This is true to a certain extent. As Dean Clifford pointed out in one of his "seminars", he would rather register his property, so that no one else can lay claim to it - but what he didn't say is that the moment you do so, it becomes a SPLIT TITLE, which then allows the municipal government to levee "property taxes".
Ok this is a bit of a flawed ? ? read.. when you 'register' your property, that is just a simplified way of letting the governing bodies/councils know who owns it and who to send the tax bill to.. it does NOT BECOME A SPLIT TITLE.. (a split title can mean a few things, ie, 2 people are share owning a piece of land, giving each a title.. is a Split Title.. also Split title can mean, you own a piece of land, which is actually MORE than one piece (as segmented by the governing bodies).. and thus it is more than one actual title.. becoming a Split Title.
In no way, does registering your land, give the governing body the title or split the title between the owner and the government. (Note, ALLODIAL TITLES exist in Canada.. as the Government of Canada has the Allodial Title to ALL land in Canada .. and ONLY the government does, this includes native Reservations etc etc).
Registration does verify/quantify the land as yours.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_registration - Wiki Land Registration
I also notice that you neglected to tackle car REGISTRATION, and how it transfers the LEGAL TITLE to the government, allowing them to be able to CRUSH (destroy) the car - BUT NOT SELL IT !!! In fact, in the U.K., once the process of REGISTRATION is complete, you are legally acknowledge as the "REGISTERED KEEPER" of your own car !!! If this isn't an admission that you are not the FULL TITLE HOLDER, then I don't know what is.
Vehicles are in essence the same.. you OWN everything, and it is a sole title to you. Registering a vehicle is often required for proof of ownership, and 'responsibility'... The Governing body CAN crush the car, but ONLY if it falls outside the regulations/guidelines/rules. - However, in doing so (crushing a vehicle) they ARE responsible for possible compensation. - Same as.. say the police take your vehicle and sell it.. they can only TAKE it if it has been in use/broken/associated to some crime/action. The police then sell it to in part recover costs/operation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_registration - Wiki Vehicle Registration
A lot of registration information in general, but registration NEVER splits or hands title to someone else.
Unregistered land, happens all the time.. however, that doesn't stop someone else from attempting to claim it as their own. Unregistered vehicles are REALLY common.. as a vehicle (in general) on PRIVATE property does not need to be registered. Only when it goes to PUBLIC lands does it.
Hope this clarifies a little bit.
Llwellyn
Guardian and Keeper of the Tor
(N.B. I did spend a few hours trying to look up split titles, and see if registration does have a 'hand-off' effect, and nowhere could I find a example of such.)