greatness begins not in slogans, but in respect — respect for one’s neighbor, respect for the land, and above all, respect for boundaries.
Boundaries are not merely lines on a map or fences in the dirt. They are the outward sign of inward law. They are the evidence of self-governance. They are the truest form of liberty a person can exercise: the right to say, “This is mine, and yours is yours.” Without this, there is no peace, no trust, no freedom.
This land — my land — is not just deeded, it is patent-protected.
It carries the weight and authority of the original grants made by the United States government — grants that cannot be simply divided, diluted, or dismissed by title companies or careless neighbors. No one has the right to seize, alter, or annex it without due process and the full authority of government, properly exercised under the laws of Maricopa County, Arizona, and the United States.
The same government that rightly stepped out of personal disputes over this land, respecting the higher principle that private property, especially patent-protected property, stands sovereign.
Today, I watch neighbors act as if courtesy can replace respect, as if permission from one justifies trespass against another. I see trash cans placed thoughtlessly on property that is not theirs, roads widened without easement, washes reshaped without foresight — destroying generations of saguaro cactus and desert stability — all to build homes that may one day slide away with the rains they have not prepared for.
These actions, small as they seem, are the first cracks in the foundation of liberty.
Unincorporated land is not city land. It is private land, governed parcel by parcel, owner by owner, and in this case, protected by patent. Each of us holds sovereignty here. When you fail to respect a neighbor’s boundary, you erode not just their freedom, but your own.
I have watched, and I have spoken, and I have corrected where correction was needed. I have stood against false accusations, against lies told to cover the shame of those who cannot stand by their own actions. I have endured the mockery of those who do not understand that liberty demands vigilance.
I remind you now:
- Patent boundaries are sacred and indivisible without lawful authority.
- Property lines must be honored.
- Easements are not assumed; they are lawfully granted, and I grant none.
- A right-of-way is for passage, not possession.
- Trash belongs on your own property, not on your neighbor’s.
- Respect for boundary is respect for the law — and for liberty itself.
I stand not in anger, but in resolve. I will not be annexed by ignorance. I will not be absorbed by convenience. My property is private, patent-protected, and sovereign. I govern it under the laws of this land and under the higher laws of conscience and God.
To those who respect boundaries, you have my respect and my peace. To those who disregard them, understand that you have neither my permission nor my silence.
God has witnessed all. And so have I.
Signed,
K. Kirton Niner
2.5 Acres, Rancho del Oro — Patent-Protected Private Land
Private Landowner and Guardian of Boundary and Liberty

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