[00:00.000 --> 00:08.640] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist [00:08.640 --> 00:15.240] updates, online at TheLibertyBeat.com. [00:15.240 --> 00:20.000] John Bush here with your Liberty Beat for Monday, November 25th, 2013. [00:20.000 --> 00:29.000] Gold opened today at $1,228, silver at $19.67, and bitcoin is trading at $816. [00:29.000 --> 00:33.640] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from ShinyBadges.com, supplying the Liberty movement with lapel [00:33.640 --> 00:38.000] pens of their favorite anarchists and volunteer symbols, including the best-selling Badges [00:38.000 --> 00:40.560] Don't Grant Extra Rights CopLock badge. [00:40.560 --> 00:43.920] Check out the selection at ShinyBadges.com. [00:43.920 --> 00:49.200] Support also comes from Central Texas Gunworks, CHL courses, self-defense training, and firearm [00:49.200 --> 00:53.600] sales, online at CentralTexasGunworks.com. [00:53.600 --> 00:54.760] And now the news. [00:54.760 --> 00:59.760] Last week, the Oakland City Council voted 6-1 to approve the construction of a $10.9 [00:59.760 --> 01:04.100] million city surveillance complex known as the Domain Awareness Center. [01:04.100 --> 01:07.960] Concerned citizens chanted and protested inside City Council, expressing concern over the [01:07.960 --> 01:11.840] surveillance hub that will connect dozens of traffic and surveillance cameras to police [01:11.840 --> 01:16.760] and fire dispatch systems, Twitter feeds, crime maps, gunshot-detecting microphones, [01:16.760 --> 01:19.400] license plate readers, and alarm programs. [01:19.400 --> 01:24.100] City officials say the fears are unwarranted, and when the center opens up in July 2014, [01:24.100 --> 01:28.760] it will focus on improving emergency response times to crimes, terrorism, earthquakes, and [01:28.760 --> 01:29.760] fires. [01:29.760 --> 01:34.120] Privacy advocates see it as big brother in action. [01:34.120 --> 01:38.600] The Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department filed proposed rules last week to require [01:38.600 --> 01:43.080] all legal gun owners to begin registering their firearms at police headquarters in order [01:43.080 --> 01:46.200] to renew firearm licenses beginning January 1st. [01:46.200 --> 01:49.960] Anyone with a gun registered before 2011 will be forced to go to police headquarters to [01:49.960 --> 01:54.760] be fingerprinted, photographed, pay a fee, and provide proof of address before the firearms [01:54.760 --> 01:59.480] registration section creates a new ID card for each gun and gun owner. [01:59.480 --> 02:06.640] Citizens have until December 15th to comment on the proposed regulations. [02:06.640 --> 02:10.920] San Rafael, California is preparing to enact an ordinance that would prohibit smoking within [02:10.920 --> 02:15.280] all duplex and multi-family residential units that share a common wall. [02:15.280 --> 02:19.480] The ordinance was originally passed by the San Rafael City Council in October 2012, but [02:19.480 --> 02:22.840] went into effect on November 14th, 2013. [02:22.840 --> 02:27.000] The ordinance applies to all new and existing properties and does not allow grandfathering [02:27.000 --> 02:28.000] rights. [02:28.000 --> 02:31.000] Landlords and property owners are required to enforce this ordinance through new lease [02:31.000 --> 02:35.440] language or lease amendments, as well as posting signs around the building. [02:35.440 --> 02:39.320] Support for the Liberty Feed comes from Cabo Bob's Baja California Style Burritos. [02:39.320 --> 02:43.960] Check out their new location on 29th and Rio Grande between Guadalupe and Lamar. [02:43.960 --> 02:50.000] Call them at 512-432-1111 or find them online at Cabobobs.com. [02:50.000 --> 02:53.320] Support also comes from World on a String at the Airstream Boutique. [02:53.320 --> 03:23.120] Crochet jewelry in pearls, shells, gemstones, glass, and other beautiful materials from [03:23.120 --> 03:40.080] United States. [03:40.080 --> 03:43.080] back in my day's sideline. [03:43.080 --> 03:47.080] A man had to answer for the way that he'd done. [03:47.080 --> 03:50.080] Take all the rope in Texas by the tall old tree. [03:50.080 --> 03:56.080] Round up all of them bad boys, hang them high in the street. [03:56.080 --> 04:01.080] For all the people to see. [04:01.080 --> 04:04.080] That justice is one thing you should always find. [04:04.080 --> 04:09.080] You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line. [04:09.080 --> 04:13.080] When the gun smoke settles, we'll sing a victory tune. [04:13.080 --> 04:17.080] And we'll all be back at the voice of hope. [04:17.080 --> 04:22.080] We'll raise up our glasses against evil forces singing. [04:22.080 --> 04:29.080] Westgate for my men, beer for my horses. [04:29.080 --> 04:32.080] Alright folks, good evening. This is Rule of Law Radio. [04:32.080 --> 04:37.080] It is November 25th, 2013. [04:37.080 --> 04:42.080] Okay, things I would like to go over as reminders to folks about how the system [04:42.080 --> 04:49.080] that we operate in regarding transportation and other misdemeanor type acts actually work. [04:49.080 --> 04:54.080] The first thing you have to understand is the system itself is intentionally rigged [04:54.080 --> 04:58.080] to deprive you of protected rights at every turn. [04:58.080 --> 05:04.080] When you don't know what your rights are or how to invoke and protect them, [05:04.080 --> 05:09.080] they will be stripped away from you whether you realize it or not. [05:09.080 --> 05:13.080] If you don't invoke and protect them properly, [05:13.080 --> 05:18.080] they will be stripped from you whether you realize it or not. [05:18.080 --> 05:22.080] So what I want to go over with, or at least at the beginning tonight, [05:22.080 --> 05:26.080] is I want to go over a couple of parts of the process in its initial stages [05:26.080 --> 05:30.080] so that you understand why things work the way they do [05:30.080 --> 05:36.080] and why there are certain things that you must do in order to properly combat the system. [05:36.080 --> 05:40.080] Now every one of these encounters will generally start somewhere on the street, [05:40.080 --> 05:45.080] either via a transportation stop or just some sort of interpersonal interaction [05:45.080 --> 05:53.080] with a police officer or some sort of officer that will attempt to be escalated to something more. [05:53.080 --> 05:57.080] And you don't have to be in a car for this to happen. [05:57.080 --> 06:00.080] You can be anywhere. [06:00.080 --> 06:08.080] Now one of the things that is being indoctrinated into our young people in the public schools [06:08.080 --> 06:18.080] and so on and so forth is that your rights exist only by consent of the government itself. [06:18.080 --> 06:22.080] In other words, they're trying to tell you that your rights don't come from a creator, [06:22.080 --> 06:28.080] they come from government or they come from society or they come from the Constitution. [06:28.080 --> 06:31.080] None of that is true. [06:31.080 --> 06:37.080] We are endowed with our inherent rights by our Creator. [06:37.080 --> 06:40.080] Our rights are limitless. [06:40.080 --> 06:48.080] In other words, they are not limited only to those things enumerated within any Constitution. [06:48.080 --> 06:55.080] In fact, every Constitution specifically has language that states that no enumeration [06:55.080 --> 07:04.080] of certain rights within this Constitution eliminates or takes away any other rights retained by the people. [07:04.080 --> 07:13.080] However, our government and especially our courts, especially the Supreme Court, [07:13.080 --> 07:25.080] has taken the completely unconstitutional and non-freedom view that our rights are specifically [07:25.080 --> 07:28.080] limited to those that are enumerated. [07:28.080 --> 07:32.080] Now we see this every day if we're paying attention because we always hear the constant argument, [07:32.080 --> 07:38.080] especially from places like the DOJ when they want to get their hands on something. [07:38.080 --> 07:43.080] The Constitution doesn't grant you a specific right to do blah, blah, blah. [07:43.080 --> 07:49.080] It doesn't need to, you morons. [07:49.080 --> 07:53.080] Our rights didn't come from a Constitution. [07:53.080 --> 07:57.080] Why would it have to enumerate it for it to exist? [07:57.080 --> 08:06.080] We existed before the Constitution did, so how would it even be possible for it to enumerate all of our rights? [08:06.080 --> 08:11.080] Or was it intended to enumerate all of our rights? [08:11.080 --> 08:16.080] That's specifically why it has the language in there that the enumeration of certain rights [08:16.080 --> 08:21.080] does not disparage or destroy any other rights. [08:21.080 --> 08:25.080] The people's rights are unlimited. [08:25.080 --> 08:36.080] Government functions entirely on the presumption that our rights have limits and they don't. [08:36.080 --> 08:45.080] The sooner you realize, understand, and hold onto that as being true on its face for all purposes, [08:45.080 --> 08:53.080] the quicker you will be able to see where the government is trying to strip them out of your hands. [08:53.080 --> 09:01.080] And nowhere does that happen more frequently or in some cases more violently [09:01.080 --> 09:09.080] than in what should be the calmest form of interaction, a traffic stop. [09:09.080 --> 09:16.080] They allege that these are not serious crimes, yet they say that an officer can arrest you and take you to jail [09:16.080 --> 09:19.080] in order to stop you from committing this crime. [09:19.080 --> 09:25.080] But even though they can take you to jail before they take you to a magistrate, [09:25.080 --> 09:31.080] even though that's not what they're directed to do or authorized to do, [09:31.080 --> 09:41.080] that you're not entitled to legal counsel even if they've got you locked up, at least not on the state's dime. [09:41.080 --> 09:44.080] But consider the situation here. [09:44.080 --> 09:50.080] How many of your rights are being ignored by the system as it exists, especially here in Texas? [09:50.080 --> 09:59.080] I'm not saying just Texas, but this is where I'm familiar with the process to a degree I really sometimes wished I was not. [09:59.080 --> 10:17.080] Because you will never see a process more criminal than that perpetrated by our public servants in the name of so-called public safety and regulation. [10:17.080 --> 10:30.080] A system designed to destroy the rights of the people, to enhance and increase the powers of government beyond all recognition, is a criminal enterprise. [10:30.080 --> 10:38.080] Why? Because it's an illegal usurpation of power. It's an unconstitutional usurpation of power. [10:38.080 --> 10:45.080] But I have to use unconstitutional loosely, whether it be federal or state, and for different reasons on each. [10:45.080 --> 10:55.080] One, I'm a firm believer in the fact that based upon its own language, the federal Constitution shot itself right through the head a long time ago. [10:55.080 --> 11:17.080] Plus, if you've read Lysander Spooner's book No Treason, his treatise on the United States Constitution, you will see exactly why it never really had any true force and effect regarding limitations on anybody, not even the government. [11:17.080 --> 11:46.080] And when you take into consideration what the courts hold dearest, which is the law of contracts and virtually everything, and you compare the constitutional implementation and everything else to what is the basis of all contractual law, you will quickly understand why the Constitution can't be binding. [11:46.080 --> 11:53.080] And was never binding, beyond the original constitutional convention at the very least. [11:53.080 --> 12:07.080] But even if it could be considered to be binding, that's only while it validly exists, or the conditions for its existence are still in force and effect. [12:07.080 --> 12:13.080] And in the case of the federal Constitution, none of that holds true. [12:13.080 --> 12:24.080] It is basic principles of contractual law that would destroy any semblance of power within the federal Constitution. [12:24.080 --> 12:29.080] So, let's go to the state. What about the state Constitution? [12:29.080 --> 12:47.080] Well, do you have one? Everyone thinks they do, but the question is, do you live in one of the southern states that was more or less conquered by the federal actions in the Federal War of Aggression against the southern states over slavery in the Civil War? [12:47.080 --> 12:51.080] Or at least they want you to believe it was over slavery. [12:51.080 --> 13:03.080] If you are a member of that particular type of republic, then you probably do not have a valid state Constitution. [13:03.080 --> 13:15.080] What you have is a reorganizational military charter that was made to resemble your particular Constitution. [13:15.080 --> 13:24.080] Now, why do I say that? Well, because the people of the states didn't change or abolish their Constitutions after the Civil War. [13:24.080 --> 13:31.080] The northern states set up the Constitutions for those conquered states after the Civil War. [13:31.080 --> 13:48.080] If you do your historical research, you'll find out that's 100% true. The Constitution for those particular republics was established or approved or controlled by the northern states and the federal military. [13:48.080 --> 13:56.080] So, how can your particular state Constitution as one of the southern states be a valid Constitution? [13:56.080 --> 14:09.080] For instance, here in Texas, the documentation of our own historical record shows very clearly that, one, Texas was never annexed properly into the union of several states. [14:09.080 --> 14:18.080] For all intents and purposes in law, Texas is still its own independent sovereign nation, separate and apart from Saint. [14:18.080 --> 14:33.080] No, that's not a Republic of Texas argument per se. It is one they use, but it is based upon actual historical documentation that exists right over here in the basement of the Supreme Court building in the state Capitol. [14:33.080 --> 14:48.080] So, Texas currently is operating under revised military charters. The 1836 Constitution is the only valid Constitution Texas actually has. It's the only one enacted and voted on by its people. [14:48.080 --> 15:12.080] None of the rest of them work. So, we're operating under an entirely military charter. But even so, if that military charter is in force in effect, which they tell us it is, but they act like it isn't, the rules within that military charter are still being completely ignored by the powers that be. [15:12.080 --> 15:33.080] And we the people still allow them to get away with doing it. Why? If they are supposed to work for us, why are we taking a back seat to control of our government and allowing them to run roughshod over everything we denied them the power to effect? [15:33.080 --> 15:57.080] Why are we letting them take from us what is rightfully ours in the name of society, in the name of public safety, in the name of anything else they can come up with to further facilitate the growth of government and the diminishment of the free people? [15:57.080 --> 16:13.080] Why? I mean, I can ask that question all day. We have a Second Amendment that we all agree is there for the people's right to keep and bear arms. Why? So that we can bear arms to resist tyranny in government. [16:13.080 --> 16:38.080] Well, folks, have you looked around lately? It can't get a whole lot more tyrannical than this, short of them starting to boil houses off the map with tanks. They've militarized our local police forces and created the standing army that was absolutely forbidden by all the rules and regulations within every constitution, including the federal. [16:38.080 --> 16:43.080] And we're doing nothing. And that's just the very tip of the iceberg. [16:43.080 --> 17:00.080] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio. This is your host, Eddie Craig. I've got some more stuff to deliver. So I'm not going to turn the phones on just yet, but I will shortly. So y'all hang on. We're not off the air. We are live. I just don't have the phones on yet. So we'll be right back after the break. Y'all hang on. [17:00.080 --> 17:17.080] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. And it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. 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[19:11.080 --> 19:32.080] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [19:32.080 --> 19:41.080] Okay, to continue on with this little bit of a discussion here. Well, I should say dissertation. [19:41.080 --> 19:54.080] So not only are these various constitutions, for the southern states at least, not valid as far as something the people themselves decided to accept and partake in, [19:54.080 --> 20:07.080] but if they are everything that I'm saying they are, which my research shows they are, then they have no more authority than the federal constitution does for exactly the same reasons. [20:07.080 --> 20:20.080] The people themselves never agreed to accept the constitution as a binding document upon anybody, even as a public officer. [20:20.080 --> 20:31.080] So, if the document was not agreed to be supported by the individual and signed and accepted in contractual terms by the individual, [20:31.080 --> 20:47.080] and copies of same just like in any other contract delivered to the parties, then the deal is never consummated and no binding power to the document or the contract exists. [20:47.080 --> 21:03.080] It falls right down to that. How can you be said to partake of something for which your permission was never asked, you were never given a voice in approving, disapproving, or setting the terms for, [21:03.080 --> 21:20.080] and you're never allowed to sign your acceptance of all of the terms of that agreement, thus binding you to it once you have been delivered with a copy of what you signed? [21:20.080 --> 21:24.080] That's straight up common sense contractual law. [21:24.080 --> 21:34.080] Ask any contract lawyer in Texas, is a contract valid if all parties are never given a copy? [21:34.080 --> 21:45.080] It's not binding on any party that didn't sign, and it's not binding on any party that was never provided a copy even if they did sign. [21:45.080 --> 21:55.080] Delivery is one of the requirements of a binding contract. When it's in written form, got to be delivered. [21:55.080 --> 22:00.080] So, this again would go right to the heart of the foreclosure issues. [22:00.080 --> 22:07.080] Where are the valid documents that prove the deal was consummated the way it's being asserted in the court? [22:07.080 --> 22:11.080] And the courts are just ignoring the argument. [22:11.080 --> 22:22.080] They're saying it's not a requirement. We know very well it's been settled off for eons that it is a requirement. [22:22.080 --> 22:41.080] So, you have a so-called governmental system that is ignoring its own rules, it's ignoring our rules put forth to bind it, and it is oppressing us with the rules it creates, [22:41.080 --> 22:57.080] even though those rules conflict with our rights and our protections under the very document that we put in place to prevent those rights from being violated in the first place. [22:57.080 --> 23:03.080] And you still think America is the greatest country on earth? [23:03.080 --> 23:20.080] I would argue vehemently in asserting that we by far have the most corrupt form of government in existence. [23:20.080 --> 23:40.080] And when I say form, I don't mean the way it was intended, I mean the way it has been mutated, distorted, corrupted, just utterly messed up, okay? [23:40.080 --> 23:52.080] This is nothing like the system of government that we the people put in place for our public servants to abide by. [23:52.080 --> 24:03.080] And every single day those same public servants act more and more like it is within their purview to dictate everything about our existence, [24:03.080 --> 24:12.080] what we can do, where we can go, when we can do it, how we can do it, whose permission we have to have, what piece of paper we need signed by somebody else, [24:12.080 --> 24:23.080] what bureaucratic decision has to be put in place before we can proceed, etc., etc., etc. [24:23.080 --> 24:35.080] Now, I know I've mentioned this book to you before, and I won't mention it again. It's a book called Hope, and it's the organization that published it is – [24:35.080 --> 24:44.080] I forget exactly what it is. It's Jews Against the Confiscation of Firearms or Jews for the Preservation of Firearms. It's something like that. [24:44.080 --> 25:00.080] But in any case, the point of it is, is in the book, this guy Alexander Hope gets elected president, and he is a historian professor by his own education, [25:00.080 --> 25:14.080] and he is a billionaire business mogul that fully believes in a constitutional form of government and has always lived his life and operated his businesses in regard for that. [25:14.080 --> 25:27.080] He's actually – even though he's a self-made billionaire, he is focused on doing things the right way, and he winds up running for president, and because of happenstance, he gets elected. [25:27.080 --> 25:44.080] But one of the quotes in the book is where he takes the position that you always take the most extreme possible position in relation to your individual rights, and you don't let go. [25:44.080 --> 25:58.080] And the reason for that is, is because there's a lot less fighting to be done later, because that is ground you will not have to regain. [25:58.080 --> 26:17.080] Now, granted, society requires us to act differently when we have to live in close proximity and so on and so forth, but that proximity still does not require that we relinquish our individual rights. [26:17.080 --> 26:39.080] But the proximity does place some form of limitation on them, and I don't think the government should be allowed to regulate it, that we should be self-regulating in that regard, that we should not seek to disturb the rights and peace of another by our actions. [26:39.080 --> 26:56.080] So, common sense just says that when you live in an apartment with paper-thin walls, and you have a neighbor that works days, and you happen to be a night owl, then you shouldn't be playing your stereo at full volume as their next-door neighbor. [26:56.080 --> 27:14.080] During the day when they are asleep, and you prefer music while you're asleep, or getting your sleep, or whatever you want to do, however the situation works out, you shouldn't be intentionally doing things that you know are going to cause problems with your neighbor when it's just as easy for you to figure out a way to not do it. [27:14.080 --> 27:23.080] You want to blare your music? Get you a set of headphones. That way you can be as loud as you want, and you're not disturbing your neighbor, and so on and so forth. [27:23.080 --> 27:32.080] Yeah, I know there's all kinds of arguments. What if I can't afford them? I hate being tied up by a wire, and I can't afford $150 for wireless headsets, blah, blah, blah. Figure it out. [27:32.080 --> 27:41.080] I'm not here to babysit you and tell you the solution to every problem. Neither is anyone else, and we've become a society of people that is way too dependent on exactly that. [27:41.080 --> 27:51.080] We always want somebody else to tell us, what's the better way to do it? How should I be doing it? Somebody take responsibility for me, because I'm too damn lazy to do it for myself. [27:51.080 --> 27:58.080] We need to stop that mentality, folks. We need to get it out of our kids. We need to get it out of ourselves. [27:58.080 --> 28:09.080] Now, a lot of what's going on, one of the other problems I'm facing with everything I do is I have a lot of requests from people to help them with things, and I don't mind doing that. [28:09.080 --> 28:18.080] Yes, I do charge for that. I've got to eat, too. I've got bills to pay, too. Everybody else goes to a job and expects to get paid. If this is my job, why shouldn't I expect to get paid? [28:18.080 --> 28:28.080] But you'd be surprised how many people look at it and the fact that I'm putting up a website that you have to pay to be a member of because of all the information that's going to be on it and all the services it's going to provide. [28:28.080 --> 28:41.080] Nobody looks at the fact that it cost me money to do that, to provide all that. All they can see is that, oh, it comes with a price. Well, I'm in the Patriot community. I shouldn't have to pay for anything. It should all be given to me for free. [28:41.080 --> 28:53.080] Why is it that those that want the most liberty think they are the most entitled to something that somebody else has to put out all the effort and expense for so they can benefit? [28:53.080 --> 29:05.080] I've never understood that about our Patriot community, but it's a very big problem. Everybody thinks that all information, resources, and efforts should be for free. [29:05.080 --> 29:21.080] Well, fine. You want my efforts for free, then you feed me. Okay? For free. You pay my bills for me. For free. Since I'm doing all this work for everybody else, let me ask you a question. [29:21.080 --> 29:28.080] What's the difference in you paying me with that than just giving me the money so I can pay for it myself? [29:28.080 --> 29:37.080] But you'd be surprised that a lot of the comments I got on the interview I did on Alex Jones, some of the things that were on that video. [29:37.080 --> 30:01.080] But y'all hang on. I'll pick this up on the other side. Rule of Law Radio, this is your host, Eddie Craig. I will be back, so y'all hang on. [30:01.080 --> 30:07.080] What's a birthday party without balloons and whistles? A European birthday party, that's what. [30:07.080 --> 30:14.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you how the EU's uptight regulators are putting an end to childhood fun next. [30:14.080 --> 30:25.080] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:25.080 --> 30:33.080] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.080 --> 30:44.080] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [30:44.080 --> 30:51.080] Talk about a party pooper. In the name of child safety, the European Union has made it a crime for kids to use party whistles, [30:51.080 --> 30:57.080] blow up balloons, and catch magnetic fish at parties. And the fear-mongering doesn't stop there. [30:57.080 --> 31:08.080] EU bureaucrats say toy noisemakers with long paper tongues are dangerous. They've banned all teddy bears unless they're washable, and they're controlling the sounds made by rattles and toy instruments. [31:08.080 --> 31:15.080] Next thing you know, European kids will be celebrating their birthdays in padded cells, for their own protection, of course. [31:15.080 --> 31:22.080] But these rules aren't so surprising if you think about it. After all, we know how much those regulators hate whistleblowers. [31:22.080 --> 31:30.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.080 --> 31:36.080] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [31:36.080 --> 31:43.080] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [31:43.080 --> 31:46.080] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [31:46.080 --> 31:48.080] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [31:48.080 --> 31:50.080] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [31:50.080 --> 31:51.080] I'm a structural engineer. [31:51.080 --> 31:52.080] I'm a New York City correction officer. [31:52.080 --> 31:53.080] I'm an Air Force pilot. [31:53.080 --> 31:55.080] I'm a father who lost his son. [31:55.080 --> 31:57.080] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [31:57.080 --> 32:01.080] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [32:01.080 --> 32:05.080] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.080 --> 32:07.080] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:07.080 --> 32:13.080] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.080 --> 32:20.080] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.080 --> 32:25.080] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.080 --> 32:35.080] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.080 --> 32:40.080] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.080 --> 32:50.080] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.080 --> 32:54.080] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.080 --> 33:02.080] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.080 --> 33:12.080] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:32.080 --> 33:47.080] All right, folks, we are back. [33:47.080 --> 33:49.080] This is Rule of Law Radio. [33:49.080 --> 33:50.080] Okay. [33:50.080 --> 34:01.080] Anyway, back to what I was originally getting to on this, a couple of the things that need to be said about the stops, and I'm actually reading some comments that are being posted up on Facebook right now. [34:01.080 --> 34:13.080] There's this individual that is posting up here right now calling me a troublemaker because of the information that I put out in the video and in the transportation script. [34:13.080 --> 34:16.080] And this is a typical example. [34:16.080 --> 34:19.080] For instance, I'm going to read what's here. [34:19.080 --> 34:21.080] Sorry, B.J., this guy's a troublemaker. [34:21.080 --> 34:29.080] He's telling you that when you get pulled over for a routine traffic stop, speeding, going through a red light, that the officer really had ulterior motives. [34:29.080 --> 34:30.080] I don't buy it. [34:30.080 --> 34:36.080] If you're being pulled over for no reason at all, racial profiling, et cetera, that's a totally different story. [34:36.080 --> 34:39.080] He's going to create more problems for the people who listen to him. [34:39.080 --> 34:42.080] Yes, you never consent to a search of your vehicle. [34:42.080 --> 34:47.080] However, I think a person would create more problems for themselves by refusing to show their driver's license. [34:47.080 --> 34:53.080] It is just giving them an excuse to possibly detain you. [34:53.080 --> 34:55.080] Well, yes. [34:55.080 --> 35:08.080] Taking your rights back from those that have illegally removed them from you and unlawfully removed them from you will almost always resort in a battle of some kind. [35:08.080 --> 35:15.080] They don't like giving back the power that they've taken by force or by fraud. [35:15.080 --> 35:17.080] They never have. [35:17.080 --> 35:22.080] That's one of the little caveats to what this individual obviously doesn't understand. [35:22.080 --> 35:30.080] Nor do they, by all appearances from their prior comments as well as those, do they actually understand what their rights even are. [35:30.080 --> 35:32.080] They haven't connected that. [35:32.080 --> 35:36.080] Again, possible product of the public school system. [35:36.080 --> 35:42.080] But the point here is government doesn't want you to exercise your rights. [35:42.080 --> 35:44.080] It doesn't want you to understand them. [35:44.080 --> 35:50.080] If it did, it wouldn't be trying so hard to remove them from public education. [35:50.080 --> 36:04.080] It wouldn't be trying so hard to completely rewrite the first, second, third, fifth, fourth, 19th point, whatever amendment to whatever there is, [36:04.080 --> 36:10.080] whether it be a federal constitution or a state constitution regarding what your rights are. [36:10.080 --> 36:19.080] Public schools are now putting into their materials for students that the right to keep and bear arms is a government-granted privilege. [36:19.080 --> 36:22.080] They're literally putting that in the textbooks. [36:22.080 --> 36:31.080] They're putting in the textbooks that you only can exercise the right if you are a member of a state-approved and regulated militia. [36:31.080 --> 36:33.080] Well, the militia is completely separate from the state. [36:33.080 --> 36:35.080] It always has been. [36:35.080 --> 36:39.080] It's got nothing to do with the state. [36:39.080 --> 36:52.080] But these are the things that folks like this have accepted as fact and they've never bothered to look beyond the end of their nose to see if the picture is different than the one they're being told to imagine. [36:52.080 --> 37:01.080] It's like being extremely nearsighted where you can't see beyond the end of your nose without corrective lenses. [37:01.080 --> 37:18.080] Your view of the world is all muddled, hazy, and out of focus, so you have to accept everyone else's word about what it is you're actually looking at because you can't see it clearly for yourself. [37:18.080 --> 37:22.080] That, folks, is exactly what we have here. [37:22.080 --> 37:31.080] And unfortunately, it is the exact mindset of a majority of the American people these days. [37:31.080 --> 37:35.080] And it doesn't matter whether they're young or old. [37:35.080 --> 37:54.080] The only ones that may stand an even chance of seeing just how far we have eroded our society into becoming subjects of the government rather than the other way around are those that actually fought in the World Wars. [37:54.080 --> 38:00.080] They're the only ones old enough to remember how it actually was and what they actually went to fight for. [38:00.080 --> 38:05.080] Even the American soldiers that are going and fighting now, they realize that they're being used. [38:05.080 --> 38:22.080] They realize they're not fighting for freedom, but I am willing to bet you dollars to doughnuts that not a majority of them actually understand their individual rights or the rights of the people themselves any better than this person right here does. [38:22.080 --> 38:23.080] Why? [38:23.080 --> 38:30.080] Because they still came from the same educational system. They still came from the same governmental control system. [38:30.080 --> 38:32.080] Remember, these people are now in the military. [38:32.080 --> 38:43.080] They're spoon-fed everything that the military wants them to know and wants them to accept, wants them to understand and take as the gospel. [38:43.080 --> 38:55.080] It's ridiculous, and if you can think for yourself, you can see how ridiculous it is, but most of these people don't think for themselves. [38:55.080 --> 39:11.080] I mean, one of the favorite lines of TIs in military basic training, and it really doesn't matter which branch of the service it is, while you're undergoing basic training, the TIs will constantly tell you your right to think for yourself is hereby revoked. [39:11.080 --> 39:15.080] You will do what I say when I say how I say. [39:15.080 --> 39:18.080] There will be no discussion. There will be no debate. [39:18.080 --> 39:22.080] You will do it or you will suffer. [39:22.080 --> 39:28.080] And the problem is that's accepted. [39:28.080 --> 39:32.080] Not only is it accepted, it's expected. [39:32.080 --> 39:49.080] And then as these people progress in their military careers, they become indoctrinated into continually accepting that limitation on their ability to think freely. [39:49.080 --> 39:51.080] It's about control. [39:51.080 --> 39:56.080] Something else this individual arguing against what I've said doesn't understand. [39:56.080 --> 40:05.080] If they can control your desire to exercise your rights, then they actually control your rights. [40:05.080 --> 40:07.080] Don't you think? [40:07.080 --> 40:18.080] If I, for instance, control your access to the cookie jar, then I control your ability to eat cookies. [40:18.080 --> 40:24.080] Provided, of course, there's not an alternative source for you to sneak around and get them from. [40:24.080 --> 40:35.080] But that's not usually an option here for these people, mainly because not only do they not go looking for that alternative source, [40:35.080 --> 40:42.080] because they've completely accepted that there's only one cookie jar on the entire planet and I've got the key. [40:42.080 --> 40:45.080] They just accept it. [40:45.080 --> 40:49.080] And this is an example of that level of acceptance. [40:49.080 --> 41:07.080] We are so indoctrinated into the government can and the government should, and I wish they would, that we can no longer function without somebody else telling us what to do. [41:07.080 --> 41:17.080] It's very much the same mental state that long-term incarcerated prisoners go through. [41:17.080 --> 41:21.080] They get into such a habit of having to ask permission to do everything. [41:21.080 --> 41:32.080] Bathroom boss, eat lunch boss, take a break boss, can I sit boss, can I stand boss, can I do this, can I do that, can I do it, please. [41:32.080 --> 41:44.080] That mindset is exactly where they have a very large amount of the population and they don't even realize it. [41:44.080 --> 42:03.080] It has become so ingrained in their nature and what they've accepted that it does not seem wrong, inhospitable, or just in any way other than normal. [42:03.080 --> 42:07.080] And that, folks, once again boils right down to whose fault? [42:07.080 --> 42:12.080] The government's or ours? [42:12.080 --> 42:22.080] Because one of the things that I absolutely cannot stand outside of stupidity, which is my biggest peeve on the planet, I just cannot be around stupidity. [42:22.080 --> 42:28.080] It breaks me out in an allergic reaction of ass-whooping, okay? [42:28.080 --> 42:30.080] Pardon my language, but that's just a fact. [42:30.080 --> 42:35.080] I cannot tolerate stupidity in my presence. [42:35.080 --> 42:40.080] And willful ignorance runs a close second. [42:40.080 --> 42:47.080] I'm not going to force you to comprehend, understand, or even discuss. [42:47.080 --> 43:06.080] But if I've made the effort and you have continually rejected the opportunity to learn something that I can tell for a fact you don't know and need to, well, when I stop trying, you've got no one to blame but yourself for where you're at. [43:06.080 --> 43:13.080] And if I didn't believe where you were at was a bad place, I wouldn't have been trying in the first place. [43:13.080 --> 43:16.080] Isn't that what we're supposed to do in relation to our fellow man? [43:16.080 --> 43:19.080] Treat them like we would treat ourselves, okay? [43:19.080 --> 43:22.080] Love our neighbor as we love ourselves. [43:22.080 --> 43:28.080] I love myself enough to understand my rights, my freedoms, and to fight for them. [43:28.080 --> 43:35.080] I love my neighbor enough to want to help them to be able to do the same. [43:35.080 --> 43:37.080] That's why I'm here. [43:37.080 --> 43:39.080] All right, folks, I'm going to open up the phones. [43:39.080 --> 43:44.080] 512-646-1984 is the call-in number. [43:44.080 --> 43:46.080] So give me a call, give me a holler. [43:46.080 --> 43:51.080] I've got zero callers on the board and I'm going to need some after this break or I'm just going to have to keep yammering. [43:51.080 --> 43:52.080] Y'all hang on. [43:52.080 --> 44:00.080] We will be right back on the other side. [44:00.080 --> 44:03.080] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:03.080 --> 44:09.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, [44:09.080 --> 44:14.080] 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [44:14.080 --> 44:18.080] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.080 --> 44:22.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.080 --> 44:27.080] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [44:27.080 --> 44:34.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [44:34.080 --> 44:43.080] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:43.080 --> 44:52.080] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [44:52.080 --> 45:01.080] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [45:01.080 --> 45:04.080] Hello. [45:04.080 --> 45:12.080] My name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D. [45:12.080 --> 45:19.080] here in Austin, Texas, buying Brave New Books and Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [45:19.080 --> 45:23.080] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:23.080 --> 45:31.080] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian Eme oil, lotion candles, olive oil soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [45:31.080 --> 45:38.080] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [45:38.080 --> 45:44.080] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [45:44.080 --> 45:48.080] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [45:48.080 --> 45:51.080] Naturespureorganics.com. [46:18.080 --> 46:41.080] All right, folks, we are back. [46:41.080 --> 46:44.080] This is Rule of Law Radio. [46:44.080 --> 46:48.080] I've got some callers up on the board. I'm trying to figure out who my first one is here. [46:48.080 --> 46:51.080] It looks like it is Andrew in Pennsylvania. [46:51.080 --> 46:53.080] Andrew, what can we do for you? [46:53.080 --> 46:54.080] Hi, Eddie. [46:54.080 --> 47:04.080] I was at the JFK rally in Dallas, got assaulted by sheriff's deputies, a job you once had that these guys were federalized by the Department of Homeland Security. [47:04.080 --> 47:07.080] I don't know if you saw the video, but it was pretty unpleasant. [47:07.080 --> 47:09.080] So I want to know, I mean, we've got to sue them. [47:09.080 --> 47:12.080] Alex Jones, who is there, said he's going to sue them. [47:12.080 --> 47:15.080] I'd love to be a witness on his behalf if possible. [47:15.080 --> 47:19.080] And if I have any recourse, what would you suggest is the best way to go about this? [47:19.080 --> 47:22.080] Well, if they actually assaulted you, that's a crime. [47:22.080 --> 47:26.080] And there is a tort action on the federal level for doing exactly that. [47:26.080 --> 47:36.080] And you can invoke the federal level on two grounds, diverse jurisdiction and violation of a federally protected right. [47:36.080 --> 47:44.080] Well, the only people that were invited there who leave Oslo was the lone government, which is a joke story, were allowed there. [47:44.080 --> 47:48.080] The Dallas police were caught off guard, too, because they were letting the barricade loose. [47:48.080 --> 47:52.080] And they were just as surprised as we were to see the federalized goons. [47:52.080 --> 47:56.080] Well, they weren't so surprised that they did anything about it. [47:56.080 --> 47:59.080] Yeah, but they weren't expecting it, nonetheless. [47:59.080 --> 48:02.080] I mean, they came out of nowhere is apparently what happened. [48:02.080 --> 48:07.080] But, you know, their job is to serve and protect. So why didn't they? [48:07.080 --> 48:12.080] It doesn't matter whether they were surprised or not. [48:12.080 --> 48:20.080] If an officer doesn't use, I was surprised as an excuse for not preventing a bank robbery when he had the opportunity, right? [48:20.080 --> 48:21.080] Right. [48:21.080 --> 48:29.080] So even though he didn't realize immediately that the guy running out of the bank, holding a bank bag was actually robbing it, [48:29.080 --> 48:34.080] once the realization set in, he kind of had a duty to run him down and capture him, didn't he? [48:34.080 --> 48:35.080] Right, yes. [48:35.080 --> 48:43.080] Well, how does that change when it comes to sheriff's goons violating the rights of the people and committing aggravated assault? [48:43.080 --> 48:50.080] That doesn't. But, I mean, I wasn't actually assaulted. I was just pushed. But there were some video shots you could see. [48:50.080 --> 48:53.080] Well, that's still assault. In Texas, that's simple assault. [48:53.080 --> 49:00.080] Yes. And there was a lot worse for some other people. Like I was choked. Alex said he was punched in the stomach as a matter of fact. [49:00.080 --> 49:09.080] So he's got a case there. And I mean, is there a way I could testify on his behalf during his trial? I'd love to, if I could volunteer for that. [49:09.080 --> 49:14.080] Well, you can make your name known if something like that happens. [49:14.080 --> 49:21.080] If you're an actual witness, then his attorney can add you to their list and call you. But it's not like you get to volunteer. [49:21.080 --> 49:29.080] Here, you can just make them aware that you have firsthand factual information and are willing to act as a witness. [49:29.080 --> 49:37.080] All right. Well, I sent in my video shot. I took the video afterwards. So I'm going to send it to him. I guess he could contact me if he wanted to. [49:37.080 --> 49:41.080] But how much time do you have before I could go? [49:41.080 --> 49:43.080] I got a full board here. [49:43.080 --> 49:46.080] All right. So you want to let me go with another caller? [49:46.080 --> 49:52.080] Well, I mean, if you're going to get into a long set of details and everything, then yeah, I'm going to need to do that. [49:52.080 --> 49:58.080] All right. Just a simple yes or no question. Do you know for a fact that the Pennsylvania State Constitution is a legal or illegal document? [49:58.080 --> 50:02.080] I have absolutely no idea. I haven't researched Pennsylvania's Constitution. [50:02.080 --> 50:05.080] Okay. I'll check that out for myself. All right. Thanks, Eddie. [50:05.080 --> 50:06.080] You're welcome. [50:06.080 --> 50:07.080] Bye-bye. [50:07.080 --> 50:20.080] All right. Now we're going to go to Rob in Illinois, but I don't know which one's real and which one's a Memorex because he's appearing up here twice. So let's find out. Rob, are you there? [50:20.080 --> 50:22.080] Hello, Rob. [50:22.080 --> 50:26.080] All right. I want to guess that one isn't working. So let's try the second one. [50:26.080 --> 50:27.080] Rob? [50:27.080 --> 50:28.080] Yes. Hello, Eddie. [50:28.080 --> 50:31.080] Hey, he's live. Okay. What can we do for you, Rob? [50:31.080 --> 50:37.080] Okay. Well, when you announced that you had no callers up in your board, I called in and then everything went blank. [50:37.080 --> 50:41.080] And I'm thinking, okay, maybe I've dialed the wrong number. I got to call back in. I got a bad connection. [50:41.080 --> 50:49.080] So here I am. Real quick. One of the points I get across to people to try to enlighten them is when it comes to permits. [50:49.080 --> 50:55.080] You know, they say you need a permit for plumbing and all this other carpentry work you want to do in your house. [50:55.080 --> 51:07.080] And I asked people, I said, what if you needed a permit to shovel the snow on your driveway or a permit to your local municipality is going to tell you, [51:07.080 --> 51:13.080] you're going to have to apply for a permit if you want hamburgers or hot dogs tonight. [51:13.080 --> 51:21.080] And I asked these people, at what point do you draw the line on how much permission you're going to get from these people? [51:21.080 --> 51:26.080] Well, question, are you of the mind you have to have a permit for your plumbing? [51:26.080 --> 51:28.080] Absolutely not. [51:28.080 --> 51:37.080] That's what most people seem to not understand is that licenses and permits by their existence are commercial. [51:37.080 --> 51:46.080] They're permission to engage in an activity for commercial purposes that is regulated by the government. [51:46.080 --> 51:52.080] It can't be anything else because it's the only authority we gave them to regulate was commerce. [51:52.080 --> 52:00.080] If that commerce is something that can be shown to be imminently dangerous or harmful to the public health and welfare. [52:00.080 --> 52:08.080] Now, in certain parts of the plumbing, that would be absolutely true because you get backflow from a toilet or something into the housing water system. [52:08.080 --> 52:12.080] Lots of people get sick with E. coli and all kinds of other stuff. [52:12.080 --> 52:19.080] You do the same thing at the water main. You could effectively infect the entire neighborhood with it and so on and so forth. [52:19.080 --> 52:22.080] That's why plumbing requires a license. [52:22.080 --> 52:32.080] So even though you don't really need it to do your own plumbing work, you need to be aware of the consequences of not doing it properly, [52:32.080 --> 52:35.080] which these days most people aren't aware of that either. [52:35.080 --> 52:47.080] Anyway, the point of it is to sell that skill as a service and that service has a direct impact upon the health and welfare of the people to whom it's sold. [52:47.080 --> 52:53.080] That is something the state is allowed to regulate for the protection of the public health and welfare. [52:53.080 --> 53:06.080] Now, the same according to the federal courts cannot be said about traveling in an automobile because the car itself is not inherently dangerous. [53:06.080 --> 53:14.080] It isn't and it doesn't really matter the speed at which it's traveled in as presenting that danger. [53:14.080 --> 53:21.080] It's the ability of the person to properly control it and that varies whether you are licensed or not licensed. [53:21.080 --> 53:26.080] It all depends upon the skill of the individual, which is something else the courts have said. [53:26.080 --> 53:39.080] Now, like scuba diving, I think that it should be self-regulating where you need to make sure that you can properly handle the car and so on and so forth when it's on the road. [53:39.080 --> 53:43.080] But I don't think the state should be responsible for that any more than they are for the scuba diving. [53:43.080 --> 53:53.080] The whole thing about scuba diving is to keep it out of the hands of government so that it can stay a fun hobby pastime instead of a regulated, [53:53.080 --> 54:03.080] overly expensive bureaucracy that prevents you from getting the water for the first day and a half unless you do all kinds of other things first. [54:03.080 --> 54:06.080] So, you know, just that kind of thing. [54:06.080 --> 54:10.080] They always want you to have the license and permits for multiple reasons, [54:10.080 --> 54:15.080] none of which are all or a lot of which are not always valid. [54:15.080 --> 54:20.080] And they exert an authority over things that they know full well they don't have, [54:20.080 --> 54:31.080] but they know people will buy into it as generally acceptable because everybody knows through conventional wisdom, right? [54:31.080 --> 54:34.080] Right. [54:34.080 --> 54:41.080] And the point I try to get across to some of these people who are the worst sheep of the sheep is that, like I said, [54:41.080 --> 54:50.080] if you want to have pizza tonight and you have to go apply for a permit, the local government says, oh, no, you're going to have hot dogs or hamburgers. [54:50.080 --> 54:53.080] At what point do you draw the line and say enough is enough? [54:53.080 --> 55:02.080] Well, yeah, they want to do a cholesterol test and a blood draw and everything else to make sure that the pizza wouldn't be a danger to your health. [55:02.080 --> 55:07.080] Do you really want them testing you for that before you can decide what you have for dinner? [55:07.080 --> 55:09.080] No, not really. [55:09.080 --> 55:18.080] And regardless of whatever the example we give them, the point we're trying to get across to these people is that at what point is enough enough? [55:18.080 --> 55:20.080] I mean, you have the right to regulate your own life. [55:20.080 --> 55:23.080] They don't have the right to regulate yours, ours. [55:23.080 --> 55:30.080] I mean, they were only given a certain amount of duties to do and that's it. [55:30.080 --> 55:31.080] That's correct. [55:31.080 --> 55:33.080] There's nothing beyond that. [55:33.080 --> 55:40.080] It's like that, like I said, if you had to apply for a permit to go and shovel your driveway, well, the snow out of your driveway, [55:40.080 --> 55:46.080] how are you going to get down to the village hall to get the permit when you've got to shovel all that snow to get your car out of the driveway? [55:46.080 --> 55:53.080] I'm trying to express the insanity of the whole situation as best I could. [55:53.080 --> 55:56.080] Well, that's true enough. [55:56.080 --> 56:01.080] And you'd be surprised the number of people that think that's acceptable. [56:01.080 --> 56:02.080] Oh, yes. [56:02.080 --> 56:05.080] There's probably plenty of them out there. [56:05.080 --> 56:15.080] And I want to thank you, Eddie, for being the only person in the world that can draw me away from wrestling on Monday nights because I'm a hardcore wrestling fan. [56:15.080 --> 56:21.080] And if people want to make fun of it, think of the two of the biggest people that have ever come out of there have made a major change in this world. [56:21.080 --> 56:26.080] And that's Roddy Roddy Piper and the movie They Live and Jesse Ventura. [56:26.080 --> 56:30.080] So the old timers, they know a lot what's going on. [56:30.080 --> 56:31.080] Or they're learning. [56:31.080 --> 56:32.080] Yeah. [56:32.080 --> 56:41.080] They finally developed the wisdom of we know we don't know everything. [56:41.080 --> 56:43.080] It's a school of never ending learning. [56:43.080 --> 56:45.080] Yes. [56:45.080 --> 56:46.080] Well, thank you, Eddie. [56:46.080 --> 56:47.080] You're very welcome. [56:47.080 --> 56:49.080] Thanks for the compliment. [56:49.080 --> 56:51.080] You're welcome. [56:51.080 --> 56:52.080] All right. [56:52.080 --> 56:57.080] Thanks for helping us out out here because I tell you, you are you're you're a dream come true. [56:57.080 --> 57:01.080] Well, now I got to do is find a nice woman that will say that. [57:01.080 --> 57:02.080] Yeah. [57:02.080 --> 57:03.080] All right, Rob. [57:03.080 --> 57:04.080] Thanks for calling in. [57:04.080 --> 57:05.080] Okay, thanks. [57:05.080 --> 57:06.080] All right. [57:06.080 --> 57:09.080] Now we're going to go to Ryan in New Jersey. [57:09.080 --> 57:12.080] Ryan, I got a break here in about a minute and a half. [57:12.080 --> 57:16.080] So let's get started and I'll tell you when to stop. [57:16.080 --> 57:25.080] All right, before you're talking about ulterior motives, when that's fully over, I think I was a victim of that. [57:25.080 --> 57:27.080] And in April of this year, I was written. [57:27.080 --> 57:30.080] Well, anybody that gets pulled over is a victim of it. [57:30.080 --> 57:35.080] Yeah, I was I was given three faulty tickets. [57:35.080 --> 57:44.080] And for the first one, it's it's really easy for me to fight because it was driving with a suspended license, which I've never had a suspended license. [57:44.080 --> 57:46.080] And that was easy for motor vehicle proof. [57:46.080 --> 57:49.080] The other two, I feel like would need video. [57:49.080 --> 57:56.080] And that's I was they said I failed to use a turn signal and I was driving an uninsured vehicle. [57:56.080 --> 57:59.080] But they say there's no video of it. [57:59.080 --> 58:04.080] And they keep on making me feel like I'm going to fail in court by bringing to court. [58:04.080 --> 58:05.080] Yeah. [58:05.080 --> 58:10.080] Well, you can show that there was insurance in effect on that particular car at the time, right? [58:10.080 --> 58:11.080] Yeah, absolutely. [58:11.080 --> 58:20.080] And I did that and then the prosecutor tried listening to Haley's show insurance, which I feel like is a direct violation of what happened. [58:20.080 --> 58:21.080] Oh, absolutely. [58:21.080 --> 58:26.080] They can't change it after the fact when they already know they can't prove the case. [58:26.080 --> 58:27.080] Yeah, that's that's what I feel like. [58:27.080 --> 58:32.080] And I was just wondering if there's actually anything that can protect my presumed innocence. [58:32.080 --> 58:33.080] Absolutely. [58:33.080 --> 58:39.080] Well, you have to insist on the presumed innocence and you'll have to bring up the fact that prosecutor is acting corruptly. [58:39.080 --> 58:42.080] You'll file a bar grievance against your prosecutor. [58:42.080 --> 58:43.080] All right. Hang on, Ryan. [58:43.080 --> 58:44.080] We'll finish this up on the other side. [58:44.080 --> 58:46.080] Five, one, two, six, four, six. [58:46.080 --> 58:47.080] Nineteen eighty four, folks. [58:47.080 --> 58:48.080] Give us a call. [58:48.080 --> 58:50.080] We'll be right back. [58:50.080 --> 58:54.080] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [58:54.080 --> 58:58.080] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.080 --> 59:02.080] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text. [59:02.080 --> 59:07.080] But in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.080 --> 59:09.080] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.080 --> 59:13.080] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate. [59:13.080 --> 59:18.080] But the real story is the more than nine thousand explanatory footnotes. [59:18.080 --> 59:22.080] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:22.080 --> 59:28.080] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.080 --> 59:33.080] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.080 --> 59:44.080] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.080 --> 59:48.080] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.080 --> 59:51.080] That's freestudybible.com. [59:51.080 --> 59:54.080] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [59:54.080 --> 01:00:03.080] Logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:03.080 --> 01:00:09.080] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, [01:00:09.080 --> 01:00:15.080] online at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:15.080 --> 01:00:20.080] John Bush here with your Liberty Beat from Monday, November 25th, 2013. [01:00:20.080 --> 01:00:29.080] Gold opened today at $1,228, silver at $19.67, and Bitcoin is trading at $816. [01:00:29.080 --> 01:00:32.080] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from shinybadges.com, [01:00:32.080 --> 01:00:37.080] supplying the Liberty movement with lapel pens of their favorite anarchist and voluntarius symbols, [01:00:37.080 --> 01:00:41.080] including the best-selling Badges Don't Grant Extra Rights Cot Block badge. [01:00:41.080 --> 01:00:44.080] Check out the selection at shinybadges.com. [01:00:44.080 --> 01:00:50.080] Support also comes from Central Texas Gunworks, CHL courses, self-defense training, and firearm sales, [01:00:50.080 --> 01:00:53.080] online at centraltexasgunworks.com. [01:00:53.080 --> 01:00:55.080] And now the news. [01:00:55.080 --> 01:01:00.080] Last week, the Oakland City Council voted 6-1 to approve the construction of a $10.9 million [01:01:00.080 --> 01:01:04.080] city surveillance complex known as the Domain Awareness Center. [01:01:04.080 --> 01:01:07.080] Concerned citizens chanted and protested inside City Council, [01:01:07.080 --> 01:01:11.080] expressing concern over the surveillance hub that will connect dozens of traffic and surveillance cameras [01:01:11.080 --> 01:01:15.080] to police and fire dispatch systems, Twitter feeds, crime maps, [01:01:15.080 --> 01:01:19.080] gunshot-detecting microphones, license plate readers, and alarm programs. [01:01:19.080 --> 01:01:24.080] City officials say the fears are unwarranted, and when the center opens up in July 2014, [01:01:24.080 --> 01:01:29.080] it will focus on improving emergency response times to crimes, terrorism, earthquakes, and fires. [01:01:29.080 --> 01:01:34.080] Privacy advocates see it as big brother in action. [01:01:34.080 --> 01:01:38.080] The Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department filed proposed rules last week [01:01:38.080 --> 01:01:43.080] to require all legal gun owners to begin registering their firearms at police headquarters [01:01:43.080 --> 01:01:46.080] in order to renew firearm licenses beginning January 1st. [01:01:46.080 --> 01:01:51.080] Anyone with a gun registered before 2011 will be forced to go to police headquarters to be fingerprinted, [01:01:51.080 --> 01:01:56.080] photographed, pay a fee, and provide proof of address before the firearms registration section [01:01:56.080 --> 01:01:59.080] creates a new ID card for each gun and gun owner. [01:01:59.080 --> 01:02:06.080] Citizens have until December 15th to comment on the proposed regulations. [01:02:06.080 --> 01:02:10.080] San Rafael, California is preparing to enact an ordinance that would prohibit smoking [01:02:10.080 --> 01:02:15.080] within all duplex and multi-family residential units that share a common wall. [01:02:15.080 --> 01:02:19.080] The ordinance was originally passed by the San Rafael City Council in October 2012, [01:02:19.080 --> 01:02:22.080] but went into effect on November 14th, 2013. [01:02:22.080 --> 01:02:27.080] The ordinance applies to all new and existing properties and does not allow grandfathering rights. [01:02:27.080 --> 01:02:31.080] Landlords and property owners are required to enforce this ordinance through new lease language [01:02:31.080 --> 01:02:35.080] or lease amendments, as well as posting signs around the building. [01:02:35.080 --> 01:02:39.080] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Cabo Bob's Baja California Style Burritos. [01:02:39.080 --> 01:02:43.080] Check out their new location on 29th and Rio Grande between Guadalupe and Lamar. [01:02:43.080 --> 01:02:49.080] Call them at 512-432-1111 or find them online at cabobobs.com. [01:02:49.080 --> 01:02:53.080] Support also comes from World on a String at the Airstream Boutique. [01:02:53.080 --> 01:03:22.080] Crochet jewelry in pearls, shells, gemstones, glass, and other beautiful materials from around the world. [01:03:22.080 --> 01:03:24.080] All right, folks, we are back. [01:03:24.080 --> 01:03:28.080] This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are talking to Ryan in New Jersey. [01:03:28.080 --> 01:03:30.080] Ryan, go ahead. [01:03:30.080 --> 01:03:32.080] Hey, Eddie. [01:03:32.080 --> 01:03:40.080] So when we last left off, you were saying, you said a few things that actually intrigued me. [01:03:40.080 --> 01:03:48.080] You said about the prosecutor that what he was doing was corrupt and that he wasn't able to change a charge after. [01:03:48.080 --> 01:03:55.080] They've already moved to the trial phase or to pretrial or something like that, [01:03:55.080 --> 01:03:58.080] and they've already got the charges set in the complaint. [01:03:58.080 --> 01:04:03.080] They may can add charges, but once they know they can't prove one of them, [01:04:03.080 --> 01:04:08.080] they're not allowed to go back and edit it to something that they can just accuse out of the blue [01:04:08.080 --> 01:04:11.080] that was never a part of the original situation. [01:04:11.080 --> 01:04:19.080] And again, whether or not you provided that, that depends. [01:04:19.080 --> 01:04:24.080] Is there a specific statute in your state that says it's an offense to not provide it? [01:04:24.080 --> 01:04:32.080] For instance, here in Texas, they try very often to charge you with failure to display proof of financial responsibility, [01:04:32.080 --> 01:04:36.080] but there's no offense in the statute for that. [01:04:36.080 --> 01:04:45.080] The statute says a person shall provide, but nowhere does it say it is an offense for failure to do so. [01:04:45.080 --> 01:04:49.080] And yet they're trying to make charges like that all the time. [01:04:49.080 --> 01:04:50.080] I believe so. [01:04:50.080 --> 01:04:58.080] When I was looking at the statutes from the case and everything, I think it's actually a higher offense, which is odd, [01:04:58.080 --> 01:05:05.080] because I remember he tried, when I was in the prosecutor's office, he tried to pass it off casually as if he was just dismissing it, [01:05:05.080 --> 01:05:10.080] but he was actually giving me a higher claim. [01:05:10.080 --> 01:05:13.080] Yeah, they're hoping you're not paying attention to what they're doing. [01:05:13.080 --> 01:05:21.080] Yeah, but I had to sign up because this prosecutor had in fact done that to both my brother and my father, [01:05:21.080 --> 01:05:26.080] where he had upped the charges and acted like he was giving them a deal. [01:05:26.080 --> 01:05:32.080] Yeah. Well, get your hands on the video from the police cruiser if there is any. [01:05:32.080 --> 01:05:40.080] Well, that's the crazy thing. You also mentioned corruption, and this whole incident is very, very corrupt. [01:05:40.080 --> 01:05:48.080] In my municipality, most of our police squad cars have video surveillance, yet this one went missing. [01:05:48.080 --> 01:05:54.080] And there's no video surveillance, even though motor vehicle stops and most tapes are supposed to be recorded. [01:05:54.080 --> 01:05:59.080] And yeah, there's no video, which would have been my proving evidence that I showed him. [01:05:59.080 --> 01:06:02.080] Okay, where's yours? [01:06:02.080 --> 01:06:03.080] What? [01:06:03.080 --> 01:06:06.080] Where's your audio or video? [01:06:06.080 --> 01:06:08.080] Yeah, that's what I can't get a hold of. [01:06:08.080 --> 01:06:12.080] No, no, no, no, no. Where is yours? [01:06:12.080 --> 01:06:16.080] Oh, yeah, I don't have it. I wasn't recording anything at the time. [01:06:16.080 --> 01:06:23.080] You went out into public and you did not go with a device that audio and or video records. [01:06:23.080 --> 01:06:24.080] Yeah. [01:06:24.080 --> 01:06:26.080] Shame on you. [01:06:26.080 --> 01:06:27.080] Yeah, that's... [01:06:27.080 --> 01:06:30.080] Okay, I'm going to rib on you just for a second here, Ryan. [01:06:30.080 --> 01:06:40.080] People, perfect example of exactly why I tell you never to go into public without one. [01:06:40.080 --> 01:06:42.080] We clear now, Ryan? [01:06:42.080 --> 01:06:49.080] Yeah, I actually, I wanted to go into the prosecutor's office with a recording device, but I wasn't sure of the legality of that. [01:06:49.080 --> 01:06:59.080] Well, all you have to do is check the recording statutes regarding public servants and things and whether or not it's a one-party state in New Jersey. [01:06:59.080 --> 01:07:04.080] If it's a one-party state, you're the only one that has to know that it's being recorded. [01:07:04.080 --> 01:07:09.080] It was, and you also mentioned bringing charges against the prosecutor. [01:07:09.080 --> 01:07:17.080] Yeah, you can file a bar grievance against him and you can accuse him of malicious prosecution and fraud upon the court. [01:07:17.080 --> 01:07:23.080] Is there anything that I can get against them for having six officers in the same room as me surrounding me? [01:07:23.080 --> 01:07:26.080] Intimidation of a witness. [01:07:26.080 --> 01:07:34.080] Awesome, because, yeah, I've been trying to figure out how to exactly deflate from my rights in that aspect. [01:07:34.080 --> 01:07:41.080] Yeah, they use the presence of force without actually using it to intimidate you into doing other things. [01:07:41.080 --> 01:07:49.080] And since you're the one that's being accused here and you're your own witness, that can be construed as tampering with a witness. [01:07:49.080 --> 01:08:08.080] And I guess one more question, if in the process the officer is used in order to incriminate me and he fails to comply with procedure, am I able to use sort of the Poison of the Street doctrine against him? [01:08:08.080 --> 01:08:11.080] Depends on what he did and what it affected. [01:08:11.080 --> 01:08:19.080] Basically speaking, if you gave him anything voluntarily, there is no poison tree. [01:08:19.080 --> 01:08:40.080] If you acquiesced without objecting and were not forced or otherwise compelled into production or providing statements or information or evidence, then it will be considered a waiver of your right to remain silent and a waiver of the requirement for a warrant to search and seize evidence. [01:08:40.080 --> 01:08:43.080] Basically you convicted yourself. [01:08:43.080 --> 01:08:49.080] All right, yeah, because in the incident report, he actually didn't list me at all. [01:08:49.080 --> 01:08:50.080] He listed my brother. [01:08:50.080 --> 01:08:58.080] And then when he wrote up the suspended license, it was actually a ticket for my brother under my name. [01:08:58.080 --> 01:09:03.080] A ticket? How did they put a ticket for your brother under your name? [01:09:03.080 --> 01:09:13.080] That's, remember in the beginning I said that I think he had ulterior motive. I think he was trying to pull over my brother because he looked at the license plate, found out he had a suspended license. [01:09:13.080 --> 01:09:16.080] He got me instead and still tried to hit me because it was the end of him. [01:09:16.080 --> 01:09:22.080] Okay, but then let's make sure that I'm understanding how you're saying this correctly. [01:09:22.080 --> 01:09:26.080] Your brother had the suspended license, not you. [01:09:26.080 --> 01:09:27.080] Yes. [01:09:27.080 --> 01:09:32.080] But they're charging you with operating a vehicle with a suspended license. [01:09:32.080 --> 01:09:33.080] Yes. [01:09:33.080 --> 01:09:36.080] Okay, they have to prove that in court. [01:09:36.080 --> 01:09:51.080] Get a copy of, if you're not going to fight this on a transportation merit and you're going to fight it on its own merits, get a copy of your driving record and your license information from your Department of Motor Vehicles or your DPS office. [01:09:51.080 --> 01:09:52.080] Oh yeah, I've definitely done that. [01:09:52.080 --> 01:10:02.080] Okay, if you've got that and it shows that your license has never been suspended, then you can take this to trial and you can bring all that up into evidence. [01:10:02.080 --> 01:10:05.080] And you can make the prosecutor look like an utter moron. [01:10:05.080 --> 01:10:11.080] And when you win the case on those grounds, you get to sue for malicious prosecution. [01:10:11.080 --> 01:10:14.080] But you got to win. [01:10:14.080 --> 01:10:18.080] But you can sue for each one you do win. [01:10:18.080 --> 01:10:23.080] Each one would be a separate cause of action. [01:10:23.080 --> 01:10:30.080] Yeah, and most people tell me to back down with this one because it's only two tickets that they can try to get me on. [01:10:30.080 --> 01:10:33.080] But I know that I'm innocent, so I'm trying my best to... [01:10:33.080 --> 01:10:41.080] Yeah, you are experiencing exactly the problem, too many sheeple. [01:10:41.080 --> 01:10:45.080] It's taken eight months for me to try to even get a trial date, which I finally got. [01:10:45.080 --> 01:10:50.080] Well, then in that case, move to dismiss for failure to provide a speedy trial. [01:10:50.080 --> 01:10:51.080] I tried that. [01:10:51.080 --> 01:10:53.080] They already gave me the trial date. [01:10:53.080 --> 01:10:54.080] Can you dismiss? [01:10:54.080 --> 01:10:55.080] No, no, no, wait a minute. [01:10:55.080 --> 01:10:57.080] It doesn't matter if they gave you a trial date or not. [01:10:57.080 --> 01:11:01.080] When did they file the complaint versus when they're going to trial? [01:11:01.080 --> 01:11:04.080] April and December 4th. [01:11:04.080 --> 01:11:10.080] Yeah, that's way too long to provide a speedy trial for a misdemeanor, way too long. [01:11:10.080 --> 01:11:15.080] So file a written motion to dismiss for failure to provide a speedy trial. [01:11:15.080 --> 01:11:18.080] That way you have a record to take up on appeal. [01:11:18.080 --> 01:11:21.080] And I can still bring them to court for everything? [01:11:21.080 --> 01:11:23.080] Absolutely. [01:11:23.080 --> 01:11:26.080] They tried to prosecute you, right? [01:11:26.080 --> 01:11:27.080] Yep. [01:11:27.080 --> 01:11:37.080] The only way you can win this is to make them dismiss it or win on the merits. [01:11:37.080 --> 01:11:40.080] Hopefully I can do that. [01:11:40.080 --> 01:11:45.080] I'm definitely going to try to write the motion then and see what comes of it. [01:11:45.080 --> 01:11:46.080] Okay. [01:11:46.080 --> 01:11:47.080] Well, good luck. [01:11:47.080 --> 01:11:48.080] All right. [01:11:48.080 --> 01:11:49.080] Thank you very much, Eddie. [01:11:49.080 --> 01:11:50.080] You're very welcome. [01:11:50.080 --> 01:11:51.080] You have a good night. [01:11:51.080 --> 01:11:52.080] Thanks for calling in. [01:11:52.080 --> 01:11:53.080] All right. [01:11:53.080 --> 01:11:56.080] Now we're going to go to Dean in Wisconsin. [01:11:56.080 --> 01:11:57.080] Yeah. [01:11:57.080 --> 01:11:58.080] Hello. [01:11:58.080 --> 01:11:59.080] Hello. [01:11:59.080 --> 01:12:00.080] Yeah. [01:12:00.080 --> 01:12:01.080] Eddie? [01:12:01.080 --> 01:12:02.080] Yes? [01:12:02.080 --> 01:12:10.080] I heard you make a comment on, I don't know if you radio show or what, but that Congress, [01:12:10.080 --> 01:12:18.080] U.S. Congress can't make laws that are over the people. [01:12:18.080 --> 01:12:25.080] The United States Congress was never given the authority to create any law that is directly applicable [01:12:25.080 --> 01:12:28.080] to the people of the several states of the union. [01:12:28.080 --> 01:12:33.080] Find that in the 18 enumerated powers. [01:12:33.080 --> 01:12:37.080] What about like all these gun laws that... [01:12:37.080 --> 01:12:41.080] They're absolutely non-applicable to the people of the states of the union. [01:12:41.080 --> 01:12:45.080] They're only applicable to those areas over which the United States Congress has plenary [01:12:45.080 --> 01:12:55.080] lawmaking power, which is D.C., any federal territory, enclave, protectorate, those types of [01:12:55.080 --> 01:13:01.080] places, or any plot of land within the several states that has been specifically ceded to [01:13:01.080 --> 01:13:05.080] the federal government by that state. [01:13:05.080 --> 01:13:12.080] That's the only place Congress has lawmaking power that directly affects the people that live there. [01:13:12.080 --> 01:13:21.080] None of the 18 enumerated powers grants them that to the people of the several states. [01:13:21.080 --> 01:13:29.080] So all these gun laws, unless the state picks it up, aren't legal. [01:13:29.080 --> 01:13:36.080] Even if the state picks it up, it's being exercised in an area that they were never given legislative authority. [01:13:36.080 --> 01:13:44.080] Even the state law would be invalid if it's based upon a federal law that doesn't have any authority. [01:13:44.080 --> 01:13:51.080] You cannot give to someone else a power you yourself never possessed, period. [01:13:51.080 --> 01:13:57.080] The federal government cannot give it to your state legislature because they never possessed it. [01:13:57.080 --> 01:14:04.080] Your state legislature can't do it because your constitution and your state forbade them to have it. [01:14:04.080 --> 01:14:07.080] See the problem? [01:14:07.080 --> 01:14:10.080] Yeah, but isn't that what's happening now? [01:14:10.080 --> 01:14:14.080] Of course it's what's happening now because we the people haven't done what we needed to do [01:14:14.080 --> 01:14:17.080] and forced them to stop doing it. [01:14:17.080 --> 01:14:22.080] And we're not going to do that at a voting booth where they get to control the outcome of the vote. [01:14:22.080 --> 01:14:26.080] They're not going to do it by marching in front of the Capitol. [01:14:26.080 --> 01:14:30.080] They're going to do it by the people in every location getting in the face of their representative [01:14:30.080 --> 01:14:35.080] and showing them what a hanging party looks like if they fail to abide by their oath of office [01:14:35.080 --> 01:14:41.080] and the rules we laid down for them to follow. [01:14:41.080 --> 01:14:48.080] We need massive nationwide public hangings reinstituted. [01:14:48.080 --> 01:14:52.080] We start with the tar feathering and riding out of town on the rail, [01:14:52.080 --> 01:14:57.080] and then we bar them from ever serving in any form of public office ever again. [01:14:57.080 --> 01:15:02.080] And if the next crop has the problem, then, hey, repeat offenders, let's go. [01:15:02.080 --> 01:15:06.080] Now we start hanging people until you get the idea that you work for us. [01:15:06.080 --> 01:15:08.080] It ain't the other way around. [01:15:08.080 --> 01:15:15.080] We try them and convict them for sedition and treason and make a show of it. [01:15:15.080 --> 01:15:16.080] Okay. [01:15:16.080 --> 01:15:21.080] That's within our power as the people to do. [01:15:21.080 --> 01:15:23.080] They claim the power to hold us accountable. [01:15:23.080 --> 01:15:27.080] Well, that power they exercise came from us. [01:15:27.080 --> 01:15:34.080] How can they possibly say that we don't have the power to enforce it ourselves? [01:15:34.080 --> 01:15:36.080] Okay. [01:15:36.080 --> 01:15:39.080] Question about training certificates. [01:15:39.080 --> 01:15:44.080] Can you ask an officer for his training certificate? [01:15:44.080 --> 01:15:54.080] You can ask him, but there's probably nothing in state law that requires him to produce it. [01:15:54.080 --> 01:15:59.080] Asking for it or asking if he has been certified. [01:15:59.080 --> 01:16:01.080] Again, certified to do what? [01:16:01.080 --> 01:16:02.080] How is that relevant? [01:16:02.080 --> 01:16:08.080] To make traffic laws or to make traffic stops. [01:16:08.080 --> 01:16:09.080] Okay. [01:16:09.080 --> 01:16:13.080] Again, he's going to assume he has all the authority he wants. [01:16:13.080 --> 01:16:16.080] See, that's the problem with that assuming thing. [01:16:16.080 --> 01:16:22.080] A lot of them are just as guilty of it as a lot of people are as individuals. [01:16:22.080 --> 01:16:27.080] So asking him to prove his authority is going to get you nowhere. [01:16:27.080 --> 01:16:32.080] Do you not have a copy of the transportation script? [01:16:32.080 --> 01:16:33.080] Yeah. [01:16:33.080 --> 01:16:36.080] Is that yeah you don't or yeah you do? [01:16:36.080 --> 01:16:37.080] Yes I do. [01:16:37.080 --> 01:16:38.080] Okay. [01:16:38.080 --> 01:16:41.080] Is there anything in there about asking the cop for that? [01:16:41.080 --> 01:16:42.080] No. [01:16:42.080 --> 01:16:43.080] Okay. [01:16:43.080 --> 01:16:44.080] Why do you think that is? [01:16:44.080 --> 01:16:47.080] You think on that for a minute and we'll carry on this conversation on the other side of [01:16:47.080 --> 01:16:48.080] the break. [01:16:48.080 --> 01:16:54.080] All right folks, 512-646-1984, I got 45 minutes left, a couple of other callers and I'm going [01:16:54.080 --> 01:16:55.080] to need some more. [01:16:55.080 --> 01:16:58.080] So y'all hang on, we will be right back. [01:16:58.080 --> 01:17:05.080] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [01:17:05.080 --> 01:17:09.080] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [01:17:09.080 --> 01:17:13.080] We provide a wide assortment of our favorite products featuring a great selection of high [01:17:13.080 --> 01:17:14.080] quality coins and precious metals. [01:17:14.080 --> 01:17:18.080] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [01:17:18.080 --> 01:17:23.080] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metals dealers [01:17:23.080 --> 01:17:24.080] and journalists. [01:17:24.080 --> 01:17:27.080] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [01:17:27.080 --> 01:17:31.080] In addition, we carry popular young Jevity products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and [01:17:31.080 --> 01:17:32.080] Polynburps. [01:17:32.080 --> 01:17:37.080] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storable Foods, Berkey Water Products, ammunition [01:17:37.080 --> 01:17:39.080] at 10% above wholesale and more. [01:17:39.080 --> 01:17:43.080] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:17:43.080 --> 01:17:46.080] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:17:46.080 --> 01:17:51.080] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:17:51.080 --> 01:17:54.080] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:17:54.080 --> 01:18:00.080] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:18:00.080 --> 01:18:06.080] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved except in the area of [01:18:06.080 --> 01:18:07.080] nutrition. [01:18:07.080 --> 01:18:12.080] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed all that. [01:18:12.080 --> 01:18:17.080] The primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:18:17.080 --> 01:18:24.080] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, young Jevity can [01:18:24.080 --> 01:18:26.080] provide the nutrients you need. [01:18:26.080 --> 01:18:31.080] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [01:18:31.080 --> 01:18:32.080] we reject. [01:18:32.080 --> 01:18:37.080] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [01:18:37.080 --> 01:18:40.080] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. [01:18:40.080 --> 01:18:47.080] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:18:47.080 --> 01:18:48.080] quality radio. [01:18:48.080 --> 01:18:52.080] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:18:52.080 --> 01:18:58.080] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family and increase [01:18:58.080 --> 01:18:59.080] your income. [01:18:59.080 --> 01:19:00.080] Order now. [01:19:00.080 --> 01:19:10.080] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:30.080 --> 01:19:50.080] Thank you. [01:20:01.080 --> 01:20:04.080] All right, folks, we are back. [01:20:04.080 --> 01:20:06.080] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:20:06.080 --> 01:20:09.080] All right, I'm going to finish up here with Dean. [01:20:09.080 --> 01:20:16.080] Dean, anything else? [01:20:16.080 --> 01:20:23.080] Can you book an oral motion when you're brought before a magistrate? [01:20:23.080 --> 01:20:28.080] Well, of course you can make an oral motion, but I recommend you don't do so. [01:20:28.080 --> 01:20:35.080] If you want an accurate record to take forward on appeal, you do everything in writing, and [01:20:35.080 --> 01:20:41.080] I do mean everything. [01:20:41.080 --> 01:20:48.080] Okay, I'm looking at here an affidavit by one of your things that you put out, demands [01:20:48.080 --> 01:20:55.080] production of your training and certificate documents, validating your alleged authority. [01:20:55.080 --> 01:20:58.080] Does that not exist? [01:20:58.080 --> 01:21:01.080] That, okay. [01:21:01.080 --> 01:21:05.080] Pursuit of Texas Administrative Code Title 37. [01:21:05.080 --> 01:21:07.080] Well, Dean, you're not in Texas. [01:21:07.080 --> 01:21:11.080] Yeah, I know. [01:21:11.080 --> 01:21:12.080] Okay. [01:21:12.080 --> 01:21:19.080] First off, that is never the proper defense in these cases, never, ever, ever. [01:21:19.080 --> 01:21:27.080] Say this before, I'll say it again, to fight such cases, you must use an equal but opposite [01:21:27.080 --> 01:21:29.080] argument to their case. [01:21:29.080 --> 01:21:35.080] For instance, where most people screw up and lose is they argue right to travel when they're [01:21:35.080 --> 01:21:39.080] actually being accused of engaging in commerce. [01:21:39.080 --> 01:21:44.080] Do you see how they're two completely unrelated arguments? [01:21:44.080 --> 01:21:45.080] Right. [01:21:45.080 --> 01:21:46.080] Yeah, I see that. [01:21:46.080 --> 01:21:52.080] So they're saying you were engaged in commerce without the proper documents, and you're saying, [01:21:52.080 --> 01:21:54.080] I have the right to travel. [01:21:54.080 --> 01:22:00.080] One does not equate to opposition to the other. [01:22:00.080 --> 01:22:09.080] The proper rebuttal is, I was never engaged in commerce requiring me to have those documents [01:22:09.080 --> 01:22:15.080] and permits, blah, blah, blah. [01:22:15.080 --> 01:22:18.080] You see how it's equal but opposite? [01:22:18.080 --> 01:22:22.080] Yeah. [01:22:22.080 --> 01:22:26.080] Okay. [01:22:26.080 --> 01:22:29.080] I was just misled then. [01:22:29.080 --> 01:22:35.080] I mean, the authority to give them the arresting powers. [01:22:35.080 --> 01:22:41.080] Okay, the difference here is, okay, I give you that information so that you understand [01:22:41.080 --> 01:22:43.080] the limits of their authority. [01:22:43.080 --> 01:22:47.080] That doesn't mean that that's the particular tool to carry on a particular part of the [01:22:47.080 --> 01:22:48.080] fight. [01:22:48.080 --> 01:22:53.080] That is information with which to arm yourself so that you understand what is actually [01:22:53.080 --> 01:22:58.080] allowed and happening. [01:22:58.080 --> 01:22:59.080] Gotcha. [01:22:59.080 --> 01:23:00.080] You follow? [01:23:00.080 --> 01:23:01.080] Yeah. [01:23:01.080 --> 01:23:06.080] That way you can have confidence in that you are properly asserting the limits of what [01:23:06.080 --> 01:23:08.080] they can do. [01:23:08.080 --> 01:23:10.080] It's for your own understanding. [01:23:10.080 --> 01:23:16.080] It is not necessarily the tool that is used to argue against what they're doing. [01:23:16.080 --> 01:23:22.080] It's simply so that you know you are in the right and thus you have confidence in your [01:23:22.080 --> 01:23:24.080] argument. [01:23:24.080 --> 01:23:29.080] Where most people have the biggest problem is they do not go into court prepared with [01:23:29.080 --> 01:23:32.080] the argument and confident that they are right. [01:23:32.080 --> 01:23:38.080] They argue it or badly argue it and maim it so bad because of a lack of confidence and [01:23:38.080 --> 01:23:46.080] faith in its truth that they screw themselves over and lose and do not make a proper record. [01:23:46.080 --> 01:23:48.080] Better to drive? [01:23:48.080 --> 01:23:53.080] It's always better to fight, but the thing is, if you're going to fight somebody that's [01:23:53.080 --> 01:23:58.080] good at it, then you need to be at least as equally good to not get pummeled, don't you? [01:23:58.080 --> 01:23:59.080] Oh, yeah. [01:23:59.080 --> 01:24:05.080] Relying on sheer dumb luck to save you is not the way to go about having any kind of [01:24:05.080 --> 01:24:07.080] fight. [01:24:07.080 --> 01:24:09.080] Got it. [01:24:09.080 --> 01:24:12.080] Are you on Facebook? [01:24:12.080 --> 01:24:17.080] Yes, it's under Tao Law, T-A-O space L-A-W. [01:24:17.080 --> 01:24:21.080] T-A-O. [01:24:21.080 --> 01:24:24.080] Space L-A-W. [01:24:24.080 --> 01:24:26.080] Okay. [01:24:26.080 --> 01:24:27.080] Okay. [01:24:27.080 --> 01:24:28.080] Thank you, Eddie. [01:24:28.080 --> 01:24:30.080] All right, Dean, thanks for calling in. [01:24:30.080 --> 01:24:33.080] All right, now we're going to go to Johnny in Texas. [01:24:33.080 --> 01:24:35.080] Johnny, is this you? [01:24:35.080 --> 01:24:36.080] It is. [01:24:36.080 --> 01:24:37.080] Hey. [01:24:37.080 --> 01:24:38.080] What's going on? [01:24:38.080 --> 01:24:40.080] So far, so grand. [01:24:40.080 --> 01:24:47.080] I just wanted to comment on a couple of things that you said earlier in the show. [01:24:47.080 --> 01:24:48.080] Well, be my guest. [01:24:48.080 --> 01:24:50.080] Okay, then I'll be brief. [01:24:50.080 --> 01:24:53.080] I got a couple of things that I want to throw in, but I'll be short on them. [01:24:53.080 --> 01:24:56.080] If there's anything you want me to expand on, feel free to let me know. [01:24:56.080 --> 01:25:05.080] But you were talking about the contractual nature of, you know, law and the Constitution [01:25:05.080 --> 01:25:07.080] and things like that. [01:25:07.080 --> 01:25:09.080] There's a book. [01:25:09.080 --> 01:25:12.080] I got it a few years back off of Google Scholar. [01:25:12.080 --> 01:25:14.080] I don't know if it's still available. [01:25:14.080 --> 01:25:21.080] But if you ever get a chance to read it, it's a very long read, but it will open your eyes [01:25:21.080 --> 01:25:27.080] and it will give you a big kick in the head as to the contractual nature of all law. [01:25:27.080 --> 01:25:29.080] Contracts are the basis of all law. [01:25:29.080 --> 01:25:38.080] The book is called Principles of the Law of Contract, 14th English Edition. [01:25:38.080 --> 01:25:42.080] And this guy's title is particularly interesting. [01:25:42.080 --> 01:25:49.080] Sir William R. Anson Barrister, DCL of the Inner Temple, Barrister at Law, Warden of [01:25:49.080 --> 01:25:52.080] All Souls College, Oxford. [01:25:52.080 --> 01:25:58.080] But by the time you get through that book, it would just totally change your entire mindset [01:25:58.080 --> 01:26:02.080] as to the contractual nature of things. [01:26:02.080 --> 01:26:10.080] And especially consent, you know, I see a lot of people that go into court and they [01:26:10.080 --> 01:26:15.080] try to say, well, you know, are you, is this a government by consent of the government? [01:26:15.080 --> 01:26:17.080] You know, do you exist by consent of the government? [01:26:17.080 --> 01:26:19.080] And the court says, oh, yeah, of course. [01:26:19.080 --> 01:26:21.080] You know, and do you govern me? [01:26:21.080 --> 01:26:22.080] Well, of course they do. [01:26:22.080 --> 01:26:23.080] Well, I don't consent. [01:26:23.080 --> 01:26:28.080] Well, that's the same thing as saying, yeah, it's the same thing as going and buying a [01:26:28.080 --> 01:26:32.080] car, filling out all the paperwork and then getting the car home and saying, I don't consent [01:26:32.080 --> 01:26:35.080] to pay for the car and I don't consent to give the car to you back. [01:26:35.080 --> 01:26:37.080] They can give it back to you. [01:26:37.080 --> 01:26:38.080] Well, you have to consent it. [01:26:38.080 --> 01:26:42.080] It's in a contract that you have not rescinded. [01:26:42.080 --> 01:26:48.080] And a lot of times in law, things that sound like commands, for example, let me give you [01:26:48.080 --> 01:26:49.080] a couple of examples here. [01:26:49.080 --> 01:26:54.080] I've had judges yell and scream at me things that sound like commands, you know, stand [01:26:54.080 --> 01:26:57.080] up, get out of the car or whatever. [01:26:57.080 --> 01:27:01.080] And if you'll just ask them, is that an order or is that a request? [01:27:01.080 --> 01:27:06.080] You will be amazed at how often they will take it down a couple of notches and they'll [01:27:06.080 --> 01:27:10.080] tell you it's a request after they just got through screaming it at you. [01:27:10.080 --> 01:27:18.080] Paul saw an example of that when I went to court with him, a municipal court, I followed [01:27:18.080 --> 01:27:22.080] him into the room for his conference with the prosecutor and the prosecutor standing [01:27:22.080 --> 01:27:29.080] there yelling and screaming at me, telling me that you can't be in here. [01:27:29.080 --> 01:27:31.080] You have to leave out of here right now. [01:27:31.080 --> 01:27:33.080] You're not allowed to be in here. [01:27:33.080 --> 01:27:39.080] And I mean, he was screaming it to the point that a bunch of cops came, you know, to see [01:27:39.080 --> 01:27:40.080] what was going on. [01:27:40.080 --> 01:27:43.080] And I asked him, is that an order or is it a request? [01:27:43.080 --> 01:27:45.080] And he just, he looked dumbfounded, like I just slapped him. [01:27:45.080 --> 01:27:48.080] And he said, well, I'm not ordering you to do anything. [01:27:48.080 --> 01:27:52.080] I'm like, well, you're screaming it at me. [01:27:52.080 --> 01:27:56.080] It's on a bigger level. [01:27:56.080 --> 01:27:58.080] You're talking about Congress. [01:27:58.080 --> 01:28:04.080] You're talking about, you know, the Constitution and legislators and all of that kind of stuff. [01:28:04.080 --> 01:28:13.080] The way they look at it and in some respects, rightfully so, is they set up this system [01:28:13.080 --> 01:28:21.080] and when you participate in it, if you go and vote, you are endorsing that system and [01:28:21.080 --> 01:28:26.080] you are essentially, you know, just a lot of this goes right to what Carmen Taylor says. [01:28:26.080 --> 01:28:33.080] You are expressing your agreement to participate in this system and essentially when you vote, [01:28:33.080 --> 01:28:40.080] so when you petition the legislators to do anything, you are essentially saying that, [01:28:40.080 --> 01:28:47.080] you're just thinking that this guy is, he represents you and that, you know, [01:28:47.080 --> 01:28:52.080] by voting you participate in the system and no matter how the vote turns out, [01:28:52.080 --> 01:28:55.080] you agree to abide by it even if you don't like it. [01:28:55.080 --> 01:28:58.080] Let me interject on that note for just one second. [01:28:58.080 --> 01:29:02.080] Technically, I would go more with how Spooner put it in relation to that. [01:29:02.080 --> 01:29:08.080] The fact that I act to defend my rights by refusing to vote for one person or voting for another [01:29:08.080 --> 01:29:14.080] does not actually offer proof that I consent to either. [01:29:14.080 --> 01:29:21.080] I'm simply acting out of the need to protect my rights to the only mechanism currently within my reach. [01:29:21.080 --> 01:29:27.080] That's like saying that I waive my right to use a gun because the first thing I hit you with [01:29:27.080 --> 01:29:31.080] if you were trying to kill me was, well, rock and from that point on, [01:29:31.080 --> 01:29:35.080] I'm limited to using only the rock to make you stop. [01:29:35.080 --> 01:29:42.080] So I agree with you depending on which rights you're talking about. [01:29:42.080 --> 01:29:43.080] Yeah. [01:29:43.080 --> 01:29:44.080] Well, hang on just a second, Johnny. [01:29:44.080 --> 01:29:46.080] We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:29:46.080 --> 01:29:47.080] All right, folks. [01:29:47.080 --> 01:29:49.080] I got about a half an hour left. [01:29:49.080 --> 01:29:52.080] 512-646-1984. [01:29:52.080 --> 01:29:53.080] Barbara, Brandon, Ross, I'll see you all there. [01:29:53.080 --> 01:29:54.080] You all hang on. [01:29:54.080 --> 01:29:56.080] I'll pick you all up when I'm done with Johnny. [01:29:56.080 --> 01:30:00.080] We'll be right back. [01:30:00.080 --> 01:30:05.080] Childhood obesity is a hefty problem, but we don't need bureaucrats to solve it. [01:30:05.080 --> 01:30:09.080] Parents can help kids maintain a healthy weight by simply sitting down to meals with them. [01:30:09.080 --> 01:30:14.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Alberts, and I'll be back with the benefits of breaking bread with your children. [01:30:14.080 --> 01:30:18.080] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches [01:30:18.080 --> 01:30:21.080] and creating a massive database of your personal information. [01:30:21.080 --> 01:30:22.080] That's creepy. [01:30:22.080 --> 01:30:24.080] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:24.080 --> 01:30:27.080] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:27.080 --> 01:30:31.080] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches, [01:30:31.080 --> 01:30:34.080] or use tracking cookies, and they're third-party certified. [01:30:34.080 --> 01:30:38.080] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [01:30:38.080 --> 01:30:41.080] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:41.080 --> 01:30:44.080] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:44.080 --> 01:30:47.080] The family that prays together stays together. [01:30:47.080 --> 01:30:49.080] We've all heard that, and studies show it's true. [01:30:49.080 --> 01:30:54.080] But there's another family activity that can help kids avoid obesity and eating disorders, [01:30:54.080 --> 01:30:56.080] sitting down to family meals. [01:30:56.080 --> 01:30:58.080] Research shows that when families eat meals together, [01:30:58.080 --> 01:31:02.080] kids are less likely to be overweight or pig out on junk food. [01:31:02.080 --> 01:31:05.080] Plus, they have 34 percent fewer eating disorders. [01:31:05.080 --> 01:31:08.080] They also consume healthier foods like fruits and vegetables. [01:31:08.080 --> 01:31:12.080] Amazingly, it takes just three sit-down meals a week to see the benefits. [01:31:12.080 --> 01:31:16.080] So take the time to prepare a nutritious family meal and serve lots of veggies. [01:31:16.080 --> 01:31:21.080] That's a good example for the kids, and your own health may improve as well. [01:31:21.080 --> 01:31:31.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:31.080 --> 01:31:33.080] Here at Zombie Killer Ammo and Guns, [01:31:33.080 --> 01:31:36.080] we believe that the Second Amendment guarantees our rights as citizens [01:31:36.080 --> 01:31:39.080] to be able to defend ourselves and our loved ones. [01:31:39.080 --> 01:31:42.080] We also believe that the right to carry weapons comes with the responsibility [01:31:42.080 --> 01:31:44.080] of being safe and smart about guns. [01:31:44.080 --> 01:31:47.080] So if you're going to be in the Corpus Christi area, give us a call [01:31:47.080 --> 01:31:52.080] at 1-611-704-6103, ask for Chris or Portia, [01:31:52.080 --> 01:31:55.080] and mention this radio ad for a 10 percent discount. [01:31:55.080 --> 01:32:01.080] We can ship ammo, parts, and accessories, like us on Facebook at Zombie Killers LLC. [01:32:01.080 --> 01:32:04.080] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:32:04.080 --> 01:32:07.080] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, [01:32:07.080 --> 01:32:10.080] and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:32:10.080 --> 01:32:14.080] Did you know the U.S. government banned the hemp plant from growing in the United States [01:32:14.080 --> 01:32:18.080] and classified it as a Schedule I drug to hide it behind the marijuana plant? [01:32:18.080 --> 01:32:21.080] People have been confused about this plant for over 80 years, [01:32:21.080 --> 01:32:24.080] and many still don't know what hemp is. [01:32:24.080 --> 01:32:28.080] So now you know hemp is not marijuana, and marijuana is not hemp. [01:32:28.080 --> 01:32:31.080] They are different varieties of the same species. [01:32:31.080 --> 01:32:34.080] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts [01:32:34.080 --> 01:32:37.080] and to help people understand that hemp protein powder [01:32:37.080 --> 01:32:40.080] is the best kept health secret you need to know about. [01:32:40.080 --> 01:32:44.080] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53 percent protein, [01:32:44.080 --> 01:32:49.080] is gluten-free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. [01:32:49.080 --> 01:32:54.080] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367, [01:32:54.080 --> 01:32:58.080] and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [01:32:58.080 --> 01:33:02.080] Only at HempUSA.org. [01:33:02.080 --> 01:33:08.080] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:08.080 --> 01:33:13.080] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:13.080 --> 01:33:15.080] Yeah, and who you want to chip? Who you take me for? [01:33:15.080 --> 01:33:17.080] Free Tully? Who you want to chip? [01:33:17.080 --> 01:33:20.080] Me no free Tully. You can't chip me. [01:33:20.080 --> 01:33:23.080] All I'm saying, don't let them chip you in the morning, [01:33:23.080 --> 01:33:26.080] chip you in the evening, put a chip in your body. [01:33:26.080 --> 01:33:29.080] And then when you go computer reading, [01:33:29.080 --> 01:33:31.080] you can't hide me from nobody. [01:33:31.080 --> 01:33:33.080] What me say? Chip in your mouth. [01:33:33.080 --> 01:33:36.080] All right, folks, we are back, and we are talking to Johnny in Texas. [01:33:36.080 --> 01:33:38.080] All right, Johnny, go ahead. [01:33:38.080 --> 01:33:40.080] Okay, I have a few things I wanted to cover, [01:33:40.080 --> 01:33:42.080] but I know you have other callers. [01:33:42.080 --> 01:33:46.080] So I just want to read you a couple of quotes that go to what you were saying earlier [01:33:46.080 --> 01:33:49.080] about the contractual nature of the Constitution [01:33:49.080 --> 01:33:53.080] and the fact that the rights do not come from it. [01:33:53.080 --> 01:33:56.080] There's a book called The American Constitution [01:33:56.080 --> 01:34:01.080] written by Herman Pritchard in 1977 [01:34:01.080 --> 01:34:06.080] where he quotes John Dickinson, who is the chairman of the Committee [01:34:06.080 --> 01:34:09.080] for the Declaration of Independence [01:34:09.080 --> 01:34:11.080] in a speech that he gave to the Pope [01:34:11.080 --> 01:34:14.080] where he said, our liberties do not come from charters, [01:34:14.080 --> 01:34:19.080] for these are only the declarations of some preexisting rights. [01:34:19.080 --> 01:34:21.080] They do not depend on parchment or steel. [01:34:21.080 --> 01:34:26.080] They come from the King of Kings and the Lord of all the earth. [01:34:26.080 --> 01:34:33.080] And in 16 Corpus Christi Constitutional Law, Section 202, [01:34:33.080 --> 01:34:37.080] it talks about how rights are not derived from [01:34:37.080 --> 01:34:41.080] or dependent on the United States Constitution. [01:34:41.080 --> 01:34:46.080] There's also a case, Paddleford Pay and Company, [01:34:46.080 --> 01:34:52.080] versus the mayor and alderman of the city of Savannah, [01:34:52.080 --> 01:34:57.080] where someone brought a suit on the grounds that they were being unfairly taxed [01:34:57.080 --> 01:35:00.080] and they said it was a breach of the Constitution. [01:35:00.080 --> 01:35:02.080] And they took the case to court and the court said, [01:35:02.080 --> 01:35:07.080] no citizen may complain on the grounds of a breach of the Constitution [01:35:07.080 --> 01:35:11.080] for while it is true that the Constitution is a contract, [01:35:11.080 --> 01:35:13.080] he is not a party to it. [01:35:13.080 --> 01:35:14.080] Correct. [01:35:14.080 --> 01:35:19.080] It's just between the federal organization and the state legislators themselves. [01:35:19.080 --> 01:35:24.080] Right. Well, it even says, you know, the framers of the Constitution even say, [01:35:24.080 --> 01:35:30.080] you know, that what they do, we do for ourselves and our posterity. [01:35:30.080 --> 01:35:37.080] And the legal meaning of posterity is all of direct descendants and the direct bloodline. [01:35:37.080 --> 01:35:39.080] So it doesn't apply. [01:35:39.080 --> 01:35:43.080] But I would say read that book. [01:35:43.080 --> 01:35:49.080] Also, the principles of the law of the contract and also look at, [01:35:49.080 --> 01:35:53.080] there's a case called the Downsby Midwill, [01:35:53.080 --> 01:35:57.080] where the court talked about how we have two national governments, [01:35:57.080 --> 01:36:01.080] one to be maintained under the Constitution with all of its restrictions [01:36:01.080 --> 01:36:07.080] and the other to be maintained by Congress outside and independent of that instrument [01:36:07.080 --> 01:36:12.080] by exercising such power as other nations of the earth are accustomed to. [01:36:12.080 --> 01:36:16.080] So when it goes on, it really goes into a lot of explanation about that. [01:36:16.080 --> 01:36:18.080] But I totally agree with you. [01:36:18.080 --> 01:36:20.080] Our rights did not come from any Constitution. [01:36:20.080 --> 01:36:24.080] It's only a subset, a reiteration of a subset of preexisting rights. [01:36:24.080 --> 01:36:28.080] It is a contract to which we are not parties. [01:36:28.080 --> 01:36:33.080] And if you will look at the book, Principles of the Law of Contract, [01:36:33.080 --> 01:36:38.080] it will really make you realize a lot of the things that Harmon talks about [01:36:38.080 --> 01:36:45.080] and so much more about how contracts are the underlying basis of all law and all forms. [01:36:45.080 --> 01:36:48.080] So I just thought I'd touch on those things and kind of... [01:36:48.080 --> 01:36:49.080] Well, I appreciate it. [01:36:49.080 --> 01:36:52.080] You were saying, you wanted to back up what you were saying earlier, [01:36:52.080 --> 01:36:54.080] but kind of in a little bit different light. [01:36:54.080 --> 01:36:55.080] All right. [01:36:55.080 --> 01:36:58.080] Well, I appreciate the assistance and emphasis there. [01:36:58.080 --> 01:36:59.080] All right. [01:36:59.080 --> 01:37:00.080] All right. [01:37:00.080 --> 01:37:01.080] Johnny, thanks for calling in. [01:37:01.080 --> 01:37:03.080] Thanks. [01:37:03.080 --> 01:37:04.080] All right. [01:37:04.080 --> 01:37:07.080] Now we're going to go to Barbara in New Jersey. [01:37:07.080 --> 01:37:10.080] Barbara, what can we do for you? [01:37:10.080 --> 01:37:13.080] Really? [01:37:13.080 --> 01:37:17.080] Actually, I do want to speak to you about something. [01:37:17.080 --> 01:37:28.080] I really don't get it because something happened to me that really terrorized my life. [01:37:28.080 --> 01:37:37.080] And I spent time in jail and everything I had never done anything wrong in my life before. [01:37:37.080 --> 01:37:48.080] It was something that you had written about your rights when you get pulled over or something. [01:37:48.080 --> 01:37:50.080] Okay. [01:37:50.080 --> 01:37:52.080] I didn't know any of that. [01:37:52.080 --> 01:38:00.080] And what I did was completely comply with the officer. [01:38:00.080 --> 01:38:07.080] But I was running from a domestic violence issue at the time. [01:38:07.080 --> 01:38:14.080] And when he pulled me over, I told him what has happened. [01:38:14.080 --> 01:38:16.080] My hair was all pulled out. [01:38:16.080 --> 01:38:18.080] I was all over the place. [01:38:18.080 --> 01:38:25.080] And he had me do like the street tests, whatever they are. [01:38:25.080 --> 01:38:27.080] So variety tests? [01:38:27.080 --> 01:38:28.080] Yeah. [01:38:28.080 --> 01:38:30.080] And I passed them all. [01:38:30.080 --> 01:38:33.080] And he's like, I still think you've been drinking. [01:38:33.080 --> 01:38:36.080] And I'm like, no, I had something. [01:38:36.080 --> 01:38:39.080] This was about 7, 8 o'clock at night. [01:38:39.080 --> 01:38:46.080] And I told him, yes, I had two beers around 12, 1 o'clock in the afternoon. [01:38:46.080 --> 01:38:54.080] But then my ex came home and, you know, that stopped immediately. [01:38:54.080 --> 01:39:01.080] But he then proceeded to give me a breathalyzer on the side of the road. [01:39:01.080 --> 01:39:04.080] I agreed to it. [01:39:04.080 --> 01:39:06.080] It didn't give him the results he wanted. [01:39:06.080 --> 01:39:08.080] So he made me wait. [01:39:08.080 --> 01:39:10.080] And then he gave me another one. [01:39:10.080 --> 01:39:13.080] It still didn't give him the results he wanted. [01:39:13.080 --> 01:39:22.080] And then he said to me, no joke, on the side of the road, I still think you've been drinking. [01:39:22.080 --> 01:39:24.080] I still think something's up. [01:39:24.080 --> 01:39:28.080] Put me in handcuffs and put me in the back of his car. [01:39:28.080 --> 01:39:29.080] Oh, no, wait. [01:39:29.080 --> 01:39:30.080] I take that back. [01:39:30.080 --> 01:39:34.080] He put me in the front seat of his car. [01:39:34.080 --> 01:39:35.080] Okay. [01:39:35.080 --> 01:39:43.080] So he proceeded to Middletown, New York, where he drove at like 90 miles an hour. [01:39:43.080 --> 01:39:53.080] And at one point, I said to him, do you realize if you get in an accident, I have no way of defending myself and you'll kill me? [01:39:53.080 --> 01:39:55.080] And he's like, fine, fine. [01:39:55.080 --> 01:39:57.080] I didn't have a seatbelt on. [01:39:57.080 --> 01:39:59.080] He had no seatbelt on me. [01:39:59.080 --> 01:40:01.080] So he pulls over. [01:40:01.080 --> 01:40:04.080] He puts the seatbelt on me, drives to Middletown, New York, [01:40:04.080 --> 01:40:16.080] then proceeds to tell his fellow officers that I threatened his job because I had said that, you know, if something happens to me, you'll lose your job. [01:40:16.080 --> 01:40:17.080] You'll lose it. [01:40:17.080 --> 01:40:18.080] How long have you been doing this? [01:40:18.080 --> 01:40:24.080] I said to him, because I was just conversing, which you say I shouldn't have done. [01:40:24.080 --> 01:40:33.080] Anyway, they had me go take three breathalyzers while I was there. [01:40:33.080 --> 01:40:35.080] None of which got their results. [01:40:35.080 --> 01:40:40.080] They had me take a fourth breathalyzer at that point. [01:40:40.080 --> 01:40:47.080] And it said 18 or.18 or something. [01:40:47.080 --> 01:40:49.080] I don't know. [01:40:49.080 --> 01:40:51.080] Anyway. [01:40:51.080 --> 01:40:56.080] So you had several that all were lower than the limit, and then suddenly you had one that was above the limit. [01:40:56.080 --> 01:40:57.080] Above the limit. [01:40:57.080 --> 01:40:59.080] It was beyond the limit. [01:40:59.080 --> 01:41:01.080] That's what I even said. [01:41:01.080 --> 01:41:03.080] I said, what am I shooting jack out here? [01:41:03.080 --> 01:41:06.080] I was handcuffed to the floor. [01:41:06.080 --> 01:41:08.080] I'm like, what am I shooting jack out here? [01:41:08.080 --> 01:41:10.080] I'm not. [01:41:10.080 --> 01:41:13.080] Did they use the same machine each time? [01:41:13.080 --> 01:41:15.080] No, they said that there was something wrong. [01:41:15.080 --> 01:41:18.080] It was calibrated right. [01:41:18.080 --> 01:41:21.080] But anyway, I had no money. [01:41:21.080 --> 01:41:24.080] So I had a public defender. [01:41:24.080 --> 01:41:29.080] And lo and behold, I get convicted. [01:41:29.080 --> 01:41:31.080] On what evidence? [01:41:31.080 --> 01:41:49.080] Because, oh, he got up there on the stand and said, no, actually she got mad because I was so adamant about him putting me in the front seat without a seat belt with my hands cuffed behind my back because I kept saying he was driving. [01:41:49.080 --> 01:41:52.080] Did you have an attorney all this time, Barbara? [01:41:52.080 --> 01:41:54.080] I had a public defender. [01:41:54.080 --> 01:41:59.080] And what did they do as far as objecting or presenting any testimony or evidence? [01:41:59.080 --> 01:42:00.080] Nothing. [01:42:00.080 --> 01:42:03.080] And you didn't complain about ineffective assistance of counsel? [01:42:03.080 --> 01:42:05.080] He lied on the stand about everything. [01:42:05.080 --> 01:42:13.080] He said that he did the sketches for the sobriety test in his car. [01:42:13.080 --> 01:42:19.080] You know, I'm talking about where they say that you couldn't touch your nose or something like that. [01:42:19.080 --> 01:42:20.080] Yeah, I got all that. [01:42:20.080 --> 01:42:28.080] Did your attorney get any of the video, get any of the prior breathalyzer tests and use any of that whatsoever in your defense? [01:42:28.080 --> 01:42:29.080] No. [01:42:29.080 --> 01:42:34.080] Then you should have complained of ineffective assistance of counsel. [01:42:34.080 --> 01:42:38.080] Your attorney did nothing to defend your case? [01:42:38.080 --> 01:42:40.080] No. [01:42:40.080 --> 01:42:41.080] Okay. [01:42:41.080 --> 01:42:45.080] Well, then you had a right to claim that they were not doing their job. [01:42:45.080 --> 01:43:02.080] Well, she told me that because it was on federal property, because it was on 209 in Pennsylvania, that it would not go on my record. [01:43:02.080 --> 01:43:08.080] It is not federal property, and that is a blatant BS lie. [01:43:08.080 --> 01:43:11.080] The highways are not federal property. [01:43:11.080 --> 01:43:12.080] They're not federal property. [01:43:12.080 --> 01:43:14.080] Well, why didn't you tell me that lie? [01:43:14.080 --> 01:43:16.080] My own attorney told me. [01:43:16.080 --> 01:43:17.080] I know that. [01:43:17.080 --> 01:43:18.080] That's what I'm saying. [01:43:18.080 --> 01:43:19.080] That's a BS lie. [01:43:19.080 --> 01:43:22.080] Never trust your attorney. [01:43:22.080 --> 01:43:26.080] Never trust your attorney. [01:43:26.080 --> 01:43:37.080] This is exactly why I want people to know the rules of the game for themselves so that their attorneys cannot throw them under the bus like this. [01:43:37.080 --> 01:43:39.080] Well, although I... [01:43:39.080 --> 01:43:40.080] Well, hang on, Barbara. [01:43:40.080 --> 01:43:41.080] I've got to break. [01:43:41.080 --> 01:43:43.080] We'll finish this up on the other side. [01:43:43.080 --> 01:43:44.080] Come on. [01:43:44.080 --> 01:43:45.080] All right, folks. [01:43:45.080 --> 01:43:46.080] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:43:46.080 --> 01:43:48.080] This is your host, Eddie Craig. [01:43:48.080 --> 01:43:49.080] Y'all hang on. [01:43:49.080 --> 01:43:51.080] I've got one segment left. [01:43:51.080 --> 01:43:52.080] I'm going to try to get these rounded up. [01:43:52.080 --> 01:43:54.080] Brandon, Ross, I'll see you there. [01:43:54.080 --> 01:43:56.080] Let me see if I can get finished up with Barbara, and I'll get your calls. [01:43:56.080 --> 01:44:00.080] We'll be right back, folks. [01:44:00.080 --> 01:44:04.080] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:04.080 --> 01:44:05.080] Boring. [01:44:05.080 --> 01:44:07.080] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.080 --> 01:44:08.080] What? [01:44:08.080 --> 01:44:13.080] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:13.080 --> 01:44:19.080] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.080 --> 01:44:25.080] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. [01:44:25.080 --> 01:44:30.080] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [01:44:30.080 --> 01:44:36.080] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports-zombieism recover. [01:44:36.080 --> 01:44:43.080] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.080 --> 01:44:50.080] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [01:44:50.080 --> 01:44:55.080] or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:55.080 --> 01:44:58.080] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:58.080 --> 01:45:01.080] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:01.080 --> 01:45:04.080] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.080 --> 01:45:11.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [01:45:11.080 --> 01:45:15.080] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.080 --> 01:45:19.080] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.080 --> 01:45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.080 --> 01:45:28.080] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.080 --> 01:45:35.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.080 --> 01:45:39.080] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.080 --> 01:45:44.080] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.080 --> 01:45:50.080] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.080 --> 01:46:02.080] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:20.080 --> 01:46:29.080] All right, folks, we are back, and we're going to try to finish up with Barbara here. [01:46:29.080 --> 01:46:30.080] All right, Barbara. [01:46:30.080 --> 01:46:38.080] Hey, hon. Hey, hon. All right, so anyway, where was I? I forgot. [01:46:38.080 --> 01:46:41.080] We were talking about your attorney not doing her job. [01:46:41.080 --> 01:46:48.080] Oh, well, yeah. Not only did she not do her job, but she said to me as we were leaving, [01:46:48.080 --> 01:46:53.080] this is never going to happen again, right? And I was like, of course not. [01:46:53.080 --> 01:47:06.080] And I walked out. Little did I know, you know, this goes a lot to abuse of women [01:47:06.080 --> 01:47:14.080] because my ex showed up at my new job, my new life and everything, and asked me to come back and see him, [01:47:14.080 --> 01:47:20.080] which, of course, turned into a disaster. And then I put him in the parking lot. [01:47:20.080 --> 01:47:23.080] There was another woman there and blah, blah, blah. [01:47:23.080 --> 01:47:32.080] But as I tried to leave, he called the police on me after he sat there and drank beer with me. [01:47:32.080 --> 01:47:40.080] I went to leave, and before I even got out, it was a private community, [01:47:40.080 --> 01:47:47.080] and I heard you say that about pulling over on a private road, but I had already pulled out to the right. [01:47:47.080 --> 01:47:54.080] That's when they stopped me. And I was like, I don't know what you're talking about. [01:47:54.080 --> 01:48:01.080] I don't know why he would call the police on me. We were just there. Anyway, it doesn't matter. [01:48:01.080 --> 01:48:16.080] I got charged with a felony in New York State because it's a felony to have two DUIs in 10 years. [01:48:16.080 --> 01:48:22.080] Because I had pleaded to the first one, even though I wasn't drunk. [01:48:22.080 --> 01:48:32.080] I had to take the felony on the second one because I did have alcohol in my system, [01:48:32.080 --> 01:48:42.080] which was like a.86 or something like that. It was so ridiculous. It was like two beers. [01:48:42.080 --> 01:48:45.080] Okay. Well, is there a question anywhere in any of this, Barbara? [01:48:45.080 --> 01:48:48.080] Because I've got to get to these other callers if I can. [01:48:48.080 --> 01:48:57.080] What I'm asking you is, is there any retaliation, not retaliation, but... [01:48:57.080 --> 01:48:59.080] Is there any recourse? [01:48:59.080 --> 01:49:05.080] My name from the first conviction because I did not do anything wrong. [01:49:05.080 --> 01:49:11.080] If you took a plea deal to it, you were convicted. So the answer to that is no, [01:49:11.080 --> 01:49:16.080] because now we're back to the contracts I was talking about earlier. You agreed. [01:49:16.080 --> 01:49:19.080] How can they do that to you, though? [01:49:19.080 --> 01:49:21.080] What do you mean, how can they do that? [01:49:21.080 --> 01:49:25.080] If I offer to sell you something for $10 and you say, okay, how can I do that? [01:49:25.080 --> 01:49:30.080] Are you going to ask me, do I own it? Is it mine? Even if it's stolen property, I can do it. [01:49:30.080 --> 01:49:32.080] It doesn't make it right, but I can do it. [01:49:32.080 --> 01:49:36.080] And if you didn't do due diligence to ask me if you were buying stolen property, [01:49:36.080 --> 01:49:42.080] then you don't have any recourse to complain that it was stolen property, do you? [01:49:42.080 --> 01:49:43.080] No. [01:49:43.080 --> 01:49:51.080] Exactly. What you do by agreement, you're stuck with. That's what a contract's all about. [01:49:51.080 --> 01:49:59.080] So it's so easy just to fall into it because I agreed with everything they said. [01:49:59.080 --> 01:50:00.080] Absolutely. [01:50:00.080 --> 01:50:05.080] Everything they asked me to do because I was innocent and I knew I was innocent. [01:50:05.080 --> 01:50:10.080] There is no such thing when it comes to interacting with government. [01:50:10.080 --> 01:50:16.080] There is no presumption of innocence ever. [01:50:16.080 --> 01:50:19.080] We clear on that? [01:50:19.080 --> 01:50:22.080] There is no presumption of innocence. [01:50:22.080 --> 01:50:25.080] All my life I did nothing wrong. [01:50:25.080 --> 01:50:28.080] Okay, Barbara, Barbara, Barbara, that's irrelevant. [01:50:28.080 --> 01:50:31.080] You're not listening to what I'm saying. [01:50:31.080 --> 01:50:35.080] When it comes to government interaction with the people, [01:50:35.080 --> 01:50:40.080] government never gives you the presumption of innocence. [01:50:40.080 --> 01:50:44.080] This is exactly what I was talking about in my script at this naysayer [01:50:44.080 --> 01:50:49.080] that we were talking about on Facebook at the beginning in that discussion that was going on, [01:50:49.080 --> 01:50:53.080] was talking about how I take this, that, or the other and I'm going to get people in trouble. [01:50:53.080 --> 01:50:55.080] No. [01:50:55.080 --> 01:51:00.080] The trouble is going to come from the fact that the state doesn't want you exercising your rights [01:51:00.080 --> 01:51:04.080] because it prevents the state from doing exactly what it did to you. [01:51:04.080 --> 01:51:08.080] And it likes being able to do to people what it did to you. [01:51:08.080 --> 01:51:12.080] There's money to be made in doing to people what they did to you. [01:51:12.080 --> 01:51:21.080] I spent, you can understand, so I spent almost three months in jail over the whole, [01:51:21.080 --> 01:51:30.080] oh, I got to tell you because they negated my license to drive to the state of New York, [01:51:30.080 --> 01:51:35.080] even though I lived in New Jersey and I had a valid license. [01:51:35.080 --> 01:51:38.080] I was not allowed to drive in the state of New York. [01:51:38.080 --> 01:51:41.080] So I had to get somebody to drive me to probation. [01:51:41.080 --> 01:51:44.080] They put me on probation for five years. [01:51:44.080 --> 01:51:45.080] Okay. [01:51:45.080 --> 01:51:49.080] But again, you're complaining about a deal that you made. [01:51:49.080 --> 01:51:53.080] I didn't know that I was making that deal. [01:51:53.080 --> 01:52:03.080] But what I like about you is that you're trying to explain to people that this is how it may play out. [01:52:03.080 --> 01:52:09.080] And if you could allow me three seconds to let them know how it plays out. [01:52:09.080 --> 01:52:12.080] Well, but the thing is, Barbara, your story is not unique. [01:52:12.080 --> 01:52:16.080] I've had many, many people like you on this show that have gone into this. [01:52:16.080 --> 01:52:28.080] No, wait, the last two months out of five years, they made me do the whole five years in New York. [01:52:28.080 --> 01:52:37.080] The last two months of my probation, I couldn't find a ride to work [01:52:37.080 --> 01:52:43.080] because somebody I know that used to drive me died, died. [01:52:43.080 --> 01:52:49.080] It wasn't like they told me they couldn't do it anymore or something like that. [01:52:49.080 --> 01:52:51.080] They died. [01:52:51.080 --> 01:52:58.080] And all of a sudden, I can't get there. [01:52:58.080 --> 01:53:02.080] So I call and I tell them the story and everything else like that. [01:53:02.080 --> 01:53:08.080] And they call me back and they say, all right, we'll just come up and we'll talk to you about it. [01:53:08.080 --> 01:53:11.080] And of course, you got in your car and you went up. [01:53:11.080 --> 01:53:16.080] I went up and of course, they put me in jail. [01:53:16.080 --> 01:53:18.080] Well, of course, they put you in jail. [01:53:18.080 --> 01:53:27.080] Somebody who's never even, you know, gone through a stop sign or. [01:53:27.080 --> 01:53:31.080] All right, Barbara, I'm not trying to sound mean here, but hang on just a second. [01:53:31.080 --> 01:53:33.080] There's something I need you to understand. [01:53:33.080 --> 01:53:38.080] You're going to have to come down off that cross because somebody else needs the wood. [01:53:38.080 --> 01:53:40.080] You're acting like a victim. [01:53:40.080 --> 01:53:41.080] Stop it. [01:53:41.080 --> 01:53:44.080] You're a victim of your own making. [01:53:44.080 --> 01:53:46.080] You made the deal. [01:53:46.080 --> 01:53:51.080] You got suckered into doing something you already knew you should not do. [01:53:51.080 --> 01:53:54.080] And they got you for it. [01:53:54.080 --> 01:53:57.080] You knew you couldn't get in a car and go to New York. [01:53:57.080 --> 01:53:59.080] I didn't know that at the time. [01:53:59.080 --> 01:54:01.080] What do you mean you didn't know that at the time? [01:54:01.080 --> 01:54:03.080] I thought I was supposed to comply. [01:54:03.080 --> 01:54:05.080] I thought complying. [01:54:05.080 --> 01:54:09.080] When they say come on up, they didn't mean go get in your car. [01:54:09.080 --> 01:54:10.080] Get a taxi. [01:54:10.080 --> 01:54:11.080] Get a bus. [01:54:11.080 --> 01:54:15.080] But if you get in the car, you should have expected what was happening because you'd [01:54:15.080 --> 01:54:19.080] already made an agreement that you weren't going to get in the car and that you accepted [01:54:19.080 --> 01:54:21.080] the liability of doing so. [01:54:21.080 --> 01:54:24.080] That's the point. [01:54:24.080 --> 01:54:26.080] Now, wait a minute. [01:54:26.080 --> 01:54:28.080] What? [01:54:28.080 --> 01:54:31.080] You agreed. [01:54:31.080 --> 01:54:32.080] To what? [01:54:32.080 --> 01:54:37.080] When you played out on the first and second, you agreed to whatever they wanted. [01:54:37.080 --> 01:54:40.080] No, I didn't lose my license or anything like that. [01:54:40.080 --> 01:54:44.080] You did to go to New York. [01:54:44.080 --> 01:54:45.080] No, no, no. [01:54:45.080 --> 01:54:48.080] I did not lose my license. [01:54:48.080 --> 01:54:50.080] You're not listening again. [01:54:50.080 --> 01:54:53.080] You didn't lose your license in New Jersey. [01:54:53.080 --> 01:54:58.080] But you have to use that same license to go to New York where they revoke the privilege [01:54:58.080 --> 01:55:00.080] of your using the license, correct? [01:55:00.080 --> 01:55:01.080] No, no. [01:55:01.080 --> 01:55:02.080] That's what you said. [01:55:02.080 --> 01:55:06.080] When I played out on the first one, no, I did not lose my license. [01:55:06.080 --> 01:55:09.080] I just had to pay a fine of $300. [01:55:09.080 --> 01:55:12.080] Again, I'm not saying which time you lost it. [01:55:12.080 --> 01:55:15.080] I am basing what I'm saying on what you've already said. [01:55:15.080 --> 01:55:18.080] When I lost my license was the second time. [01:55:18.080 --> 01:55:20.080] I understand that. [01:55:20.080 --> 01:55:24.080] And then after the second time is when you got in the car and went there, correct? [01:55:24.080 --> 01:55:26.080] No, I didn't. [01:55:26.080 --> 01:55:35.080] The reason I got sent to jail was because I couldn't drive in the state of New York. [01:55:35.080 --> 01:55:40.080] But you said that you went there. [01:55:40.080 --> 01:55:42.080] Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:55:42.080 --> 01:55:44.080] I live in New Jersey. [01:55:44.080 --> 01:55:45.080] I understand that. [01:55:45.080 --> 01:55:47.080] They never transferred it over. [01:55:47.080 --> 01:55:49.080] They were supposed to transfer it to New Jersey. [01:55:49.080 --> 01:55:53.080] Okay, Barbara, somewhere we're having a lack of communication here, okay? [01:55:53.080 --> 01:55:55.080] Listen carefully. [01:55:55.080 --> 01:55:57.080] Stop talking and listen. [01:55:57.080 --> 01:55:58.080] Okay. [01:55:58.080 --> 01:56:01.080] You played out on the first one. [01:56:01.080 --> 01:56:06.080] You got a felony parole on the second one. [01:56:06.080 --> 01:56:10.080] Your person that was taking you, according to what you said, [01:56:10.080 --> 01:56:17.080] unless I'm completely mistaken on the timeline, died after the second one. [01:56:17.080 --> 01:56:19.080] Right. [01:56:19.080 --> 01:56:23.080] Then you cried about not being able to get to the parole office, [01:56:23.080 --> 01:56:27.080] and they told you, come on up and we'll figure it out. [01:56:27.080 --> 01:56:30.080] No, they never said that. [01:56:30.080 --> 01:56:32.080] That's what you said. [01:56:32.080 --> 01:56:35.080] No, they said, no, I never said that. [01:56:35.080 --> 01:56:41.080] They said, come up here and you have no choice. [01:56:41.080 --> 01:56:43.080] You have to get here. [01:56:43.080 --> 01:56:47.080] Okay, how is that not what I just said? [01:56:47.080 --> 01:56:48.080] It wasn't parole. [01:56:48.080 --> 01:56:50.080] It was probation. [01:56:50.080 --> 01:56:53.080] Okay, probation. [01:56:53.080 --> 01:56:57.080] And they said, I don't care how you get here. [01:56:57.080 --> 01:56:58.080] Just get here. [01:56:58.080 --> 01:57:03.080] But you got in a car and took yourself, right? [01:57:03.080 --> 01:57:05.080] No. [01:57:05.080 --> 01:57:09.080] Then how did you get there? [01:57:09.080 --> 01:57:12.080] I had another friend bring me. [01:57:12.080 --> 01:57:19.080] Okay, then what would they have thrown you in jail for when you got there? [01:57:19.080 --> 01:57:20.080] No, no, no. [01:57:20.080 --> 01:57:22.080] They didn't throw me in jail when I got there. [01:57:22.080 --> 01:57:30.080] What they threw me in jail for was I could not make the last two appointments, [01:57:30.080 --> 01:57:33.080] the very last two appointments. [01:57:33.080 --> 01:57:35.080] I couldn't find anyone to bring me. [01:57:35.080 --> 01:57:42.080] After five years of going without missing the last two appointments, [01:57:42.080 --> 01:57:44.080] I could not get there. [01:57:44.080 --> 01:57:51.080] Okay, does the bank give a crap if you don't make your last two house payments on time when they start a foreclosure? [01:57:51.080 --> 01:57:54.080] Well, the judge certainly gave a crap about all the girls. [01:57:54.080 --> 01:57:57.080] He's just going to give a second chance for, you know. [01:57:57.080 --> 01:57:59.080] Okay, we're not talking about other girls. [01:57:59.080 --> 01:58:00.080] We're talking about you. [01:58:00.080 --> 01:58:03.080] I have never been in trouble before. [01:58:03.080 --> 01:58:05.080] I had never been in trouble. [01:58:05.080 --> 01:58:08.080] Again, not relevant to the issue of what you agreed to, Barbara. [01:58:08.080 --> 01:58:09.080] That's the problem. [01:58:09.080 --> 01:58:12.080] You're not understanding what you agreed to. [01:58:12.080 --> 01:58:14.080] But you agreed anyway. [01:58:14.080 --> 01:58:15.080] Okay. [01:58:15.080 --> 01:58:16.080] All right, hang on. [01:58:16.080 --> 01:58:17.080] The show's done. [01:58:17.080 --> 01:58:18.080] I got to go. [01:58:18.080 --> 01:58:19.080] All right, folks. [01:58:19.080 --> 01:58:21.080] Thanks everybody that called in. [01:58:21.080 --> 01:58:23.080] Brandon, Ross, I'm very sorry. [01:58:23.080 --> 01:58:25.080] I didn't get a chance to talk to you guys tonight. [01:58:25.080 --> 01:58:30.080] Please feel free to call back in next week or send me an email if it's important and you need to know about it now. [01:58:30.080 --> 01:58:33.080] Eddie, E-D-D-I-E at Rule of Law Radio. [01:58:33.080 --> 01:58:35.080] Folks, thank you all for listening in. [01:58:35.080 --> 01:58:38.080] Thank you for all the kind words, the kudos, the emails. [01:58:38.080 --> 01:58:40.080] Y'all have an excellent week. [01:58:40.080 --> 01:58:50.080] Good night and God bless. [01:59:10.080 --> 01:59:37.080] We'll see you next time. [01:59:40.080 --> 01:59:42.080] We'll see you next time.