[00:00.000 --> 00:07.500] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates online at thelibertybeat.com. [00:07.500 --> 00:09.000] This is Justin Armand. [00:09.000 --> 00:10.500] And this is Jessica Armand. [00:10.500 --> 00:14.500] Here with your Liberty Beat for January 9th, 2014. [00:14.500 --> 00:23.500] Gold opens today at $1,226, silver at $19.48, and bitcoin is trading at $790. [00:23.500 --> 00:29.500] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from blockchain.info, the world's most popular bitcoin wallet. [00:29.500 --> 00:34.000] Simple and secure blockchain is the easiest way to get started using bitcoin. [00:34.000 --> 00:38.500] To learn more or to create your wallet today, visit blockchain.info. [00:38.500 --> 00:48.000] And support also comes from AJ Processing, transcription service to increase your online traffic and subscription, online at ajprocessing.com. [00:48.000 --> 00:53.000] And support also comes from Brave New Books, online at bravenewbookstore.com. [00:53.000 --> 00:54.500] And now the news. [00:54.500 --> 01:02.500] On Wednesday, Russia blocked a resolution that would have condemned Syria for airstrikes used by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. [01:02.500 --> 01:10.500] Russia has now vetoed three security resolutions that would have blamed Assad's government for attacks and may possibly have included sanctions. [01:10.500 --> 01:15.500] The most recent statement would have blamed the Syrian government for airstrikes in the city of Aleppo, [01:15.500 --> 01:24.000] where the UN says more than 700 people have been killed and 3,000 injured. [01:24.000 --> 01:32.500] Accusations of misleading and outright false information continue in an ongoing battle between a Houston-based doctor and medical authorities. [01:32.500 --> 01:42.500] On December 11th, the Texas Medical Board filed a complaint complaining that Stanislav Brzezinski is violating federal law with his experimental cancer therapy claims. [01:42.500 --> 01:52.000] The Brzezinski Clinic released a statement Wednesday claiming the charges were frivolous and that Brzezinski has a constitutional right to make truthful statements about his cancer research. [01:52.000 --> 02:04.500] The FDA allowed Brzezinski to test his antineoplastins in a clinical trial from 1996 to 2013 until the agency put the trials on hold over safety issues. [02:04.500 --> 02:13.500] The Pirate Bay is working on a second edition to its popular Pirate Browser, which has been downloaded more than 2 million times since August 2013. [02:13.500 --> 02:22.500] The Pirate Browser was created to help web surfers access the Pirate Bay and other torrent downloading sites when they are blocked by the Internet Service Providers, [02:22.500 --> 02:25.500] as well as cutting through censorship in certain nations. [02:25.500 --> 02:32.500] This new app will be available as a standalone browser as well as a plug-in for Mozilla's Firefox and Google Chrome. [02:32.500 --> 02:35.500] Support for The Liberty Beat comes from Logos Radio Network. [02:35.500 --> 02:38.500] Truth, liberty, health and spiritual growth. [02:38.500 --> 02:42.500] Listen online at logosradionetwork.com. [02:42.500 --> 02:44.500] And support comes from The Cory Moore Show. [02:44.500 --> 02:50.500] Live Friday nights at 9 p.m. Central Standard Time at corymoreshow.com. [02:50.500 --> 02:52.500] You've been listening to The Liberty Beat. [02:52.500 --> 03:19.500] Freeing your mind is freeing our world. [03:22.500 --> 03:26.500] Whatcha gonna do? [03:26.500 --> 03:28.500] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:28.500 --> 03:30.500] Whatcha gonna do? [03:30.500 --> 03:32.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.500 --> 03:34.500] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:34.500 --> 03:36.500] Whatcha gonna do? [03:36.500 --> 03:38.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.500 --> 03:40.500] When you were eight and you had bad dreams. [03:40.500 --> 03:43.500] You'd go to school and learn the golden rules. [03:43.500 --> 03:46.500] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.500 --> 03:48.500] If you get hot then you must get cool. [03:48.500 --> 03:50.500] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:50.500 --> 03:52.500] Whatcha gonna do? [03:52.500 --> 03:54.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.500 --> 03:56.500] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:56.500 --> 03:57.500] Whatcha gonna do? [03:57.500 --> 04:00.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.500 --> 04:03.500] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one. [04:03.500 --> 04:05.500] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father. [04:05.500 --> 04:08.500] You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister. [04:08.500 --> 04:10.500] You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me. [04:10.500 --> 04:12.500] Bad boys, bad boys. [04:12.500 --> 04:14.500] Whatcha gonna do? [04:14.500 --> 04:16.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:16.500 --> 04:18.500] Bad boys, bad boys. [04:18.500 --> 04:22.000] Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:22.000 --> 04:25.000] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [04:25.000 --> 04:27.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:27.500 --> 04:30.500] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [04:30.500 --> 04:31.500] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:31.500 --> 04:37.500] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue de la Radio. [04:37.500 --> 04:45.500] On this Thursday, January the 9th, 2014, [04:45.500 --> 04:51.500] my mother warned me that time will have the, [04:51.500 --> 04:56.500] will give the impression of moving faster as we get older. [04:56.500 --> 04:58.500] And I told her several years ago, [04:58.500 --> 05:03.500] if that's the case, I'm gonna get a speeding ticket. [05:03.500 --> 05:08.500] Time definitely has the impression of moving faster. [05:08.500 --> 05:13.500] But then again, when you're busy, time has a way of doing that. [05:13.500 --> 05:16.500] And fortunately, in these times, [05:16.500 --> 05:19.500] we have been fortunate enough to be very, very busy. [05:19.500 --> 05:23.500] And here lately, I've been pretty busy. [05:23.500 --> 05:26.500] Oh, by the way, we will have, the phone lines are open. [05:26.500 --> 05:28.500] We'll keep them open all night. [05:28.500 --> 05:33.500] And I'll take your questions on topic, off topic. [05:33.500 --> 05:37.500] Let's play Stump the Chump. [05:37.500 --> 05:42.500] I do enjoy it when I get questions I can't answer. [05:42.500 --> 05:46.500] I know I suppose a lot of people would think [05:46.500 --> 05:48.500] I would only want questions I can answer. [05:48.500 --> 05:52.500] But actually, I do this show a lot, [05:52.500 --> 05:55.500] and I talk about the things that I know, [05:55.500 --> 05:58.500] and Deborah talks about the things that she knows. [05:58.500 --> 06:02.500] And we tend to talk about the same things quite a bit. [06:02.500 --> 06:08.500] And it's really nice to get someone else throwing things at us [06:08.500 --> 06:11.500] that we haven't thought about or considered yet. [06:11.500 --> 06:13.500] And it puts us back to work, [06:13.500 --> 06:17.500] and we get to grow and expand our horizons. [06:17.500 --> 06:21.500] So if you have hard questions, [06:21.500 --> 06:24.500] don't worry about asking me a question I can't answer, [06:24.500 --> 06:26.500] because I do enjoy that. [06:26.500 --> 06:29.500] But I've been pretty busy here lately. [06:29.500 --> 06:33.500] We've been taking a somewhat different approach. [06:33.500 --> 06:39.500] And through all of the time that we have been on the radio, [06:39.500 --> 06:45.500] I have been doing things and trying different approaches [06:45.500 --> 06:47.500] to find out what works. [06:47.500 --> 06:52.500] In fact, I've been working on this for some 30 years now, [06:52.500 --> 06:55.500] trying different things and seeing, you know, [06:55.500 --> 06:57.500] learning what works, what doesn't work, [06:57.500 --> 07:01.500] and adjusting the way I think about things. [07:01.500 --> 07:06.500] And when I look back to the time I started [07:06.500 --> 07:11.500] and compare that to how I address things now, [07:11.500 --> 07:15.500] it is remarkable how different it is. [07:15.500 --> 07:28.500] When I started, I had this notion that the rule of law mattered. [07:28.500 --> 07:31.500] Not that it doesn't matter anymore, [07:31.500 --> 07:34.500] but I used to think that all I needed [07:34.500 --> 07:38.500] was to have the facts and the law on my side. [07:38.500 --> 07:42.500] Frankly, that was naive. [07:42.500 --> 07:46.500] It's not that way. It never has been that way. [07:46.500 --> 07:50.500] Now, our government through our school systems [07:50.500 --> 07:54.500] certainly want to convince us that it is that way [07:54.500 --> 07:56.500] and that we can have faith in [07:56.500 --> 07:59.500] and trust the American form of government, [07:59.500 --> 08:02.500] but we cannot. [08:02.500 --> 08:04.500] We should not. [08:04.500 --> 08:07.500] And our founders understood that. [08:07.500 --> 08:09.500] They set up a form of government [08:09.500 --> 08:13.500] that they believed was the best they could craft. [08:13.500 --> 08:17.500] But Benjamin Franklin knew exactly what he said [08:17.500 --> 08:20.500] when he stated that... [08:20.500 --> 08:23.500] I'm sorry, it wasn't Benjamin Franklin. [08:23.500 --> 08:31.500] It was Plato, I believe, who said that the democratic form of government [08:31.500 --> 08:35.500] was a horrible form of government, [08:35.500 --> 08:38.500] but it's the best one we got. [08:38.500 --> 08:45.500] The American form of government has horrible defects [08:45.500 --> 08:48.500] and faults and weaknesses, [08:48.500 --> 08:50.500] but it's the best we got. [08:50.500 --> 08:52.500] So in order to combat that, [08:52.500 --> 08:56.500] our founders were very diligent in that [08:56.500 --> 09:02.500] they put in place checks to the balance of the abuse of power. [09:02.500 --> 09:06.500] They gave us tools we could use [09:06.500 --> 09:10.500] to correct the problems that keep occurring. [09:10.500 --> 09:15.500] They were wise enough to realize [09:15.500 --> 09:21.500] that they could not anticipate all of the problems that we would have, [09:21.500 --> 09:27.500] so they could not craft a system that was perfect. [09:27.500 --> 09:33.500] And that's because the system is administered by people who are far from perfect. [09:33.500 --> 09:37.500] I know, I hear people giving the impression [09:37.500 --> 09:43.500] that they wished this were a perfect world. [09:43.500 --> 09:46.500] Well, I thought about that a lot [09:46.500 --> 09:52.500] and came to the conclusion that if this were a perfect world, [09:52.500 --> 09:57.500] I would probably not be here. [09:57.500 --> 10:02.500] And I suspect a lot of people listening would not be here either. [10:02.500 --> 10:09.500] So it is naive of us to expect the rest of the world [10:09.500 --> 10:15.500] to be more perfect than we require ourselves to be. [10:15.500 --> 10:21.500] So I will allow myself room to have imperfection. [10:21.500 --> 10:24.500] And in doing so, [10:24.500 --> 10:34.500] I will accept that there exists imperfections in others and in things. [10:34.500 --> 10:37.500] Okay, with that said, now let's stop thinking about [10:37.500 --> 10:42.500] or addressing things as we think they should be. [10:42.500 --> 10:46.500] And for the purpose of this show, let's address things [10:46.500 --> 10:57.500] the way they really are as best we can understand them. [10:57.500 --> 11:00.500] Okay, sorry about that little break. [11:00.500 --> 11:07.500] As best we can understand them and end researching this area [11:07.500 --> 11:15.500] and actually trying to take actions that have effect, [11:15.500 --> 11:20.500] I've come to learn a lot of things that work and a lot of things that don't work. [11:20.500 --> 11:26.500] And for the most part, all of the things you were taught in school [11:26.500 --> 11:30.500] or if not so much directly taught, [11:30.500 --> 11:40.500] but very deliberately given the impression of about how things are, [11:40.500 --> 11:46.500] was really about how things should be and not how they are at all. [11:46.500 --> 11:51.500] We need to back up and take a look at what really works. [11:51.500 --> 11:58.500] And what really works in the world we live in, especially in the legal arena, [11:58.500 --> 12:04.500] is first you will never win your case simply because you have the law [12:04.500 --> 12:08.500] and the facts on your side to think so is naive. [12:08.500 --> 12:14.500] It is not that way now, never has been that way. [12:14.500 --> 12:23.500] So if we are to have a positive effect, if we are to achieve remedy, [12:23.500 --> 12:31.500] whether we like it or not, we will have to accept the fact that everything is political. [12:31.500 --> 12:40.500] Politics rules everything and politics is not necessarily such a bad thing. [12:40.500 --> 12:46.500] Politics is really about civility. [12:46.500 --> 12:54.500] The law cannot dictate what to do in every circumstance. [12:54.500 --> 13:04.500] But living in a culture, we as humans tend to have a hurting instinct [13:04.500 --> 13:11.500] in that we are not tigers that go out and once their young is raised, [13:11.500 --> 13:16.500] they put them out on their own and then the tiger goes out and is a solitary hunter. [13:16.500 --> 13:19.500] We are more like lions. [13:19.500 --> 13:32.500] We gather together in groups, we become stronger by the bond within the groups. [13:32.500 --> 13:39.500] And on the one hand that is a good thing, but it has its difficulties. [13:39.500 --> 13:48.500] Like prides of lions, humans have always gathered into groups of greater and lesser size [13:48.500 --> 14:00.500] and the groups or the prides that lions tend to gather into are relatively simplistic. [14:00.500 --> 14:07.500] You have an alpha male who leads the pride and you have some younger males [14:07.500 --> 14:13.500] who all want to vie for the alpha male's position and then you have females [14:13.500 --> 14:24.500] who have purposes other than leading the pride, taking care of the young [14:24.500 --> 14:28.500] and all these things they do, they do that quite well and it's really simple. [14:28.500 --> 14:31.500] They're relatively simple and consistent. [14:31.500 --> 14:34.500] Human beings are not quite that way. [14:34.500 --> 14:39.500] We have alpha males and we also have alpha females. [14:39.500 --> 14:47.500] We have alpha females sometimes that look like and act like males, [14:47.500 --> 14:50.500] but those are not the most powerful. [14:50.500 --> 14:57.500] The most powerful alpha females are the ones that look and act like females. [14:57.500 --> 15:01.500] But learn how to handle themselves very well in their environment [15:01.500 --> 15:07.500] so that they can essentially manipulate and control their environment [15:07.500 --> 15:18.500] to secure the outcomes they believe are the most conducive to a long and healthy existence. [15:18.500 --> 15:22.500] All this goes to politics. [15:22.500 --> 15:27.500] We have different males out there who do different things. [15:27.500 --> 15:33.500] We have males who are alpha males in one circumstance and not in another. [15:33.500 --> 15:36.500] We are extremely complex. [15:36.500 --> 15:38.500] Everything is politics. [15:38.500 --> 15:42.500] Everything is civility because politics is civility. [15:42.500 --> 15:50.500] How do human beings interact and get along with one another? [15:50.500 --> 15:53.500] If we're to get remedy in the legal arena, [15:53.500 --> 16:02.500] we need to understand that in spite of what we may think of this police officer out there on the street, [16:02.500 --> 16:08.500] before he is a police officer, he is a human being [16:08.500 --> 16:16.500] and he is subject to the pressures and influences of any other human being. [16:16.500 --> 16:27.500] And humans have always gathered together in tribes, large groups, smaller groups, [16:27.500 --> 16:30.500] and in smaller groups down to families. [16:30.500 --> 16:37.500] We've always gathered together in groups to a greater and lesser size [16:37.500 --> 16:43.500] and there's always a tremendous amount of politics between all of these different groups. [16:43.500 --> 16:47.500] I know I sound like I'm just kind of wandering, but I'm really not. [16:47.500 --> 16:50.500] I'll try to kind of get to a point when we come back on the other side. [16:50.500 --> 16:52.500] The phone lines are open. [16:52.500 --> 16:57.500] The call-in number is 512-646-1984. [16:57.500 --> 17:00.500] We'll be right back. [17:00.500 --> 17:06.500] At Logos Radio Network, we are committed to bringing you the best and most accurate information possible [17:06.500 --> 17:10.500] with programs on a variety of topics such as law, current events, and health. [17:10.500 --> 17:15.500] We function on a fraction of the budget of most media outlets, but free speech isn't free. [17:15.500 --> 17:20.500] That's why we're holding our annual fundraiser for operating expenses and equipment upgrades. [17:20.500 --> 17:24.500] We need to raise $7,000 by the end of January, so when you contribute, [17:24.500 --> 17:29.500] you'll receive free gifts such as colloidal or ionic silver, T-shirts, tote bags, [17:29.500 --> 17:31.500] and gift certificates to brave new books. [17:31.500 --> 17:34.500] Please visit logosradionetwork.com for details. [17:34.500 --> 17:37.500] We accept PayPal, credit or debit cards, and Bitcoins. [17:37.500 --> 17:41.500] Click the Spread the Word link to post our banner on your Facebook page or website. [17:41.500 --> 17:45.500] If you enjoy our shows and find Logos a valuable resource of information, [17:45.500 --> 17:48.500] please support our fundraiser to keep us on the air. [17:48.500 --> 17:53.500] We've enjoyed bringing you over five years of live free speech talk radio at its best, [17:53.500 --> 17:55.500] and we want to continue to serve you. [17:55.500 --> 18:00.500] Please visit logosradionetwork.com and contribute today. [18:00.500 --> 18:05.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.500 --> 18:09.500] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.500 --> 18:14.500] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [18:14.500 --> 18:20.500] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [18:20.500 --> 18:26.500] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [18:26.500 --> 18:31.500] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them [18:31.500 --> 18:34.500] and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.500 --> 18:39.500] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.500 --> 18:41.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.500 --> 18:47.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [18:47.500 --> 18:50.500] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:50.500 --> 18:57.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [18:57.500 --> 19:01.500] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:01.500 --> 19:11.500] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, lo-lo-lo-logosradio-network.com. [19:11.500 --> 19:32.500] Look what we've got, we are the Christians, we know what God is, we don't have answers, [19:32.500 --> 19:57.500] we are the Christians, we know what God is, we know what God is, we know what God is. [19:57.500 --> 20:01.500] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, [20:01.500 --> 20:08.500] I know I sound like I'm kind of wondering, but there's a point I'm trying to make. [20:08.500 --> 20:17.500] Lawyers become lawyers and they become part of a lawyer clan, a group, [20:17.500 --> 20:27.500] just like street gangs, just like people who work in a certain section of a office building [20:27.500 --> 20:39.500] or fans of a given team, we all develop these cliques, these groups that we feel a part of. [20:39.500 --> 20:47.500] That's not something sinister, that is the nature of the human animal. [20:47.500 --> 20:59.500] And if we're to get along in any arena, we need to stop this childish notion [20:59.500 --> 21:04.500] that things ought to be a certain way. [21:04.500 --> 21:11.500] Things, there may be, we should all have ideals of how we believe things should be, [21:11.500 --> 21:19.500] but we should not mix up how we believe things should be with how they actually are. [21:19.500 --> 21:24.500] First, figure out how things work and do it that way. [21:24.500 --> 21:29.500] This big humongous object rises up in the sky, hangs there a while, [21:29.500 --> 21:33.500] boom, crashes to the ground, shakes the ground for miles around. [21:33.500 --> 21:37.500] Big object rises back up, hangs there a while, crashes to the ground. [21:37.500 --> 21:45.500] Now you might say, that's a stupid idea, but first get out from under it, [21:45.500 --> 21:47.500] or you get smashed. [21:47.500 --> 21:50.500] Figure out how things work and do it that way. [21:50.500 --> 21:59.500] In the courts, we have lawyers, and these lawyers are part of a group, [21:59.500 --> 22:03.500] they're part of a clan, and we're not a part of that clan. [22:03.500 --> 22:07.500] Now you hire a lawyer, and this lawyer is going to tell you what a great job [22:07.500 --> 22:11.500] he's going to do for you and how he's going to be your adversary, [22:11.500 --> 22:14.500] and he's going to go in and litigate your position. [22:14.500 --> 22:22.500] What he doesn't tell you is that before you are his client, he is a lawyer. [22:22.500 --> 22:27.500] And lawyers are part of lawyer groups, and with these other lawyers, [22:27.500 --> 22:31.500] they have alliances. [22:31.500 --> 22:38.500] And everything is about alliances, and that's the politics we're talking about. [22:38.500 --> 22:43.500] Every lawyer has alliances with other lawyers. [22:43.500 --> 22:47.500] You go in with the lawyer one time. [22:47.500 --> 22:52.500] The lawyer goes into court and sees the same lawyers over and over. [22:52.500 --> 22:54.500] They deal with the same lawyers. [22:54.500 --> 22:58.500] They go into court and they argue cases against one another, [22:58.500 --> 23:02.500] and then they go into another court, and they're both on the same side, [23:02.500 --> 23:08.500] and they go into another court, and they negotiate out a deal that everybody can like. [23:08.500 --> 23:10.500] They have a lot of different things they do, [23:10.500 --> 23:13.500] and the lawyers are interacting with one another all the time. [23:13.500 --> 23:16.500] And then when they get done, they go out and have drinks together, [23:16.500 --> 23:20.500] go play golf together, because they're all part of the same group. [23:20.500 --> 23:23.500] We should not be upset about that. [23:23.500 --> 23:27.500] It is the nature of things. [23:27.500 --> 23:32.500] But we should understand it and understand how that affects us. [23:32.500 --> 23:38.500] You hire a lawyer and go to face the court. [23:38.500 --> 23:44.500] The lawyer wants to give you the impression that he is your advocate. [23:44.500 --> 23:47.500] He's your shield against the court. [23:47.500 --> 23:50.500] He is no such thing. [23:50.500 --> 23:54.500] You have an alliance with your lawyer. [23:54.500 --> 23:59.500] The opponent has an alliance with his lawyer. [23:59.500 --> 24:04.500] Your lawyer has an alliance with the opponent's lawyer. [24:04.500 --> 24:09.500] Even though in this case they're at odds, they still have alliances with one another. [24:09.500 --> 24:13.500] And both those lawyers have alliances with the court. [24:13.500 --> 24:17.500] So I've been talking about a three-sided chessboard that's really not correct, [24:17.500 --> 24:21.500] because it's actually a four-sided chessboard. [24:21.500 --> 24:27.500] You go into court, ask the client, you don't have an alliance with the judge. [24:27.500 --> 24:32.500] But both lawyers do, because they go before this judge all the time, [24:32.500 --> 24:37.500] and they probably were all lawyers together before the judge became a judge. [24:37.500 --> 24:39.500] They know one another real well. [24:39.500 --> 24:42.500] They have alliances. [24:42.500 --> 24:45.500] The lawyers have alliances with each other. [24:45.500 --> 24:48.500] And you have an alliance with your lawyer. [24:48.500 --> 24:52.500] Do you see the problem with all of that? [24:52.500 --> 24:57.500] The alliances are heavily weighted against you. [24:57.500 --> 25:03.500] So when you find that just because you have all the law and the facts on your side [25:03.500 --> 25:07.500] does not necessarily mean that you're going to win your case, [25:07.500 --> 25:09.500] that should not surprise you, [25:09.500 --> 25:24.500] because there are all of these influences with imperfect human beings that may or may not belong there. [25:24.500 --> 25:30.500] I have contemplated building an electronic lawyer. [25:30.500 --> 25:37.500] We have the technology now to feed facts into a system [25:37.500 --> 25:49.500] and have the system scour all of the laws and come to the appropriate legal conclusion. [25:49.500 --> 25:54.500] Is that what we want? [25:54.500 --> 26:07.500] Do we want a cold, hard application of strict rule of law? [26:07.500 --> 26:12.500] Take you back to the miracle on 34th Street. [26:12.500 --> 26:21.500] Had the judge applied the strict rule of law, he would have thrown Santa Claus in jail. [26:21.500 --> 26:29.500] But if you'll think back to the ending scene where the judge declares that he is Santa Claus, [26:29.500 --> 26:34.500] think back, why did the judge do that? [26:34.500 --> 26:39.500] He had his little advisor chirping in his ear warning him, [26:39.500 --> 26:48.500] if you rule that he is not Santa Claus, you will never get elected again. [26:48.500 --> 26:52.500] And that's why the judge ruled in his favor. [26:52.500 --> 26:57.500] And everybody who watched the program was just so happy about that. [26:57.500 --> 27:07.500] Had the judge ruled on the cold, hard facts and the binding law, he would have thrown Santa Claus in jail. [27:07.500 --> 27:12.500] When we go to court and the court rules against us, [27:12.500 --> 27:19.500] we tend to feel like we've lost something or we've been betrayed. [27:19.500 --> 27:29.500] We need to overcome that and realize that there's more going on here than just the cold, hard facts. [27:29.500 --> 27:34.500] And the judge for the most part doesn't care about us. [27:34.500 --> 27:38.500] The court does not have an alliance with us. [27:38.500 --> 27:42.500] He has an alliance with these lawyers. [27:42.500 --> 27:48.500] So for the most part, the courts don't pick on us, they just don't care. [27:48.500 --> 27:58.500] They have their alliances and they have those things that they pay attention to that are important to them. [27:58.500 --> 28:02.500] If we are to begin to win our cases, [28:02.500 --> 28:09.500] we need to start paying a lot of attention to the humanity that's in front of us. [28:09.500 --> 28:18.500] For the most part, the human beings in front of us will decide our case, not the facts and not the law. [28:18.500 --> 28:27.500] And in that regard, we need to understand the influence is affecting these people in front of us. [28:27.500 --> 28:32.500] I recently, with the help of Joe Esquivel, [28:32.500 --> 28:43.500] came up with an incredibly serious problem with the records filed in the county recorder's office. [28:43.500 --> 28:49.500] But I can't see any way I can adjudicate that. [28:49.500 --> 28:58.500] It goes to the electronic filing scheme, where it appears the district court set up the electronic filing protocols, [28:58.500 --> 29:04.500] but the district courts don't have records that are addressed by the Uniform Commercial Code, [29:04.500 --> 29:11.500] and U.S. Code 7003 specifically excludes those from electronic filing, [29:11.500 --> 29:14.500] but all the clerks have been electronically filing them. [29:14.500 --> 29:16.500] That's illegal. [29:16.500 --> 29:25.500] So I'm going to go in and I'm going to ask a judge to rule that this document has been electronically filed [29:25.500 --> 29:29.500] and is forbidden to be electronically filed by 15 U.S. Code 7003, [29:29.500 --> 29:37.500] so therefore all of the documents that have been filed this way since the year 2000 are garbage. [29:37.500 --> 29:43.500] I can have all the facts and law I want, and I am not going to get that ruling. [29:43.500 --> 29:51.500] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, we'll do our radio, our call at number 512-646-1984. [29:51.500 --> 29:53.500] We'll be right back. [30:03.500 --> 30:08.500] Were you aware that sitting about your weight on an online dating site could make you a felon? [30:08.500 --> 30:15.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you how a federal anti-hacking law could put us all behind bars. [30:15.500 --> 30:17.500] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.500 --> 30:21.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, [30:21.500 --> 30:26.500] and once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.500 --> 30:31.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.500 --> 30:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.500 --> 30:41.500] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.500 --> 30:45.500] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.500 --> 30:50.500] Have you ever created a pseudonym on a website or made yourself sound a little better on Match.com? [30:50.500 --> 30:55.500] You may not have known it, but under a federal anti-hacking law, you are actually committing a felony. [30:55.500 --> 30:56.500] No joke. [30:56.500 --> 31:02.500] Under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, doing something as innocuous as fudging your weight on a Facebook profile [31:02.500 --> 31:06.500] could get you arrested and prosecuted as a cyber criminal. [31:06.500 --> 31:09.500] Enacted in the 80s, the law has been broadened four times [31:09.500 --> 31:13.500] and now applies to any violation of any Internet Service Agreement, [31:13.500 --> 31:17.500] such as knowingly providing false information about yourself. [31:17.500 --> 31:21.500] Hey, can we use this law to hold politicians to their political promises? [31:21.500 --> 31:31.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.500 --> 31:36.500] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [31:36.500 --> 31:38.500] The government says that fire brought it down. [31:38.500 --> 31:43.500] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [31:43.500 --> 31:46.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [31:46.500 --> 31:49.500] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [31:49.500 --> 31:50.500] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [31:50.500 --> 31:51.500] I'm a structural engineer. [31:51.500 --> 31:52.500] I'm a New York City correction officer. [31:52.500 --> 31:53.500] I'm an Air Force pilot. [31:53.500 --> 31:55.500] I'm a father who lost his son. [31:55.500 --> 31:58.500] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [31:58.500 --> 32:01.500] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [32:01.500 --> 32:05.500] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [32:05.500 --> 32:06.500] Sorry. [32:06.500 --> 32:09.500] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [32:09.500 --> 32:10.500] What? [32:10.500 --> 32:14.500] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [32:14.500 --> 32:17.500] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [32:17.500 --> 32:20.500] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [32:20.500 --> 32:23.500] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease [32:23.500 --> 32:26.500] is found in almost every home in America, the television. [32:26.500 --> 32:30.500] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity. [32:30.500 --> 32:31.500] But there is hope. [32:31.500 --> 32:33.500] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me [32:33.500 --> 32:37.500] and thousands of other Foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [32:37.500 --> 32:40.500] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading [32:40.500 --> 32:44.500] and watching educational documentaries without feeling tired or uninterested. [32:44.500 --> 32:47.500] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [32:47.500 --> 32:51.500] then you need to call 512-480-2503 [32:51.500 --> 32:55.500] or visit them at 1904Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [32:55.500 --> 32:57.500] Side effects from using Brave New Books products [32:57.500 --> 32:59.500] may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [32:59.500 --> 33:01.500] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [33:01.500 --> 33:12.500] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:12.500 --> 33:26.500] Yes, Mr. Officer, you're taking the line ahead. Won't you follow the law of the land? I don't understand. [33:26.500 --> 33:51.500] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, we're live on our radio. [33:51.500 --> 34:01.500] And I may sound like I'm fumbling around with this topic, but it is one of the most important considerations that I have. [34:01.500 --> 34:08.500] And I've been struggling with a way to take this understanding that's in my mind [34:08.500 --> 34:14.500] and convert it into a presentation that will make sense to someone else. [34:14.500 --> 34:18.500] So I am kind of struggling here. [34:18.500 --> 34:24.500] But we do have to understand the influences on the individuals we're dealing with. [34:24.500 --> 34:33.500] I was just in court this Monday and I was there with someone else [34:33.500 --> 34:38.500] and we were both named on a suit. [34:38.500 --> 34:42.500] This was an eviction hearing where we had gotten a quitclaim deed, [34:42.500 --> 34:46.500] so I was named on the quitclaim deed, so I had standing. [34:46.500 --> 34:52.500] And the guy that I was with, they knew him real well and the courts were pretty upset with it. [34:52.500 --> 35:01.500] So I went in and the court felt like he had brought me in as a ringer, and that's actually what he did. [35:01.500 --> 35:06.500] And I kind of hammered the lawyer on the other side a little bit. [35:06.500 --> 35:11.500] The judge was getting frustrated because clearly she wanted to rule against us right off the bat. [35:11.500 --> 35:20.500] And I stopped him with a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction, and he objected because it wasn't filed three days ahead of time. [35:20.500 --> 35:27.500] I apologize for it not being three days ahead of time, but we hadn't received proper notice. [35:27.500 --> 35:32.500] And besides, it's a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [35:32.500 --> 35:36.500] It does not have to be filed three days ahead of time. [35:36.500 --> 35:46.500] And the judge got pretty cranky and kind of read me the riot act about the rule calls for documents to be filed three days ahead of time and blah, blah, blah. [35:46.500 --> 35:56.500] I could have went into the fact that a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction can be filed at any time, but I decided that wasn't a good idea. [35:56.500 --> 36:04.500] And then I nailed them for lack of proper notice because I handed in documents to show that they had notice. [36:04.500 --> 36:10.500] And this kind of frustrated the judge because she clearly wanted to just hammer us. [36:10.500 --> 36:26.500] And the judge appeared all of a sudden when I stopped the other attorney, got so angry that her eyes turned red and her jaw was quivering. [36:26.500 --> 36:36.500] And I stepped back from the bench because we were right up at the bench and I took a step backwards and that really got their attention. [36:36.500 --> 36:43.500] And I said, Your Honor, is there a dynamic here that I don't know about? [36:43.500 --> 36:48.500] Do you have a prejudice that needs to be revealed in this court? [36:48.500 --> 36:57.500] Oh, my goodness, really got tense in there and the bailiff stepped up. [36:57.500 --> 37:00.500] So I thought he was going to come over there and get in the middle. [37:00.500 --> 37:04.500] But the judge really gathered herself up. [37:04.500 --> 37:07.500] And this had none of this had to do with law. [37:07.500 --> 37:11.500] This had to do with paying attention to the human beings around me. [37:11.500 --> 37:22.500] I fully understood that the judge was upset at this other guy because he had filed criminal charges against their bailiff. [37:22.500 --> 37:28.500] And she was really upset about that because it's her bailiff and how dare him do that. [37:28.500 --> 37:32.500] And she wanted to really lambaste him in court. [37:32.500 --> 37:35.500] So I understood that dynamic. [37:35.500 --> 37:40.500] That was political, had nothing to do with the law in the courtroom. [37:40.500 --> 37:45.500] And it went relatively well. [37:45.500 --> 37:53.500] She denied everything, but she never got me to give her anything to work with. [37:53.500 --> 37:56.500] She never got me to raise my voice. [37:56.500 --> 38:02.500] When I asked her about her prejudice, she told me to be quiet, not another word. [38:02.500 --> 38:05.500] And that was all I needed. [38:05.500 --> 38:11.500] You see, I'm thinking of the politics. How do I set her up? [38:11.500 --> 38:17.500] And she gave me an opportunity when she showed emotion. [38:17.500 --> 38:22.500] So I pulled a political card. [38:22.500 --> 38:28.500] I in effect accused her of being biased without calling her biased. [38:28.500 --> 38:34.500] And then when she told me to stop talking, you see, I was going to recusal. [38:34.500 --> 38:40.500] And when she ordered me not to say a word, she kept me from going to recusal. [38:40.500 --> 38:49.500] Well, that was probably a really big mistake because I have an issue of subject matter jurisdiction. [38:49.500 --> 39:04.500] The standard in response for people, especially in court, is to argue their issue. [39:04.500 --> 39:16.500] But Dr. Graves tells us a real purpose in court is to set the record for appeal. [39:16.500 --> 39:22.500] And I was in the court and I was not concerned about arguing my issues. [39:22.500 --> 39:27.500] I'm thinking, what do I need to get on the record for appeal? [39:27.500 --> 39:37.500] So when she deliberately goaded me to get me to argue an issue, the first thing I did is thought, [39:37.500 --> 39:43.500] if I give her a good argument on this issue, is it going to make any difference? [39:43.500 --> 39:46.500] It's not a court of record. [39:46.500 --> 39:51.500] And she's obviously going to deny everything I throw at her. [39:51.500 --> 40:03.500] So on the issue of her being biased, I could have pursued that and got her to talk about that issue. [40:03.500 --> 40:08.500] But when she told me to be quiet, I didn't have to, so I stopped right there. [40:08.500 --> 40:19.500] The next communication about that she will get from me will be a tort letter to the county commissioner's court, [40:19.500 --> 40:25.500] suing the judge for acting without subject matter jurisdiction. [40:25.500 --> 40:30.500] And the judge is going to see that as coming out of left field. [40:30.500 --> 40:32.500] She's going to say, he can't do that. [40:32.500 --> 40:34.500] I said, absolutely I can. [40:34.500 --> 40:38.500] You go into court and you argue subject matter jurisdiction. [40:38.500 --> 40:47.500] Once I raised subject matter jurisdiction, the law said the court does not have subject matter jurisdiction [40:47.500 --> 40:53.500] and will not have subject matter jurisdiction until it's proven. [40:53.500 --> 41:00.500] Well, I raised it and she went to other issues that didn't have to do with subject matter jurisdiction, [41:00.500 --> 41:04.500] filing time limits that didn't apply and all this other stuff. [41:04.500 --> 41:11.500] So she never really ruled on my challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [41:11.500 --> 41:15.500] So I withdrew the challenge. [41:15.500 --> 41:17.500] And it's because it wasn't well written. [41:17.500 --> 41:18.500] We didn't have time. [41:18.500 --> 41:21.500] It's part of my fault I didn't get a document prepared I was supposed to. [41:21.500 --> 41:24.500] So it was really crappy written challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [41:24.500 --> 41:27.500] So I just withdrew it. [41:27.500 --> 41:30.500] But it didn't matter. [41:30.500 --> 41:41.500] If she didn't have subject matter jurisdiction, the fact that I withdrew my motion is irrelevant or my petition is irrelevant. [41:41.500 --> 41:43.500] I can't give her subject matter jurisdiction. [41:43.500 --> 41:48.500] I'm going to maintain she doesn't have it and I'm going to bushwhack her with a lawsuit. [41:48.500 --> 41:57.500] A couple of weeks before I went into a court and stood up in the hearing prior to mine. [41:57.500 --> 42:03.500] And the judge saw me standing there and asked me who I was and what I needed. [42:03.500 --> 42:10.500] And I told him I'm Randall Kelton and I have a hearing problem. [42:10.500 --> 42:13.500] And he said, well, what's wrong with your hearing Mr. Kelton? [42:13.500 --> 42:21.500] Well, Judge, I was in Mexico a week or so ago and I got drunk on that cheap tequila and awesome hearing aid. [42:21.500 --> 42:23.500] Why are you telling me this? [42:23.500 --> 42:28.500] I said, well, do you have a combination for the hearing impaired? [42:28.500 --> 42:29.500] No, I don't. [42:29.500 --> 42:31.500] Do you have a sound system? [42:31.500 --> 42:33.500] I said, do you have a sound system here? [42:33.500 --> 42:34.500] Will you turn it up? [42:34.500 --> 42:36.500] He said, no, I won't. [42:36.500 --> 42:39.500] Well, then will you speak up? [42:39.500 --> 42:40.500] And he did. [42:40.500 --> 42:47.500] He spoke up and told the bailiff, if I didn't sit down and shut up, that he was to throw me out of the courtroom. [42:47.500 --> 42:49.500] So I sat down and shut up. [42:49.500 --> 42:52.500] Never said another word about that. [42:52.500 --> 43:02.500] But when I left the courtroom, I asked the bailiff to come out with me and then I asked the bailiff to arrest the judge for failure [43:02.500 --> 43:14.500] and provide accommodation for the hearing impaired in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. [43:14.500 --> 43:28.500] The judge, I met the bailiff at a political gathering a couple days later and he said the judge was absolutely freaked out. [43:28.500 --> 43:33.500] I was prepared, I asked the bailiff to arrest him over that. [43:33.500 --> 43:41.500] He felt like I had set him up and that's exactly how I want him to feel. [43:41.500 --> 43:44.500] That is very politically powerful. [43:44.500 --> 43:52.500] In Tarrant County, the judges are paying real close attention to me now because they feel like I'm after them and that's exactly how we want them. [43:52.500 --> 44:02.500] When I come back, Dale, I'll take your call, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue de la Radio, I'll call that number. [44:02.500 --> 44:09.500] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come buy our store at 1904 [44:09.500 --> 44:17.500] Guadalupe Street, Suite D here in Austin, Texas behind Brave New Books and Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:17.500 --> 44:22.500] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.500 --> 44:30.500] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Alchali Emu Oil, Lotion Candles, Olive Oil Soaps, and Colloidal Silver and Gold. [44:30.500 --> 44:37.500] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.500 --> 44:43.500] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.500 --> 45:01.500] Also like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.500 --> 45:04.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.500 --> 45:09.500] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, [45:09.500 --> 45:15.500] four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.500 --> 45:19.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.500 --> 45:23.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.500 --> 45:28.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.500 --> 45:34.500] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.500 --> 45:39.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.500 --> 45:43.500] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.500 --> 45:49.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.500 --> 45:52.500] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.500 --> 46:15.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:15.500 --> 46:37.500] Thank you. [46:37.500 --> 47:05.500] Okay, we're back, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [47:05.500 --> 47:13.500] And Deborah reminded me on the air that I left out the best part, and she was right. [47:13.500 --> 47:19.500] When the judge refused to turn up the sound system, [47:19.500 --> 47:28.500] and it threatened me with someone with a gun to throw me out of the court room, [47:28.500 --> 47:32.500] I didn't pursue, I just sat down and shut up. [47:32.500 --> 47:39.500] And I met this bailiff at a tea party here, a tea party meeting a couple days later. [47:39.500 --> 47:42.500] He was security there. [47:42.500 --> 47:45.500] And we got to talking, and I told him about that. [47:45.500 --> 47:48.500] He asked me, you know, why I did that. [47:48.500 --> 47:52.500] And I said, well, you know, I was setting the judge up. [47:52.500 --> 47:55.500] I've given him opportunity to screw up. [47:55.500 --> 47:59.500] He said, well, if the judge was violating the Americans Disabilities Act, [47:59.500 --> 48:03.500] why didn't you raise it in the courtroom? [48:03.500 --> 48:07.500] I said, well, the judge is bound by law, [48:07.500 --> 48:13.500] whether I cite the law or bring it up to him or not. [48:13.500 --> 48:18.500] He had a duty to provide accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [48:18.500 --> 48:24.500] Had I raised it in the courtroom, he might have turned the sound up. [48:24.500 --> 48:30.500] And if he had done that, then I wouldn't be able to file against him. [48:30.500 --> 48:35.500] And the bailiff looked at me and he said, you can really be a scoundrel. [48:35.500 --> 48:38.500] I said, yes, I can. [48:38.500 --> 48:43.500] And I want the court to think that I'm setting them up. [48:43.500 --> 48:47.500] But this goes to something that goes to more. [48:47.500 --> 48:49.500] It goes to setting the record. [48:49.500 --> 48:54.500] In a court, in this court, it's not a court of record. [48:54.500 --> 49:05.500] But keep in mind that the fact that it's not a court of record only goes to trial de novo, [49:05.500 --> 49:15.500] meaning that it is trial de novo for the purpose of perfecting your right to appeal. [49:15.500 --> 49:17.500] That's all. [49:17.500 --> 49:20.500] What goes on in that first court? [49:20.500 --> 49:29.500] The record you lay and what these people say and do in that court can be brought into the next court. [49:29.500 --> 49:35.500] If they make an admission or state a position, [49:35.500 --> 49:40.500] then they can't come into the second court and state a different position. [49:40.500 --> 49:44.500] You can bring in collateral estoppel. [49:44.500 --> 49:49.500] So it's important in that first court to lay the record. [49:49.500 --> 49:54.500] Don't fail to lay the record just because it's not a court of record. [49:54.500 --> 50:00.500] Always you're there to lay the record. [50:00.500 --> 50:06.500] It's seldom ever a good idea to argue with a judge, especially if you're pro se. [50:06.500 --> 50:11.500] You can expect a judge to rule against you out of hand at every turn. [50:11.500 --> 50:13.500] That's the reality. [50:13.500 --> 50:15.500] That's the politics. [50:15.500 --> 50:18.500] So okay, we can handle that. [50:18.500 --> 50:19.500] Go ahead and do that. [50:19.500 --> 50:24.500] All I'm here for is to set the record anyway. [50:24.500 --> 50:27.500] And the dumber things I can get you to do, the better. [50:27.500 --> 50:32.500] The better it looks for me when I come back and raise accusations like here, [50:32.500 --> 50:39.500] I'm going to sue the judge for official misconduct for exerting or purporting to exert an authority [50:39.500 --> 50:45.500] she doesn't especially have by impersonating a public official. [50:45.500 --> 50:49.500] And when she gets wind of that, she's going to have a conniption [50:49.500 --> 50:53.500] because she's going up for election here shortly. [50:53.500 --> 51:00.500] She is really going to get excited and feel like I bushwhacked. [51:00.500 --> 51:05.500] At least I hope she does. [51:05.500 --> 51:13.500] This way, the next time I come into her court, she's going to be wondering what I'm setting her up for. [51:13.500 --> 51:19.500] And if I've done my job right, that will make her far more cautious. [51:19.500 --> 51:23.500] I don't want her to do anything stupid to get her thrown out of office [51:23.500 --> 51:27.500] because she does something stupid that's going to get her thrown out of office. [51:27.500 --> 51:31.500] She did it stupid to me, made my life more difficult. [51:31.500 --> 51:37.500] And she'd be doing it to everybody else that walks in that's not as knowledgeable in these areas as I am. [51:37.500 --> 51:44.500] Those of you who listen to this program, those who study these tools and techniques and learn to use them, [51:44.500 --> 51:50.500] you are a benefit to everybody else that comes in the courtroom [51:50.500 --> 51:56.500] because the judge never knows which one's going to hammer them, [51:56.500 --> 52:05.500] especially if we simply set up our issues and then address our issues at the next stage. [52:05.500 --> 52:14.500] If this official doesn't do what they're supposed to, you don't address the issue with this person. [52:14.500 --> 52:21.500] You go to the person who has authority over this person, like American Truth Disabilities Act. [52:21.500 --> 52:32.500] You go to a grand jury of my peers and see what they think of a judge denying me in a public court [52:32.500 --> 52:35.500] because I can't hear the court. [52:35.500 --> 52:45.500] And when I tell the grand jury, the reason I couldn't hear the court was I'd left my left ear drum in Vietnam somewhere. [52:45.500 --> 52:52.500] There was a jungle back there where I was there fighting for these very rights [52:52.500 --> 52:57.500] while this judge was sitting here going to law school doing whatever he was doing. [52:57.500 --> 53:08.500] So I come here with a disability I carried from that jungle and he's going to deny me the very right I fought for. [53:08.500 --> 53:11.500] Now that really sounds good. [53:11.500 --> 53:17.500] I can get a tear from a grand jury or give the judge the impression that I'm going to. [53:17.500 --> 53:23.500] That's what I put in the tort letter that I gave the judge a copy of. [53:23.500 --> 53:27.500] So I hope this gives him apoplexy. [53:27.500 --> 53:36.500] I hope it has the effect of adjusting his behavior so that the next time somebody comes in there [53:36.500 --> 53:45.500] and asks him for some accommodation that is appropriate, be it hearing or anything else, [53:45.500 --> 53:49.500] that he remembers this guy that came in there and set him up. [53:49.500 --> 53:53.500] And I told the bailiff what I did so that the bailiff would tell the judge, [53:53.500 --> 53:59.500] I was certain he would tell the judge that I did that on purpose. [53:59.500 --> 54:03.500] If you've listened to the show a lot, you've heard me say in the past, [54:03.500 --> 54:09.500] my ultimate intended outcome, you always got to know what it is. [54:09.500 --> 54:12.500] If you don't know where you're going, you can expect to wind up somewhere else. [54:12.500 --> 54:18.500] My ultimate intended outcome is to place every judge in the country in a position such that [54:18.500 --> 54:23.500] when they step up behind the bench and look out across the bar at the gallery, [54:23.500 --> 54:29.500] I want them wondering which one, which one of those dirty rotten scoundrels out there [54:29.500 --> 54:36.500] are waiting for me to render a ruling so he can run down to grand jury and try to get me indicted. [54:36.500 --> 54:42.500] Think about that, how that will change the politics in the courtroom. [54:42.500 --> 54:44.500] So in the end, everything's political. [54:44.500 --> 54:50.500] I'm going to stop blabbering on that now and go to Dale in Florida. [54:50.500 --> 54:57.500] Hello, Dale. You have a question or comment for us? [54:57.500 --> 55:00.500] I think I got you. There you go, Dale. [55:00.500 --> 55:01.500] Hear me okay? [55:01.500 --> 55:05.500] Yes, it took a minute for my page to refresh and unreach you. [55:05.500 --> 55:07.500] Okay, I can hear you. [55:07.500 --> 55:14.500] Okay. First of all, I've got to say that you've just made a loyal listener. [55:14.500 --> 55:19.500] I think I'll be tuning in to you from now on. [55:19.500 --> 55:23.500] Well, thank you. I wasn't sure if that's going to make sense. [55:23.500 --> 55:30.500] I've got this thing in my head that I think is an understanding, [55:30.500 --> 55:37.500] and I've tried to take it out of my head and present it in a way that it makes sense to somebody else, [55:37.500 --> 55:41.500] and sometimes that's a real struggle. [55:41.500 --> 55:48.500] Well, you did a good job because I got it, and I'm kind of a simple kind of guy. [55:48.500 --> 55:53.500] Well, if we do this right, once we understand this, the politics behind it, [55:53.500 --> 55:57.500] what you actually do gets a whole lot simpler. [55:57.500 --> 56:00.500] It's not so terribly complex anymore. [56:00.500 --> 56:05.500] You say, here's the law, here are the facts, and here's the law that goes to that fact, [56:05.500 --> 56:07.500] and here's what the judge should do. [56:07.500 --> 56:09.500] So I'm going to ask the judge to do this. [56:09.500 --> 56:13.500] I'm giving this fact, asking him to take judicial notice of this fact, [56:13.500 --> 56:17.500] and here's the law applied to the fact, I want you to do this. [56:17.500 --> 56:22.500] And when he says no, okay, we go to the next one. [56:22.500 --> 56:23.500] I don't get it. [56:23.500 --> 56:29.500] You're supposed to do this, you dirty rotten scoundrel, and blah, blah, blah, and argue back and forth. [56:29.500 --> 56:33.500] That's what we do on the street, or if we're in a debate. [56:33.500 --> 56:36.500] The courtroom's not a debate. [56:36.500 --> 56:38.500] Setting the record for appeal. [56:38.500 --> 56:40.500] Okay, I'll stop preaching now. [56:40.500 --> 56:47.500] Great. You've got yourself a loyal listener now, anyway. [56:47.500 --> 56:49.500] I've got a little situation. [56:49.500 --> 56:54.500] I've got some friends, an elderly couple. [56:54.500 --> 56:55.500] I'm not that elderly. [56:55.500 --> 56:57.500] They're in great shape. [56:57.500 --> 57:05.500] But I was talking to them, and I actually have them here with me right now in the room. [57:05.500 --> 57:17.500] They advised me that they had a lawyer that went to court, supposedly on their behalf, a state appointed. [57:17.500 --> 57:25.500] Some years ago, they bought a house in Florida, and they bought it outright. [57:25.500 --> 57:34.500] During the housing boom, they ended up getting a loan on their house right before things went sour. [57:34.500 --> 57:40.500] And so they hadn't been able to take care of that note. [57:40.500 --> 57:48.500] And here recently, the property or the bank took them to court, [57:48.500 --> 57:55.500] and they just got a final judgment for a foreclosure. [57:55.500 --> 58:00.500] And it seems like the amount that they want now is really extravagant. [58:00.500 --> 58:06.500] I had a friend put me in contact with a gentleman, David, from Austin, [58:06.500 --> 58:11.500] and he said I should call in tonight and share this. [58:11.500 --> 58:13.500] He said something about it. [58:13.500 --> 58:15.500] Hang on, hang on. We're about to go to break. [58:15.500 --> 58:18.500] We'll pick this up when we come back on the other side. [58:18.500 --> 58:25.500] But in the spirit of what we were talking about earlier, the politics, [58:25.500 --> 58:33.500] when we come back, I'm going to give you a whole bunch of things you can do to gain time to stop the other side [58:33.500 --> 58:36.500] and influence the element of making a deal you can live with. [58:36.500 --> 58:44.500] Hang on. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Our Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [58:44.500 --> 58:47.500] Give us a call. We're going to have the phone lines open all night. [58:47.500 --> 58:49.500] We'll be right back. [58:49.500 --> 58:53.500] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [58:53.500 --> 58:57.500] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.500 --> 59:01.500] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.500 --> 59:05.500] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:05.500 --> 59:08.500] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.500 --> 59:12.500] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:12.500 --> 59:17.500] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.500 --> 59:24.500] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word [59:24.500 --> 59:27.500] beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.500 --> 59:32.500] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.500 --> 59:43.500] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.500 --> 59:47.500] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.500 --> 59:50.500] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.500 --> 59:59.500] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.500 --> 01:00:05.500] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, [01:00:05.500 --> 01:00:07.500] online at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:07.500 --> 01:00:09.500] This is Justin Armand. [01:00:09.500 --> 01:00:11.500] And this is Jessica Armand. [01:00:11.500 --> 01:00:14.500] And this is your Liberty Beat for January 9, 2014. [01:00:14.500 --> 01:00:23.500] Gold up today $1,226, silver at $19.48, and Bitcoin is trading at $790. [01:00:23.500 --> 01:00:29.500] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from blockchain.info, the world's most popular Bitcoin wallet. [01:00:29.500 --> 01:00:33.500] Simple and secure blockchain is the easiest way to get started using Bitcoin. [01:00:33.500 --> 01:00:38.500] To learn more or to create your wallet today, visit blockchain.info. [01:00:38.500 --> 01:00:45.500] And support also comes from AJ Processing, transcription service to increase your online traffic and subscription, [01:00:45.500 --> 01:00:48.500] online at ajprocessing.com. [01:00:48.500 --> 01:00:53.500] And support also comes from Brave New Books, online at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:00:53.500 --> 01:00:54.500] And now the news. [01:00:54.500 --> 01:01:02.500] On Wednesday, Russia blocked a resolution that would have condemned Syria for airstrikes used by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. [01:01:02.500 --> 01:01:10.500] Russia has now vetoed three security resolutions that would have blamed Assad's government for attacks and may possibly have included sanctions. [01:01:10.500 --> 01:01:15.500] The most recent statement would have blamed the Syrian government for airstrikes in the city of Aleppo, [01:01:15.500 --> 01:01:23.500] where the UN says more than 700 people have been killed and 3,000 injured. [01:01:23.500 --> 01:01:31.500] Accusations of misleading and outright false information continue in an ongoing battle between a Houston-based doctor and medical authorities. [01:01:31.500 --> 01:01:41.500] On December 11th, the Texas Medical Board filed a complaint complaining that Stanislav Brzezinski is violating federal law with his experimental cancer therapy claims. [01:01:41.500 --> 01:01:51.500] The Brzezinski Clinic released a statement Wednesday claiming the charges were frivolous and that Brzezinski has a constitutional right to make truthful statements about his cancer research. [01:01:51.500 --> 01:02:04.500] The FDA allowed Brzezinski to test his antennaeoplastins in a clinical trial from 1996 to 2013 until the agency put the trials on hold over safety issues. [01:02:04.500 --> 01:02:13.500] The Pirate Bay is working on a second edition to its popular Pirate Browser, which has been downloaded more than two million times since August 2013. [01:02:13.500 --> 01:02:22.500] The Pirate Browser was created to help web surfers access the Pirate Bay and other torrent downloading sites when they are blocked by the Internet service providers, [01:02:22.500 --> 01:02:25.500] as well as cutting through censorship in certain nations. [01:02:25.500 --> 01:02:32.500] This new app will be available as a standalone browser as well as a plug-in for Mozilla's Firefox and Google Chrome. [01:02:32.500 --> 01:02:35.500] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Logos Radio Network. [01:02:35.500 --> 01:02:38.500] Truth, liberty, health and spiritual growth. [01:02:38.500 --> 01:02:42.500] Listen online at logosradionetwork.com. [01:02:42.500 --> 01:02:44.500] And support comes from the Cory Moore Show. [01:02:44.500 --> 01:02:50.500] Live Friday nights at 9 p.m. Central Standard Time at corymoreshow.com. [01:02:50.500 --> 01:02:52.500] You've been listening to the Liberty Beat. [01:02:52.500 --> 01:03:20.500] Remember, freeing your mind is freeing our world. [01:03:23.500 --> 01:03:25.500] Chant the blues. [01:03:25.500 --> 01:03:29.500] Chant for our world. [01:03:29.500 --> 01:03:32.500] Chant on body. [01:03:32.500 --> 01:03:35.500] Chant for justice. [01:03:35.500 --> 01:03:37.500] Chant for justice. [01:03:37.500 --> 01:03:39.500] Chant the blues. [01:03:39.500 --> 01:03:42.500] Chant for our world. [01:03:42.500 --> 01:03:45.500] Chant for our world. [01:03:45.500 --> 01:03:53.500] When I yell at them, when I chant, when we sing, said all men was created equally. [01:03:53.500 --> 01:03:56.500] Chant down Babylon and do it daily. [01:03:56.500 --> 01:03:59.500] And when night come, bless everybody. [01:03:59.500 --> 01:04:04.500] erklären why300 badly, [01:04:04.500 --> 01:04:12.500] the family, the only right man I scar 총 mind we take. [01:04:12.500 --> 01:04:30.420] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, we have our radio, and we still have our gun [01:04:30.420 --> 01:04:35.660] giveaway promotion on, we're still trying to raise money for the network. [01:04:35.660 --> 01:04:47.220] We have a lot of equipment we need to upgrade, and we're giving away the Ruger LC9 with laser [01:04:47.220 --> 01:04:57.780] and the Mosin M1891, I think that's 30 caliber with a bayonet, the M1891 means that's when [01:04:57.780 --> 01:05:05.260] it was originally made, this is really a really nice retro weapon, it even has a bayonet on [01:05:05.260 --> 01:05:06.260] it. [01:05:06.260 --> 01:05:15.820] But if you purchase Eddie's traffic seminar before January the 31st, it's 250 bucks, your [01:05:15.820 --> 01:05:22.420] name will go into the drawing 10 times along with getting the traffic seminar. [01:05:22.420 --> 01:05:29.700] So have a look at our website, look at our sponsors, and if you're interested in anything [01:05:29.700 --> 01:05:36.140] that any of our sponsors have handled, we would greatly appreciate you using their services [01:05:36.140 --> 01:05:44.100] so that we can build up our sponsorship and not have to come on here and do these fundraisers [01:05:44.100 --> 01:05:45.100] so often. [01:05:45.100 --> 01:05:54.740] Thank you for that, now we're going to go back to Dale in Florida, Dale I think I have [01:05:54.740 --> 01:06:01.820] you unmuted, I'm having a little, there we go, gotcha, okay. [01:06:01.820 --> 01:06:07.740] As to what to do, now I know there's a lot of people out there that say you ought to [01:06:07.740 --> 01:06:15.300] do this, you ought to do that, well I don't know enough quite yet to tell you what you [01:06:15.300 --> 01:06:22.700] should do, and the reason I say that is, is there are simply so many things you can do [01:06:22.700 --> 01:06:31.740] that's the nature of the civil courts, there's just all sorts of things you can do, and the [01:06:31.740 --> 01:06:38.420] first thing that you need to do in order to figure out what your options are is pull all [01:06:38.420 --> 01:06:47.340] the records from the county recorder's office, and that's because since the year 2000 the [01:06:47.340 --> 01:06:52.740] banks come up with this great scheme where they were going to make a lot of money by [01:06:52.740 --> 01:07:02.340] taking long term indebtedness and matching it to long term investments, residential mortgages [01:07:02.340 --> 01:07:12.020] matched with retirement plans, well it looked like a great idea but the problem was residential [01:07:12.020 --> 01:07:19.700] mortgages had reporting requirements that was not conducive to this scheme so they tried [01:07:19.700 --> 01:07:25.940] to drive this square peg in this round hole and they did not get it done well. [01:07:25.940 --> 01:07:35.860] The person who's coming before the court to do a foreclosure, he may actually be the bona [01:07:35.860 --> 01:07:43.900] fide true and singular holder of the claim against the property. [01:07:43.900 --> 01:07:51.780] The problem he has is he can't prove it, now if you don't raise the issue he never has [01:07:51.780 --> 01:07:57.340] to prove it, but the screwed up paperwork to where he can't prove it and where you find [01:07:57.340 --> 01:08:05.940] that, evidence of that, is in the filings with the county registrar of deeds, get that [01:08:05.940 --> 01:08:15.820] out first and read it really carefully, we do, we have a tool to help you, I do an evaluation [01:08:15.820 --> 01:08:24.620] of these records and you won't believe the stuff I find in there, the last three I looked [01:08:24.620 --> 01:08:30.220] at and this was unusual, this seems to be happening more and more lately and I don't [01:08:30.220 --> 01:08:38.140] understand it, the trustee who does the trustee sale, now you're in a mortgage state, we're [01:08:38.140 --> 01:08:42.780] in a deed of trust state, but the trustee was never appointed as trustee, there has [01:08:42.780 --> 01:08:47.460] to be an assignment of substitute trustee in order for this person to have authority [01:08:47.460 --> 01:08:50.100] to do that, it's not in there. [01:08:50.100 --> 01:08:57.500] If you have a lender, you took a loan out with this lender and the lender subsequently [01:08:57.500 --> 01:09:06.180] went out of business, if the lender did not put something in the record transferring the [01:09:06.180 --> 01:09:14.020] security instrument, the mortgage document to some other party, he abandoned it, there [01:09:14.020 --> 01:09:20.060] is no mortgage document, now there's still a note, but the mortgage document is the one [01:09:20.060 --> 01:09:27.300] that grants a claim against the property, if they didn't properly transfer that, they [01:09:27.300 --> 01:09:33.220] don't have a claim, it's void, there are just stacks of these things we can do, so [01:09:33.220 --> 01:09:38.940] the first thing is you want to have a good look at what's in the record and what we're [01:09:38.940 --> 01:09:44.620] looking at, looking for when we're doing this is we're not looking for something that's [01:09:44.620 --> 01:09:50.940] going to cause us to win the whole enchilada, to think you're going to be able to go into [01:09:50.940 --> 01:09:58.060] these crooked corrupt courts and get these crooked corrupt courts, especially in Florida, [01:09:58.060 --> 01:10:05.380] the courts in Florida are bought and paid for, if you think they're going to give you [01:10:05.380 --> 01:10:14.460] a ruling in your favor, you are kidding yourself, but that's okay, we can deal with that, because [01:10:14.460 --> 01:10:23.900] there are so many issues that you can bring, and the other side has to address the issues, [01:10:23.900 --> 01:10:30.100] I have someone listening who just sent me an email and he was telling me recently about [01:10:30.100 --> 01:10:39.980] his case where he got a whole huge stack of disclosures or discovery from the other side [01:10:39.980 --> 01:10:46.220] and they accidentally put inside there a bill they had sent to the client, this is for a [01:10:46.220 --> 01:10:52.020] hearing that only took about 10 minutes, it was a minor hearing, and they billed the client [01:10:52.020 --> 01:11:02.340] $9,000 for this minor hearing, these lawyers are charging the banks tremendous amounts [01:11:02.340 --> 01:11:09.020] of money, but the banks have estimated that a uncontested foreclosure costs them on the [01:11:09.020 --> 01:11:18.860] average of $60,000 for the lawyers to adjudicate, so there's a lot of money there, okay you [01:11:18.860 --> 01:11:26.860] have this indebtedness and the bank is trying to collect this indebtedness, well let's see [01:11:26.860 --> 01:11:35.460] how much money we can cost them or let's see how much money we can make it appear as though [01:11:35.460 --> 01:11:44.660] it's going to cost them, because in the end it's not about right or wrong or justice or [01:11:44.660 --> 01:11:55.460] any of that, it's all about the money, so put together all of the claims you can come [01:11:55.460 --> 01:12:08.340] up with and file a quiet title action in the district court, put everything in there, throw [01:12:08.340 --> 01:12:16.460] the chicken to the kitchen sink, everything you can find in there and file it, serve it [01:12:16.460 --> 01:12:23.220] and then call the lawyers and say look Gus, yeah I know I filed this big woppy big suit [01:12:23.220 --> 01:12:30.180] but you know that's going to give us both a headache if we have to adjudicate this thing, [01:12:30.180 --> 01:12:35.900] it's going to cost you a fortune and all the time we're fighting this thing, I'll hold [01:12:35.900 --> 01:12:40.180] you off and I'll get to stay in the property and it's just going to be a big headache, [01:12:40.180 --> 01:12:48.180] I'll tell you what, the banks as a rule when they foreclose on these properties or foreclose [01:12:48.180 --> 01:12:53.700] it on so many they can't get people to buy them, so the banks tend to buy them back and [01:12:53.700 --> 01:12:58.780] then they'll group a bunch of these together because when the bank buys it back the property [01:12:58.780 --> 01:13:03.980] becomes a toxic asset especially if whoever was living in it's moved out, now the building [01:13:03.980 --> 01:13:08.100] is empty and the bank has to take care of it, so they group them all together and sell [01:13:08.100 --> 01:13:16.020] them at wholesale, 30 cents on the dollar, okay you know the bank can expect to sell [01:13:16.020 --> 01:13:22.380] the note at 30 cents on the dollar and there's a lot of guys out there who are doing short [01:13:22.380 --> 01:13:28.820] sales, they'll go to these people and get a quick claim deed from them and then go to [01:13:28.820 --> 01:13:36.740] the bank and try to get the bank to make them a deal, the problem is 70% of them never go [01:13:36.740 --> 01:13:42.020] through because the banks don't want to make the deal, well the problem is is it going [01:13:42.020 --> 01:13:50.140] to the banks with their hat in their hand, the bank has no reason to make the deal, so [01:13:50.140 --> 01:13:55.900] what we suggest is you go to the bank with your boot up their behinds, you've already [01:13:55.900 --> 01:14:01.700] sued them and you're going to keep them in court until they get old, cost them a whole [01:14:01.700 --> 01:14:06.540] lot more in attorney fees than they're going to make on the property, so you say gee what [01:14:06.540 --> 01:14:14.580] guys don't even bother answering this suit, let's sit down and if you'll negotiate with [01:14:14.580 --> 01:14:20.860] me and make a deal I can live with, I'll non-suit this thing and I'll sign you a waiver of any [01:14:20.860 --> 01:14:28.780] claim I may have in the future, just resell me the note at 30% at what you would sell [01:14:28.780 --> 01:14:35.500] it at wholesale, remove any marks from my credit so it rehabilitates my credit so I [01:14:35.500 --> 01:14:40.900] can get it refinanced and I'll drop this suit against you and not cost you three times the [01:14:40.900 --> 01:14:52.940] amount of the principal on the note, such a deal, so in order to get there, oh you can [01:14:52.940 --> 01:15:02.060] make the show me the note argument, you can make the the MERS is not a beneficiary argument [01:15:02.060 --> 01:15:08.140] now all those things are out there but there's a whole lot more, when you sit down at the [01:15:08.140 --> 01:15:13.620] closing table did MERS did the lender actually provide the money for the loan or was it table [01:15:13.620 --> 01:15:19.820] funded and if it was table funded did the lender disclose who funded it because it might [01:15:19.820 --> 01:15:25.580] have been the Mexican and Colombian drug cartels and had you known that you would never have [01:15:25.580 --> 01:15:29.940] entered into that contract, so that's fraud by non-disclosure, you can throw that one [01:15:29.940 --> 01:15:38.580] at them, had they sold a beneficial interest in the note before they filed the mortgage [01:15:38.580 --> 01:15:43.380] with the county recorder's office, if they did when they filed the mortgage they had [01:15:43.380 --> 01:15:51.140] no claim so the mortgage is fraudulent, is void and unenforceable, did they fail to give [01:15:51.140 --> 01:15:56.340] you all of the proper statutory notices, if they did they breached generally covenant [01:15:56.340 --> 01:16:02.980] 14, a requirement to give you all the notices, that's a breach of contract, that's default, [01:16:02.980 --> 01:16:06.740] they accuse you of default for not paying the mortgage, well they've already defaulted [01:16:06.740 --> 01:16:13.300] only by not giving you all your notifications, there's a whole stack of them, I could spend [01:16:13.300 --> 01:16:18.580] four or five hours going through all of these, Dale is that making sense do you understand [01:16:18.580 --> 01:16:20.580] where I'm going? [01:16:20.580 --> 01:16:27.780] Well the path that you're taking me on sure does sound like a great path, yeah we've been [01:16:27.780 --> 01:16:35.220] helping people sue and we keep them in court forever but it makes people crazy, when you're [01:16:35.220 --> 01:16:38.660] worried every week they're going to come and throw you out of the house it just drives [01:16:38.660 --> 01:16:43.220] you crazy, if we can go in there and get them to make a deal, just get it done, get it over [01:16:43.220 --> 01:16:48.340] with, go home, everybody's happy, hang on Randy Kelton, David Stevens, we have our radio, [01:16:48.340 --> 01:16:58.340] our call is number 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. 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[01:19:22.900 --> 01:19:49.380] Okay hold on Dale, hold on Dale, okay we are back, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, I unmuted [01:19:49.380 --> 01:19:55.140] Dale a little too quickly, he was talking to somebody in the background, Dale we're going [01:19:55.140 --> 01:20:01.860] to move on, I've got four callers and three segments but if you will call back tomorrow [01:20:01.860 --> 01:20:07.060] night, we do a four hour show and tomorrow night I'll have a lot more time and I can [01:20:07.780 --> 01:20:14.980] go through some of the general basics of what we're looking at, what we can expect to do [01:20:14.980 --> 01:20:21.380] and what we can expect it to get from the other side and it's good to do that because [01:20:21.380 --> 01:20:30.340] I get a lot of people that's on that hears it for the first time, okay so I think Dale [01:20:30.340 --> 01:20:40.580] is in a conversation, I'm going to move ahead and go to Kevin in Texas, hello Kevin, hi [01:20:40.580 --> 01:20:48.660] Randy, howdy, howdy, what do you have for us tonight? Well I went with my son to a pre-trail [01:20:48.660 --> 01:20:58.660] hearing for a traffic ticket and my son was presenting the motion, hey wait a minute, [01:20:58.660 --> 01:21:04.740] hold on, hold on, Kevin are you on a speaker phone? Oh yeah I'm sorry, okay, is that better? [01:21:04.740 --> 01:21:09.380] Okay yeah folks it's okay to listen on speaker phone when you're sitting on hold but when we [01:21:09.380 --> 01:21:14.420] call you on the air we really really need you to get off the speaker phone, thank you, yeah I'm [01:21:14.420 --> 01:21:19.380] sorry, okay, yeah Kevin I didn't say anything because I just thought you had your head in the [01:21:19.380 --> 01:21:24.100] toilet because that's what kind of what it sounds like, I probably will pretty soon [01:21:27.220 --> 01:21:33.860] but anyway we were at a pre-trial hearing and the judge asked if there was any here any issues [01:21:33.860 --> 01:21:41.300] and this is for a traffic ticket for making a illegal left turn to cross through a parking [01:21:41.300 --> 01:21:51.140] light to avoid a traffic light and so my son said he is making a motion that there was no [01:21:51.780 --> 01:21:58.260] probable cause for the charge so right there the judge said well I'm a magistrate I'll make the [01:21:58.260 --> 01:22:08.260] determination of probable cause right now so he looked at his paperwork and he said well [01:22:09.220 --> 01:22:15.460] there's probable cause to continue with this you know basically he's saying that there's probable [01:22:15.460 --> 01:22:24.900] cause, is that legal to? Yeah that's surprising but technically not exactly legal because [01:22:24.900 --> 01:22:36.180] that's not how a examining trial is required to be held but at least the judge didn't just [01:22:36.180 --> 01:22:43.380] ignore it and blow it off completely. When I get a ticket the first thing I want is a [01:22:44.260 --> 01:22:53.700] examining trial because under the code the court doesn't have jurisdiction just because [01:22:53.700 --> 01:23:03.060] just because the complaint's been filed. The complaint must be filed with some magistrate [01:23:04.580 --> 01:23:13.780] and all judges are magistrates, mayors are magistrates and it sends recorders and [01:23:14.820 --> 01:23:21.300] I've had some people claim that what recorders means are municipal court judges but [01:23:21.300 --> 01:23:26.420] I don't know about that I don't know what a recorder is haven't been able to actually find [01:23:26.420 --> 01:23:32.740] it in law but all judges and mayors are definitely magistrates and it is the magistrate who makes a [01:23:32.740 --> 01:23:40.260] determination of probable cause if he finds probable cause then he issues a order under 16.17 [01:23:40.260 --> 01:23:49.220] code of criminal procedure and he issues a warrant and it is the warrant that bestows subject matter [01:23:49.220 --> 01:23:56.260] jurisdiction on the trial court and under 17.30 code of criminal procedure after an examining trial [01:23:57.140 --> 01:24:02.740] the judge is required to seal all documents had in the hearing cause his name to be written across [01:24:02.740 --> 01:24:08.260] the seal of the envelope and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction [01:24:08.260 --> 01:24:18.660] and it is that forwarding that transfers jurisdiction from the magistrate to the court [01:24:19.700 --> 01:24:25.060] the court doesn't have jurisdiction until there's a proper determination of probable cause made [01:24:26.660 --> 01:24:35.140] does that make sense Kevin? So if he did not seal the documents would that be a problem? [01:24:35.140 --> 01:24:45.140] If he did not what? Seal the documents? Oh yeah well that's well he is both in his case [01:24:46.500 --> 01:24:55.460] he is the magistrate and he is the judge who will be the judge of original jurisdiction [01:24:55.460 --> 01:25:04.180] so realistically it would be unreasonable for him to seal a document and send it to his own clerk [01:25:04.180 --> 01:25:11.700] who's sitting right next to him. The point of the sealing is to make sure that all of the documents [01:25:11.700 --> 01:25:19.620] get to the clerk untouched but in this case he can just hand them to the clerk. Okay. I always [01:25:19.620 --> 01:25:27.540] go in and ask the judge to hold an examining trial. I had I got a ticket here in Azalea Texas [01:25:27.540 --> 01:25:34.100] and went in and asked the judge to hold an examining trial and he refused so I asked the [01:25:34.100 --> 01:25:38.580] bailiff to arrest you ask him to call the bailiff over and have the bailiff arrest him [01:25:39.700 --> 01:25:48.100] and he wouldn't do that either. So is pre-trial the same thing as an examining trial? [01:25:48.100 --> 01:25:59.220] No a judge cannot hold a pre-trial hearing until he there has been an examining trial in a [01:25:59.220 --> 01:26:07.540] determination of probable cause. A pre-trial hearing is held by the judge of original jurisdiction [01:26:10.020 --> 01:26:15.780] and he doesn't have jurisdiction until a determination of probable cause is made. [01:26:15.780 --> 01:26:23.940] Was the officer present in the room at the time? No sir. He can't hold an examining trial without [01:26:23.940 --> 01:26:31.380] a witness against you. So that that should get a judicial conduct complaint against the judge. [01:26:33.620 --> 01:26:40.020] He wants to be a smart aleck we'll stick that back on him. Check to see if the judge is also [01:26:40.020 --> 01:26:47.220] a lawyer they almost always are and if he is file a bar grievance against him. That'll give him [01:26:47.220 --> 01:26:55.860] apoplexy. And if we do that can we have him recuse from the case? No that's not grounds for recuse. [01:26:55.860 --> 01:27:15.300] It's a technical matter. A judge is required to recuse himself if there are circumstances [01:27:16.100 --> 01:27:23.220] that would give the mere impression of impropriety. It doesn't have to be something that [01:27:23.220 --> 01:27:30.020] would actually disqualify the judge but if it would give the public impression that the judge [01:27:30.020 --> 01:27:38.820] was not fair and honest he has a duty to recuse. But this is traffic court it's only about the money [01:27:38.820 --> 01:27:45.620] that's all they care about. Okay how long before the trial do we have before any motions and other [01:27:45.620 --> 01:27:54.500] documents are allowed to be filed? Seven days before a hearing. Before a hearing or the trial? [01:27:55.380 --> 01:28:00.260] Before any hearing a pre-trial hearing is for the purpose of hearing motions. [01:28:01.620 --> 01:28:09.460] So if we haven't filed them by the pre-trial then it's too late? No just seven days before trial. [01:28:09.460 --> 01:28:17.620] Oh okay seven days before trial. If you're going to go into a hearing and you want to hear a motion [01:28:17.620 --> 01:28:23.860] at that hearing then it has to be in seven days prior. Oh I got you. Yeah the other side has to [01:28:23.860 --> 01:28:34.260] have a chance to look at it and come up with a argument against it. So otherwise it would be [01:28:34.260 --> 01:28:40.020] surprise it'd be bushwhack. And then how long before the trial does the prosecutor have to [01:28:40.020 --> 01:28:50.500] present the jury pool and notice of charges? Oh he does all of that at the trial. That's not [01:28:50.500 --> 01:29:00.020] something done beforehand unless you file a motion to show nature and cause. Have you looked at Eddie's [01:29:00.020 --> 01:29:10.340] traffic seminar? Actually not the whole seminar. Well I did for the one from Alex's show. [01:29:12.260 --> 01:29:18.500] No no Kevin. Randy's talking about Eddie's traffic seminar course [01:29:19.060 --> 01:29:26.660] that you can purchase on the ruleoflawradio.com website. Oh I got you. Okay it'll answer all [01:29:26.660 --> 01:29:32.420] these questions and it'll help you prepare for how to handle these situations. Hey I'm kind of [01:29:32.420 --> 01:29:40.820] unemployed right now and I really can't afford that at the moment. All right well listen Kevin [01:29:40.820 --> 01:29:47.300] hold on we're going to go to break now. Folks this is the rule of law on the Logos Radio Network. [01:29:47.300 --> 01:29:53.940] Logosradionetwork.com is the network website and ruleoflawradio.com is the website for the [01:29:53.940 --> 01:29:57.620] show. You can get Eddie's traffic seminar at ruleoflawradio.com. We'll be right back. [01:30:04.660 --> 01:30:10.420] Mind reading vehicles? Imagine if your car decided when to apply the brakes based on your thoughts [01:30:10.420 --> 01:30:15.940] alone. I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you about breaking at the speed of thought [01:30:15.940 --> 01:30:23.060] next. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again [01:30:23.060 --> 01:30:28.820] and once your privacy is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect [01:30:28.820 --> 01:30:34.580] your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy it's [01:30:34.580 --> 01:30:40.260] worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by startpage.com the private search engine [01:30:40.260 --> 01:30:47.940] alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. I'm a big fan of German [01:30:47.940 --> 01:30:53.380] engineering when it comes to cars. After all they did create the Mercedes and the BMW plus they have [01:30:53.380 --> 01:30:58.580] no speed limit on the Autobahn but when they start developing cars that read minds they've gone too [01:30:58.580 --> 01:31:04.180] far. To test cars that apply the brakes when the driver thinks of stopping, German researchers [01:31:04.180 --> 01:31:09.700] attached electrodes to people's skulls and legs and then had them drive in a simulator. When certain [01:31:09.700 --> 01:31:15.140] brain activity and leg tension were detected the brakes engaged milliseconds before the drivers [01:31:15.140 --> 01:31:21.060] actually hit the brake pedal. Doug is showing guys but no thanks if I'm going to drive I don't need [01:31:21.060 --> 01:31:27.220] my car to second-guess me. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com the world's most private [01:31:27.220 --> 01:31:37.060] search engine. I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. Most people don't know [01:31:37.060 --> 01:31:43.220] that a third tower fell on September 11. World Trade Center 7 a 47-story skyscraper was not hit [01:31:43.220 --> 01:31:49.140] by a plane. Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 [01:31:49.140 --> 01:31:53.300] architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [01:31:53.300 --> 01:31:59.460] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, [01:31:59.460 --> 01:32:05.380] why it matters, and what you can do. Nutritious food is real body armor. 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Remember, hemp protein powder contains [01:32:42.980 --> 01:32:50.020] 53% protein, is gluten free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. Call [01:32:50.020 --> 01:33:01.220] 888-910-4367. 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you only at hempusa.org. [01:33:01.220 --> 01:33:07.220] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:07.220 --> 01:33:32.340] Okay, we are back. Red DeKalb and Debbie Stevens. We're talking to Kevin in Texas. Kevin, [01:33:32.340 --> 01:33:38.660] it would be better if you called in tomorrow night because this is taking a long time. We've got [01:33:39.460 --> 01:33:46.820] more callers and only got two segments left. What would be even better than that is call in [01:33:46.820 --> 01:33:53.300] Monday night for Eddie's show because Eddie's specifically traffic and he'll have better [01:33:53.300 --> 01:34:04.180] answers for you than I will. You are welcome. Okay, now we're going to go to Doug in Texas. [01:34:04.180 --> 01:34:18.980] Hello, Doug. Hello, Doug. Are you there? Doug calls in a lot and I think he likes the soft [01:34:18.980 --> 01:34:28.500] sound of my voice because it kind of helps to lull him to sleep. Jump. Okay, we're going to go to [01:34:29.380 --> 01:34:35.940] Patrick in Texas. Hello, Patrick. I'll try Doug a little later. Maybe we'll get him woke up. [01:34:37.220 --> 01:34:43.300] Go ahead, Patrick. What do you have for us? Yeah, kind of a little bit different approach [01:34:43.300 --> 01:34:51.860] than a lot of people, but two things. One thing I want to kind of present a challenge to all the [01:34:51.860 --> 01:34:57.380] listeners. You know, we've got the drive going on and I don't want to drive for too long on this, [01:34:57.380 --> 01:35:03.140] but it's like whatever you can give, you got to give because this is something that's going to [01:35:03.140 --> 01:35:08.100] change the lives of a lot of people and maybe those that don't have a lot of money. It'll help [01:35:08.100 --> 01:35:17.700] them get out of a bad situation, but I found such value between you and Eddie and I really appreciate [01:35:17.700 --> 01:35:24.500] what you guys are doing and I called them a couple weeks ago and put down, you know, a good generous [01:35:24.500 --> 01:35:31.780] donation and so I want to challenge people to kind of come to that level because it's not a lot, [01:35:31.780 --> 01:35:38.340] but whatever you can give, please give because these individuals give a lot of their time [01:35:38.340 --> 01:35:44.500] and a huge sacrifice, I'm sure, and I'm familiar with that type of giving and that type of [01:35:45.140 --> 01:35:50.820] desire to move things forward in a positive sense and so not everyone can give, you know, [01:35:50.820 --> 01:35:56.900] like $5,000 like I did, but whatever you can give, please do because this is fundamental. [01:35:56.900 --> 01:36:03.540] This is something that really will change the lives and the quality of individuals' lives [01:36:04.740 --> 01:36:09.380] more than you possibly know with whatever money you can give and so that's my first thing. [01:36:09.380 --> 01:36:14.420] It's kind of a challenge. Patrick, you're the one that gave $5,000 to the fundraiser? [01:36:15.300 --> 01:36:20.980] Yes, ma'am. Patrick, I want to thank you so much. I didn't want to mention anything about this on [01:36:20.980 --> 01:36:28.420] the air. I sent an email to the email address that was with the PayPal donation asking whoever did [01:36:28.420 --> 01:36:32.180] this if they wanted to come on the air, but I didn't want to toot anyone's horn without asking [01:36:32.180 --> 01:36:37.380] their permission first, but I really, really appreciate it. I just, I don't know what to say. [01:36:37.380 --> 01:36:42.500] I mean, I've got no words. No, you don't have to. I mean, I don't want to, [01:36:42.500 --> 01:36:47.140] you know, totally get off my tangent. I saw that, but my thing is, you know, I really, [01:36:47.140 --> 01:36:52.580] I really, you know, I want people understand that, you know, we're in a world that is just [01:36:52.580 --> 01:36:58.740] so massively just disconfigured from where we started from and we've got to find a way to get [01:36:58.740 --> 01:37:02.820] back to a basis and it's going to take a little bit of, you know, gumption. It's going to take, [01:37:02.820 --> 01:37:06.740] you know, a little bit of finance, a little donation to get to that point, but please, [01:37:07.300 --> 01:37:11.540] I'm serious. It's like, you know, I understand there's financial discord because obviously [01:37:11.540 --> 01:37:16.260] we're all subject to that because, I mean, it's kind of given. You look around and you see that's [01:37:16.260 --> 01:37:20.820] going on. You look at the federal reserve, you look at the FDA, the EPA, on and on and on. [01:37:20.820 --> 01:37:25.220] They want to do nothing but destroy you because it's in their best interest for them, not for us [01:37:25.220 --> 01:37:31.220] as the mass populace. And this has got to change. And the only way we can change it is to come [01:37:31.220 --> 01:37:36.660] together, do what we can do as a collective unit and execute. And that was kind of my point, [01:37:37.300 --> 01:37:43.460] but that's kind of goes into the segue into what I was calling in about. And I apologize for saying, [01:37:43.460 --> 01:37:48.660] you know, that I'm so dismayed, but I don't think it's going to be taken negatively. [01:37:49.540 --> 01:37:53.700] The one thing that we do need to really kind of find a solution for, in my opinion, [01:37:54.340 --> 01:37:58.580] and this is a question for you, Randy, and this is what I called in about, is what can we do [01:37:58.580 --> 01:38:04.660] from a proactive stance, either through a legal system or any other means that's going to find [01:38:04.660 --> 01:38:12.260] some type of result to go and attack on a positive and a multi-spectrum type environment, [01:38:12.260 --> 01:38:18.020] these different federal agencies and individuals and entities that are creating so much discord? [01:38:18.020 --> 01:38:22.100] I can't think of anything. I don't know of anything to do, but I want to find a way to do it. [01:38:22.100 --> 01:38:27.300] And I personally, I'll head it up. I don't care. I'll put together 15 task force. We got the EPA, [01:38:27.300 --> 01:38:32.500] the FDA, the Federal Reserve, the global bankers, whatever entities it is. It's like, let's put it [01:38:32.500 --> 01:38:36.660] together. Let's get people interested and let's execute. But what can we do? Is there anything [01:38:36.660 --> 01:38:43.060] from a legal standpoint that we can do to put the government back on their heels and potentially [01:38:43.060 --> 01:38:48.020] put them in the dirt to be able to get our country back? That's really my basic question tonight. [01:38:48.020 --> 01:38:53.060] And then I still, one again, I challenge everyone, please do what you can do because this is critical [01:38:53.060 --> 01:38:58.580] to our wellbeing. But at the same time, what else can we do from an offensive position rather [01:38:58.580 --> 01:39:07.620] than being a receptively destroyed? Good. That is a great question. And you have to know that [01:39:08.340 --> 01:39:17.300] we spend a lot of time thinking about that. I'm an engineer by training and engineers, [01:39:17.300 --> 01:39:25.460] they don't care how things ought to be. They only care how things actually work. And I'm looking at [01:39:25.460 --> 01:39:31.780] a dysfunctional system here. How do we fix it? Now, from an engineering perspective, [01:39:32.820 --> 01:39:44.100] you want to find the smallest change that you can make that will have the greatest results. [01:39:45.060 --> 01:39:52.580] If we don't get to the source of the problem, we'll be batting around symptoms until we all get old. [01:39:52.580 --> 01:39:58.100] And I spent a lot of time, I've been researching and working in this since 1981. [01:39:59.700 --> 01:40:03.220] That was the night I spent the night in jail for driving with a headlight out. [01:40:03.220 --> 01:40:10.500] And that got me started. There was a problem. When I read the code, read the penal code and [01:40:10.500 --> 01:40:14.740] code of criminal procedure and looked at what they were doing, I thought, have I stepped [01:40:14.740 --> 01:40:20.500] through the looking glass? I read the penal code and code of criminal procedure as if they were [01:40:20.500 --> 01:40:27.540] tech manuals. They said, in this circumstance, you will do this thing. And then I looked at what [01:40:27.540 --> 01:40:33.860] they were actually doing. They weren't doing anything near that. So I thought maybe I had missed [01:40:33.860 --> 01:40:41.620] something really important. And I spent about 15 years just researching law. And it finally [01:40:41.620 --> 01:40:49.060] became clear I had missed a darn thing. It really said what it said. And the case law backed up. [01:40:49.060 --> 01:40:57.060] And the case law backed up what the statutory law said. They're just not doing it. So what is wrong? [01:40:57.060 --> 01:41:06.340] Where's the flaw? At first, I blamed the police for not following law. But, you know, I'm an engineer [01:41:06.340 --> 01:41:16.900] and when an engineer sees the system consistently going wrong the same way, you can't blame what's [01:41:16.900 --> 01:41:25.860] going wrong. You got to back up and see what is systemic that creates these same negative outcomes [01:41:25.860 --> 01:41:34.180] all over the place. So I backed up from the police officer to the police management, [01:41:34.180 --> 01:41:46.180] from management to prosecutors, from prosecutors to judges. And finally, I was left with no option. [01:41:46.180 --> 01:41:56.180] I found the enemy and it was us. What I was talking about earlier today, these judges are human beings. [01:41:56.180 --> 01:42:06.580] And these judges are subject to the pressures and influences that are on them. And they all [01:42:06.580 --> 01:42:14.500] tend to be responding to those pressures and influences in a similar way. We are not going to [01:42:14.500 --> 01:42:21.940] beat this by going after the judges for what they're doing directly. We need to find something [01:42:21.940 --> 01:42:30.740] underneath that will give these officials reason to change their behavior. And that's what I was [01:42:30.740 --> 01:42:37.780] talking about earlier about setting up the judge so that when he steps out on the bench he's wondering [01:42:37.780 --> 01:42:47.700] who out there is waiting to get a crack at it. Government agencies. You and I, and for the most [01:42:47.700 --> 01:42:58.180] part the legal reform community, does not have the influence to turn our politicians against [01:42:59.300 --> 01:43:06.820] large agencies that produce, that use up a lot of the budget and have lots of influence to throw [01:43:06.820 --> 01:43:13.300] around. We're going to have to find a more subtle way to get at it. And one of the things I'm [01:43:13.300 --> 01:43:21.700] looking at is it's something that's grown out of all of this. And it's this electronic lawyer. [01:43:23.060 --> 01:43:28.020] And obviously filing criminal charges against these guys with grand juries. [01:43:29.460 --> 01:43:37.460] You take a federal agent who violates a law relating to his office. If he is not in DC [01:43:37.460 --> 01:43:44.020] or in a federal reserve, that's a state crime. Take the fed to the state, the state to the fed. [01:43:44.020 --> 01:43:48.340] That's one way. Hang on, we're about to go to break. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, [01:43:48.340 --> 01:43:54.980] the root of our radio. I'll call it number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:43:58.980 --> 01:44:02.980] Do you feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:02.980 --> 01:44:03.480] Sorry! [01:44:03.480 --> 01:44:07.620] Are you confused by words like the constitution or the federal reserve? 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So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.260 --> 01:44:54.660] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.660 --> 01:44:57.540] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged [01:44:57.540 --> 01:45:02.980] vocabulary and an overall increase in mental functioning. Are you the plaintiff or defendant [01:45:02.980 --> 01:45:09.060] in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to [01:45:09.060 --> 01:45:17.060] understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. If you have a lawyer, [01:45:17.060 --> 01:45:22.020] know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for [01:45:22.020 --> 01:45:28.980] yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary [01:45:28.980 --> 01:45:35.620] was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in [01:45:35.620 --> 01:45:41.140] a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices [01:45:41.140 --> 01:45:48.020] that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:48.020 --> 01:45:55.220] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:45:55.220 --> 01:46:18.500] and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.220 --> 01:46:54.020] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Patrick [01:46:54.020 --> 01:47:03.060] in Texas. And Patrick, I really do appreciate you. You have helped the network. You've helped us stay [01:47:03.060 --> 01:47:11.220] online and keep up to date. We really appreciate it. But as to what we can do, this has been what [01:47:11.220 --> 01:47:17.700] I'm after. And a lot of times when people are frustrated and angry at the system and want to [01:47:17.700 --> 01:47:22.980] change it and fix it, they want something where they can run out there and bump these guys on the [01:47:22.980 --> 01:47:32.340] conogand and let them know how to cow a cabbage. And what I'm finding is if we are going to change [01:47:32.340 --> 01:47:39.940] this, that's not how we're going to do it. We're going to do it with what I was doing to the judges [01:47:39.940 --> 01:47:49.140] this morning. And I'm building a tool. The most important thing that we can do is make the law [01:47:49.140 --> 01:47:57.540] available to the individual. And if you were listening earlier, I spoke to this electronic [01:47:57.540 --> 01:48:06.420] lawyer being able to take a situation and analyze it and pull all of the facts and all of the law. [01:48:08.020 --> 01:48:13.540] And while that's a cool thing, we don't necessarily want judges to rule only on the [01:48:13.540 --> 01:48:19.780] facts and law, but we do want to have them available. And that's what the electronic [01:48:19.780 --> 01:48:24.500] lawyer is. And in building the electronic lawyer, there's a lot of pieces to it. [01:48:25.380 --> 01:48:33.540] So if you want something you can actually do, let's take, I'm working on the penal code right now [01:48:33.540 --> 01:48:44.260] where I'm taking the penal code each crime by crime and turning it into a questionnaire. [01:48:46.660 --> 01:48:53.940] And once I get it into all of these into questionnaires, I have a tool that's almost [01:48:53.940 --> 01:49:03.860] completed on due process. I've turned that into a questionnaire where imagine that you're a lawyer [01:49:03.860 --> 01:49:11.860] and you have your client on the stand. The client is your witness, so you can't ask reading questions. [01:49:11.860 --> 01:49:20.260] And unlike the real world, the client can only answer the specific question that you ask. [01:49:20.260 --> 01:49:26.100] What questions would you ask your client? What would be the very first question you would ask? [01:49:27.620 --> 01:49:34.500] And then what responses would you anticipate? And then based on each of those responses, [01:49:34.500 --> 01:49:42.180] what would be your next question? And once you walk through this and the way I have people do this [01:49:42.180 --> 01:49:53.940] is you assume the person answering the questions always answers yes or picks the first item in a [01:49:53.940 --> 01:50:01.060] select list because you want your questions to always be either Boolean, yes or no, or a select [01:50:01.060 --> 01:50:06.660] list. So you assume they always say yes and always pick the top item in a select list. [01:50:06.660 --> 01:50:13.700] And follow that out all the way to the end. When you get to the last question you'd ask your client, [01:50:14.660 --> 01:50:26.020] you will have 80% of the entire knowledge base captured of whatever this, this will work for any [01:50:26.020 --> 01:50:35.700] field, any expert in any field, but it works exactly the same way. So you assume the person [01:50:35.700 --> 01:50:42.660] answers yes, but it works especially well in law because you assume he answers yes to everything. [01:50:43.540 --> 01:50:50.260] And then you back up from the last yes that he gave you, you back up one step and assume he says [01:50:50.260 --> 01:50:59.220] no. What would you ask next? And then back, back up again and keep backing up to you, backed up to [01:50:59.220 --> 01:51:08.100] the last question you ask and you will have captured the person's entire expertise. Now [01:51:09.300 --> 01:51:15.700] on the surface, this sounds like it would be very time consuming and complex, [01:51:17.140 --> 01:51:26.500] but actually once you get to the end of the first one, you got 80% because you'll back up to where [01:51:26.500 --> 01:51:33.460] they said yes and you'll assume a no question. And then for the most part, you'll ask one, [01:51:33.460 --> 01:51:39.620] maybe two questions and you'll go right back to where you were because you're following down all [01:51:39.620 --> 01:51:46.020] the points of law. So when you get to that point, I've got a little program I do this with that [01:51:46.020 --> 01:51:52.100] I can go grab that question and drag it down here and clone it to this next line of questioning. [01:51:52.100 --> 01:51:57.380] You think of it like the roots of a tree and this same root, [01:51:58.500 --> 01:52:04.420] you know, there are certain things that's going to come up in every single case. At one point in the [01:52:04.420 --> 01:52:09.380] questionnaire, you want to get to that issue because it goes to point of law. So the next time [01:52:09.380 --> 01:52:13.780] you come to it, you just go up and grab the one you've already done, drag it down here and drop [01:52:13.780 --> 01:52:21.940] it. You will be amazed how fast you can capture someone's entire expertise. I have one for [01:52:21.940 --> 01:52:30.500] due process. The questionnaire will almost shut down my server. Actually, if I bring up, I've had [01:52:30.500 --> 01:52:37.220] to break it into four pieces because the server slows down so much that it can't function. It's [01:52:37.220 --> 01:52:44.820] not usable because the questionnaire is so huge. So I've broken off, take before magistrate, [01:52:44.820 --> 01:52:53.220] uh, take to the jail. Everybody is going to get the question where you take it before magistrate, [01:52:53.220 --> 01:52:58.500] and that'll get that line of questions always. Everybody who's been arrested is going to be [01:52:58.500 --> 01:53:02.740] taken to jail. So that'll wind up in all of them. So I broke those into separate, I've got them in [01:53:02.740 --> 01:53:12.340] four different sections because they're so huge, but nobody sees all that. The user who's answering [01:53:12.340 --> 01:53:20.100] the questions, they only see one line of questions, but no matter what they answer, we have [01:53:22.260 --> 01:53:30.900] the next step in there. This is much simpler than it appears. The hardest thing for people to do [01:53:31.620 --> 01:53:41.300] is isolate the legal issues in their case. This tool will do that. Not only will it isolate the [01:53:41.300 --> 01:53:50.100] legal issues, it'll tell you what remedy to do. Like I asked, were you arrested? Yes. Were you [01:53:50.100 --> 01:53:59.060] arrested on an existing warrant? Yes. Do you have reason to believe that the officer who testified [01:53:59.060 --> 01:54:04.020] before the magistrate to secure the warrant misrepresented the truth to the magistrate? [01:54:04.020 --> 01:54:11.780] If they say yes, the system always produces a frank shearing. It veers off and asks all [01:54:11.780 --> 01:54:18.900] the questions it needs for a frank shearing and comes back. It never ever forgets to ask that [01:54:18.900 --> 01:54:26.100] question. And every legal issue that's indicated, we program it in. And once we've got it done, [01:54:26.820 --> 01:54:32.420] somebody comes up with something we don't have in there. Okay. We open up the questionnaire and we [01:54:32.420 --> 01:54:38.340] should look at it and say, okay, that question goes right here. We drop the question in. [01:54:39.460 --> 01:54:47.220] We never have to worry about it again. Once we have that, we make that available to the pro se. [01:54:48.980 --> 01:54:56.260] The pro se can go into court with the accumulated expertise of all of these lawyers. [01:54:56.260 --> 01:55:01.540] Now we have all of the law in place. Does that make sense, Patrick? [01:55:03.380 --> 01:55:08.740] That does. That really does. And that's one thing I think a lot of people are intimidated and kind [01:55:08.740 --> 01:55:15.220] of put on edge with that. And I wholly agree with what you're stating. And that's not only [01:55:15.220 --> 01:55:21.380] applicable like in a traffic court or municipal district or a county court. I mean, I think this [01:55:21.380 --> 01:55:26.420] can be applicable across the board, all the way up to the Supreme Court. And I like exactly the [01:55:26.420 --> 01:55:33.540] mentality of setting individuals up because you know they will. They will answer and they will do [01:55:33.540 --> 01:55:38.420] certain things because they think that we are so ignorant that we're just going to accept [01:55:38.420 --> 01:55:45.460] exactly what they feed to us. Whether it's dead bodies tied up in fertilization from fields or [01:55:45.460 --> 01:55:49.380] whatever it is, but they're going to think that we're so ignorant that we're going to be [01:55:49.380 --> 01:55:54.020] they're going to think that we're so ignorant as a populace that we're going to take that [01:55:54.020 --> 01:56:02.020] and treat that as the law. And that's so inaccurate. But that's kind of what I was trying to get at [01:56:02.660 --> 01:56:10.980] is how do we not only take affirmative or offensive action to get to a better state, [01:56:10.980 --> 01:56:18.980] but also preserve our rights and our, you know, I guess our current, well, not even current, but our [01:56:20.740 --> 01:56:24.820] I'm getting the best one. Let me try to let me there's only two minutes left of the show, [01:56:24.820 --> 01:56:28.660] actually only barely a minute and a half before the bumper starts playing. So I wanted to address [01:56:28.660 --> 01:56:34.580] some of these issues. One thing that people need to do if we really want to preserve what we have [01:56:34.580 --> 01:56:43.300] already and even roll back the mess that has been thrown in our lap is to understand the nature at [01:56:43.300 --> 01:56:50.580] the fundamental level of how our legal system actually works. And I'm going to try to wrap this [01:56:50.580 --> 01:56:56.500] up in a nutshell as best as I can in just less than two minutes here. But push comes to shove, [01:56:56.500 --> 01:57:00.180] everything is commercial. The Constitution doesn't apply anymore. There is no more [01:57:00.180 --> 01:57:04.740] there is no more Constitution. Constitution doesn't matter. I know it breaks a lot of people's [01:57:04.740 --> 01:57:11.140] hearts, but forget about it. It doesn't matter because what does the Constitution say it is what [01:57:11.140 --> 01:57:20.020] the supreme law of the what land? It's the supreme law of the land. We are not on law of the land [01:57:20.020 --> 01:57:27.780] anymore. We are in maritime law. We are on law of the sea. And that has been that that is case law. [01:57:27.780 --> 01:57:33.380] Okay, that's Harman Taylor's case law, Graham v. Lappin. All right, the courts, the appellate [01:57:33.380 --> 01:57:38.660] court came around and said there's it's we're on law of the sea now. Okay, deal with it. Everything [01:57:38.660 --> 01:57:43.860] is by commercial agreement now. And so people have to realize that because we're on the funny [01:57:43.860 --> 01:57:49.940] money system, we're not on the gold standard or silver standard or whatever anymore. We are on [01:57:49.940 --> 01:57:57.780] commercial law now, which means all law is by agreement, all of it, except for common law crimes. [01:57:58.420 --> 01:58:04.100] Okay, the you're susceptible to your subject to common law crimes laws, whether or not you agree [01:58:04.100 --> 01:58:11.220] to it, everything else is by commercial agreement. And you have to approach your defense from that [01:58:11.220 --> 01:58:17.220] perspective. Did you agree to this law or not? No, you didn't. It doesn't apply to you. And so you [01:58:17.220 --> 01:58:21.940] have to approach it from that method. And I encourage everyone to get on Harman Taylor's [01:58:21.940 --> 01:58:31.460] email list, email him at legal we underscore reality at earth link dot net that's legal [01:58:31.460 --> 01:58:41.380] l e g a l underscore reality at earth link dot net, please get on his email list, [01:58:41.380 --> 01:58:45.780] learn the legal reality. This will empower you greatly. And we can talk some more about this [01:58:45.780 --> 01:58:53.700] next week. We've got to go now. God bless you. Bibles for America is offering absolutely free [01:58:53.700 --> 01:58:58.980] a unique study Bible called the New Testament recovery version. The New Testament recovery [01:58:58.980 --> 01:59:05.460] version has over 9000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says, verse by verse, helping you to [01:59:05.460 --> 01:59:11.620] know God and to know the meaning of life. Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.620 --> 01:59:22.340] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. This translation is highly [01:59:22.340 --> 01:59:28.660] accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline [01:59:28.660 --> 01:59:34.020] for every book of the Bible. This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy [01:59:34.020 --> 01:59:44.980] of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102 [01:59:44.980 --> 02:00:04.820] or visit us online at bfa.org. You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.