[00:00.000 --> 00:08.880] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist [00:08.880 --> 00:11.640] updates online at thelibertybeat.com. [00:11.640 --> 00:21.360] This is Justin Armand with the Liberty Beat for Thursday, December 5th, 2013. [00:21.360 --> 00:29.560] Gold opened today at $1,224, silver at $19.25 and bitcoin is trading at $987. [00:29.560 --> 00:36.240] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from shinybadges.com, supplying the Liberty movement with lapel [00:36.240 --> 00:41.800] pins of their favorite anarchist and voluntarious symbols, including the best-selling Badges [00:41.800 --> 00:44.560] Don't Grant Extra Rights cop-lock badge. [00:44.560 --> 00:50.920] Check out the selection at shinybadges.com and from Central Texas Gunworks, CHL courses, [00:50.920 --> 00:56.320] self-defense training and firearm sales online at centraltexasgunworks.com. [00:56.320 --> 00:57.440] And now the news. [00:57.440 --> 00:59.880] Nearly five billion records each day. [00:59.880 --> 01:04.440] That's how many cell phones are tracked worldwide in 24 hours by the NSA. [01:04.440 --> 01:09.360] The revelation comes from top secret documents and U.S. intelligence officials cited in a [01:09.360 --> 01:11.600] report from the Washington Times. [01:11.600 --> 01:15.700] The cell phone tracking enables the agency to follow the movement of individuals while [01:15.700 --> 01:17.940] connecting their relationships. [01:17.940 --> 01:21.140] The findings come from documents leaked by Edward Snowden. [01:21.140 --> 01:25.520] They reveal how the collected cell phone records make up a vast database where the locations [01:25.520 --> 01:33.240] of hundreds of millions of devices are held. [01:33.240 --> 01:35.680] The use of drones just got deadlier. [01:35.680 --> 01:40.120] That comes as the Pentagon loosens requirements regarding civilian casualties. [01:40.120 --> 01:44.320] The Washington Times reports that the key change comes in the language of the instructions [01:44.320 --> 01:49.460] which now call for drones to, and I quote, avoid targeting civilians. [01:49.460 --> 01:55.120] The former wording stated that military personnel must ensure civilians are not targeted. [01:55.120 --> 02:01.400] The revisions also instruct military commanders that collateral damage must not be excessive [02:01.400 --> 02:07.160] in relation to mission goals. [02:07.160 --> 02:11.400] A special needs man is dead, shot and killed by police in New Jersey. [02:11.400 --> 02:18.600] WABC TV reports that this happened Wednesday afternoon as 31-year-old Dixon Rodriguez stood [02:18.600 --> 02:20.120] near a bus stop. [02:20.120 --> 02:24.460] Surveillance video has been taken into evidence and the Acting County Prosecutor says it clearly [02:24.460 --> 02:29.440] shows Rodriguez attacked a police officer, as well as showing that he had a knife. [02:29.440 --> 02:33.680] Family and friends describe the scene differently, saying Rodriguez had his hands in his pockets [02:33.680 --> 02:34.680] during the incident. [02:34.680 --> 02:38.680] They describe him as a mild schizophrenic who was kind and trusting. [02:38.680 --> 02:41.760] This case remains under investigation. [02:41.760 --> 02:46.080] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from the first all-natural tooth whitener that polishes, [02:46.080 --> 02:53.120] strengthens and heals your teeth, now being sold at Brave New Bookstore or visit MyMagicMud.com. [02:53.120 --> 02:58.000] If you've been listening to the Liberty Beat, remember, freeing your mind is freeing our [02:58.000 --> 02:59.000] world. [02:59.000 --> 03:28.980] Bad Boys, Bad Boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do? [03:28.980 --> 03:32.480] Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.480 --> 03:37.980] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:37.980 --> 03:43.480] When you were eight and you had bad traits You'd go to school and learn the golden rules [03:43.480 --> 03:48.980] So why are you acting like a fluffy fool? And if you get fucked then you're much too cool [03:48.980 --> 03:54.480] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.480 --> 03:59.980] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:59.980 --> 04:03.480] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one [04:03.480 --> 04:05.480] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [04:05.480 --> 04:08.480] You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister [04:08.480 --> 04:10.980] You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me [04:10.980 --> 04:16.480] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:16.480 --> 04:21.980] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:21.980 --> 04:29.100] bad boys bad boy what you gonna do what you gonna do when they come for you bad boys bad boy [04:29.100 --> 04:35.020] what you gonna do what you gonna do when they come for you nobody now gives you no break [04:37.740 --> 04:45.660] howdy howdy this is randy kelton deborah stevens rule of law radio on this thursday december [04:45.660 --> 04:55.260] the fourth fifth fifth i'm losing track if the year can hard not be almost over already [04:56.540 --> 05:01.340] but we have i hope a lively show tonight we're going to talk about [05:03.740 --> 05:12.380] traffic and the traffic issue and see if we can find a better way to fight these things [05:12.380 --> 05:18.940] as i am looking at what's going on in the state and around the country [05:20.620 --> 05:27.980] i'm hearing a lot more pressure on the courts i just listened to a public radio here today and [05:27.980 --> 05:37.340] they had the prosecuting attorney from colorado springs and a group for better treatment for [05:37.340 --> 05:46.700] youth in the criminal justice system and i listened to what they were saying in colorado [05:46.700 --> 05:59.500] they have authorized the prosecutor to just pass judgment and set punishment [06:00.860 --> 06:07.180] i didn't get all of it of how he does that but he can just do everything himself it never goes [06:07.180 --> 06:15.180] to court and they were the group was complaining that there was no judicial intervention and they [06:15.180 --> 06:26.700] were lobbying for legislation to create judicial intervention and i was thinking [06:28.140 --> 06:29.660] have you guys not read the book [06:29.660 --> 06:36.140] do you guys come from a another planet that has a different set of laws than we have [06:37.740 --> 06:42.700] in every state that i have been to our laws reflect the magna carta [06:44.700 --> 06:50.780] and they have reflected the magna carta since our laws have been in place the magna carta was [06:50.780 --> 07:00.300] signed in 1216 and one of the primary things that was established by the magna carta was a protection [07:00.300 --> 07:09.660] against overzealous prosecution a protection against the sheriff and his armed guards over [07:09.660 --> 07:17.740] abusing the public and that protection was a magistrate they were required a [07:17.740 --> 07:27.100] an officer if he arrested someone for any reason with or without a warrant was required to take [07:27.100 --> 07:37.580] the arrested person directly to the nearest magistrate and explain himself that was the [07:37.580 --> 07:43.100] intervention that was required with a traffic citation they decided it was [07:43.100 --> 07:50.300] with a traffic citation they decided it was uh too inconvenient too timely and costly it [07:50.300 --> 07:56.860] could make enough money taking people to a magistrate to explain a traffic citation so they [07:56.860 --> 08:03.900] came up with this nifty new legislation that allowed the officer to release the person for [08:03.900 --> 08:13.900] certain offenses on his own requirement on an agreement to appear in court now the only reason [08:13.900 --> 08:23.180] they had to have that requirement randy are you there [08:23.180 --> 08:30.540] all right just a minute folks see if we can get randy back [08:53.580 --> 08:56.540] so [09:01.820 --> 09:02.540] i've got [09:02.540 --> 09:04.540] I've got to believe my heart [09:06.540 --> 09:10.540] If I can't believe my ears [09:11.540 --> 09:13.540] I've got to believe my heart [09:14.540 --> 09:18.540] Yeah, if I can't believe the newspapers [09:20.540 --> 09:23.540] I've got to believe my heart [09:25.540 --> 09:28.540] If I can't believe the radio [09:28.540 --> 09:32.540] I've got to believe my heart [09:33.540 --> 09:36.540] And my heart said, whoa [09:37.540 --> 09:39.540] Wait a minute, oh [09:40.540 --> 09:44.540] You know I'm out here in this wilderness alone [09:45.540 --> 09:49.540] Troubles you bring to me make me feel like stone [09:50.540 --> 09:55.540] Just because you can't find the sleep in this reality [09:55.540 --> 10:01.540] Maria, Maria, Maria [10:12.540 --> 10:18.540] Maria, Maria [10:19.540 --> 10:22.540] Okay, sorry folks about that little minor interruption [10:22.540 --> 10:25.540] But I am up here in North Texas [10:26.540 --> 10:30.540] And you might have heard some of this Yankee propaganda [10:31.540 --> 10:34.540] About an ice storm in North Texas [10:35.540 --> 10:38.540] Well, maybe a little bit [10:39.540 --> 10:41.540] Yeah, we are getting about a half inch of black ice [10:42.540 --> 10:44.540] And my internet just dropped off, it came back up [10:45.540 --> 10:48.540] But I suspect in this storm it's going to be a bit unstable [10:48.540 --> 10:52.540] So I'm on the phone now [10:53.540 --> 10:55.540] If my quality is not quite so great [10:56.540 --> 10:58.540] I will try to speak up [10:59.540 --> 11:03.540] If my internet stabilizes then I may go back on the studio mic [11:04.540 --> 11:08.540] Anyway, we're talking about the Magna Carta in due process [11:09.540 --> 11:14.540] The only reason we have this exclusion in the traffic code [11:14.540 --> 11:19.540] That authorizes a police officer to release someone [11:20.540 --> 11:25.540] On their own recognizance on a promise to appear [11:26.540 --> 11:33.540] Is because in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure [11:34.540 --> 11:36.540] Paragraph 14, 14A [11:37.540 --> 11:39.540] When it was passed [11:39.540 --> 11:44.540] Chapter 1401, I'm sorry 14A, 1401 [11:45.540 --> 11:50.540] Authorized a police officer to arrest anyone for [11:51.540 --> 11:55.540] On a warrant, felony or breach of the peace [11:56.540 --> 11:59.540] For everything else you write a citation [12:00.540 --> 12:03.540] And they be ordered to appear in court [12:03.540 --> 12:08.540] The way that would be done is the officer would release the person [12:09.540 --> 12:12.540] Go to the magistrate, file a complaint [12:13.540 --> 12:16.540] The magistrate would issue a summons to appear [12:17.540 --> 12:19.540] And then they'd be required to appear [12:20.540 --> 12:21.540] If they didn't appear, that is your warrant [12:22.540 --> 12:24.540] That was a procedure that had been in place for [12:25.540 --> 12:30.540] 500, 600 years, 700 years, plus 16 [12:30.540 --> 12:34.540] And this was in I think 1965 [12:35.540 --> 12:39.540] They made this change where they added paragraph B [12:40.540 --> 12:47.540] To 1401 that authorized a police officer to arrest someone [12:48.540 --> 12:51.540] For any on-site offense [12:52.540 --> 12:56.540] Now that doesn't sound like a whole lot [12:56.540 --> 12:59.540] But that created a police state [13:00.540 --> 13:08.540] That created a situation that totally undermined all of Chapter 14 [13:09.540 --> 13:16.540] Chapter 14, Chapter 16, 2.10, 2.11 [13:17.540 --> 13:21.540] All of these statutes were overwritten by this seemingly innocuous [13:21.540 --> 13:26.540] Some title added to 1401 [13:27.540 --> 13:31.540] It authorized a policeman to arrest somebody for anything [13:32.540 --> 13:35.540] That was not how it was intended [13:36.540 --> 13:40.540] Now we have the police in a position [13:41.540 --> 13:48.540] To where they can say, you dropped a cigarette, but I saw that [13:48.540 --> 13:53.540] And that's literally, they can arrest you, throw you in jail [13:54.540 --> 14:01.540] They can say, your tires touched the yellow line, throw you in jail [14:02.540 --> 14:04.540] This was not the intent of our legislators [14:05.540 --> 14:13.540] This was not the intent of the original 1925 penal code that was put in place [14:13.540 --> 14:18.540] And the penal code was intended to stay the way it was [14:19.540 --> 14:23.540] And this addition dramatically changed things [14:24.540 --> 14:27.540] Now we have our prisons filled with people who shouldn't be there [14:28.540 --> 14:30.540] And the worst part is traffic [14:31.540 --> 14:38.540] First off, it's clear in reading the statutory law and the case law [14:38.540 --> 14:46.540] That the traffic law does not apply to anyone who's not in commerce [14:47.540 --> 14:48.540] That is absolutely clear [14:49.540 --> 14:56.540] The problem we have is that the municipalities make way too much money enforcing the traffic laws [14:57.540 --> 15:00.540] Against people that it doesn't apply to [15:00.540 --> 15:13.540] And if we were to allow the courts to rule that the traffic law only applied to those in commerce [15:14.540 --> 15:17.540] Most of our municipalities would bankrupt [15:18.540 --> 15:20.540] Or they'd have to increase their taxes [15:21.540 --> 15:25.540] And they should have to increase their taxes [15:25.540 --> 15:31.540] What they're doing is using the traffic laws as an unauthorized tax [15:32.540 --> 15:36.540] They get to generate tremendous amounts of revenue from the public [15:37.540 --> 15:39.540] And the public has no say in it [15:40.540 --> 15:42.540] The public has no recourse [15:43.540 --> 15:47.540] So we need to do something to stop that [15:47.540 --> 15:55.540] Well, Randy, I want to make a comment here about this issue with the municipalities and the taxes and all this kind of stuff [15:56.540 --> 16:01.540] For one thing, maybe they do need to be bankrupted a little bit [16:02.540 --> 16:07.540] Because they're spending too much money on too much stuff that is completely unnecessary [16:07.540 --> 16:20.540] And for another thing, what's happening with the taxes is that they're giving these subsidies, at least here in Austin, to entities like the Domain Project [16:21.540 --> 16:23.540] Oh, and what about Formula One? [16:24.540 --> 16:28.540] That is all paid for by the taxpayers [16:29.540 --> 16:30.540] But guess who makes all the profits? [16:31.540 --> 16:32.540] The private entities [16:32.540 --> 16:37.540] Okay, so they privatize the profits, but they make the debt public [16:38.540 --> 16:42.540] I'm sorry, I can't agree or go along with any of that madness [16:43.540 --> 16:48.540] They don't need to be making any revenue off of us from any kind of traffic issues [16:49.540 --> 16:55.540] They need to be taxing these major corporate entities that are making huge profits off our backs [16:56.540 --> 16:58.540] We'll be right back, folks [16:58.540 --> 17:05.540] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition [17:06.540 --> 17:10.540] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that [17:11.540 --> 17:16.540] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition [17:17.540 --> 17:24.540] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need [17:24.540 --> 17:30.540] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject [17:31.540 --> 17:38.540] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others [17:39.540 --> 17:46.540] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio [17:47.540 --> 17:50.540] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us [17:50.540 --> 17:57.540] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income [17:58.540 --> 17:59.540] Order now [18:00.540 --> 18:04.540] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.540 --> 18:08.540] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method [18:09.540 --> 18:13.540] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win too [18:13.540 --> 18:19.540] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [18:20.540 --> 18:23.540] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons [18:24.540 --> 18:25.540] How to answer letters and phone calls [18:26.540 --> 18:28.540] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report [18:29.540 --> 18:32.540] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [18:33.540 --> 18:37.540] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [18:38.540 --> 18:40.540] Personal consultation is available as well [18:40.540 --> 18:45.540] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.540 --> 18:48.540] Or email michaelmears at yahoo.com [18:49.540 --> 18:50.540] That's ruleoflawradio.com [18:51.540 --> 18:56.540] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [18:57.540 --> 18:59.540] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [18:59.540 --> 19:09.540] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:09.540 --> 19:35.540] Okay, folks, we're back. This is the rule of law, Randy Kelton and Deborah Stevens. [19:35.540 --> 19:43.540] And we are here talking about this revenue scheme concerning transportation traffic issues. [19:44.540 --> 19:56.540] And as Randy was saying, pretty much more than 90% of the population, if not almost 95 or 99%, do not need a driver's license. [19:56.540 --> 20:05.540] They don't need license tags, they don't need inspection stickers, they don't need any of that stuff because it's all about commerce. [20:06.540 --> 20:15.540] If you're not transporting, literally, goods or passengers for hire on the roadways, you don't need a driver's license. [20:15.540 --> 20:28.540] You don't need a driver's license. And guess what, folks? Even if you are transporting passengers or goods for hire as a business on the roadways, you still don't need a driver's license. [20:29.540 --> 20:36.540] If you don't agree to be regulated, okay? It's all about agreement to be regulated. [20:36.540 --> 20:47.540] So even if you are engaged in an activity that potentially could be regulated by a regulatory scheme, even that doesn't apply to you if you don't agree to be regulated, okay? [20:48.540 --> 20:53.540] It's all by commercial agreement, period. All right, but back to this whole driver's license scheme and we're talking about the taxes. [20:54.540 --> 21:01.540] All right, listen, I am sick and tired of seeing what is going on in this city and I know it's going on in cities across the nation. [21:01.540 --> 21:10.540] And I just brought up what happened to Formula One madness here in Austin and the domain development project. [21:11.540 --> 21:21.540] And that's just two, all right? This has happened over and over and over again in Austin where you get these big corporations, these big private entities that want to do these huge developments. [21:21.540 --> 21:32.540] And what the city does is that they just waive all the permitting fees, all right, and all the, you know, for building inspections and all this stuff. [21:33.540 --> 21:40.540] I mean, folks, it's expensive if you want to go through the permitting process and agree to be regulated by the city on building codes and things like that. [21:41.540 --> 21:47.540] I mean, multi-million dollar projects like that, that's where the city should be making their money from. [21:47.540 --> 21:54.540] It's from these giant corporate entities that are making huge profits off of these developments. [21:55.540 --> 22:00.540] All right, but no, what we have here is called fascism. It's called neo-fascism. [22:01.540 --> 22:06.540] All right, traditional fascism is where the state owns the corporate entities. [22:07.540 --> 22:13.540] We've got neo-fascism where we've got the corporate entities are running everything and paying off the politicians and running the government. [22:13.540 --> 22:26.540] All right, this is a different kind of fascism. All right, and so you get these politicians that get paid off under the table by these corporate entities to waive all the permitting and all the taxes. [22:27.540 --> 22:31.540] This is called insider cronyism. This is not capitalism. This is not the free market. [22:32.540 --> 22:37.540] Okay, so people out there that want to say, oh, this is why the free market doesn't work. No, this has nothing to do with free markets. It's not free market. [22:37.540 --> 22:44.540] All right, and so then what ends up happening is all these insider crony deals and then, but who's going to pay for it now? [22:45.540 --> 23:00.540] Well, then, like I said, they privatize the profits of these developments and then they publicize or they make public, I should say, the debts off the taxpayers' backs in the form of various types of taxes. [23:00.540 --> 23:15.540] And I would even call this transportation, all these traffic tickets, a form of taxation, okay, because it's like a hidden tax and it's a huge scam because almost nobody needs driver's license if they're not in commerce. [23:16.540 --> 23:22.540] And like I said, even if you are in commerce, you still don't need one if you don't agree to the system. All right, and so that's all I have to say about that. [23:22.540 --> 23:39.540] The government doesn't need that much taxes from us. They don't need any taxes from us. All right, in fact, I think everything needs to be, we need to start moving in the direction to set ourselves up to remove ourselves from these agreements, okay, these taxation agreements because it's ridiculous. [23:40.540 --> 23:40.540] Go ahead, Randy. [23:40.540 --> 23:58.540] Yeah, that was my whole point is they are enforcing a law against people to whom the law does not apply. They know full well it doesn't apply. And that renders the funds that they collect here as an unauthorized tax. [23:58.540 --> 24:09.540] Now, they're using that as a source of funding, a source of taxes that they can then use to fund their pet projects. [24:09.540 --> 24:28.540] And it's time we do something about it. And I've been researching this a long time and studying how to get at these guys. And it's probably easier to sue them in the district court than it is to fight the ticket. [24:28.540 --> 24:43.540] You go in to fight the ticket and the judges are in these lower courts, the most rude, obnoxious judges I have ever seen. They totally ignore law. [24:43.540 --> 25:07.540] They are, in my opinion, the biggest stumbling block to a fair and honest society that we have. We take our children, we put them through a school system where we tell them from day one what a great and wonderful country we live in, how it's a country of rights and law. [25:07.540 --> 25:21.540] However, while you're in this school system that you have to come to, it's not your choice. While you're in this school system, even though you've got all these great and wonderful rights, don't even think about trying to express one of them. [25:21.540 --> 25:36.540] While you're in this system and the whole weight of the system, a land right somewhere on your head, then when they get out, it's the children that get them, the new drivers that get most of the tickets. [25:36.540 --> 26:01.540] The first experience with the court system is one of absolute and total disregard for all civility and all law. It's nothing but steal as much money from the citizen as you possibly can with the least amount of discomfort and interruption by this annoyance of civil rights. [26:01.540 --> 26:27.540] Of all places, that should be the place where we demonstrate to the citizen that this is a land of law. That is our opportunity to help our young citizens to come to trust in this system and trust that they can bring the system to task and the system will be fair to them. [26:27.540 --> 26:42.540] But they use this in order to terrify people, to get them to talk the talk and do the little we have all these rights dance, but don't even think or try to express one of your rights. [26:42.540 --> 27:09.540] We'll make you pay for that just as my candle, but we'll do this to try to frighten them. They will use every dime they've got of your tax money to fight you no matter what you do. They will never ever stop. They will use every blow down stinkin' rotten lion trick they can to force you into submission because they don't want you to thank anyone else. [27:09.540 --> 27:25.540] Well, Randy, look, we have to fight it. People have to stand up. That's just all there is to it because otherwise the whole society is just going to continue to degrade further and further into tyranny and slavery. [27:25.540 --> 27:42.540] We've got to stop it and one of the ways to stop it is to do whatever we can to cut off their funding because if they don't have money then they can't engage in this type of corruption. [27:42.540 --> 28:11.540] Listen, they've got too many toys. They've got too much time on their hands and they've got too much money to play with. This is another reason why I think that we've got to cut the funding, period, because all the money that they spend, they're not spending it on things, legitimate services for the people like libraries or internet connections at the libraries for people to be able to go. [28:12.540 --> 28:23.540] You know what they do is they put filters in at the libraries so that you can't visit websites like Infowars and things like this and who knows, our website is probably blocked too. That's what they spend their money on. [28:24.540 --> 28:39.540] They spend their money on the spy grid. They spend their money on the biometric face scanning and iris scanning surveillance cameras that are on every street corner and the microphones and all of that and gathering all your data and tracking everything you do and coming up with bogus warrants [28:39.540 --> 29:02.540] and all the sound cannons and the tasers and whatever. Look, they've got too many toys. They've got too much money. We've got to cut it off. I think suing them is a very good way to do it because then we take a chunk out of their pocketbook. They've only got so much money to play with. [29:02.540 --> 29:27.540] Exactly where I was going. It's hard to get people, especially older people who don't get as many tickets to agree to cut off the funding. We've tried that for a long, long time and never have been able to get it done because they're easy to fight. So this is all about the money. So let's make it about the money. [29:27.540 --> 29:47.540] Well, and look, even if, and here's one thing that I've thought of too, and of course we want to win our lawsuits, but even if we don't, think about it. It costs them to fight us. If you're a pro se litigant, you're on your own time and you don't have to hire an attorney, but it costs them to fight you. [29:47.540 --> 29:57.540] I just say it just costs them, man. We got it. We just got to put up resistance and start taking it out of their hide. All right. We'll be right back, folks. This is the rule of law. [30:02.540 --> 30:14.540] If you pay cash at a flea market in Louisiana, you could wind up in jail. That's right, jail. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you about a draconian law that bans paper money in the Bayou stage next. [30:14.540 --> 30:32.540] 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. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.540 --> 30:43.540] 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. [30:44.540 --> 31:00.540] Cash used to be king in this country, but lately bureaucrats have begun clamping down on paper money at the expense of our civil liberties. The latest culprit is Louisiana. Their state legislature passed an outrageous law making it a crime to give or receive cash for secondhand property. [31:00.540 --> 31:16.540] The broad scope of the law includes just about everything from flea markets to garage sales to baseball card conventions, even stuff bought on eBay and Craigslist. Louisiana already has laws against stealing and penalizes people for dealing in stolen property. [31:16.540 --> 31:29.540] Can't law enforcement do its job without stepping on our personal liberties? I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:29.540 --> 31:48.540] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [31:48.540 --> 31:59.540] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [31:59.540 --> 32:19.540] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, 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. 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. [32:19.540 --> 32:34.540] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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 the courts to the rule of law. [32:34.540 --> 32:49.540] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. 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. [32:49.540 --> 33:04.540] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:19.540 --> 33:45.540] Okay, folks, we are back. This is the rule of law. [33:45.540 --> 33:56.540] When are you going to stop abusing your power? Well, they're not going to stop, like Randy says, until we put a stop to it. It's up to us, and that's what this show is all about. [33:57.540 --> 34:06.540] And speaking of this show, before we continue with the discussion, I need to make an announcement to folks about our fundraiser. [34:06.540 --> 34:21.540] We are having our annual fundraiser for the network here, Logos Radio Network. We're going to be having our annual fundraiser at the end of the year, every year, because we need your support and your help to stay on the air. [34:21.540 --> 34:35.540] It's getting more and more expensive. The operating costs are increasing because of the city and the madness that is going on with the city utilities here in Austin and all of that. [34:36.540 --> 34:47.540] And we do need to upgrade some of our equipment, and so we would really appreciate it if folks would help us. We want to raise $7,000 to help with operating expenses. [34:47.540 --> 34:54.540] We've had to borrow some money over the last few months to keep things going, and we need to get that paid back next month. [34:55.540 --> 35:11.540] And so we need to raise some money here to pay back some loans and to upgrade our equipment and hopefully put away a little bit so that we can have something, a little nest egg, a little safety net for what's to come in the future. [35:11.540 --> 35:28.540] So if you would please go to logosradionetwork.com, there's a donate button, and I am going to be putting a little widget up there pretty soon within hopefully later tonight that will have a little chart to show our progress of our fundraiser. [35:28.540 --> 35:47.540] And I'll also have a banner so that folks can put a banner for the network and for a fundraiser on your own website or your blog or your Facebook page and to help us spread the word about the network and about this programming because we are here to help people. [35:47.540 --> 35:59.540] But we also need your help to continue to help you. And Larry Weiss, one of the hosts on this network, is going to be donating colloidal silver to the fundraiser. [36:00.540 --> 36:12.540] And, you know, as we all know, we're coming into that time of the year where a lot of people tend to, you know, catch flus and things like that because their immune systems start running down because there's not as much vitamin D. [36:12.540 --> 36:16.540] They're not making as much vitamin D because of the lack of sunlight and these sorts of things. [36:17.540 --> 36:22.540] So I just wanted to briefly run down some of the free gifts that we have going for donations. [36:23.540 --> 36:33.540] If you donate $25, you can get, you will get one spray bottle, a topical spray bottle of ionic silver. [36:33.540 --> 36:47.540] Ionic silver, a lot of people use it for topical use, you know, skin cuts, abrasions, things like that. And you will also get a one-ounce bottle, a spray bottle of colloidal silver for your sinuses. [36:48.540 --> 36:53.540] So if you start feeling, you know, a little sinus infection coming on or something like that, spray up there, does a great job. [36:53.540 --> 37:11.540] So you get both of those for a $25 donation. And for a $75 donation, you can get a 32-ounce bottle of either colloidals or ionic silver as well as one spray bottle, all right, with either the colloidal or the ionic silver. [37:11.540 --> 37:25.540] And if you don't, and Brave New Books is going to be helping us out with the fundraiser as well. And so if you give a $100 donation, you will get a free $15 gift certificate from Brave New Books. [37:26.540 --> 37:37.540] You can give it away as gift for the holiday season. And also you will receive a free Texas Liberty Radio t-shirt and a Texas Liberty Radio tote bag. [37:37.540 --> 37:51.540] Texas Liberty Radio is one of the affiliates of Logos Radio Network. So folks that are here in Austin that listen to Texas Liberty Radio, if you want to donate to the network, you can get some of these gifts from Brave New Books or you can get some colloidal silver. [37:51.540 --> 38:08.540] So we want to give back to our listeners. And anyways, if y'all would please help us out, we are doing our fundraiser. You know, most media outlets, it costs them hundreds of thousands of dollars to run their media operation. [38:08.540 --> 38:21.540] And we do this on a shoestring budget. I mean, folks, for us to only try to raise $7,000, you know, $7,000 to $10,000 a year. Last year we successfully raised $10,000. [38:21.540 --> 38:40.540] I mean, folks, this is nothing, okay? This really does not cost very much to run this network. But when we're looking at Randy and Eddie and I are the only ones, you know, that are having to pay, then it hurts us, okay? [38:40.540 --> 38:50.540] This is what I do for a living. I quit my job as a physical therapist so that I could serve you, the listeners, and produce these shows and run this network. [38:51.540 --> 39:08.540] Randy and Eddie do this full time as well. And so this is what we do, okay? We can't just help people all the time and not get reimbursed anything for it hardly at all and still have to pay basic costs. [39:08.540 --> 39:14.540] I mean, we're not even hardly making anything for our time. We're not even hardly making any money for our time, folks. [39:15.540 --> 39:25.540] You know, I get a little bit from the Young Jevity products. So if you want to get, you know, be a distributor for Young Jevity or buy some Young Jevity products from the Logos website, you will support the network. [39:26.540 --> 39:35.540] And that will also help to reimburse me for some of my time that I put into this, all right? But we do need to raise money just for bare bones basic costs, okay? [39:35.540 --> 39:43.540] We have to pay for the equipment, the upgrades, telephones, lines, the Internet, okay? Power, all these things. [39:44.540 --> 39:52.540] We bring this message to you for free for you, the listeners, but it does cost. And so folks, please help us to stay on the air. [39:53.540 --> 39:59.540] We're not asking for much. And if you give just a little bit, you know, as the saying goes, many hands make light work. [39:59.540 --> 40:05.540] Many small donations do add up to a lot. And we really do need your help and support. [40:06.540 --> 40:12.540] So I'm sorry, I didn't mean to take up so much of this segment, but I do need to promote this fundraiser because it is that time of year. [40:13.540 --> 40:20.540] And we do have to come up with this money by next month. So I really hope that folks out there will show your love and support. [40:20.540 --> 40:31.540] And we have Mary Krennic on the line now who wants to talk about the bar grievance party tomorrow night at Brave New Books. [40:32.540 --> 40:36.540] And Randy is going to be there. And it looks like Randy dropped off the line. I'm sure he'll call right back in. [40:37.540 --> 40:43.540] But I'm going to go to Mary now. Mary, thanks for calling in. So why don't you give us the scoop on the bar grievance party tomorrow night? [40:43.540 --> 40:53.540] Wait a minute. I have a complaint. Oh, boy. I didn't hear one word about Randy's beer fund. [40:54.540 --> 40:58.540] Randy's beer fund. I told you I'd give you gas fund, not beer fund. [40:59.540 --> 41:03.540] Those are sort of synonymous when it comes to Randy, Mary. [41:03.540 --> 41:14.540] Hi, Eddie. I'm going to have eggnog and rum, my candle, and about 10 bar grievance packages and how many ever we need. [41:15.540 --> 41:27.540] I might even fill out a bar grievance about Sam Hildebrand. I can't even remember the firm right now, but boy, he sure liked insulting me and being a bad attorney. [41:27.540 --> 41:35.540] And I decided that I'm going to start a bad attorney of the year award. It's going to be a little paddle. [41:36.540 --> 41:41.540] And we'll see if we can gold plate it or not. I don't know. But it's going to go along with my brass balls award. [41:42.540 --> 41:47.540] Alex is going to get the first one. Luke Brudowski the second. And then I'm going to make you guys compete from here on out who gets the next one. [41:48.540 --> 41:52.540] We can call it the Super Scheister Awards. [41:52.540 --> 41:57.540] I think you should lead plate that lawyer award, not gold plate it. [41:58.540 --> 42:00.540] Well, we can have a gold ball award. [42:01.540 --> 42:02.540] Even depleted uranium would work. [42:03.540 --> 42:12.540] You want depleted uranium on them? Well, we'll do whatever we're going to do, but we're all going to be at Break New Books tomorrow for my second annual bar grievance Christmas party. [42:13.540 --> 42:19.540] My candle will be speaking. He is the expert on filling out bar grievances. We'll help you fill out a bar grievance or we'll just entertain you. [42:19.540 --> 42:27.540] I'll be there a little bit early and we'll be YouTubing some different legal film and I hope Deborah will be there after this. [42:28.540 --> 42:35.540] I'm going to start a monthly bar grievance party at Break New Books and I will have lawyers come out, lecturers come out, victims come out. [42:36.540 --> 42:43.540] We've got Curtis in a very interesting case where he says he was falsely accused of assaulting a police officer. [42:43.540 --> 42:50.540] He was in Lago Vista, walking his dog with his tattoos and long hair and his beard that cops pull up on and wanted his ID. [42:51.540 --> 42:57.540] And whatever ensued, I'm not sure of the exact process, but he was in jail for six months. [42:58.540 --> 42:59.540] He wasn't given access to an attorney. [43:00.540 --> 43:09.540] And by the end of it, the way he did the process right with criminal complaints and his motions, bar grievances, judicial complaints, lack of due process complaints, [43:09.540 --> 43:15.540] he had to sneak those out through some of the older network in that jail system, thank God. [43:16.540 --> 43:21.540] And I think the attorney warned the judge that the judge was about to go down for all the violations of this man's rights. [43:22.540 --> 43:27.540] And he walked out of jail with a handshake from the judge and he has no probation. [43:28.540 --> 43:31.540] So we're going to need to learn from Curtis. He has documents at Break New Books. [43:31.540 --> 43:41.540] He's an artist, so you can see his beautiful habeas corpus he wrote up there. And it will give us a chance to drink together, eat together and laugh together. [43:42.540 --> 43:50.540] And of course, though, we all expect you there bright and early Sunday at 2 p.m. for Eddie Craig's legal class on driving or... [43:50.540 --> 44:00.540] Okay, listen, we're cutting the break. Mary, you're welcome to stay on the line. We'll be right back, folks. [44:21.540 --> 44:29.540] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, olive oil, soaps and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.540 --> 44:42.540] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.540 --> 44:49.540] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [45:00.540 --> 45:06.540] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [45:06.540 --> 45:14.540] The affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.540 --> 45:21.540] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.540 --> 45:26.540] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.540 --> 45:33.540] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.540 --> 45:42.540] 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. [45:43.540 --> 45:51.540] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.540 --> 46:02.540] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:21.540 --> 46:44.540] Okay folks, we are back. We are here with Randy Kelton. I'm Deborah Stevens. Eddie Craig has joined us tonight. [46:44.540 --> 46:50.540] Surprise special guest Eddie Craig. He's normally with us on Monday nights, and he popped in to join us tonight. [46:51.540 --> 46:56.540] We've got Mary Krennic on the line talking about the bar grievance party tomorrow night at Brave New Books. [46:57.540 --> 47:06.540] And I just want to make a comment, Mary, about this man and what happened to him and walking out of the jail with a handshake by the judge. [47:06.540 --> 47:13.540] And okay, so maybe he didn't get railroaded as far as conviction or charges and this and that, but you know what? [47:14.540 --> 47:22.540] This man still suffered, okay, and he had his liberty taken for a long time, and he was in jail for no reason, and this is wrong. [47:22.540 --> 47:39.540] And we have got to realize, folks, that when we get falsely charged and run through the system, it's not enough just to beat the bogus charge and then walk away. [47:40.540 --> 47:49.540] And then we should not feel like, oh, what a victory. We were able to get out of this bogus charge against me. [47:49.540 --> 47:58.540] That is not enough. All right, folks, we need to have a little bit more dignity and respect for ourselves and our liberty and our fellow mankind, [47:59.540 --> 48:04.540] our brothers and sisters and our children, and say, you know what? This is wrong, okay? [48:05.540 --> 48:16.540] And I am going to sue you into oblivion, okay? Sue them personally. You sue the city. You sue the police department. You sue them all, okay? [48:16.540 --> 48:26.540] Sue them all, and you know, Randy and I were talking about a couple of segments ago, folks, look, even if you don't win, sue them anyway, okay? [48:27.540 --> 48:36.540] Cost them a fortune. We have got to start putting up resistance and throwing some rocks, gravel, boulders even, not just sand, [48:37.540 --> 48:42.540] into the gears of this corrupt system and show them that it's going to cost them, all right? [48:42.540 --> 48:50.540] It's not going to be so easy to just railroad us like this and think that, oh, well, you know, when they start to realize how bad they messed up, [48:51.540 --> 48:59.540] that, well, just let them out of jail, you know, and I want to go to a Scripture verse here that goes to that very issue, you know, [49:00.540 --> 49:05.540] something similar to this happened with Paul, all right, in the New Testament when they were preaching the Gospel, [49:05.540 --> 49:13.540] and him and his fellow Gospel preachers, they got publicly beaten and thrown in prison. [49:14.540 --> 49:20.540] This was under the Roman Empire at the time, Roman rule, and they were about to get scourged and the whole nine yards, [49:21.540 --> 49:29.540] and once the guards found out that they were Roman citizens, they were like, uh-oh, we really messed up. [49:29.540 --> 49:39.540] See, at least they had some respect for due process back in those days, and our legal system is very much modeled on the old Roman legal system of due process, [49:40.540 --> 49:43.540] and so what happened, same thing, corruption as usual. [49:44.540 --> 49:50.540] When the magistrates found out, they said, oh, well, you know, let them out, let them out the back door, whatever. [49:51.540 --> 49:56.540] The Bible doesn't exactly say the back door, but the point was they were trying to thrust them out in secret. [49:56.540 --> 50:06.540] That's what the word says, and Paul said, oh, they have beaten us publicly and imprisoned us without due process, [50:07.540 --> 50:10.540] us as Roman citizens, and now they want to thrust us out secretly? [50:11.540 --> 50:17.540] No, but rather let the magistrates come and take us out themselves, and so Paul wouldn't have any of it. [50:18.540 --> 50:24.540] He insisted on the due process, and they even opted to stay in jail to insist on due process, [50:24.540 --> 50:33.540] and folks, this is the kind of commitment that we have to be willing to make in these days, or else we're going to lose everything. [50:34.540 --> 50:43.540] And so for this man, what happened to him, it's not, I'm glad that he walked out of that jail, but it's not enough just to walk out with a handshake. [50:44.540 --> 50:49.540] He needs to sue them into oblivion, and folks, listen, if you guys and gals out there, [50:49.540 --> 50:59.540] if y'all don't think that you have the confidence or the ability to handle a lawsuit like that as a pro se, and you can't afford to hire an attorney, [51:00.540 --> 51:05.540] Randy and I were discussing on the break, there's not a whole lot of attorneys that will take cases like that on contingency, [51:06.540 --> 51:12.540] but there are entities out there of lawyers that will take cases like this. [51:12.540 --> 51:20.540] All right, the Rutherford Institute is one of them. I've seen them do a lot of good work, and even the ACLU has done a lot of good work. [51:21.540 --> 51:28.540] Now, I'm no big fan of the ACLU because they're pretty liberal organization, left-wing organization, but they have done good work, [51:29.540 --> 51:33.540] and so the point is we need to just use all of our options and resources that we can. [51:33.540 --> 51:42.540] We've got to start going after these guys, these corrupt people on the offense. It's not enough just to win on a defense, and so I just want to make that point. [51:43.540 --> 51:49.540] So, comments? Mary, why don't you tell us a little bit more about what happened to this man and what's going on? [51:50.540 --> 51:56.540] Well, what happened with this man is that he came to Austin a while ago looking at the Hurricane Ike, [51:56.540 --> 52:02.540] saying he had family and friends there, and he started coming to Brave New Books and started learning the law. [52:03.540 --> 52:07.540] Now, I will never encourage anyone to spend time in jail, but I understand where you're coming from, Deborah. [52:08.540 --> 52:12.540] I'm a mother, a homeowner, and all this stuff, and it's hard once you get in jail. I'll tell you that. [52:13.540 --> 52:20.540] I've reamed my friends out, Mike and Randy, for being in jail because it's hard to get them out sometimes when they're in. [52:20.540 --> 52:33.540] So, that point being made, I still understand what you're saying, Deborah, and I believe we have set up arrests before when the city wouldn't give us permits with some taxicab issue. [52:34.540 --> 52:39.540] We were advised by an attorney to get arrested, but we had it videotaped. So, let me at least say this. [52:40.540 --> 52:46.540] If you are planning to get arrested, make sure you've got five friends around there, some on the street, some with hidden cameras. [52:46.540 --> 52:52.540] If you didn't know it, you can use your cell phone as a hidden camera and you act like you're talking on it while you're filming everybody. [52:53.540 --> 53:03.540] Yes, it's not the best video. It'll look like Alex Jones, Bilderberg, or what was that event where he went to the campground and he had it in his fanny pack, but you can edit it later if you really need it. [53:04.540 --> 53:10.540] So, make sure if you're going to get arrested that it's because you know you're going to, and you've got people on the outside that might be able to support you. [53:10.540 --> 53:17.540] Once you're inside and you don't know you're going to get arrested, I view you as a victim, not as an activist, and you go in a different category. [53:18.540 --> 53:25.540] When we're trying to get victims to stand up for their rights, we also have to educate them, and we have to educate their families, and we have to fund it. [53:26.540 --> 53:33.540] So, if we have a victim that's ready to stand up for a case, then you've got to take care of them like a little baby and help them move forward. [53:33.540 --> 53:41.540] And sometimes their issue is political enough that somebody will take it on, and sometimes their issue, for other reasons, is valuable and people will help them. [53:42.540 --> 53:49.540] So, that's all I'll say, but I'll say Curtis came to classes and already knew. So, by the time he was in jail, he knew what to do. [53:50.540 --> 53:56.540] He was doing bar grievances. He was having to write criminal complaints. He was writing motions in court. [53:56.540 --> 54:04.540] He wrote, today, and tell you this now, they didn't give him access to any legal documents. And what he did, he had to request, maybe get him in a week or two. [54:05.540 --> 54:16.540] So, he's going to have to tell his own story. A lot of times when we get victims like Carolyn Barnes, they arrested her the day after she set a case for appeal where she had eight cops subpoenaed for the first case. [54:17.540 --> 54:24.540] Her client she was standing up for was a sovereign, and he chose not to drive licensed. They said her client was crazy. [54:24.540 --> 54:29.540] She had to get an international nonprofit to help her, Citizens Commission on Human Rights. [54:30.540 --> 54:36.540] And this brings me to another topic. If you're going to be an activist or a willing victim, go ahead and get a medical directive. [54:37.540 --> 54:43.540] So, if they do get you in custody, they won't start pumping you through drugs like they did to Carolyn Barnes at Vernon State Hospital. [54:44.540 --> 54:50.540] Maybe you ever think you've seen a scary hospital go up there, and I challenge you to see what kind of place that looks like. [54:50.540 --> 54:59.540] Okay, I'm going to suggest that nobody get themselves put in jail. [55:00.540 --> 55:03.540] Yeah, I agree completely. It's not a good idea at all. [55:04.540 --> 55:06.540] You don't have to do it that way. There's another way to do it. [55:06.540 --> 55:19.540] Let me give you an example. I went to a JP court recently in Mansfield, Texas, and they were having these eviction hearings. [55:20.540 --> 55:23.540] I had a property I was helping someone with. [55:23.540 --> 55:36.540] Well, the hearing before me, when I started the hearing, I stood up at the bar and got the judge's attention and said, Your Honor, I have a hearing disability. [55:37.540 --> 55:41.540] And the judge kind of looked at me and said, Well, what's the problem with your hearing? [55:41.540 --> 55:53.540] So, I said, Well, Judge, I was down in Mexico the other day, and I was in a peculiar loss of hearing aids. He did not see the humor in that. [55:54.540 --> 55:58.540] I said, I can't hear. Do you have accommodations for the hearing impaired? [55:59.540 --> 56:03.540] He said, No, we don't. Do you have a sound system here? Will you turn it up? [56:04.540 --> 56:09.540] No, I will not. Well, then will you speak up? And he did. [56:09.540 --> 56:15.540] He spoke up and told me if I didn't sit down and shut up, he would have his may list removed me from the courtroom. [56:16.540 --> 56:18.540] So, I sat down and shut up. [56:19.540 --> 56:29.540] The next day, I prepared a tort letter, and I haven't sent it to the county commissioners yet, but I did file it at the court, [56:29.540 --> 56:39.540] accusing him of official oppression for failing to provide accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [56:40.540 --> 56:50.540] In there, I stated that I left my left ear drum in somewhere in Vietnam, fighting for these very rights. [56:51.540 --> 56:54.540] And when I come back, this arrogant judge denies them out of hand. [56:54.540 --> 57:00.540] So, how much are the rights that I risk my life for worth? [57:01.540 --> 57:11.540] How much should this judge have to pay for exerting or purporting to exert the authority he didn't have for failing to perform a duty he was required to perform? [57:12.540 --> 57:19.540] So, I give them notice of tort that I intended to sue, and I'll be filing criminal charges against the judge. [57:19.540 --> 57:23.540] I did not argue with the judge in the courtroom. [57:24.540 --> 57:28.540] I simply got the judge to step across the line. [57:29.540 --> 57:30.540] They were actually true. [57:31.540 --> 57:39.540] When I got to my hearing, we had filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction while the judge was on the bench. [57:39.540 --> 57:50.540] So, he gets to my hearing, I tell him who I am and that I have standing by way of a warranty deed and a quick claim deed. [57:51.540 --> 57:58.540] So, therefore, I have standing on the charity, and I have a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction before the court without even reading it. [57:59.540 --> 58:06.540] He declared that he had subject matter jurisdiction, so I'm charging him criminally for that. [58:06.540 --> 58:10.540] But you want to dance with him? [58:11.540 --> 58:13.540] I sued him for three times. [58:14.540 --> 58:26.540] My tort letter claimed three times the amount of the original principle of the property for ruling to allow an eviction without reading the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [58:27.540 --> 58:29.540] I didn't argue with the judge in court. [58:29.540 --> 58:36.540] Plus, if I'd have brought it up in court, he might have read it, and then I wouldn't have been charged against him. [58:37.540 --> 58:39.540] Let's stop fighting with him and start setting him up. [58:40.540 --> 58:41.540] Let's lead him down the garden path. [58:42.540 --> 58:43.540] This is Randy Kelton, there with Stevens. [58:44.540 --> 58:44.540] We will radio. [58:45.540 --> 58:48.540] I'll call it number 512-646-1984. [58:49.540 --> 58:57.540] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. 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[01:00:03.540 --> 01:00:14.540] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, online at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:14.540 --> 01:00:20.540] This is Justin Armand with the Liberty Beat for Thursday, December 5th, 2013. [01:00:21.540 --> 01:00:23.540] Gold opened today at $1,224. [01:00:24.540 --> 01:00:29.540] Silver at $19.25 and Bitcoin is trading at $987. [01:00:30.540 --> 01:00:40.540] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from shinybadges.com, supplying the Liberty movement with lapel pins of their favorite anarchists and voluntary assembles, including the best-selling [01:00:40.540 --> 01:00:43.540] Badges Don't Grant Extra Rights Cop Block Badge. [01:00:44.540 --> 01:00:46.540] Check out the selection at shinybadges.com. [01:00:47.540 --> 01:00:55.540] And from Central Texas Gunworks, CHL courses, self-defense training and firearm sales, online at centraltexasgunworks.com. [01:00:56.540 --> 01:00:58.540] And now the news, nearly 5 billion records each day. [01:00:59.540 --> 01:01:03.540] That's how many cell phones are tracked worldwide in 24 hours by the NSA. [01:01:03.540 --> 01:01:10.540] The revelation comes from top secret documents and U.S. intelligence officials cited in a report from the Washington Times. [01:01:11.540 --> 01:01:16.540] The cell phone tracking enables the agency to follow the movement of individuals while connecting their relationships. [01:01:17.540 --> 01:01:20.540] The findings come from documents leaked by Edward Snowden. [01:01:21.540 --> 01:01:27.540] They reveal how the collected cell phone records make up a vast database where the locations of hundreds of millions of devices are held. [01:01:27.540 --> 01:01:29.540] The use of drones just got deadlier. [01:01:30.540 --> 01:01:34.540] That comes as the Pentagon loosens requirements regarding civilian casualties. [01:01:35.540 --> 01:01:43.540] The Washington Times reports that the key change comes in the language of the instructions which now call for drones to, and I quote, avoid targeting civilians. [01:01:44.540 --> 01:01:49.540] The former warding stated that military personnel must ensure civilians are not targeted. [01:01:49.540 --> 01:02:03.540] The former warding stated that military personnel must ensure civilians are not targeted. The revisions also instruct military commanders that collateral damage must not be excessive in relation to mission goals. [01:02:07.540 --> 01:02:10.540] A special needs man is dead, shot and killed by police in New Jersey. [01:02:10.540 --> 01:02:18.540] WABC TV reports that this happened Wednesday afternoon as 31-year-old Dixon Rodriguez stood near a bus stop. [01:02:19.540 --> 01:02:28.540] Surveillance video has been taken into evidence and the acting county prosecutor says it clearly shows Rodriguez attacked a police officer as well as showing that he had a knife. [01:02:29.540 --> 01:02:33.540] Family and friends described the scene differently saying Rodriguez had his hands in his pockets during the incident. [01:02:34.540 --> 01:02:37.540] They described him as a mild schizophrenic who was kind and trusting. [01:02:37.540 --> 01:02:39.540] This case remains under investigation. [01:02:40.540 --> 01:02:46.540] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from the first all-natural tooth whitener that polishes, strengthens and heals your teeth. [01:02:47.540 --> 01:02:51.540] Now being sold at Brave New Bookstore or visit MyMagicMud.com. [01:02:51.540 --> 01:03:06.540] You've been listening to the Liberty Beat. Remember, freeing your mind is freeing our world. [01:03:51.540 --> 01:04:05.540] Okay folks, we are back. This is World Law, hour two. [01:04:06.540 --> 01:04:10.540] Tonight is Thursday, December 5th, 2013. [01:04:11.540 --> 01:04:13.540] I am Deborah Stevens here with Randy Kelton and Eddie Craig. [01:04:14.540 --> 01:04:19.540] And we are going to get back to talking about this transportation issue in just a moment. [01:04:19.540 --> 01:04:23.540] But first, I just wanted to clarify a couple of things. [01:04:24.540 --> 01:04:27.540] Going back to the fundraiser, folks, if you would please help. [01:04:28.540 --> 01:04:35.540] And I hope I didn't mean to act like or say that we don't have any help from sponsors for one thing. [01:04:36.540 --> 01:04:44.540] We do have some sponsors. We've got Jurisdictionary, we've got the Mike Mears Method, we've got HempUSA, we do have Chad and Becky from Capital Coin and Bullion. [01:04:44.540 --> 01:04:49.540] We do have some sponsors that are very good sponsors and help out. [01:04:50.540 --> 01:05:02.540] But most of our sponsors, and also we have Eddie's Traffic Seminar Course, but most of our sponsors are products that we sell that we make a commission on. [01:05:03.540 --> 01:05:04.540] And that's how we get paid. [01:05:04.540 --> 01:05:13.540] We don't typically charge for just a straight up flat fee for advertising because that doesn't always work out. [01:05:14.540 --> 01:05:19.540] It's just a better situation. It's a win-win situation. People get paid when we sell the products. [01:05:20.540 --> 01:05:21.540] So it works out better that way. [01:05:22.540 --> 01:05:27.540] But the point I'm trying to make about that is that if we don't sell the products, if nobody buys it, then we don't get paid. [01:05:27.540 --> 01:05:33.540] And so that's why we do need help. We do need our fundraiser. [01:05:34.540 --> 01:05:37.540] And so folks, if you would please, please donate and you can get some cool little silver. [01:05:38.540 --> 01:05:39.540] Or you could purchase some of our products. [01:05:40.540 --> 01:05:42.540] Jurisdictionary, Mike Mears Method, One World Way. [01:05:43.540 --> 01:05:45.540] We sell One World Way and Young Jeopardy products, things like this. [01:05:46.540 --> 01:05:48.540] This will support the network. So I just want to make that clear. [01:05:49.540 --> 01:05:51.540] We do have some sponsors, but we still need your help. [01:05:51.540 --> 01:05:58.540] Now, the other thing I was going to clarify going back to what I was talking about before with the story about Paul, [01:05:59.540 --> 01:06:13.540] I hope that people didn't take that story at face value as far as I don't want people to think that what I'm trying to say is that folks need to go out and get themselves arrested on purpose [01:06:14.540 --> 01:06:18.540] and try to stay in jail longer than necessary on purpose just to make some kind of a point. [01:06:18.540 --> 01:06:23.540] That's not what I was trying to say. All right. So I just want to make that clear. [01:06:24.540 --> 01:06:39.540] You know, I was using that story as an analogy to illustrate that there's a level of commitment that is necessary if we're really going to make any changes here as far as reclaiming our liberty. [01:06:40.540 --> 01:06:45.540] And so that level of commitment is what I was mainly trying to make the point about. [01:06:45.540 --> 01:06:51.540] And what you do with that level of commitment is going to be different in every situation. [01:06:52.540 --> 01:06:56.540] It doesn't necessarily mean go out and get yourself arrested and stay in jail. Okay. So I just want to make that clear. [01:06:57.540 --> 01:07:03.540] Okay. So anyways, we're going to go back to Randy now. And Randy and Eddie, we're going to talk about those transportation issues. [01:07:04.540 --> 01:07:08.540] So go ahead, Randy. Okay. Before I get to that, everybody dig in your pocket. [01:07:08.540 --> 01:07:16.540] Throw in all that expertise. Go on to the website and select Randy's Beer Fund. [01:07:17.540 --> 01:07:24.540] Okay. If you can't find it, do it on the map. Okay. [01:07:25.540 --> 01:07:36.540] About the transportation issue then. About what I have been finding works much better than getting in their face and arguing with them [01:07:36.540 --> 01:07:40.540] and letting them know how to calibrate the cabbage. That's fun to do. [01:07:41.540 --> 01:07:51.540] And we get to have this feeling of righteous indignation and all that. It's great fun. I love to do it. [01:07:52.540 --> 01:08:00.540] But it tends to get me beat up and thrown in jail. It tends to get me discredited. [01:08:00.540 --> 01:08:06.540] And these guys really know how to deal with that kind of thing. [01:08:07.540 --> 01:08:16.540] They do confrontation all day every day. They're very accustomed to it. [01:08:17.540 --> 01:08:23.540] They're very accustomed to people reading the Riot Act, telling them how to calibrate the cabbage. They know how to handle that. [01:08:23.540 --> 01:08:30.540] If we're going to have effect, we have to take these guys outside their comfort zone. [01:08:31.540 --> 01:08:43.540] And the best way I've found to do that is we want to give them the impression that everything we're doing is a setup. [01:08:43.540 --> 01:08:55.540] And the way you do that is never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want him to do. [01:08:56.540 --> 01:09:08.540] Because you will never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not specifically require him to do. [01:09:08.540 --> 01:09:22.540] So when you insist that he do what the law requires him to do, and he doesn't do it, then you get to collaborate with his own law. [01:09:23.540 --> 01:09:29.540] Just like this judge, when I went in there and asked him to turn up the sound system, [01:09:29.540 --> 01:09:41.540] I don't think he had a clue that I would set him up for class A misdemeanor official oppression by Ms. Stevens in office. [01:09:42.540 --> 01:09:45.540] Failure to perform the duty he was required to perform. [01:09:46.540 --> 01:09:48.540] Now he knows I set him up deliberately. [01:09:49.540 --> 01:09:54.540] And I talked to his bailiff, and the bailiff has told him that I set him up on the second one. [01:09:54.540 --> 01:10:02.540] Because when he ruled against my challenge to subject matter jurisdiction, it was the first thing out of my mouth. [01:10:03.540 --> 01:10:06.540] We have a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction before the court, [01:10:07.540 --> 01:10:11.540] because there is a trespass to tri-title suit in the district court. [01:10:12.540 --> 01:10:21.540] The judge said, Mr. Kelton, just because you have filed a trespass to tri-title suit in the district court does not necessarily mean that I do not have jurisdiction. [01:10:21.540 --> 01:10:23.540] Your motion is denied. [01:10:24.540 --> 01:10:26.540] He said that without reading it. [01:10:27.540 --> 01:10:29.540] I said, well, then, Your Honor, we're done here. [01:10:30.540 --> 01:10:38.540] I closed my folder, got up, walked over to the bar, pointed at the bailiff, you, I need you outside, and turned and walked out of the courtroom. [01:10:39.540 --> 01:10:45.540] And the bailiff told me later, because I went to a political rally in Fort Worth, a tea party, [01:10:45.540 --> 01:10:50.540] because it was Monday of the next week. [01:10:51.540 --> 01:10:54.540] And I walked in, and there's that bailiff, guarding the door. [01:10:55.540 --> 01:11:05.540] So I got to talking to him, and he said, when you walked, when you said, we're done here, and got up and walked out, [01:11:06.540 --> 01:11:10.540] he said, I thought the judge was going to get up and run out of the courtroom. [01:11:10.540 --> 01:11:14.540] Because he didn't know what was going on. [01:11:15.540 --> 01:11:17.540] That's when he got the first inkling he was being set up. [01:11:18.540 --> 01:11:23.540] If we're going to beat these guys, we need to start setting them up. [01:11:24.540 --> 01:11:34.540] And I'm going to suggest, and we have Eddie here to talk about this, that we not think about filing some major action against them. [01:11:34.540 --> 01:11:39.540] That it's going to take a whole lot to rejudicate. [01:11:40.540 --> 01:11:44.540] It's going to cost them a lot of money to defend our whatever we file. [01:11:45.540 --> 01:11:48.540] They're going to have to pay all these lawyers to write all these pleadings. [01:11:49.540 --> 01:11:56.540] I suggest we take something minor and key, like failure to bring before magistrates. [01:11:57.540 --> 01:11:59.540] That's real clear in law. [01:11:59.540 --> 01:12:10.540] If you read the ticket, the statute that authorizes the officer to release you on a signed promise to appear. [01:12:11.540 --> 01:12:20.540] Eddie, what does the statute say or who does the statute say you must appear before? [01:12:21.540 --> 01:12:25.540] Well, it says that you are promising to appear before a magistrate. [01:12:25.540 --> 01:12:38.540] But at the same time, it also says that if the person refused to sign or demand such, that they are to be taken immediately before a magistrate. [01:12:39.540 --> 01:12:41.540] And that goes back to the Magna Carta. [01:12:42.540 --> 01:12:44.540] It goes back to Chapter 14. [01:12:45.540 --> 01:12:51.540] Chapter 14, 1403, if you're arrested, you're to be taken directly to the nearest magistrate. [01:12:51.540 --> 01:12:56.540] You're not to appear before a judge because no judge has jurisdiction yet. [01:12:57.540 --> 01:13:00.540] No court has jurisdiction over you yet. [01:13:01.540 --> 01:13:11.540] When someone makes a complaint, the court does not have jurisdiction until some magistrate makes a determination probable cause. [01:13:12.540 --> 01:13:16.540] And that's why the statute says you're promised to appear before some magistrate. [01:13:16.540 --> 01:13:22.540] You appear before the trial judge, he don't have such a matter of jurisdiction. [01:13:23.540 --> 01:13:32.540] So we make up a lawsuit suing the judge personally for acting without such a matter of jurisdiction. [01:13:33.540 --> 01:13:36.540] Well, there's the other issue there also, Randy, of false imprisonment. [01:13:36.540 --> 01:13:45.540] When the officer fails to take you before that magistrate and does anything else with you physically, it's a direct violation of the mandate of law. [01:13:46.540 --> 01:13:47.540] No, no, no, don't want to get you false imprisonment. [01:13:48.540 --> 01:13:51.540] False imprisonment is way too hard for a judge to take. [01:13:52.540 --> 01:13:54.540] This one is dead bang. [01:13:55.540 --> 01:13:59.540] It's not a matter of, it's going to be a matter of how long the officer helps you. [01:13:59.540 --> 01:14:10.540] How long is a custodial stop as compared to a false imprisonment? [01:14:11.540 --> 01:14:13.540] When does a jury stop become false imprisonment? [01:14:14.540 --> 01:14:17.540] No, no, no, I'm not talking about just the issue of stopping you. [01:14:18.540 --> 01:14:22.540] I'm talking about the issue of actually taking you from the scene to a jail cell. [01:14:23.540 --> 01:14:27.540] No, no, how often does that happen? [01:14:27.540 --> 01:14:29.540] I'm not talking about that. [01:14:30.540 --> 01:14:38.540] The things they do all day, every day, like you a ticket, you sign the ticket. [01:14:39.540 --> 01:14:41.540] Fine, that works. [01:14:42.540 --> 01:14:47.540] Then you go down to the court and ask to be here before a magistrate. [01:14:48.540 --> 01:14:50.540] What happens when you do that? [01:14:51.540 --> 01:14:52.540] They refuse. [01:14:53.540 --> 01:14:55.540] Yes, that's what you want. [01:14:55.540 --> 01:14:59.540] When I go down and ask to be brought before a magistrate, I want them to refuse. [01:15:00.540 --> 01:15:02.540] The last ticket I got was in Hazel, Texas. [01:15:03.540 --> 01:15:06.540] I went to the court and I happened to know this judge. [01:15:07.540 --> 01:15:12.540] I'd been before him once before and he was a surprisingly pleasant individual. [01:15:13.540 --> 01:15:16.540] They finally called my name. It was on a Monday night. [01:15:17.540 --> 01:15:19.540] Everybody had to show up at the same time and they're calling everybody else. [01:15:19.540 --> 01:15:24.540] He calls my name and I come up there and I look down at his name and I see Judge Getman. [01:15:25.540 --> 01:15:32.540] I seem to remember a Judge Getman in this court, but I don't remember him having that much gray hair. [01:15:33.540 --> 01:15:36.540] The judge looked at me and he said, yes, Mr. Kelvin. [01:15:37.540 --> 01:15:40.540] I don't remember your belly being quite that big. [01:15:41.540 --> 01:15:42.540] Good point, Judge. [01:15:42.540 --> 01:15:48.540] I said, now, Your Honor, I have received this citation and I agreed to appear before a magistrate. [01:15:49.540 --> 01:15:52.540] I'm here to appear before a magistrate and I want you to hold an examining trial. [01:15:53.540 --> 01:15:57.540] No, Mr. Kelvin, I'm not going to hold an examining trial. [01:15:58.540 --> 01:16:09.540] Well, in that case, I want you to have this plaintiff come over here and arrest you for official oppression by criminal violation 3903, penal code elsewhere. [01:16:09.540 --> 01:16:11.540] That's the point. [01:16:12.540 --> 01:16:15.540] No, Mr. Kelvin, I'm not going to have my baby for rest of the week. [01:16:16.540 --> 01:16:17.540] Oh, okay. [01:16:18.540 --> 01:16:24.540] Then in that case, Ms. Prosecutor, I want you to take my criminal complaint against the judge. [01:16:25.540 --> 01:16:29.540] And the judge said, the prosecutor's not going to take your criminal complaint against the judge. [01:16:30.540 --> 01:16:34.540] I said, well, Your Honor, you waited all my time today. [01:16:34.540 --> 01:16:38.540] Yes, Mr. Kelvin, I'm afraid I am. [01:16:39.540 --> 01:16:40.540] I said, have we done? [01:16:41.540 --> 01:16:43.540] And he said, yes, Your Honor, I've walked out of the court. [01:16:44.540 --> 01:16:45.540] He set him up. [01:16:46.540 --> 01:16:50.540] I cannot get these guys to break my case trial. [01:16:51.540 --> 01:16:52.540] Because they know everything to set up. [01:16:53.540 --> 01:16:54.540] This is Randy Kelvin. [01:16:55.540 --> 01:16:56.540] This is our radio. [01:16:57.540 --> 01:16:58.540] We'll be right back. [01:16:58.540 --> 01:17:05.540] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:17:06.540 --> 01:17:08.540] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:17:09.540 --> 01:17:10.540] And it's time we changed all that. [01:17:11.540 --> 01:17:16.540] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:17:17.540 --> 01:17:24.540] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:17:24.540 --> 01:17:30.540] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:17:31.540 --> 01:17:38.540] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:17:39.540 --> 01:17:46.540] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:17:47.540 --> 01:17:50.540] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:17:50.540 --> 01:17:57.540] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:17:58.540 --> 01:17:59.540] Order now. [01:18:00.540 --> 01:18:08.540] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [01:18:09.540 --> 01:18:13.540] We provide a wide assortment of your favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality coins and precious metals. [01:18:14.540 --> 01:18:17.540] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [01:18:17.540 --> 01:18:23.540] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metals dealers and journalists. [01:18:24.540 --> 01:18:26.540] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [01:18:27.540 --> 01:18:31.540] In addition, we carry popular young Jevity products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Pollenburks. [01:18:32.540 --> 01:18:38.540] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storable Foods, Berkey Water Products, ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [01:18:39.540 --> 01:18:42.540] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:18:43.540 --> 01:18:45.540] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:18:45.540 --> 01:18:50.540] We're located at 7304 Burnet Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:18:51.540 --> 01:18:53.540] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:18:54.540 --> 01:18:59.540] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:00.540 --> 01:19:06.540] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:06.540 --> 01:19:08.540] Network, yo. [01:19:15.540 --> 01:19:17.540] Ain't gonna blind me. [01:19:20.540 --> 01:19:22.540] Don't bore me. [01:19:22.540 --> 01:19:35.540] Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.540 --> 01:19:40.540] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan. [01:19:41.540 --> 01:19:45.540] You put the fear in my pocket, took the money from my hand. [01:19:45.540 --> 01:19:51.540] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:51.540 --> 01:19:56.540] Ain't gonna fool me. [01:20:11.540 --> 01:20:15.540] Ain't gonna drive me with that same old sucker punch. [01:20:15.540 --> 01:20:20.540] I get it now, but then I must have enough to love. [01:20:21.540 --> 01:20:25.540] Back then you had room to move, but now you're feeling the crunch. [01:20:26.540 --> 01:20:31.540] Ain't gonna get me with that same old sucker punch. [01:20:32.540 --> 01:20:36.540] You can hear me. We are back from Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Danny Craig. [01:20:37.540 --> 01:20:38.540] We're on the radio. [01:20:38.540 --> 01:20:46.540] And there's a point I'm trying to get to here in helping people with foreclosure issues. [01:20:47.540 --> 01:20:52.540] I have stacks and stacks and stacks of arguments that I could make. [01:20:53.540 --> 01:20:56.540] I've got about 20 arguments I could make on a deed of trust. [01:20:57.540 --> 01:21:05.540] There's hardly ever an assignment of the deed of trust or an appointment of substitute trustee that I can't blow right out of the water. [01:21:05.540 --> 01:21:07.540] By the code. [01:21:08.540 --> 01:21:14.540] When it's complex, it takes a lot of knowledge to be able to address these issues. [01:21:15.540 --> 01:21:22.540] What I started doing is, if somebody's about to get foreclosed on, we file suit to the federal court. [01:21:23.540 --> 01:21:28.540] And all we say is, you sent us this demand for payments. [01:21:29.540 --> 01:21:30.540] I don't know who you are. [01:21:30.540 --> 01:21:37.540] I never entered into a contract with you. Never entered into a contract with your alleged principal. [01:21:38.540 --> 01:21:40.540] I don't know anything about this. [01:21:41.540 --> 01:21:55.540] And under 15 U.S. Code 1692-G, I dispute any debt you claim to have to which I am an obligated debtor. [01:21:56.540 --> 01:21:58.540] Demand that you prove it up. [01:21:58.540 --> 01:22:03.540] That creates statutory estoppel from further collection. [01:22:04.540 --> 01:22:14.540] I also demand that you make available the original debt instrument for my inspection under Uniform Commercial Code 3.501. [01:22:15.540 --> 01:22:18.540] That also generates statutory estoppel from collection. [01:22:19.540 --> 01:22:20.540] That's it. [01:22:21.540 --> 01:22:22.540] Who are you? [01:22:23.540 --> 01:22:25.540] Nothing else, no more conflict issues. [01:22:25.540 --> 01:22:29.540] We've got people spending quite a couple of years on this suit. [01:22:30.540 --> 01:22:31.540] We don't even care about this suit. [01:22:32.540 --> 01:22:35.540] They throw it out. We don't care. [01:22:36.540 --> 01:22:39.540] We file it. They file a challenge to subject matter. [01:22:40.540 --> 01:22:43.540] I mean, they file a rule for emotion dismissal for the state of Cleveland which can't be had. [01:22:44.540 --> 01:22:46.540] We file an opposition to the suit. [01:22:47.540 --> 01:22:50.540] I got that standard ripped out almost completely done. [01:22:51.540 --> 01:22:52.540] Minor adjustment for every suit. [01:22:52.540 --> 01:22:56.540] The judge dismisses. Motion for reconsideration. [01:22:57.540 --> 01:22:58.540] Opposition to motion for reconsideration. [01:22:59.540 --> 01:23:01.540] The judge denies reconsideration. [01:23:02.540 --> 01:23:05.540] We file an appeal. It takes six months per year to get to the appeal. [01:23:06.540 --> 01:23:08.540] Costs them a fortune. [01:23:11.540 --> 01:23:15.540] City court, they're going to collect about 300 bucks from you. [01:23:16.540 --> 01:23:20.540] You sue them for not bringing you before a magistrate. [01:23:20.540 --> 01:23:22.540] That is right there in the code. [01:23:23.540 --> 01:23:28.540] It's been a statutory requirement since 1216. [01:23:30.540 --> 01:23:32.540] They can't get around that. [01:23:33.540 --> 01:23:41.540] The trial judge has no jurisdiction until some magistrate has made a determination upon the cause. [01:23:41.540 --> 01:23:53.540] The code says that the officer can release you on your sentence or the purpose of appearing before a magistrate. [01:23:54.540 --> 01:23:58.540] You go into the courtroom and they want you to enter a plea. [01:23:59.540 --> 01:24:02.540] That is a... [01:24:03.540 --> 01:24:04.540] What is it, Eddie? [01:24:05.540 --> 01:24:08.540] They bring you in to identify you and take your plea. [01:24:08.540 --> 01:24:10.540] That's an arraignment. [01:24:11.540 --> 01:24:13.540] That's an arraignment hearing. [01:24:14.540 --> 01:24:19.540] An arraignment hearing can only be had by a judge with jurisdiction. [01:24:20.540 --> 01:24:25.540] No judge has jurisdiction until there's a determination upon the cause. [01:24:26.540 --> 01:24:28.540] That's what Chapter 16 is for. [01:24:29.540 --> 01:24:31.540] A whole chapter in the Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:24:31.540 --> 01:24:41.540] So we make up a suit and sue them for breach of due process. [01:24:42.540 --> 01:24:49.540] In this case, you can claim that the judge lacks subject matter jurisdiction. [01:24:50.540 --> 01:24:55.540] Since the judge lacks subject matter jurisdiction, he can be sued personally. [01:24:56.540 --> 01:24:58.540] So you sue the judge personally. [01:24:58.540 --> 01:25:00.540] He's going to have a fit. [01:25:01.540 --> 01:25:05.540] The problem with that is all these municipal judges are lawyers. [01:25:06.540 --> 01:25:10.540] And when you sue him personally, that's a malpractice suit. [01:25:11.540 --> 01:25:18.540] That's going to make his malpractice insurance for his practice as a lawyer go through the roof. [01:25:19.540 --> 01:25:26.540] If he ever gets thrown off this bench, then he's going to have to go out and make a real living. [01:25:26.540 --> 01:25:29.540] He's not going to be able to afford his malpractice insurance. [01:25:30.540 --> 01:25:37.540] And then the city is going to have to put together a response and argue your issues in court. [01:25:38.540 --> 01:25:42.540] And you get to go in court, fight with them, and you don't care what they do. [01:25:43.540 --> 01:25:46.540] This is a great education. [01:25:47.540 --> 01:25:53.540] If you're accusing them of a due process violation, they don't have a way to come back at you. [01:25:53.540 --> 01:25:56.540] Because your ticket is not before the court. [01:25:57.540 --> 01:25:59.540] If they lose, the ticket goes out the window. [01:26:00.540 --> 01:26:03.540] So let's get together something really simple. [01:26:04.540 --> 01:26:09.540] Just like the suit I'm using, we download it off the internet, fill in the blanks, they do the same thing every time. [01:26:10.540 --> 01:26:12.540] And just start prepping them with it. [01:26:13.540 --> 01:26:17.540] They want to collect three or five hundred bucks from a ticket. [01:26:17.540 --> 01:26:25.540] Let's charge you, let's get it to cost them several thousand to defend your suit. [01:26:26.540 --> 01:26:29.540] You don't even care what happens to it. [01:26:30.540 --> 01:26:32.540] You don't have a dog in the hut, you can care less. [01:26:33.540 --> 01:26:36.540] The worst they're going to do is charge you a couple hundred bucks. [01:26:37.540 --> 01:26:45.540] This suit, no way they're going to be able to come back at you because you're making a due process claim against them that's dead on law. [01:26:45.540 --> 01:26:48.540] You just had somebody come out of court. [01:26:49.540 --> 01:26:50.540] The judge ruled against it. [01:26:51.540 --> 01:26:57.540] He told the lawyers on the other side, the client asked for a continuance. [01:26:58.540 --> 01:27:01.540] And he couldn't give it to them unless the other side agreed. [01:27:02.540 --> 01:27:05.540] He told the lawyers, you really need to agree to this. [01:27:06.540 --> 01:27:08.540] You are not going to give attorney fees. [01:27:09.540 --> 01:27:13.540] And when this gets to a higher court, you're likely to get beat up big time. [01:27:13.540 --> 01:27:16.540] They didn't agree, so they're going to get beat up big time. [01:27:17.540 --> 01:27:18.540] But the judge recognized the problem. [01:27:19.540 --> 01:27:21.540] The guy was making due process claims. [01:27:22.540 --> 01:27:28.540] And with a due process claim, you can ask for attorney fees, but you'll almost never get it. [01:27:29.540 --> 01:27:33.540] So we need a simple suit that anybody can file. [01:27:34.540 --> 01:27:35.540] Just download, sign, and send. [01:27:36.540 --> 01:27:38.540] It costs you 125 bucks to file it. [01:27:39.540 --> 01:27:41.540] That puts them in the distant court. [01:27:41.540 --> 01:27:47.540] This is 125, 160 in the district. [01:27:48.540 --> 01:27:50.540] Anything above 35, I thought. [01:27:51.540 --> 01:27:52.540] I don't know. [01:27:53.540 --> 01:27:54.540] What's it cost to file? [01:27:55.540 --> 01:27:58.540] Oh, 327 or 426, something like that. [01:27:59.540 --> 01:28:00.540] That's settled. [01:28:01.540 --> 01:28:03.540] Then I don't know, because I thought that's what it was here. [01:28:04.540 --> 01:28:08.540] I think the county was like 120, and I believe the district was 160. [01:28:08.540 --> 01:28:13.540] And you won't have to have it served. [01:28:14.540 --> 01:28:15.540] You can take it down to the court. [01:28:16.540 --> 01:28:19.540] Since they're public officials, you get to file a motion to waive service. [01:28:20.540 --> 01:28:21.540] They'll almost always have to do that. [01:28:22.540 --> 01:28:23.540] And you put them in court. [01:28:24.540 --> 01:28:29.540] It stood them down stealing 300 bucks from you. [01:28:30.540 --> 01:28:31.540] You still sell $1,000 to them. [01:28:32.540 --> 01:28:33.540] It's all about the money, guys. [01:28:34.540 --> 01:28:36.540] In the end, it's all about collected money. [01:28:36.540 --> 01:28:41.540] When we start costing them more money to adjudicate these than they're making them, [01:28:42.540 --> 01:28:45.540] then we'll get them to change their policies. [01:28:46.540 --> 01:28:50.540] We start suing every judge in there, one suit after another. [01:28:51.540 --> 01:28:56.540] Those judges are never going to be able to practice, because if they get off the bench, [01:28:57.540 --> 01:29:02.540] the only way they'll be able to practice is if another law firm picks them up. [01:29:02.540 --> 01:29:05.540] And it's very unlikely that they'll be able to get that done [01:29:06.540 --> 01:29:08.540] if they've got a number of malpractice suits kept. [01:29:09.540 --> 01:29:16.540] Just like if you buy insurance on your car, and somebody bashes into it, it's not your fault. [01:29:17.540 --> 01:29:18.540] They're going to raise your rates anyway. [01:29:19.540 --> 01:29:20.540] Second time, they're going to cancel. [01:29:21.540 --> 01:29:22.540] These guys are in the same place. [01:29:23.540 --> 01:29:28.540] We can fight them, but not in the way we used to fight them, [01:29:28.540 --> 01:29:32.540] because they're accustomed to people trying to come and get them. [01:29:33.540 --> 01:29:34.540] There's no freedom. [01:29:35.540 --> 01:29:36.540] We're going to have that. [01:29:37.540 --> 01:29:38.540] You just want to give to them. [01:29:39.540 --> 01:29:42.540] If my clock's not working, it's easy to get out. [01:29:44.540 --> 01:29:45.540] All right, folks, we'll be right back. [01:29:46.540 --> 01:29:47.540] This is the rule of law. [01:29:48.540 --> 01:29:51.540] Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, and Deborah Stevens, we'll be right back. [01:29:51.540 --> 01:29:58.540] You can call in 512-646-1984. [01:30:00.540 --> 01:30:01.540] All aboard. [01:30:02.540 --> 01:30:05.540] When mold spread through the dorms of St. Mary's College in Maryland, [01:30:06.540 --> 01:30:08.540] the school relocated its students to a cruise ship. [01:30:09.540 --> 01:30:13.540] And Dr. Catherine Albrecht with an ocean tale of kids sailing through college next. [01:30:14.540 --> 01:30:17.540] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches, [01:30:17.540 --> 01:30:20.540] and creating a massive database of your personal information. [01:30:21.540 --> 01:30:23.540] That's creepy, but it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:24.540 --> 01:30:26.540] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:27.540 --> 01:30:30.540] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches, [01:30:31.540 --> 01:30:33.540] or use tracking cookies, and they're third-party certified. [01:30:34.540 --> 01:30:37.540] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [01:30:38.540 --> 01:30:40.540] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:41.540 --> 01:30:43.540] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:43.540 --> 01:30:46.540] After Tropical Storm Irene swept through Maryland, [01:30:47.540 --> 01:30:50.540] mold spread like wildfire through the dorms of St. Mary's College. [01:30:51.540 --> 01:30:54.540] 250 students had to be relocated, but where? [01:30:55.540 --> 01:30:58.540] Hotels? Well, that cost a fortune, 20,000 a day. [01:30:59.540 --> 01:31:01.540] So St. Mary's President came up with a way with an idea. [01:31:02.540 --> 01:31:03.540] How about putting the students up on a cruise ship? [01:31:04.540 --> 01:31:08.540] It just so happened, the Sea Voyager cruise ship was on its way down from Maine, [01:31:09.540 --> 01:31:11.540] with the owners' mind docking in Maryland and turning their vessel [01:31:11.540 --> 01:31:14.540] into a floating dorm? No problem. [01:31:15.540 --> 01:31:18.540] So now the students are enjoying fine onboard dining, sweet-looking suites, [01:31:19.540 --> 01:31:22.540] and a breathtaking waterfront view. Talk about smooth sailing. [01:31:23.540 --> 01:31:27.540] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.540 --> 01:31:33.540] Here at Zombie Killer Ammo and Guns, we believe that the Second Amendment [01:31:34.540 --> 01:31:37.540] guarantees our rights as citizens to be able to defend ourselves and our loved ones. [01:31:37.540 --> 01:31:40.540] We also believe that the right to carry weapons comes with the responsibility [01:31:41.540 --> 01:31:42.540] of being safe and smart about guns. [01:31:43.540 --> 01:31:45.540] So if you're going to be in the Corpus Christi area, give us a call. [01:31:46.540 --> 01:31:53.540] Hit 361-704-6103, ask for Chris or Portia, and mention this radio ad for a 10% discount. [01:31:54.540 --> 01:31:59.540] We can ship ammo, parts, and accessories, like us on Facebook at Zombie Killers, LLC. [01:32:00.540 --> 01:32:05.540] Nutritious food is real body armor. It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, [01:32:05.540 --> 01:32:08.540] and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:32:09.540 --> 01:32:12.540] Did you know the U.S. government banned the hemp plant from growing in the United States [01:32:13.540 --> 01:32:16.540] and classified it as a Schedule I drug to hide it behind the marijuana plant? [01:32:17.540 --> 01:32:22.540] People have been confused about this plant for over 80 years, and many still don't know what hemp is. [01:32:23.540 --> 01:32:26.540] So now you know hemp is not marijuana, and marijuana is not hemp. [01:32:27.540 --> 01:32:29.540] They are different varieties of the same species. [01:32:30.540 --> 01:32:33.540] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts, [01:32:33.540 --> 01:32:38.540] and to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best kept health secret you need to know about. [01:32:39.540 --> 01:32:47.540] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten-free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. [01:32:48.540 --> 01:32:59.540] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367, and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you, only at HempUSA.org. [01:32:59.540 --> 01:33:06.540] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.540 --> 01:33:31.540] I'm not a nobody, but I'm a sick chick. [01:33:32.540 --> 01:33:35.540] Chippin' on your mom, chippin' on your daddy, chippin' on your grandpa and the granny. [01:33:36.540 --> 01:33:40.540] Chippin' on me, chippin' on your baby, chippin' on your family, whole family. [01:33:41.540 --> 01:33:45.540] Chippin' on your dad and the kids around me, chippin' on the beef and you still go eat it. [01:33:46.540 --> 01:33:50.540] Chippin' on the fish, them all in the sea, chippin' on the shark and the whale around me. [01:33:51.540 --> 01:33:55.540] You know still mankind, we ain't cheap crazy. They take in the king, man they want the we be. [01:33:55.540 --> 01:33:58.540] Security, they go tell me, number when they give me, they rip it up you see. [01:33:59.540 --> 01:34:03.540] I'm chippin' you in the morning, chippin' you in the evening, chippin' you all the dinner time. [01:34:04.540 --> 01:34:08.540] Experiment on mankind, but man you know say them lie. [01:34:09.540 --> 01:34:13.540] Well, we don't want no chip, man, you have your body. Freedom or something, man, you fight for it. [01:34:14.540 --> 01:34:18.540] You should tell them the free we be. Constitution set us free. [01:34:19.540 --> 01:34:23.540] Don't let them put no chip in your body. Put no chip in your dog or cat, you see. [01:34:23.540 --> 01:34:27.540] Don't put no chip in your cow and go eat it. Don't put no chip in the fish and go eat it. [01:34:28.540 --> 01:34:32.540] All in the wheel and the shark in the sea. Put the little chip in the little baby. [01:34:33.540 --> 01:34:37.540] Want to put the chip in a gram for yourself. Want to put the little chip in a imam in Madrid. [01:34:38.540 --> 01:34:41.540] Okay, we are back. We had to tell, there were students here with Eddie Craig. [01:34:42.540 --> 01:34:45.540] And we're talking about a way to go after them. And on the break we talked about [01:34:46.540 --> 01:34:50.540] where if you come down and you don't enter a plea, [01:34:50.540 --> 01:34:54.540] they issue a warrant as a matter of policy. [01:34:55.540 --> 01:35:01.540] Holy crap, if I can get them to admit they did something as a matter of policy [01:35:02.540 --> 01:35:05.540] that violates law. [01:35:06.540 --> 01:35:14.540] When an entity issues a policy that violates law, [01:35:15.540 --> 01:35:17.540] they waive their sovereign immunity. [01:35:17.540 --> 01:35:22.540] That's a big deal. And when it's a public official, [01:35:23.540 --> 01:35:28.540] the thing on the break was you don't have a claim until they've harmed you. [01:35:29.540 --> 01:35:34.540] Actually you do, because this is a due process, [01:35:35.540 --> 01:35:45.540] in that the judge issued a warrant when he did not have authority to issue a warrant. [01:35:45.540 --> 01:35:49.540] That's a criminal act he committed at your expense. [01:35:50.540 --> 01:35:53.540] And I can assure you that if you want a criminal history, [01:35:54.540 --> 01:35:58.540] even if that warrant has been revoked or removed, [01:35:59.540 --> 01:36:02.540] it will still show up in your criminal history. [01:36:03.540 --> 01:36:06.540] It's just like a bad mark on your credit, [01:36:07.540 --> 01:36:10.540] that they're supposed to take it off and they never take it off. [01:36:10.540 --> 01:36:17.540] You can have records expunged, they never, ever expunge them. [01:36:18.540 --> 01:36:25.540] Any criminal mark ever, ever goes away, especially a warrant issued. [01:36:26.540 --> 01:36:29.540] So if they've issued a warrant, even if they've revoked it, [01:36:30.540 --> 01:36:34.540] you do a criminal history, you see that warrant, you are harmed. [01:36:35.540 --> 01:36:38.540] But in the case of a public official violating a law related to office, [01:36:38.540 --> 01:36:43.540] you don't have to claim harm, you simply claim due process is harm per se. [01:36:44.540 --> 01:36:48.540] The fact that he breached due process and issued a warrant against you, [01:36:49.540 --> 01:36:53.540] he had no authority to do so, that's a due process violation is harm per se. [01:36:54.540 --> 01:36:56.540] Well now wait a minute, Randy, you bring up an interesting point. [01:36:57.540 --> 01:37:00.540] If that's really true, that if there's a warrant issued, [01:37:01.540 --> 01:37:05.540] even if it's bogus and you can manage to get it taken off or get it removed [01:37:05.540 --> 01:37:09.540] or you know, voided or whatever, you're saying it's always there anyway? [01:37:10.540 --> 01:37:11.540] Absolutely. [01:37:12.540 --> 01:37:17.540] Okay, but going to the harm issue, I would have to challenge you a bit on this issue, [01:37:18.540 --> 01:37:22.540] that just because it's on your record, that doesn't necessarily mean you've been harmed. [01:37:23.540 --> 01:37:30.540] Okay, you would have to show that you tried to get a job or get a loan from a bank [01:37:30.540 --> 01:37:35.540] or something like that and that you were denied because of that. [01:37:36.540 --> 01:37:38.540] You're not suing for harm, you're suing for due process. [01:37:39.540 --> 01:37:47.540] Due process, the courts have ruled that a due process violation is harm per se [01:37:48.540 --> 01:37:52.540] because it's sometimes hard to show how a due process violation actually harms you. [01:37:53.540 --> 01:37:56.540] Yeah, maybe that's why O'Connor doesn't list that as a cause of action. [01:37:56.540 --> 01:37:59.540] There's nothing in there I can find, and I've looked, [01:38:00.540 --> 01:38:04.540] relating to how you would even assert a due process as a tort. [01:38:05.540 --> 01:38:08.540] Look under suing the government. It's in there. [01:38:10.540 --> 01:38:13.540] It's not under your normal causes of action. [01:38:14.540 --> 01:38:16.540] It's a special case, look under suing governments. [01:38:17.540 --> 01:38:23.540] You'll find due process under there and you'll find the case law that says due process is harm per se. [01:38:23.540 --> 01:38:28.540] Due process absolutely is a cause of action. [01:38:29.540 --> 01:38:34.540] And if you sue in a 42 U.S. Code 1983 suit, that's the only thing you sue under, [01:38:35.540 --> 01:38:43.540] is due process, because that falls under the Ku Klux Klan Act. [01:38:44.540 --> 01:38:48.540] 42 U.S. Code 1983 is the second part of the Ku Klux Klan Act. [01:38:48.540 --> 01:38:54.540] The first part of the Ku Klux Klan Act is 18 U.S. Code 242 of the Official Act, [01:38:55.540 --> 01:38:59.540] that is authority exerts force to exert authority he does not expressly have, [01:39:00.540 --> 01:39:02.540] or fails to perform a duty he's required to perform. [01:39:03.540 --> 01:39:05.540] And in the process, not a citizen will react if he's too far in the right. [01:39:06.540 --> 01:39:07.540] That's a crime. [01:39:08.540 --> 01:39:13.540] And any due process violation denies you in a right. [01:39:13.540 --> 01:39:20.540] This is, that's clear, you'll find that in O'Connor's if you look under suing governments, [01:39:21.540 --> 01:39:24.540] government agencies, and you don't have to show harm. [01:39:25.540 --> 01:39:32.540] So that's a great one, because if it's a matter of policy, they waive all the duty. [01:39:33.540 --> 01:39:36.540] That would really give them a headache. [01:39:37.540 --> 01:39:41.540] Well they'll definitely have no problem telling you that if you refuse to enter a plea, [01:39:41.540 --> 01:39:43.540] then we're going to issue a warrant for you. [01:39:44.540 --> 01:39:45.540] There's lots of them that'll do it. [01:39:46.540 --> 01:39:48.540] They even put it in their instructions from the court paperwork. [01:39:49.540 --> 01:39:52.540] Oh, that's wonderful. That would go to RICO. [01:39:53.540 --> 01:39:56.540] But RICO's the hardest for individuals to file. [01:39:57.540 --> 01:40:02.540] What might be a good plan is to get a lot of people to file a lot of lawsuits, [01:40:03.540 --> 01:40:04.540] simple, singular issues. [01:40:05.540 --> 01:40:07.540] They got to start writing answers to these. [01:40:07.540 --> 01:40:10.540] And they get all these suits against their bond rating. [01:40:11.540 --> 01:40:15.540] As soon as bond ratings start going up, that'll probably hurt them more than the cost of litigation. [01:40:16.540 --> 01:40:20.540] But the problem with the cost of litigation, it comes out of their general funds, [01:40:21.540 --> 01:40:23.540] and they don't have as much money to throw around. [01:40:24.540 --> 01:40:30.540] We start collecting these tickets more costly and push their bond rating through the roof. [01:40:31.540 --> 01:40:34.540] It's all about costing them more money. [01:40:34.540 --> 01:40:37.540] We don't care if we win or not. You know, they're criminals. [01:40:38.540 --> 01:40:44.540] And all of the courts are going to protect them because all of the courts feel similarly vulnerable, [01:40:45.540 --> 01:40:47.540] and they don't want this done to them. [01:40:48.540 --> 01:40:50.540] So we let them. [01:40:51.540 --> 01:40:54.540] You file a suit. They'll file an opposition. [01:40:55.540 --> 01:40:57.540] The court will dismiss your case. [01:40:58.540 --> 01:41:00.540] You file a motion for reconsideration. [01:41:00.540 --> 01:41:03.540] They'll deny the motion for reconsideration. [01:41:04.540 --> 01:41:06.540] You file a demand for fine-expected conclusions of law. [01:41:07.540 --> 01:41:09.540] They will either do that or not. [01:41:10.540 --> 01:41:17.540] If they don't, then you file a petition for writ of mandamus to the appeals court, [01:41:18.540 --> 01:41:21.540] asking them to command them to file a writ of mandamus. [01:41:22.540 --> 01:41:23.540] We need the mic handle on. [01:41:24.540 --> 01:41:26.540] He can walk you through all of those procedures. [01:41:26.540 --> 01:41:30.540] Just drive these guys crazy. You know, the same things over and over. [01:41:31.540 --> 01:41:38.540] We can get a set of standard documents, make them available on the Internet. [01:41:39.540 --> 01:41:44.540] The lawyers on the other side will file their standard responses, [01:41:45.540 --> 01:41:48.540] but they'll build a city anyway. [01:41:48.540 --> 01:41:55.540] You know, there's a number of things that we can make up that are standard, [01:41:56.540 --> 01:41:59.540] because these are things they do to everybody. [01:42:00.540 --> 01:42:04.540] We can make up one suit and everybody file it individually. [01:42:05.540 --> 01:42:12.540] We could file a class action, but class action is really tough. [01:42:13.540 --> 01:42:16.540] And the other side of the tariff portion, class action. [01:42:16.540 --> 01:42:20.540] If we get a bunch of people file a suit against them. [01:42:21.540 --> 01:42:23.540] So, Eddie? [01:42:24.540 --> 01:42:25.540] Yes? [01:42:26.540 --> 01:42:30.540] Is there any other really technical issues? [01:42:31.540 --> 01:42:34.540] Those are the ones we never see coming. [01:42:35.540 --> 01:42:42.540] Well, the really technical issue, again, in respect to a municipal court, [01:42:42.540 --> 01:42:45.540] is a city attorney acting as a state prosecutor. [01:42:46.540 --> 01:42:48.540] Oh, that would be great. [01:42:49.540 --> 01:42:53.540] Because what the legislature has done in that respect is they have abused [01:42:54.540 --> 01:42:58.540] the authority granted by the Constitution to create statutory courts [01:42:59.540 --> 01:43:05.540] and set their jurisdiction by expanding that in the creation of extra [01:43:06.540 --> 01:43:09.540] constitutional prosecutors in the name of the state. [01:43:09.540 --> 01:43:14.540] Wait a minute. Could you sue the legislature? [01:43:15.540 --> 01:43:17.540] Uh, don't know. [01:43:18.540 --> 01:43:22.540] They don't have such a matter of jurisdiction to commit the act they committed. [01:43:23.540 --> 01:43:27.540] Well, technically they don't have a legal quorum to pass any act they've passed [01:43:28.540 --> 01:43:32.540] since 1939. And that's another technical issue we could talk about, [01:43:33.540 --> 01:43:37.540] but since 1939 there hasn't been a legal Texas legislature in existence. [01:43:37.540 --> 01:43:41.540] Okay, that is going to be an impossible one. [01:43:42.540 --> 01:43:45.540] Well, maybe, but let me just point out some of the certain facts to it. [01:43:46.540 --> 01:43:49.540] We're not going to find somebody sophisticated enough to do that. [01:43:50.540 --> 01:43:54.540] Well, you asked for issues. I'm trying to tell you what just a few of them are. [01:43:55.540 --> 01:43:58.540] Change the whole world and bring down the whole institution. [01:43:59.540 --> 01:44:03.540] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.540 --> 01:44:06.540] Sorry! Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.540 --> 01:44:11.540] What? If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.540 --> 01:44:15.540] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:16.540 --> 01:44:18.540] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.540 --> 01:44:23.540] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, [01:44:24.540 --> 01:44:28.540] the television. Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, [01:44:29.540 --> 01:44:31.540] but there is hope. The staff at Brave New Books have helped me [01:44:31.540 --> 01:44:35.540] and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [01:44:36.540 --> 01:44:39.540] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [01:44:40.540 --> 01:44:42.540] without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.540 --> 01:44:45.540] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.540 --> 01:44:53.540] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them at 1904Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.540 --> 01:44:56.540] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment [01:44:57.540 --> 01:44:59.540] and enlarged vocabulary and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:44:59.540 --> 01:45:03.540] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.540 --> 01:45:06.540] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.540 --> 01:45:14.540] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.540 --> 01:45:18.540] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.540 --> 01:45:21.540] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.540 --> 01:45:26.540] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:26.540 --> 01:45:32.540] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.540 --> 01:45:37.540] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.540 --> 01:45:41.540] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.540 --> 01:45:48.540] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:48.540 --> 01:45:55.540] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:55.540 --> 01:46:18.540] or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.540 --> 01:46:30.540] I never understand some things I realize fully [01:46:31.540 --> 01:46:35.540] Somebody's gonna police the policeman [01:46:36.540 --> 01:46:39.540] Somebody's gonna police the police [01:46:40.540 --> 01:46:43.540] There's always a room at the top of the hill [01:46:44.540 --> 01:46:48.540] Here through the grapevine and it's lonely left too [01:46:49.540 --> 01:46:52.540] They're wishing it was more than opposition to bill [01:46:52.540 --> 01:46:56.540] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will [01:46:57.540 --> 01:47:00.540] Some things in this world we'll never understand [01:47:01.540 --> 01:47:04.540] Somebody's gonna police the policeman [01:47:05.540 --> 01:47:08.540] Somebody's gonna police the policeman [01:47:09.540 --> 01:47:12.540] Somebody's gonna police the policeman [01:47:13.540 --> 01:47:15.540] I know they will [01:47:16.540 --> 01:47:18.540] Yeah, they're gonna put the bill [01:47:18.540 --> 01:47:23.220] Okay, folks, we are back with the little blog. [01:47:23.220 --> 01:47:28.140] We've got one more segment left, and we have a caller on the line. [01:47:28.140 --> 01:47:29.900] We've got Brian from Illinois. [01:47:29.900 --> 01:47:31.380] We're going to go to our caller. [01:47:31.380 --> 01:47:33.180] Brian, thanks for calling in. [01:47:33.180 --> 01:47:35.140] Where's your question or comment tonight? [01:47:35.140 --> 01:47:42.300] Well, I had a question about a problem that I'm having with the attorney. [01:47:42.300 --> 01:47:44.100] You and everybody else, but go ahead. [01:47:44.100 --> 01:47:45.580] Yeah, thank you, Eddie. [01:47:45.580 --> 01:47:52.340] This is a general rule, hard feathering first, and then we talk about the rest. [01:47:52.340 --> 01:47:56.860] Well, one interesting thing I wanted to talk about before the attorney is, Eddie, I used [01:47:56.860 --> 01:48:03.660] your ticket today, or your letter for the red light ticket, but I used a little different [01:48:03.660 --> 01:48:04.660] spin on it. [01:48:04.660 --> 01:48:10.420] I actually went down to the police station and hand-delivered it, and talk about setting [01:48:10.420 --> 01:48:12.500] them up. [01:48:12.500 --> 01:48:20.460] I also asked to be sent to the magistrate that I was here to appear, today was the deadline [01:48:20.460 --> 01:48:26.100] to appear, and that, you know, I'm here. [01:48:26.100 --> 01:48:31.020] And basically, he said, oh, you're here to pay, and I said, no, I'm not here to pay. [01:48:31.020 --> 01:48:40.220] I'm here to be taken down to the magistrate, or for you to accept this letter. [01:48:40.220 --> 01:48:43.940] And if you have any questions, let me know right now. [01:48:43.940 --> 01:48:46.580] And they basically didn't know what to do. [01:48:46.580 --> 01:48:50.780] The guy was flabbergasted, he didn't know what to say. [01:48:50.780 --> 01:48:54.660] I asked him for a business card, he gave me a blank business card. [01:48:54.660 --> 01:48:57.380] What did you get that proved you filed a letter with him? [01:48:57.380 --> 01:48:58.380] Pardon me? [01:48:58.380 --> 01:49:02.700] What did you get that proves you filed that letter with him? [01:49:02.700 --> 01:49:03.700] He wouldn't give me anything. [01:49:03.700 --> 01:49:05.340] He gave me a blank business card. [01:49:05.340 --> 01:49:08.700] Right, which is why we don't deliver it in by hand. [01:49:08.700 --> 01:49:12.020] Why we send it certified mail return receipt requested. [01:49:12.020 --> 01:49:13.020] Okay. [01:49:13.020 --> 01:49:14.020] Okay. [01:49:14.020 --> 01:49:16.020] I understand. [01:49:16.020 --> 01:49:21.460] Now, are they going to say that I didn't hand that letter in to them? [01:49:21.460 --> 01:49:22.460] That's entirely possible. [01:49:22.460 --> 01:49:25.540] You have no clue what they're going to say. [01:49:25.540 --> 01:49:29.180] You just expect them to say it nonetheless and be prepared for it. [01:49:29.180 --> 01:49:30.180] Well, I didn't. [01:49:30.180 --> 01:49:31.180] Yes. [01:49:31.180 --> 01:49:36.580] Did you tell the officer, will you please, that I don't hear so well, will you please [01:49:36.580 --> 01:49:41.540] look and speak clearly into my den, please? [01:49:41.540 --> 01:49:45.220] No, I did not. [01:49:45.220 --> 01:49:47.300] But get you one and take it with you. [01:49:47.300 --> 01:49:50.380] I just got one off of eBay. [01:49:50.380 --> 01:49:56.220] My voice, I have a terrible time getting microphones to pick up my voice. [01:49:56.220 --> 01:50:02.740] I can't program Windows for voice because it can't get my voice. [01:50:02.740 --> 01:50:10.940] If it can record or not a video, man, this thing picks up good. [01:50:10.940 --> 01:50:14.220] Never ever talk to those guys if you can avoid it. [01:50:14.220 --> 01:50:15.220] Right. [01:50:15.220 --> 01:50:20.300] If you do record them because they will lie with the truth would do better. [01:50:20.300 --> 01:50:21.300] Right. [01:50:21.300 --> 01:50:25.540] One of the reasons I had to actually walk in there is I was a little bit lazy about [01:50:25.540 --> 01:50:27.540] sending in the letter. [01:50:27.540 --> 01:50:32.140] It was mailed to me at a different address where the car is registered to. [01:50:32.140 --> 01:50:36.420] So if I had sent it in certified mail, I would have been late to that. [01:50:36.420 --> 01:50:40.260] No, you wouldn't because it's a date it's postmarked, not the date it arrives. [01:50:40.260 --> 01:50:41.260] Oh, really? [01:50:41.260 --> 01:50:44.220] Because it said I needed to respond by the 5th. [01:50:44.220 --> 01:50:49.220] Anything postmarked on or before a due date to a government office is considered timely [01:50:49.220 --> 01:50:50.220] filed. [01:50:50.220 --> 01:50:51.220] Well, there you go. [01:50:51.220 --> 01:50:52.220] You taught me something again today, Eddie. [01:50:52.220 --> 01:50:53.220] Thank you very much. [01:50:53.220 --> 01:50:54.220] You're welcome. [01:50:54.220 --> 01:50:55.220] Yes. [01:50:55.220 --> 01:50:56.220] Thank you. [01:50:56.220 --> 01:50:57.220] Thank you. [01:50:57.220 --> 01:51:00.820] But to go back to the attorney, I was wondering if you could please help me on that. [01:51:00.820 --> 01:51:03.020] What exactly is the issue with the attorney? [01:51:03.020 --> 01:51:04.020] Okay. [01:51:04.020 --> 01:51:10.540] Well, I hired an attorney to defend me or to work out a defamation problem that I was [01:51:10.540 --> 01:51:11.540] having. [01:51:11.540 --> 01:51:17.460] A person left some formatory information about me online. [01:51:17.460 --> 01:51:23.860] And I paid for a retainer and he billed against the retainer. [01:51:23.860 --> 01:51:29.700] And I found that he had billed me excessively for a few things. [01:51:29.700 --> 01:51:33.980] One of the things that he billed me for was to greet me at the door. [01:51:33.980 --> 01:51:34.980] That's good. [01:51:34.980 --> 01:51:40.260] How much did he charge you to greet you at the door? [01:51:40.260 --> 01:51:43.900] Oh, I think it was somewhere between $25 or $45. [01:51:43.900 --> 01:51:49.100] Oh, he must be really important if you have to pay that much to greet him. [01:51:49.100 --> 01:51:53.660] Bargain him and give him a tort letter. [01:51:53.660 --> 01:51:54.660] Pardon me, sir? [01:51:54.660 --> 01:51:56.660] Send him a tort letter. [01:51:56.660 --> 01:51:57.660] Okay. [01:51:57.660 --> 01:51:58.660] Yes. [01:51:58.660 --> 01:52:05.780] Notify him that you have been harmed by fraud on his part, by unlawful and improper billing. [01:52:05.780 --> 01:52:10.020] Did he adjudicate your issue? [01:52:10.020 --> 01:52:12.900] No, he didn't. [01:52:12.900 --> 01:52:15.260] He just basically got irate about it. [01:52:15.260 --> 01:52:16.260] Oh, good. [01:52:16.260 --> 01:52:18.260] Well, here's something in the... [01:52:18.260 --> 01:52:19.260] Go ahead. [01:52:19.260 --> 01:52:20.260] Go to bargrievance.net. [01:52:20.260 --> 01:52:21.260] Right. [01:52:21.260 --> 01:52:28.260] And click on the create a grievance, the complaint. [01:52:28.260 --> 01:52:39.140] And that is a format that will walk you through the American Bar Association model standards. [01:52:39.140 --> 01:52:40.140] Okay. [01:52:40.140 --> 01:52:43.420] And read those questions and go through some of them. [01:52:43.420 --> 01:52:47.500] You will be surprised what you can grieve the lawyer for. [01:52:47.500 --> 01:52:48.500] Right. [01:52:48.500 --> 01:52:50.180] And then listen to this. [01:52:50.180 --> 01:52:57.000] He examined some packages for me because I was selling these items online and some other [01:52:57.000 --> 01:53:03.180] people that were friends of this guy that were going to possibly leave me some bad feedback [01:53:03.180 --> 01:53:07.420] online, I had him examine the items. [01:53:07.420 --> 01:53:14.860] And so when I was done cleaning up the items, I asked his associate to hand me Windex and [01:53:14.860 --> 01:53:17.220] paper towels so that I could clean their desk. [01:53:17.220 --> 01:53:23.900] And he billed me for asking him for Windex and a paper towel. [01:53:23.900 --> 01:53:27.220] Okay, let me make a suggestion here. [01:53:27.220 --> 01:53:31.300] Let's go a little bit beyond what they think of as normal here. [01:53:31.300 --> 01:53:32.300] Right. [01:53:32.300 --> 01:53:38.460] First off, when a lawyer sets up a law firm, how does he usually do it? [01:53:38.460 --> 01:53:42.820] Well, I'm not sure, Eddie, I'm not an attorney. [01:53:42.820 --> 01:53:46.900] He will almost always incorporate it into an LLP or an LLC. [01:53:46.900 --> 01:53:47.900] LLC, yes, right. [01:53:47.900 --> 01:53:50.100] It would make it limited liability, correct. [01:53:50.100 --> 01:53:51.100] Correct. [01:53:51.100 --> 01:53:57.660] So what you want to do is not only bar grieve the attorney, but you want to sue his corporation [01:53:57.660 --> 01:54:00.660] for deceptive trade practices. [01:54:00.660 --> 01:54:07.540] He took your money offering you a service that he knew good and well he had no intention [01:54:07.540 --> 01:54:10.940] of providing and defrauded you out of that money. [01:54:10.940 --> 01:54:12.220] Right, right. [01:54:12.220 --> 01:54:15.460] Don't go after him just for malpractice as an attorney. [01:54:15.460 --> 01:54:19.220] Go after him for deceptive practices as a corporation. [01:54:19.220 --> 01:54:21.420] Right, right, right, right. [01:54:21.420 --> 01:54:22.420] Yeah, very good. [01:54:22.420 --> 01:54:23.420] That's very good information. [01:54:23.420 --> 01:54:25.420] A couple more things. [01:54:25.420 --> 01:54:26.420] Okay. [01:54:26.420 --> 01:54:27.420] Bar grieving first. [01:54:27.420 --> 01:54:28.420] Correct. [01:54:28.420 --> 01:54:33.340] That'll double his malpractice insurance and you'll have a fit. [01:54:33.340 --> 01:54:41.460] When you prepare a tort letter, fit in the tort letter because the courts do not want [01:54:41.460 --> 01:54:48.220] you to use the courts as the remedy of first resort, but rather the remedy of last resort. [01:54:48.220 --> 01:54:53.100] And the only administrative remedy you need to apply is a tort letter. [01:54:53.100 --> 01:54:58.020] If you notice him you've been harmed, demand that he makes you over be sued. [01:54:58.020 --> 01:54:59.020] Okay. [01:54:59.020 --> 01:55:00.020] Like give him 30 days. [01:55:00.020 --> 01:55:03.260] On the 31st day you file a suit on him, bang. [01:55:03.260 --> 01:55:04.260] Okay. [01:55:04.260 --> 01:55:08.260] Malpractice suit, if you've already bar grieved him, they'll probably cancel his malpractice [01:55:08.260 --> 01:55:09.260] insurance. [01:55:09.260 --> 01:55:10.260] Okay. [01:55:10.260 --> 01:55:14.740] If you bar grieve him first and then give him a tort letter, he might pay you to keep [01:55:14.740 --> 01:55:16.340] you from suing. [01:55:16.340 --> 01:55:17.340] Okay. [01:55:17.340 --> 01:55:18.340] Yeah. [01:55:18.340 --> 01:55:22.620] Another interesting, another thing interesting is the person that I was trying to adjudicate [01:55:22.620 --> 01:55:30.700] against or trying to, you know, stop, you know, defaming me lives in a certain town. [01:55:30.700 --> 01:55:36.000] And what's interesting is I couldn't find any attorneys that would represent me. [01:55:36.000 --> 01:55:42.380] And this particular attorney has the same last name as the attorney in the town that [01:55:42.380 --> 01:55:43.940] this person lives in. [01:55:43.940 --> 01:55:50.020] So, I had asked his associate, do you, I believe, you know, do you have the same last names? [01:55:50.020 --> 01:55:52.740] You're the only attorney that would take my case. [01:55:52.740 --> 01:55:56.940] Do you have any relation to this other attorney in this other city? [01:55:56.940 --> 01:55:59.940] And then she called me back and said, no, it's genealogies. [01:55:59.940 --> 01:56:00.940] We're from that area. [01:56:00.940 --> 01:56:07.140] And I said, okay, fine, you need to send me a statement before I sign, you know, the contract [01:56:07.140 --> 01:56:12.240] that, you know, you have no relation to these people. [01:56:12.240 --> 01:56:18.820] And so, when I got the contract, he did not state that he had no relation to these people. [01:56:18.820 --> 01:56:24.460] And he refuses, you know, she told to me verbally, but now they refuse to send me any type of [01:56:24.460 --> 01:56:29.380] proof that they have no relation or a statement saying they have no relation to this other [01:56:29.380 --> 01:56:30.380] attorney. [01:56:30.380 --> 01:56:32.580] Probably because it would be proof of fraud. [01:56:32.580 --> 01:56:34.500] So, that's great. [01:56:34.500 --> 01:56:35.500] That's great. [01:56:35.500 --> 01:56:36.500] Accusing of it. [01:56:36.500 --> 01:56:37.500] Right. [01:56:37.500 --> 01:56:46.740] Hey, Wendy, for these people who are defaming your product, send them a tort letter. [01:56:46.740 --> 01:56:47.740] Also the people? [01:56:47.740 --> 01:56:48.740] Yeah. [01:56:48.740 --> 01:56:50.220] Send them a notice of tort. [01:56:50.220 --> 01:56:51.220] Okay. [01:56:51.220 --> 01:56:57.780] And if you write it in terms of a cause of action, you write a lawsuit against them, [01:56:57.780 --> 01:57:02.500] change the heading on it to notice of tort, and send it to them. [01:57:02.500 --> 01:57:05.660] They're likely to give it to their lawyer and the lawyer will look at it. [01:57:05.660 --> 01:57:10.140] If it's written like a lawsuit, he's going to say, this guy's not kidding, he's fixing [01:57:10.140 --> 01:57:11.140] to sue you. [01:57:11.140 --> 01:57:12.140] Okay. [01:57:12.140 --> 01:57:19.500] And then, you know, ask them to either send you, you know, give them a way that they can [01:57:19.500 --> 01:57:26.580] agree to either rescind this or stop doing this practice or be sued, you know, give them [01:57:26.580 --> 01:57:27.580] something to do. [01:57:27.580 --> 01:57:28.580] If they don't do it, sue them. [01:57:28.580 --> 01:57:29.580] Okay. [01:57:29.580 --> 01:57:30.580] Another part... [01:57:30.580 --> 01:57:37.380] It won't have to, when you send them a tort letter, that is a really good remedy. [01:57:37.380 --> 01:57:38.380] Okay. [01:57:38.380 --> 01:57:42.860] They don't expect it, and that tells them you made business. [01:57:42.860 --> 01:57:43.860] Okay. [01:57:43.860 --> 01:57:49.660] Now, going back to the attorney, he also, when I was there the other day, I questioned [01:57:49.660 --> 01:57:53.300] his associates' abilities and, you know, the question... [01:57:53.300 --> 01:57:56.340] Wait a minute, we're running out of time here. [01:57:56.340 --> 01:57:57.340] Okay. [01:57:57.340 --> 01:57:58.340] Sorry, Dave. [01:57:58.340 --> 01:58:00.780] The music's on. [01:58:00.780 --> 01:58:01.780] Eddie, can you bring us out? [01:58:01.780 --> 01:58:02.780] My clock is not working. [01:58:02.780 --> 01:58:03.780] Yeah. [01:58:03.780 --> 01:58:04.780] All right. [01:58:04.780 --> 01:58:09.860] Do me a favor, send me an email offline with whatever it is you want to know about the [01:58:09.860 --> 01:58:12.100] attorney, and we'll discuss it offline, okay? [01:58:12.100 --> 01:58:13.100] No problem, Eddie. [01:58:13.100 --> 01:58:14.100] We're friends on Facebook. [01:58:14.100 --> 01:58:15.100] I will do that tonight. [01:58:15.100 --> 01:58:16.100] Okay. [01:58:16.100 --> 01:58:17.100] Thank you, sir. [01:58:17.100 --> 01:58:18.100] All right. [01:58:18.100 --> 01:58:21.300] Folks, thank you so much for listening in to us this evening. [01:58:21.300 --> 01:58:25.220] Thanks for allowing me to be on, guys, I appreciate it. [01:58:25.220 --> 01:58:27.540] And this has been the Rule of Law Radio. [01:58:27.540 --> 01:58:30.420] I want you all to have a blessed week. [01:58:30.420 --> 01:58:32.700] Please listen in and please listen to whatever's said. [01:58:32.700 --> 01:58:33.700] Give us some funds, folks. [01:58:33.700 --> 01:58:34.820] It's the end of the year. [01:58:34.820 --> 01:58:35.820] We need it. [01:58:35.820 --> 01:58:37.860] Keep us on the air so we can continue to help. [01:58:37.860 --> 01:58:38.860] Randy? [01:58:38.860 --> 01:58:41.860] Eddie, we wanted you on because we were just loving tonight. [01:58:41.860 --> 01:58:42.860] Yeah. [01:58:42.860 --> 01:58:43.860] Well, I appreciate that. [01:58:43.860 --> 01:58:44.860] Thanks. [01:58:44.860 --> 01:58:45.860] You're welcome. [01:58:45.860 --> 01:58:46.860] All right, folks. [01:58:46.860 --> 01:58:47.860] You'll have a great night. [01:58:47.860 --> 01:58:50.620] Good night and God bless. [01:58:50.620 --> 01:58:56.700] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.700 --> 01:58:57.900] Recovery Version. [01:58:57.900 --> 01:59:02.860] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.860 --> 01:59:08.540] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.540 --> 01:59:11.820] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.820 --> 01:59:20.800] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.800 --> 01:59:26.320] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references plus [01:59:26.320 --> 01:59:30.360] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.360 --> 01:59:32.900] This is truly a Bible you can understand. 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