[00:00.000 --> 00:07.000] This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates. [00:07.000 --> 00:09.000] Online at thelibertybeat.com. [00:09.000 --> 00:14.000] I'm Brian Hagan with your Liberty Beat for Monday, April 14th, 2014. [00:14.000 --> 00:17.000] Gold opens today at $1,323. [00:17.000 --> 00:19.000] Silver opens at $19.81. [00:19.000 --> 00:23.000] And Bitcoin is trading at $459.40. [00:23.000 --> 00:26.000] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from GrowYourOwnGroceries.org. [00:26.000 --> 00:31.000] Now offering an eight-week course where you can learn to treat the most common family ailments [00:31.000 --> 00:34.000] with simple medicines that you can grow or easily find. [00:34.000 --> 00:37.000] Learn more at GrowYourOwnGroceries.org. [00:37.000 --> 00:43.000] Support also comes from BitmainTech, creators of the newly released Antminer S2 Bitcoin Miner. [00:43.000 --> 00:46.000] One tera hash and only 1,000 watts. [00:46.000 --> 00:49.000] Order yours online today at BitmainTech.com. [00:49.000 --> 00:53.000] And support comes from Affordable Sound, CD and DVD duplication, [00:53.000 --> 00:55.000] along with posters and promotions materials. [00:55.000 --> 01:01.000] Online at AffordableSound.com or call them at 512-459-5253. [01:01.000 --> 01:05.000] In the news, a former employee is alleging that Britain's largest drug company [01:05.000 --> 01:08.000] bribed doctors to prescribe their medications in Europe. [01:08.000 --> 01:12.000] The Telegraph reports that the former GlaxoSmithKline sales representative [01:12.000 --> 01:16.000] claims that Polish doctors were paid to promote the company's asthma drug. [01:16.000 --> 01:20.000] An investigation has been launched and the BBC reports that 11 doctors [01:20.000 --> 01:25.000] and a GlaxoSmithKline regional manager have been charged for their involvement in the scheme. [01:25.000 --> 01:29.000] The company has also been accused of bribery in China and Iraq. [01:33.000 --> 01:36.000] Minor earthquakes beneath the Appalachians have been linked to fracking. [01:36.000 --> 01:41.000] The finding comes through work conducted by Ohio geologists, according to the Associated Press. [01:41.000 --> 01:47.000] The discovery is being touted as the first time tremors have been directly associated with fracking. [01:47.000 --> 01:51.000] The five small quakes happened last month near Youngstown. [01:54.000 --> 02:01.000] On Thursday, the United States Sentencing Commission voted to reduce federal prison sentences for most drug offenses. [02:01.000 --> 02:05.000] The commission stated that the move would reduce the federal prison population [02:05.000 --> 02:09.000] by 6,500 inmates over the next five years. [02:09.000 --> 02:14.000] The changes are expected to reduce the average sentence for drug offenders by 11 months. [02:14.000 --> 02:21.000] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Voice and Exit, maximizing human flourishing through radical innovation. [02:21.000 --> 02:26.000] Tickets on sale now. Get 10% off with promo code FREEDOM. [02:26.000 --> 02:31.000] June 21st at Austin Music Hall. Get yours at voiceandexit.com. [02:31.000 --> 02:38.000] Support also comes from the Cory Moore Show. Live Friday nights at 9 o'clock Central at corymoreshow.com. [02:38.000 --> 02:42.000] And support for the Liberty Beat comes from Roberts & Roberts Brokerage, Inc. [02:42.000 --> 02:50.000] Precious medals at reasonable rates since 1977. Online at rrbi.co. [02:50.000 --> 02:55.000] This is the Liberty Beat for Monday, April 14th, 2014. [02:55.000 --> 03:13.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [03:13.000 --> 03:26.000] This is the Liberty Beat for Monday, April 14th, 2014. [03:26.000 --> 03:38.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [03:38.000 --> 03:48.000] This is the Liberty Beat for Monday, April 14th, 2014. [03:48.000 --> 03:58.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [03:58.000 --> 04:08.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [04:08.000 --> 04:18.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [04:18.000 --> 04:28.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [04:28.000 --> 04:33.000] Alright. Good evening, folks. This is Rule of Law Radio. [04:33.000 --> 04:36.000] And this is your host, Eddie Craig. [04:36.000 --> 04:49.000] Alright. Now, it is April 14th, 2014, which, in case none of us actually knew that, is almost halfway through the month of April. [04:49.000 --> 05:03.000] And just to give you all an idea of how my past week has gone here, I've had a bit of sinusitis and the barometric changes that have been going on over here with the hot and the cold and the hot and the cold and over again [05:03.000 --> 05:09.000] has not voted well for my ability to recover from that and I have not been in a good mood. [05:09.000 --> 05:19.000] Basically, this entire past three and a half weeks with all the folks I've been dealing with, getting emails from and questions from and having to help and things like that, [05:19.000 --> 05:34.000] I mean I know exactly how Noah felt if stupid people were watered because I've gotten to the point where I actually have to wonder where some people's brains are. [05:34.000 --> 05:36.000] I'm not saying everybody's this way. [05:36.000 --> 05:48.000] I just wish it was not true of the majority of them that were calling me 24 hours a day because a lot of the questions I get asked about how to deal with certain things are not that hard to figure out. [05:48.000 --> 06:06.000] Whether you've done it before or not, there is a certain logical jumping off point and progression that you should be able to at least figure out to a minimal standard is the way I would consider it. [06:06.000 --> 06:19.000] I mean no one taught me how to do this, okay? And while my IQ is definitely over 100, I'm not going to sit up here and say I'm some sort of genius in this. [06:19.000 --> 06:32.000] I just tend to think about things differently and I don't think that I do anything that anybody else is not capable of if they apply themselves. [06:32.000 --> 06:45.000] And so sometimes it gets a tad bit frustrating for me. In fact, it became so frustrating just analyzing all the things that are going on, not just what people call me, but just the situation of things in the world with everything that's going on. [06:45.000 --> 06:54.000] I mean if there is anything the human race can screw up, we're right in the middle of it, okay? [06:54.000 --> 07:05.000] And we're punching in early for work. And so it kind of led me to write something I posted up on Facebook and this is what it came down to. [07:05.000 --> 07:25.000] After much introspection and external examination, I have realized that which brings me the greatest disappointment about being a member of the human race. It chagrins me on a cosmic level that the human species has a tremendously extraordinary capacity for love, compassion, and empathy. [07:25.000 --> 07:36.000] While simultaneously maintaining an absolute dedication to destroying anything that presents us with an opportunity as a species to show it. [07:36.000 --> 07:44.000] And folks, when you think about that, I don't find any saving grace in that part of being human at all. [07:44.000 --> 07:59.000] Now, I'm not saying that I don't believe in grace, but now we know why someone has to give it to us because we are incapable of earning it ourselves. [07:59.000 --> 08:17.000] We tend to think that we can either create any problem and find a solution for it, or we can solve any problem by creating an alternative for it. [08:17.000 --> 08:34.000] And we don't really have an in-between. And the few people that do manage to find a way to approach it from an in-between are quickly eradicated by society as radicals and folks that you don't want to deal with. [08:34.000 --> 08:43.000] They're too out there for everything else. They think too differently. They act too differently. Their concepts are not similar to ours. [08:43.000 --> 08:54.000] And it goes back to the old movie adages of the things we don't understand we fear, and the things we fear we kill. [08:54.000 --> 09:01.000] And in case you haven't noticed, there's an awful lot of that going around in the world today. [09:01.000 --> 09:19.000] And the things that we're beginning to actually understand are putting those that are the cause of them in fear, and then they want to kill us to keep us from killing them. [09:19.000 --> 09:26.000] We've just made a complete mess out of this ball of mud we all live on. [09:26.000 --> 09:36.000] And now we want to go interstellar travel and take it somewhere else. We want to put it on the road, this show we call The Human Species. [09:36.000 --> 09:46.000] We want to bring peace, glory, and democracy to the universe. Imagine how that's going to play out on a cosmic scale. [09:46.000 --> 10:03.000] Folks, we need to completely reexamine why we are so willing to follow the voice and personality of another human [10:03.000 --> 10:19.000] when on their face, if we really watch what they say and what they do and the results of it, what they're trying to get us to follow and support is extremely detrimental to our own well-being. [10:19.000 --> 10:33.000] And yet, we chase after them like the Messiah. And I'm not talking about just Obama, for instance, but many like him. [10:33.000 --> 10:46.000] Most of these people are not qualified to work a hot dog cart. The only thing they have going for them is money and more moneyed friends. [10:46.000 --> 10:57.000] Very few of them know reality at all. Most of them have never worked in the real world for a living. [10:57.000 --> 11:04.000] They've worked behind a desk. They've ordered other people around. They've gotten their information from somebody that actually knows how something works. [11:04.000 --> 11:18.000] But very few of them have ever actually built something, designed something, grown something, or even directly managed it for that matter. [11:18.000 --> 11:29.000] Everything they've ever done was delegated to someone else that actually knew what to do and collectively brought the information back to them [11:29.000 --> 11:44.000] so that they could sit and tell everybody else what to do again. So, they really don't produce. They just micromanage. [11:44.000 --> 11:58.000] But before we dedicate ourselves to following people like that, we need to ask, where are they ultimately trying to take things while they're running them? [11:58.000 --> 12:05.000] Now, me, I'm a big proponent of the idea of this. And, I mean, you can align it with some particular ideals and things that you want. [12:05.000 --> 12:23.000] But to me, there is a distinguishable difference between working for the mutual benefit of our neighbors, besides outside of socialism or communism. [12:23.000 --> 12:32.000] I'm not talking about forced labor for anyone. And I'm not talking about being dictated as the type of labor that I must do. [12:32.000 --> 12:46.000] But just a simple concept and understanding that the more we work together toward the benefit of each other, the better off we all are. [12:46.000 --> 13:01.000] For instance, I know that my neighbor does not have a green thumb and doesn't really have any clue how to grow a garden or any food like that. [13:01.000 --> 13:21.000] I, as an example, am great at it. But while my land is dedicated to the growing of vegetables, theirs is dedicated to the growing of beef and dairy and things of that nature, and that they are good at. [13:21.000 --> 13:36.000] Now, would it behoove us to work together to meet each other's needs, as far as me being able to supply them with a source of vegetables, them being able to supply me with a source of meat, that we come to each other's mutual aid and assistance. [13:36.000 --> 13:42.000] They have a house fire. I help them fight it. I help them rebuild it. Same thing if something happens for me. [13:42.000 --> 13:55.000] I need a new storage barn to put in my stored crops as I harvest them and things like that. I need a place to put them until they're ready to be sold at market or whatever. [13:55.000 --> 14:08.000] And I need help raising a barn, and they get some of their family and friends, and they all come help me very much kind of like an Amish community would work, I would guess, but without limiting ourselves on the things that we have available to us. [14:08.000 --> 14:30.000] Though I would agree with the Amish of one thing, when crap hits the fan, and everything you've come to rely on shuts down, the electrical grid, the water grid, all of these things that you cannot live without, especially beyond three days with the water situation. [14:30.000 --> 14:52.000] Who do you think is going to be the least impacted from the immediate crash? People that live in cities that can't grow dust, or people like the Amish that learn how to live without all this stuff that everybody else takes their entire life depends on, because they don't know any other way. [14:52.000 --> 15:14.000] Now, granted, the Amish ain't going to last long. Why? Well, for one thing, they aren't armed either. And the people that didn't learn how to take care of themselves in the manner the Amish did have certainly learned how to steal from those who can't prevent them from stealing it. [15:14.000 --> 15:36.000] And so they'll go take what the Amish have if they have to in order to see to their own survival. Whereas all it had taken all along was instead of trying to build these mega cities and drawing all this industry was simply set things up where everybody learns to live together and produce together. [15:36.000 --> 15:54.000] And even if it was everybody making their own thing in their own way, everybody had, you know, a couple acres, they raised their own small family garden, their own small set of goats and cows and whatever they needed. And that was that. Everybody was self-sufficient. [15:54.000 --> 16:13.000] If we could just think ahead and along those lines, man, where would we be? We wouldn't need things like the Empire State Building and the Twin Towers and all this stuff to make the world a better place or a bigger target, depending upon how you look at it. [16:13.000 --> 16:29.000] And I know that seems kind of utopian in my way of thinking and stuff like that. And granted it is because human nature being what it is, we're not that smart and we're not that forward thinking. [16:29.000 --> 16:47.000] So what we do has extremely selfish motivations behind it. And that's the part that concerns me. And that's the part I'm telling you that I believe we should start taking more into consideration what to do about it. [16:47.000 --> 17:00.000] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio calling number 512-646-1984. Give us a call. We will be right back. So y'all hang on. [17:17.000 --> 17:32.000] We will be right back. [17:32.000 --> 17:47.000] We've come to trust YoungGevity so much. We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [17:47.000 --> 18:00.000] As you realize the benefits of YoungGevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [18:00.000 --> 18:09.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.000 --> 18:29.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [18:29.000 --> 18:41.000] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.000 --> 19:01.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:01.000 --> 19:11.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradio.com. [19:31.000 --> 19:53.000] All right, folks, we are back. Call in number 512-646-1984. So give us a call. All right. Since I don't have any callers up yet, I'm going to go ahead and ramble on a little bit more. [19:53.000 --> 20:07.000] The things we've got going on down at the Sunday classes right now, we still need a lot more participation than we've got, folks. I mean, it is part of my problem with the people that are calling me is they will say things like, well, I did everything in the script. [20:07.000 --> 20:19.000] I did this and did this. And then when they provide me with a copy of the recording of the audio or the video, no, they didn't. They didn't do 90% of what the script says to do. [20:19.000 --> 20:37.000] Instead, they did everything the script says not to do. And then come to find out that they've only taken their education one one hundredth of the way to where it needs to be. [20:37.000 --> 20:59.000] See, I don't know of anybody that used to watch Wile E. Coyote chase the Road Runner and all the crap that he would pull to catch the Road Runner that actually would design the same thing that Wile E. [20:59.000 --> 21:11.000] did and not at least test it out before jumping the gun and trying to apply it. [21:11.000 --> 21:21.000] And yet people believe that just because they have the information that they're being screwed over that that's enough. [21:21.000 --> 21:30.000] All they have to do is say, look, I'm tired of being screwed over. Leave me alone. And that's going to fix the problem when they go out there and decide they don't want to have plates and everything on their car anymore. [21:30.000 --> 21:40.000] And the cops pull them over. They're going to go to doing exactly what the script says don't do, which is attempt to educate the cop on why they're doing what they're doing. [21:40.000 --> 21:44.000] And that's a mistake. [21:44.000 --> 21:59.000] People are not thinking things through. They're jumping the gun. They're getting information and they realize just from listening to it and watching it and checking it out that it's good information. [21:59.000 --> 22:09.000] But they are not taking it in the context of it is only one piece of the pot. [22:09.000 --> 22:19.000] And so they do exactly what they want to do as far as they'll take the tags and stickers and all this off or they'll let them expire. [22:19.000 --> 22:29.000] They'll go out on the road, they'll get pulled over. And the next thing I get is an email or phone call going, help. [22:29.000 --> 22:35.000] And this is not to pick on any one person because it isn't just one person. There are many. [22:35.000 --> 22:46.000] And it's to the point sometimes I just sit here listening to conversations rubbing my temples with both fingers and just sitting here trying to quietly meditate myself into a coma. [22:46.000 --> 22:56.000] Well, I listen to them to the drone on with the same thing I have heard every person before them tell me about everything they did and why they did it. [22:56.000 --> 23:08.000] Blah, blah, blah. Like it's going to change anything. And it's not because they did not take everything into account before they went out there. [23:08.000 --> 23:22.000] They simply jumped the gun assumed that because they knew the truth about one thing that that was enough to fight the battle on every front they came across, and it isn't true. [23:22.000 --> 23:27.000] And I had to prove that point in more than one conversation today. [23:27.000 --> 23:33.000] And the day before that, and the day before that, and the day before that. [23:33.000 --> 23:41.000] Hence the Noah reference at the opening of the show that I know exactly how Noah felt if stupid people were water. [23:41.000 --> 23:48.000] And I don't want to say stupid as to make it sound like I'm trying to insult them on a personal level. [23:48.000 --> 23:55.000] I'm insulting what they did. What they did was act stupidly. [23:55.000 --> 24:10.000] They took a course of action without any consideration or preparation for the highly likely results of taking that action. [24:10.000 --> 24:25.000] It's sort of like driving toward a cliff at a high rate of speed, knowing full well that gravity works despite the Roadrunner cartoons. [24:25.000 --> 24:32.000] And that when you in the car clear the edge, down is the only choice available. [24:32.000 --> 24:38.000] So what is the smart thing to be doing? Well, there are several. [24:38.000 --> 24:45.000] One, don't be driving toward the edge of the cliff at a high rate of speed in the first place. [24:45.000 --> 24:51.000] Two, figure out how to bail out safely before you get to the cliff. [24:51.000 --> 25:03.000] Or three, make sure at a minimum you, if not you and the car, are wearing parachutes or can fly. [25:03.000 --> 25:17.000] If you can't prepare to do any of these things, then the course of driving toward the cliff at a high rate of speed was stupid. [25:17.000 --> 25:27.000] Because there ain't going to be but one possible result. [25:27.000 --> 25:42.000] So when you call me with these questions, the first ones I'm going to ask is, what were you thinking? [25:42.000 --> 25:51.000] And the general response is, well I wasn't. Bingo. [25:51.000 --> 25:59.000] Okay? There's a reason why you don't try to milk a cow with one tea. [25:59.000 --> 26:06.000] I'll let you figure that one out if you grew up on a farm anywhere. [26:06.000 --> 26:10.000] But generally it would be because you weren't thinking. [26:10.000 --> 26:14.000] Or you didn't know what you were doing. [26:14.000 --> 26:21.000] And didn't know the difference in what to do it to. [26:21.000 --> 26:24.000] So consider all of that. [26:24.000 --> 26:30.000] When you're watching my Infowars video, if you're a first time listener or you've been listening but you haven't seen it or whatever, [26:30.000 --> 26:35.000] you go back and listen to any of the archives, try to pay attention. [26:35.000 --> 26:40.000] Because I'm pretty sure that I tell you repeatedly, [26:40.000 --> 26:48.000] do not presume that because you know the information you now know that that's all there is. [26:48.000 --> 26:58.000] And that if you take up this fight, you better know what you're doing and you better be prepared for it. [26:58.000 --> 27:05.000] Because it is time consuming, it is frustrating, and it can get expensive. [27:05.000 --> 27:11.000] If you doubt me, ignore me. [27:11.000 --> 27:15.000] And then we'll see how it works out. [27:15.000 --> 27:16.000] All right. [27:16.000 --> 27:19.000] I finally got a couple of callers up on the board here. [27:19.000 --> 27:22.000] Looks like we have Andrew in Pennsylvania up first. [27:22.000 --> 27:25.000] Andrew, what can we do for you? [27:25.000 --> 27:26.000] Hey, Eddie. [27:26.000 --> 27:30.000] There's something I want to do with tyranny alert when DowellVlog.com launches. [27:30.000 --> 27:35.000] I think I might as well talk to you about this now so it doesn't become one of those what are you thinking situations. [27:35.000 --> 27:41.000] In January 2013, I read an article in my paper talking about how a local police department [27:41.000 --> 27:46.000] was going to change the way that they do their jobs because they believe the official story of Sandy Hook. [27:46.000 --> 27:48.000] And I went to that police department. [27:48.000 --> 27:52.000] I told them, hey, you guys have been had the government stages to just start taking our guns. [27:52.000 --> 27:54.000] And the clerk in the front desk said, well, you know what? [27:54.000 --> 27:56.000] We're going to go along with the government lie. [27:56.000 --> 27:57.000] That's all I have to say to you. [27:57.000 --> 27:58.000] Have a nice day. [27:58.000 --> 28:00.000] That left a really bad taste in my mouth. [28:00.000 --> 28:05.000] And right now, I would really like to make a sign that says this police department wants to take your guns [28:05.000 --> 28:10.000] and walk back and forth on the sidewalk in front of the Cheltenham, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania police department. [28:10.000 --> 28:14.000] And there's no doubt that I obviously confront the cops with this, and it could turn ugly. [28:14.000 --> 28:18.000] But that's why I'm willing to wait until you have tyranny alert activated. [28:18.000 --> 28:23.000] So I did not get the front desk clerk on film when I did this, and I do regret that. [28:23.000 --> 28:27.000] But just to make sure this doesn't become a what are you thinking scenario, do you recommend I do this? [28:27.000 --> 28:31.000] And if I do, what would be the best course of action if the cops confront me? [28:31.000 --> 28:33.000] Well, let me ask you a question, Andrew. [28:33.000 --> 28:42.000] What exactly do you think is going to be the positive result of doing any of that? [28:42.000 --> 28:48.000] Waking people up to the fact that there's a police department that wants to go along with anti-gun tyranny to impose tyranny. [28:48.000 --> 28:55.000] Are you under some impression that the majority of folks that love police are going to buy what you're saying [28:55.000 --> 29:00.000] and those that don't like police don't already know that? [29:00.000 --> 29:02.000] Consider your audience here. [29:02.000 --> 29:07.000] Those that don't like the cops are going to already agree and know everything you're talking about. [29:07.000 --> 29:11.000] So you're not raising any new level of awareness. [29:11.000 --> 29:18.000] And those that love the cops are going to hate the very fact that you're even attempting to do that. [29:18.000 --> 29:29.000] So again, the question boils down to what is the positive outcome you want from what you're going to do? [29:29.000 --> 29:34.000] That's just one of those things where I thought you can't do any harm in exposing anti-gun. [29:34.000 --> 29:37.000] No, that ain't necessarily true. [29:37.000 --> 29:46.000] It's not necessarily true that because you choose to expose a particular fact that you're not actually doing a bigger harm than good. [29:46.000 --> 29:49.000] That's not necessarily true. [29:49.000 --> 29:55.000] Anyway, hang on just a second and we will be right back and we'll finish this up on the other side, okay? [29:55.000 --> 29:56.000] Okay. [29:56.000 --> 30:00.000] All right, folks, we'll be right back. Y'all hang in there. [30:00.000 --> 30:07.000] The Ten Commandments are a cornerstone of Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. [30:07.000 --> 30:11.000] If you're an educated person, you should probably know them, regardless of your religion. [30:11.000 --> 30:16.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with a tip to help you remember one of the Ten Commandments. [30:16.000 --> 30:18.000] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.000 --> 30:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.000 --> 30:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.000 --> 30:28.000] So protect your rights. [30:28.000 --> 30:32.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.000 --> 30:34.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.000 --> 30:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:38.000 --> 30:42.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.000 --> 30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.000 --> 30:51.000] What three-letter word practically passes for a four-letter word these days? G-O-D. [30:51.000 --> 30:56.000] But commandment number three says don't use that three-letter word, God's name, as a cuss word. [30:56.000 --> 31:00.000] The Bible says, Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain. [31:00.000 --> 31:05.000] People who follow this commandment don't say, oh my. Instead, they might say, oh my gosh. [31:05.000 --> 31:11.000] Of all the world's moral codes, the Ten Commandments have probably inspired more commitment and controversy than any other. [31:11.000 --> 31:16.000] The next time they come up in conversation, you'll be prepared by knowing that commandment number three [31:16.000 --> 31:20.000] says to use that three-letter word, God's name, with reverence. [31:20.000 --> 31:35.000] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:50.000 --> 32:01.000] . [32:01.000 --> 32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.000 --> 32:10.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.000 --> 32:13.000] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.000 --> 32:17.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.000 --> 32:20.000] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.000 --> 32:25.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.000 --> 32:31.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.000 --> 32:35.000] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [32:35.000 --> 32:41.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.000 --> 32:45.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.000 --> 32:51.000] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.000 --> 32:55.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.000 --> 33:15.000] Order your copy today and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [33:15.000 --> 33:25.000] Yes, I got a warrant and I'm going to solve them to the help of the government to prosecute them. [33:25.000 --> 33:31.000] Okay. [33:31.000 --> 33:55.000] Hi folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [33:55.000 --> 34:05.000] All right, apparently I'm hurting some feelings by using the word stupid and talking about how some of this stuff makes me feel and having to respond to it at times. [34:05.000 --> 34:15.000] Folks, believe me, if you had to spend as much time as I do answering the same questions over and over and giving out the same answers over and over, [34:15.000 --> 34:25.000] you'd get a tad bit frustrated with it at times too. But I am not directing my comments at any particular person or individual or group of people. [34:25.000 --> 34:33.000] I am using it as a general example of the things people are not taking the time to figure out and learn. [34:33.000 --> 34:41.000] I don't want to be the only source of this information for people to come running to. [34:41.000 --> 34:49.000] That makes me the weakest link. That makes me the guy that everybody paints a target on [34:49.000 --> 34:57.000] because you get rid of me and everybody else that's running to me for their drink of knowledge doesn't know where to go next. [34:57.000 --> 35:05.000] That is my issue with this. It's not the fact that I'm helping people. It's not the fact that I'm trying to answer questions. [35:05.000 --> 35:15.000] It's the fact that the questions themselves are basic enough that people should be able to start somewhere on their own [35:15.000 --> 35:21.000] even after I've already started answering the question. But everybody keeps running back to me, okay, well, that was one. [35:21.000 --> 35:25.000] Now what's two? Now what comes after two? What comes after three? What comes after four? [35:25.000 --> 35:35.000] And they're making no effort to actually sit down and read the codes and the rules themselves. [35:35.000 --> 35:40.000] I can only explain so much. You're the one that's got to take it into the courtroom. [35:40.000 --> 35:46.000] If you don't know how it works on a personal level, you will get screwed on a personal level. [35:46.000 --> 35:56.000] Take it or leave it. And to me, to have that attitude about my own well-being and outcome and ignoring it, well, that's stupid. [35:56.000 --> 36:07.000] That's just my thoughts on the process. I chose a long time ago to not be stupid, not to rely on someone else no matter how much they knew. [36:07.000 --> 36:17.000] I would ask questions when I absolutely couldn't get by somewhere. If I could not figure out how this works and why it isn't working this way, [36:17.000 --> 36:22.000] then I would bother to ask a question. But for the most part, I tried to figure out how this worked myself. [36:22.000 --> 36:31.000] That's how I got on this show, because I took something that was happening to me, very personal to me and very detrimental to me, [36:31.000 --> 36:42.000] and decided that I was going to own it instead of the other way around. I didn't have anybody to ask questions to until I found Randy and Deborah here at Rule of Law. [36:42.000 --> 36:51.000] And then, yeah, I called, and I told them what was going on. But I didn't ask them how all of this worked. [36:51.000 --> 36:59.000] I told them what was going on with me, and I told them what I had spent so much time and effort in trying to figure out about [36:59.000 --> 37:07.000] why these people thought they could get away with doing what they were doing. That is what makes me talk the way I do, [37:07.000 --> 37:19.000] because I don't consider myself any more special than anyone else out there. And it bugs me when somebody comes to me for an answer [37:19.000 --> 37:26.000] that I feel they are perfectly capable of helping themselves get. I'm not trying to put people down. [37:26.000 --> 37:32.000] I'm trying to piss them off to the point where they'll say, screw it, I'm going to figure this out. [37:32.000 --> 37:39.000] Now, if that makes you butt hurt, I can't do anything about that part of it. That's a personal issue you're going to have to get over, [37:39.000 --> 37:50.000] because I'm not directing personal attacks at anyone. If I was doing that, I would be naming names, and I'm not doing that. [37:50.000 --> 37:58.000] What I'm trying to get you to understand is I am not the bottomless water well in the desert. [37:58.000 --> 38:06.000] I can disappear tomorrow, and then where are you going to be if you don't know where to find your own oasis? [38:06.000 --> 38:19.000] That's my point. This is about teaching you to do what I do, so you do not have to keep coming back to me. [38:19.000 --> 38:25.000] So if you're offended by what I said tonight, well, then I'm sad that you're offended, [38:25.000 --> 38:33.000] and I apologize if you think that that was my intent, but I'm here to tell you it was not. [38:33.000 --> 38:40.000] So if that's how you're taking it, get over it, because that's not the way I meant it. [38:40.000 --> 38:50.000] This is about learning, not about being upset about the way that I'm having to talk about things to make it clear why I'm talking about them. [38:50.000 --> 38:54.000] All right, let's go back to Andrew. All right, Andrew, sorry for the delay. [38:54.000 --> 38:57.000] That's all right. I think you pretty much answered that. [38:57.000 --> 39:03.000] But one more thing I'd like to clear up, because a couple weeks ago when you did that mock trial thing, [39:03.000 --> 39:08.000] there was one instance where the guy mentioned the phrase transportation code, and you didn't object. [39:08.000 --> 39:11.000] Are there any times where they would mention the eight deadly sins? [39:11.000 --> 39:19.000] Why would I object to transportation code if it's used in the proper context of meaning I'm talking about transportation? [39:19.000 --> 39:26.000] Yeah, that's what I figured, but I'm getting from that that there's obviously times where the prosecution can use one of the eight deadly sins. [39:26.000 --> 39:34.000] No, I'm going to object to the use of transportation by itself in reference to an activity that they say I was engaged in. [39:34.000 --> 39:38.000] I can't object to the code because there is one. [39:38.000 --> 39:44.000] Okay, but if you're saying I'm driving, then you're inferring transportation, which isn't the code. [39:44.000 --> 39:50.000] The code is just what codifies the act known as. That's the difference. [39:50.000 --> 39:56.000] Yeah, and is there any other times besides transportation that would often pop up where that would be? [39:56.000 --> 40:05.000] Any time you're using one of the sins to reference an activity that you're accusing me of engaging in is when. [40:05.000 --> 40:08.000] Okay. All right. Thanks, Eddie. [40:08.000 --> 40:09.000] All right. [40:09.000 --> 40:10.000] Thanks. Later. [40:10.000 --> 40:12.000] All right, Andrew. Thanks for calling in. [40:12.000 --> 40:13.000] Bye. [40:13.000 --> 40:14.000] Bye-bye. [40:14.000 --> 40:17.000] Now, see, Andrew is a good example. [40:17.000 --> 40:21.000] Andrew and I will talk on Facebook. [40:21.000 --> 40:27.000] I've been on his radio show with him, and I give him a hard time because of some of the stuff that he puts up on my timeline. [40:27.000 --> 40:38.000] And I don't pull any punches with him, but he knows enough to know I'm not talking to him on a you're a complete and total personal idiot level. [40:38.000 --> 40:40.000] I don't agree with a lot of the things he puts up there. [40:40.000 --> 40:42.000] He doesn't agree with a lot of what I put up there. [40:42.000 --> 40:48.000] But we're not chasing each other around squeezing our butt and going, look at the bruise you left. [40:48.000 --> 40:50.000] Come on, people. [40:50.000 --> 40:51.000] All right. [40:51.000 --> 40:56.000] Now we have somebody named Deliverance in Oregon. [40:56.000 --> 40:57.000] Hello. [40:57.000 --> 40:58.000] Hello. [40:58.000 --> 40:59.000] Hi. [40:59.000 --> 41:11.000] Well, I'm just calling in today because I got my first ticket ever, and it was a red light traffic, the camera violation. [41:11.000 --> 41:23.000] And I was Googling things, and I looked up, and I just found a letter that you had put together for the respondent's special appearance and demand letter. [41:23.000 --> 41:24.000] Uh-huh. [41:24.000 --> 41:29.000] So my question is, my trial is in two days or- [41:29.000 --> 41:33.000] Now, does this one specifically say it's for red light and or speeding cameras? [41:33.000 --> 41:34.000] Yes. [41:34.000 --> 41:35.000] Okay. [41:35.000 --> 41:37.000] When I got it, that was the one. [41:37.000 --> 41:38.000] Okay. [41:38.000 --> 41:47.000] Yeah, and so my question is, I'm supposed to appear in two days at the courthouse, but I didn't know. [41:47.000 --> 42:04.000] I had written up something myself to just go and show up and say, hey, you know, my accuser is not present, you know, for a due process to take place. [42:04.000 --> 42:06.000] Your accuser has to be present, but they're not. [42:06.000 --> 42:09.000] And so I request that you dismiss this. [42:09.000 --> 42:19.000] Would you recommend that I, even though it's only two days until I'm supposed to appear, that I just go and send this letter instead? [42:19.000 --> 42:20.000] Yours or mine? [42:20.000 --> 42:21.000] Huh? [42:21.000 --> 42:22.000] Yours or mine? [42:22.000 --> 42:23.000] Yours. [42:23.000 --> 42:26.000] Yeah, the sooner you send it in, the better. [42:26.000 --> 42:29.000] Okay. [42:29.000 --> 42:39.000] And you can always carry a copy of it showing that it was mailed, whatever you mail, you mail return receipt requested, certified mail return receipt requested. [42:39.000 --> 42:41.000] Somebody has to sign for it. [42:41.000 --> 42:48.000] The other thing you need to find out is in Oregon, what type of ticket are red light cameras? [42:48.000 --> 42:54.000] For instance, here in Texas, they're civil administrative, which makes them bills of pains and penalties. [42:54.000 --> 43:07.000] They all are, but those are most definitely such, and they're outlawed by that fact alone, which is also addressed in that letter, if it's the one, if it's the one I actually wrote. [43:07.000 --> 43:10.000] So all of that's in there. [43:10.000 --> 43:16.000] So you need to know how those types of tickets are supposed to be handled in Oregon. [43:16.000 --> 43:24.000] And that will give you a better idea of what rules you need to be aware of when you go into the court with it in a couple days. [43:24.000 --> 43:25.000] Wow. [43:25.000 --> 43:26.000] Okay. [43:26.000 --> 43:34.000] Okay, because you don't want to go in there ready to play baseball, and they're going to be using tennis rules. [43:34.000 --> 43:36.000] Right. [43:36.000 --> 43:37.000] Okay. [43:37.000 --> 43:38.000] Okay. [43:38.000 --> 43:40.000] All right. [43:40.000 --> 43:43.000] Anything else? [43:43.000 --> 43:44.000] No, I guess that's it. [43:44.000 --> 43:49.000] Okay, well, if you think of something else, feel free to call back in before the show is over tonight. [43:49.000 --> 43:51.000] We'll see if we can get you rounded up, okay? [43:51.000 --> 43:52.000] All right, thank you. [43:52.000 --> 43:53.000] You're welcome. [43:53.000 --> 43:56.000] All right, folks, 512-646-1984. [43:56.000 --> 43:57.000] Give us a call. [43:57.000 --> 44:00.000] We will be right back. [44:00.000 --> 44:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:04.000 --> 44:13.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours. [44:13.000 --> 44:15.000] Step-by-step. [44:15.000 --> 44:18.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.000 --> 44:22.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.000 --> 44:27.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [44:27.000 --> 44:33.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [44:33.000 --> 44:42.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:42.000 --> 44:51.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [44:51.000 --> 45:00.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [45:00.000 --> 45:13.000] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Suite D here in Austin, Texas, [45:13.000 --> 45:19.000] to find brave new books and chase things, to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:23.000 --> 45:31.000] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [45:31.000 --> 45:44.000] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [45:44.000 --> 45:54.000] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [46:14.000 --> 46:31.000] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. Call in number 512-646-1984. [46:31.000 --> 46:37.000] All right, we've got Mojo in Texas on the line. Mojo, what can we do for you? [46:37.000 --> 46:45.000] Hey, it's been a while since I called in. I just finished my taxes tonight, and the point you made about reading the code [46:45.000 --> 46:52.000] and understanding was driven home to me 10 or 15 years ago when I trusted an accountant and submitted a tax return, [46:52.000 --> 46:58.000] and it came back to me, and the IRS hit me with all kinds of penalties, and I do my own taxes now, and I call the IRS, [46:58.000 --> 47:01.000] and they give me a helpline, and when I have a question, I ask them. [47:01.000 --> 47:05.000] Then I write down the number of the person who talked to me, ask them for a badge number. [47:05.000 --> 47:08.000] So what you're saying about trying to read the code is right on. [47:08.000 --> 47:15.000] I mean, I've been listening to Rule of Law for 10 years now, and I haven't paid a traffic ticket in a really long time [47:15.000 --> 47:21.000] because I do what you guys say, and, you know, it works, and you've just got to read it and understand. [47:21.000 --> 47:27.000] Yeah, I mean, I agree. I mean, it's not that I have a problem with this being your very first experience at times. [47:27.000 --> 47:33.000] You call in and say, okay, look, I've never done this before, and I have no clue what to do, so tell me where to start, [47:33.000 --> 47:38.000] and I say, okay, go read this chapter, this chapter, this chapter, and this chapter. [47:38.000 --> 47:43.000] You don't know what's in these chapters. There ain't nothing I can do for you until that's done. [47:43.000 --> 47:47.000] And then you call me back in three or four days, well, I read all this. [47:47.000 --> 47:50.000] Oh, good. Well, then you need to know you need to do this, this, and this. [47:50.000 --> 47:53.000] Well, no. Where did it say that? [47:53.000 --> 47:55.000] Then you didn't read it. [47:55.000 --> 47:56.000] Exactly. [47:56.000 --> 48:01.000] But I bought this first dictionary course a number of years ago after I had called in a few times for Andy, [48:01.000 --> 48:04.000] and maybe it was even before you were on the show. [48:04.000 --> 48:10.000] Yeah, I've only been on here like 2008 or 2009, something like that. [48:10.000 --> 48:15.000] Yeah, but the course really helped open up my eyes really to what law is about. [48:15.000 --> 48:21.000] And it looks different underneath than it does on the surface, don't it? [48:21.000 --> 48:26.000] It's a lot deeper. And if you just are intelligent and go about it in a methodical manner, [48:26.000 --> 48:29.000] you can be just as effective as any lawyer in court, you know? [48:29.000 --> 48:32.000] Yeah, but you have to put the personal effort into it. [48:32.000 --> 48:35.000] And that has been my whole point tonight. [48:35.000 --> 48:41.000] This requires personal effort and involvement on the participant, not the advisor. [48:41.000 --> 48:46.000] Right. And so I had told my wife about it for a bunch of years, and she would always just pay [48:46.000 --> 48:48.000] because she didn't want to have the hassle. [48:48.000 --> 48:52.000] And she finally started pleading not guilty and asking for a trial. [48:52.000 --> 48:55.000] And she's had everyone dismissed, too. They don't ever even make it to trial. [48:55.000 --> 48:57.000] They just dismiss it. [48:57.000 --> 48:59.000] Yeah. [48:59.000 --> 49:02.000] That's a good thing for people to know, that if you're willing to invest the time [49:02.000 --> 49:07.000] and learn and play the rules, you won't even go into the courtroom more than once or twice. [49:07.000 --> 49:09.000] Yeah, now let me ask you a question. [49:09.000 --> 49:11.000] Since the first couple of times that you've called in [49:11.000 --> 49:14.000] and learned how to apply yourself to learning this on your own, [49:14.000 --> 49:22.000] how often have you called in to ask for the same information from somebody that you already knew? [49:22.000 --> 49:25.000] I haven't called back and asked for any information. [49:25.000 --> 49:29.000] I go online and I find it or I read the code or I go to Jurisdictionary. [49:29.000 --> 49:34.000] I do find myself learning from when you or Randy tell stories about what y'all are doing [49:34.000 --> 49:37.000] and what you did in a specific situation. [49:37.000 --> 49:39.000] I find myself trying to apply that knowledge, [49:39.000 --> 49:42.000] but I don't find myself having to go back and ask questions too much. [49:42.000 --> 49:47.000] Exactly, because you've already figured out, well, this is where I found it last time. [49:47.000 --> 49:51.000] Let me go see if something's changed, or at least let me make sure I'm current. [49:51.000 --> 49:52.000] Right. [49:52.000 --> 49:55.000] And you'll go back and you'll review it, and I guarantee you, [49:55.000 --> 50:00.000] you will retain that much longer and better and in more detail [50:00.000 --> 50:05.000] than if you sit here and just listen to me tell you what it is over and over again. [50:05.000 --> 50:07.000] Yeah, what I found myself doing a lot of times, [50:07.000 --> 50:09.000] because I tend to listen on my way home from work sometimes, [50:09.000 --> 50:12.000] is I'll just write down something that y'all talk about, [50:12.000 --> 50:17.000] and then I'll go the next day and kind of Google it up and just sort of reinforce what I heard. [50:17.000 --> 50:18.000] Thank you. [50:18.000 --> 50:20.000] See, that's exactly my point. [50:20.000 --> 50:24.000] I know I talk about this stuff enough on the show that if you've gone back [50:24.000 --> 50:26.000] and listened to any of the archives, [50:26.000 --> 50:29.000] especially the early stuff when I started doing traffic on a regular basis [50:29.000 --> 50:31.000] every three nights a week, [50:31.000 --> 50:38.000] there is more than enough on there to drive you nuts trying to research the statutes. [50:38.000 --> 50:40.000] But guess what? [50:40.000 --> 50:43.000] I had to do it in order to give you that information. [50:43.000 --> 50:47.000] What does it mean when you are not willing to take it upon yourself [50:47.000 --> 50:50.000] to verify what I've already given you for free? [50:50.000 --> 50:54.000] You're just going to trust that your person is steering you right [50:54.000 --> 50:57.000] like I did with that accountant that sent me sideways? [50:57.000 --> 50:58.000] There you go. [50:58.000 --> 51:02.000] And that is a responsibility I don't want from anyone. [51:02.000 --> 51:06.000] I want people to be responsible for themselves. [51:06.000 --> 51:10.000] Yeah, so I did mine tonight, and it only took me two, three hours, [51:10.000 --> 51:16.000] but it took me probably two days to get prepared to do the two hours online. [51:16.000 --> 51:21.000] And I appreciate the calling in and applying what I've been saying about this. [51:21.000 --> 51:24.000] I really appreciate the support on that because, like I say, [51:24.000 --> 51:27.000] my intention in what I said tonight was not to hurt anyone's feelings [51:27.000 --> 51:31.000] or to attack any individual specifically for asking questions. [51:31.000 --> 51:32.000] That's not it. [51:32.000 --> 51:37.000] Mine is to attack the laziness of the concept of I don't have the time [51:37.000 --> 51:40.000] or the willingness to figure it out. [51:40.000 --> 51:42.000] Then you better hire a lawyer. [51:42.000 --> 51:44.000] Yeah, or pay it and walk away. [51:44.000 --> 51:46.000] Right, okay, walk away, exactly. [51:46.000 --> 51:48.000] And I said I hadn't paid a ticket in 10 years. [51:48.000 --> 51:51.000] I have paid a couple that I did not have the time. [51:51.000 --> 51:54.000] Like I got in a foreign state or something, like in Louisiana or somewhere, [51:54.000 --> 51:57.000] and I just didn't have time to deal with their court. [51:57.000 --> 52:00.000] And I paid because it was easier to deal with that. [52:00.000 --> 52:03.000] But here in Travis County, you should plead not guilty [52:03.000 --> 52:06.000] and talk to the judge and talk to the prosecutor again. [52:06.000 --> 52:08.000] I know they don't want me to say that, but if you go there [52:08.000 --> 52:10.000] and you stand up for your rights nine times out of 10, [52:10.000 --> 52:12.000] they're going to not even let you see a judge. [52:12.000 --> 52:13.000] You just don't throw it out. [52:13.000 --> 52:15.000] Yeah, exactly. [52:15.000 --> 52:17.000] So anyway, that's what I wanted to say tonight, [52:17.000 --> 52:18.000] and I really appreciate the show. [52:18.000 --> 52:19.000] I really do. [52:19.000 --> 52:20.000] All right, well, thanks for calling in, Mojo. [52:20.000 --> 52:21.000] I appreciate it a lot. [52:21.000 --> 52:23.000] Bye-bye. [52:23.000 --> 52:26.000] Okay, folks, and I don't want to spend the rest of the evening [52:26.000 --> 52:29.000] trying to defend what I've said because I don't believe I was wrong [52:29.000 --> 52:32.000] in what I said as far as the general purpose of the message, [52:32.000 --> 52:37.000] and that is that when you come to rely on someone else [52:37.000 --> 52:40.000] as the only place for you to get information, [52:40.000 --> 52:42.000] that is going to be your downfall, [52:42.000 --> 52:47.000] especially if they're wrong, and I don't want that liability. [52:47.000 --> 52:50.000] I don't believe I'm wrong in what I tell you, [52:50.000 --> 52:55.000] but I have studied this so close, so hard for so long [52:55.000 --> 52:59.000] that I could wind up missing something very easily. [52:59.000 --> 53:02.000] It's like sitting here and writing 10 different court pleadings [53:02.000 --> 53:03.000] in a single day. [53:03.000 --> 53:06.000] After a while, the facts tend to blend together, [53:06.000 --> 53:09.000] and then I have to start wondering when I go back and read something, [53:09.000 --> 53:11.000] oh, man, why is this fact in this document? [53:11.000 --> 53:13.000] That case and this case, they're two different people. [53:13.000 --> 53:15.000] That shouldn't even be here, [53:15.000 --> 53:18.000] and it's come to where everything I was doing has run together, [53:18.000 --> 53:21.000] and I have to go back and double-check everything. [53:21.000 --> 53:25.000] Well, when I'm up for several days in a row reading something, [53:25.000 --> 53:29.000] writing something, or trying to outline an argument [53:29.000 --> 53:34.000] and build the fact base for it and everything else, that can happen, [53:34.000 --> 53:40.000] and that's exactly why I want somebody to apply their own eyes to it. [53:40.000 --> 53:43.000] I want someone else looking at this [53:43.000 --> 53:46.000] and seeing if they see something that I said [53:46.000 --> 53:49.000] that doesn't match what they're reading, [53:49.000 --> 53:52.000] then it gives them an opportunity to question, okay? [53:52.000 --> 53:54.000] You want to ask me this? That's fine. [53:54.000 --> 54:00.000] That's a legitimate question based upon a legitimate observation. [54:00.000 --> 54:04.000] But asking me questions based on laziness, [54:04.000 --> 54:08.000] that's a whole other matter, okay? [54:08.000 --> 54:11.000] That to me is the entire thing I'm talking about. [54:11.000 --> 54:17.000] Wanting my help as long as my help relieves you of all responsibility. [54:17.000 --> 54:19.000] I ain't into that. [54:19.000 --> 54:23.000] My job as far as I believe it to be and understand it is, [54:23.000 --> 54:28.000] is to train you to know as much as or more than me [54:28.000 --> 54:31.000] in the most expedient manner possible. [54:31.000 --> 54:35.000] And when you're making it obvious to me [54:35.000 --> 54:40.000] that you have made no effort to do that, it bugs me. [54:40.000 --> 54:45.000] And that's not meant to attack, again, anyone on a personal level. [54:45.000 --> 54:47.000] It's not. [54:47.000 --> 54:52.000] But we are all responsible for ourselves, like it or not. [54:52.000 --> 54:55.000] I am not responsible for you. [54:55.000 --> 54:59.000] I am not your keeper. I'm not your daddy. I'm not your mama. [54:59.000 --> 55:04.000] I'm me. You're you. Own that. [55:04.000 --> 55:06.000] I will help where I can help. [55:06.000 --> 55:11.000] But I do not want you to rely on me [55:11.000 --> 55:14.000] unless I have specifically looked you in the eye and said, [55:14.000 --> 55:17.000] rely on me. [55:17.000 --> 55:22.000] I will take the responsibility to do this for you. [55:22.000 --> 55:27.000] Until I do that, this is your fight. [55:27.000 --> 55:31.000] This is your task. It is not mine. [55:31.000 --> 55:34.000] And while I don't mind answering questions, [55:34.000 --> 55:37.000] if you stop and think about the question you're asking, [55:37.000 --> 55:40.000] you might come to the conclusion there wasn't a need to ask it [55:40.000 --> 55:46.000] because you already knew. [55:46.000 --> 55:51.000] This is about self-reliance, personal responsibility, [55:51.000 --> 55:54.000] and taking control of it. [55:54.000 --> 55:57.000] That's what it's always had to be for me. [55:57.000 --> 56:02.000] I've learned a long time ago, don't put your faith in other people [56:02.000 --> 56:05.000] because other people will disappoint. [56:05.000 --> 56:10.000] They may not always mean to, but it'll happen. [56:10.000 --> 56:15.000] And it will almost always be at a time when you can't afford for it to happen. [56:15.000 --> 56:18.000] I don't want that blame sitting on my shoulders, [56:18.000 --> 56:21.000] and I don't want to have to put it on someone else's. [56:21.000 --> 56:23.000] But that's just me. [56:23.000 --> 56:26.000] Some people like going, that's this guy's fault. [56:26.000 --> 56:29.000] If he hadn't have done this to me, I'd have been fine. [56:29.000 --> 56:34.000] Well, that's because, as Mojo put it, [56:34.000 --> 56:38.000] you put your faith in somebody who convinced you they knew what they were doing, [56:38.000 --> 56:40.000] and then they kicked the chair right out from under you [56:40.000 --> 56:44.000] after you were trying to measure the noose on the ceiling. [56:44.000 --> 56:46.000] So what are you going to do? [56:46.000 --> 56:48.000] All right, folks, I need some callers. [56:48.000 --> 56:52.000] 512-646-1984. [56:52.000 --> 56:57.000] It's kind of a slow night, but just give me a call, [56:57.000 --> 57:00.000] and let's talk about something if you've got some. [57:00.000 --> 57:02.000] Now, while we're waiting on this, [57:02.000 --> 57:05.000] we've got just under two minutes before the next break comes around, [57:05.000 --> 57:08.000] so I'm going to continue on with this. [57:08.000 --> 57:12.000] When we're doing the classes on Sundays, [57:12.000 --> 57:18.000] the new format of three-minute intervals to do the round robin thing [57:18.000 --> 57:20.000] of picking up where the person before you left off [57:20.000 --> 57:23.000] to build upon it is actually working pretty good. [57:23.000 --> 57:27.000] Everybody seems to be enjoying it, and everybody is having to participate, [57:27.000 --> 57:31.000] whereas before they got to pick and choose whether or not they participated. [57:31.000 --> 57:32.000] Well, not anymore. [57:32.000 --> 57:35.000] You come to class, you will be participating. [57:35.000 --> 57:39.000] Whether you think you know anything or not, you're going to be participating. [57:39.000 --> 57:43.000] And I will give a scenario and everything, [57:43.000 --> 57:50.000] and I am going to be the person on the other side, whichever role you're playing. [57:50.000 --> 57:54.000] So I am not going to make it easy on you, and I'm not going to be nice about it. [57:54.000 --> 57:57.000] There will be no kid glove treatment. [57:57.000 --> 58:01.000] I'm going to make you afraid of me in that classroom, [58:01.000 --> 58:05.000] and I'm going to make you wonder if you can deal with what I'm doing, [58:05.000 --> 58:09.000] because if I can get you to a point where you can handle me [58:09.000 --> 58:11.000] without too much of a headache or a problem, [58:11.000 --> 58:17.000] then I'm pretty sure that you can go out and rock the world of any prosecutor or judge out there, [58:17.000 --> 58:22.000] because they're going to be a lot more afraid to do to you whatever they do [58:22.000 --> 58:25.000] than what I am in that classroom. [58:25.000 --> 58:29.000] So if you let me get you stumbling, fumbling, and bumming around in there, [58:29.000 --> 58:31.000] you're going to carry that out in real world with you, [58:31.000 --> 58:33.000] and it's my job to prevent that. [58:33.000 --> 58:35.000] I've got to get you prepared. [58:35.000 --> 58:38.000] So when you come to class, be ready to participate. [58:38.000 --> 58:42.000] But we're having a lot of fun right now, and we need a lot more people in there. [58:42.000 --> 58:46.000] People need to know how to do their job in a courtroom. [58:46.000 --> 58:50.000] 512-646-1984. [58:50.000 --> 58:54.000] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [58:54.000 --> 58:58.000] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.000 --> 59:02.000] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:02.000 --> 59:07.000] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:07.000 --> 59:09.000] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.000 --> 59:13.000] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:13.000 --> 59:18.000] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.000 --> 59:22.000] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:22.000 --> 59:25.000] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word [59:25.000 --> 59:28.000] beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.000 --> 59:33.000] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.000 --> 59:39.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free [59:39.000 --> 59:48.000] at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.000 --> 59:51.000] That's freestudybible.com. [59:51.000 --> 59:54.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [59:54.000 --> 01:00:03.000] logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:03.000 --> 01:00:07.000] This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, [01:00:07.000 --> 01:00:09.000] online at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:09.000 --> 01:00:14.000] I'm Brian Hagan with your Liberty Beat for Monday, April 14, 2014. [01:00:14.000 --> 01:00:23.000] Gold opens today at $1,323, silver opens at $19.81, and bitcoin is trading at $459.40. [01:00:23.000 --> 01:00:26.000] Support for Liberty Beat comes from growyourowngroceries.org, [01:00:26.000 --> 01:00:31.000] now offering an eight-week course where you can learn to treat the most common family ailments [01:00:31.000 --> 01:00:34.000] with simple medicines that you can grow or easily find. [01:00:34.000 --> 01:00:37.000] Learn more at growyourowngroceries.org. [01:00:37.000 --> 01:00:39.000] Support also comes from BitmainTech, [01:00:39.000 --> 01:00:43.000] creators of the newly released Antminer S2 Bitcoin Miner, [01:00:43.000 --> 01:00:46.000] one tera hash and only 1,000 watts. [01:00:46.000 --> 01:00:49.000] Order yours online today at bitmaintech.com. [01:00:49.000 --> 01:00:53.000] And support comes from Affordable Sound, CD and DVD duplication, [01:00:53.000 --> 01:00:55.000] along with posters and promotions materials. [01:00:55.000 --> 01:01:02.000] Online at affordablesound.com or call them at 512-459-5253. [01:01:02.000 --> 01:01:06.000] In the news, a former employee is alleging that Britain's largest drug company [01:01:06.000 --> 01:01:09.000] bribed doctors to prescribe their medications in Europe. [01:01:09.000 --> 01:01:13.000] The Telegraph reports that the former GlaxoSmith client sales representative [01:01:13.000 --> 01:01:17.000] claims that Polish doctors were paid to promote the company's asthma drug. [01:01:17.000 --> 01:01:20.000] Investigation has been launched and the BBC reports that 11 doctors [01:01:20.000 --> 01:01:26.000] and a GlaxoSmith client regional manager have been charged for their involvement in the scheme. [01:01:26.000 --> 01:01:33.000] The company has also been accused of bribery in China and Iraq. [01:01:33.000 --> 01:01:37.000] Minor earthquakes beneath the Appalachians have been linked to fracking. [01:01:37.000 --> 01:01:40.000] The finding comes through work conducted by Ohio geologists, [01:01:40.000 --> 01:01:42.000] according to the Associated Press. [01:01:42.000 --> 01:01:44.000] The discovery is being touted as the first time [01:01:44.000 --> 01:01:47.000] tremors have been directly associated with fracking. [01:01:47.000 --> 01:01:54.000] The five small quakes happened last month near Youngstown. [01:01:54.000 --> 01:01:57.000] On Thursday, the United States Sentencing Commission [01:01:57.000 --> 01:02:01.000] voted to reduce federal prison sentences for most drug offenses. [01:02:01.000 --> 01:02:05.000] The commission stated that the move would reduce the federal prison population [01:02:05.000 --> 01:02:09.000] by 6,500 inmates over the next five years. [01:02:09.000 --> 01:02:14.000] The changes are expected to reduce the average sentence for drug offenders by 11 months. [01:02:14.000 --> 01:02:18.000] Support for Liberty Beat comes from Voice and Exit, [01:02:18.000 --> 01:02:22.000] maximizing human flourishing through radical innovation. [01:02:22.000 --> 01:02:26.000] Tickets on sale now. Get 10% off with promo code FREEDOM [01:02:26.000 --> 01:02:32.000] June 21st at Austin Music Hall. Get yours at VoiceAndExit.com. [01:02:32.000 --> 01:02:34.000] Support also comes from The Cory Moore Show. [01:02:34.000 --> 01:02:38.000] Live Friday nights at 9 o'clock Central at CoryMoreShow.com. [01:02:38.000 --> 01:02:42.000] And support for Liberty Beat comes from Roberts & Roberts Brokerage, Inc. [01:02:42.000 --> 01:02:47.000] Precious medals at reasonable rates since 1977. [01:02:47.000 --> 01:02:50.000] Online at rrbi.co. [01:02:50.000 --> 01:02:55.000] This is the Liberty Beat for Monday, April 14th, 2014. [01:02:55.000 --> 01:03:00.000] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [01:03:00.000 --> 01:03:12.000] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. [01:03:12.000 --> 01:03:19.000] I read his book and he says he cares not for the unsightly. [01:03:19.000 --> 01:03:28.000] These warm-hearted come by that term rightly. [01:03:28.000 --> 01:03:31.000] I won't pay for the war with my body. [01:03:31.000 --> 01:03:35.000] She gonna pay for the car with my money. [01:03:35.000 --> 01:03:36.000] I won't pay for the war with my body. [01:03:36.000 --> 01:03:38.000] All right, folks, we are back. [01:03:38.000 --> 01:03:40.000] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:03:40.000 --> 01:03:45.000] Call in number 512-646-1984. [01:03:45.000 --> 01:03:47.000] I haven't into call boards, [01:03:47.000 --> 01:03:50.000] so I'm just glad to keep talking till I get somebody back on the phone here. [01:03:50.000 --> 01:03:52.000] It looks like some of the phones got turned off. [01:03:52.000 --> 01:03:56.000] But anyway, they're on now if you are having trouble getting in. [01:03:56.000 --> 01:03:58.000] Okay. [01:03:58.000 --> 01:04:02.000] Now, again, in the class, [01:04:02.000 --> 01:04:07.000] we're going through several things regarding the traffic stops, for instance. [01:04:07.000 --> 01:04:11.000] Let's deal with you being the person being stopped and me being the cop. [01:04:11.000 --> 01:04:15.000] Let's go through the scenario with the script on what to say, why to say it, [01:04:15.000 --> 01:04:17.000] how to say it, and so on and so forth. [01:04:17.000 --> 01:04:20.000] And that's what we worked on this past weekend. [01:04:20.000 --> 01:04:26.000] Now, I want to go into something on the script that hopefully if you have [01:04:26.000 --> 01:04:33.000] actually applied yourself to truly studying what is in the transportation script, [01:04:33.000 --> 01:04:35.000] you'll realize something. [01:04:35.000 --> 01:04:43.000] And that is that every single word that is used in that script in response to [01:04:43.000 --> 01:04:50.000] what an officer wants you to provide them with or to respond to is taken [01:04:50.000 --> 01:05:00.000] directly from case law surrounding the rights that that request or demand by [01:05:00.000 --> 01:05:06.000] the officer directly affects or potentially affects. [01:05:06.000 --> 01:05:13.000] And for that reason, it is extremely important that certain responses in the [01:05:13.000 --> 01:05:19.000] script are learned and used verbatim. [01:05:19.000 --> 01:05:25.000] One of those, in fact, being your response to the officer's demand for [01:05:25.000 --> 01:05:30.000] production of licensed registration and proof of financial responsibility. [01:05:30.000 --> 01:05:37.000] Now, it's very, very important that you word that right when you respond to it. [01:05:37.000 --> 01:05:39.000] You can't just sound like you're arguing with the cop. [01:05:39.000 --> 01:05:47.000] You cannot be the one asserting a factual argument about why he can't have it. [01:05:47.000 --> 01:05:50.000] We ask questions. [01:05:50.000 --> 01:05:54.000] We do not make arguments. [01:05:54.000 --> 01:05:59.000] And there is a big difference between the two. [01:05:59.000 --> 01:06:05.000] By asking questions, we make them make the argument. [01:06:05.000 --> 01:06:14.000] They assert the questionable facts that they are responsible for proving up later. [01:06:14.000 --> 01:06:17.000] You ask questions. [01:06:17.000 --> 01:06:22.000] That's exactly why that part of the script is written to say, [01:06:22.000 --> 01:06:26.000] Officer, I invoke my right to remain silent and my right to assistance of [01:06:26.000 --> 01:06:29.000] counsel in relation to the information you're demanding. [01:06:29.000 --> 01:06:32.000] Can any of it be used against me in a court of law or to potentially [01:06:32.000 --> 01:06:34.000] incriminate me in any way? [01:06:34.000 --> 01:06:39.000] If so, then I cannot waive my right to remain silent or my right to assistance [01:06:39.000 --> 01:06:43.000] of counsel prior to giving you any of that information and cannot, [01:06:43.000 --> 01:06:50.000] in good conscience, give you that information without advice of counsel. [01:06:50.000 --> 01:06:51.000] Okay? [01:06:51.000 --> 01:06:56.000] You haven't made any statements of fact other than I have a right, [01:06:56.000 --> 01:06:58.000] I'm invoking the right, I'm going to protect that right, [01:06:58.000 --> 01:07:01.000] and I will not waive that right. [01:07:01.000 --> 01:07:03.000] That's it. [01:07:03.000 --> 01:07:05.000] You're not asserting any fact of law. [01:07:05.000 --> 01:07:09.000] You're not asserting any argument regarding this code section or that code [01:07:09.000 --> 01:07:11.000] section or anything else. [01:07:11.000 --> 01:07:18.000] You're, most importantly, not attempting to educate the cop on his job. [01:07:18.000 --> 01:07:25.000] You are invoking, demanding, and protecting your rights. [01:07:25.000 --> 01:07:33.000] And that is the entire essence of what the script is for. [01:07:33.000 --> 01:07:36.000] So in relation to that invocation of rights, [01:07:36.000 --> 01:07:40.000] you need to learn how to make that rebuttal verbatim. [01:07:40.000 --> 01:07:43.000] Officer, can any of the information that you are demanding from me be used [01:07:43.000 --> 01:07:47.000] against me in a court of law to potentially incriminate me in any way? [01:07:47.000 --> 01:07:53.000] That word potentially is extremely important. [01:07:53.000 --> 01:07:56.000] Without potentially, this is the way it sounds. [01:07:56.000 --> 01:08:00.000] Officer, can this information incriminate me in any way? [01:08:00.000 --> 01:08:08.000] Now while it's still a question, you are simply giving the officer too broad [01:08:08.000 --> 01:08:13.000] a brush or too narrow a brush for him to answer positively yes or no, [01:08:13.000 --> 01:08:15.000] it can or it can't. [01:08:15.000 --> 01:08:21.000] Whereas with potentially, that's the court's word for your right is invocable [01:08:21.000 --> 01:08:32.000] over any direction and length of subject where you don't know if providing it [01:08:32.000 --> 01:08:38.000] would be detrimental to your legal well-being or not. [01:08:38.000 --> 01:08:48.000] And that potentially makes your refusal 100% valid for all purposes. [01:08:48.000 --> 01:08:54.000] If there is even the potential that you can use this against me, [01:08:54.000 --> 01:08:59.000] then without advice of counsel, I can't give it to you. [01:08:59.000 --> 01:09:01.000] That's it. [01:09:01.000 --> 01:09:09.000] That is the simple, plain, legal logic behind using those exact words to ask [01:09:09.000 --> 01:09:14.000] the officer that question. [01:09:14.000 --> 01:09:21.000] Now along with the one on invoking that one, as far as that right goes, [01:09:21.000 --> 01:09:25.000] the other one you want to try to get down verbatim is when the officer starts [01:09:25.000 --> 01:09:30.000] threatening you with some violent course of action that he's willing to take [01:09:30.000 --> 01:09:36.000] if you won't do exactly what he demands immediately. [01:09:36.000 --> 01:09:40.000] Officer, I have simply invoked my fundamentally protected right to remain silent [01:09:40.000 --> 01:09:44.000] and my right to assistance of counsel, and I've refused to waive those rights. [01:09:44.000 --> 01:09:51.000] Do you intend to arrest, incarcerate, or otherwise punish me or perpetrate harm [01:09:51.000 --> 01:09:55.000] against me or my property simply because I've invoked my [01:09:55.000 --> 01:09:59.000] fundamentally protected rights? [01:09:59.000 --> 01:10:04.000] Again, fundamentally protected rights. [01:10:04.000 --> 01:10:08.000] That is verbatim language from the courts on what your rights are [01:10:08.000 --> 01:10:12.000] and what you're supposed to do with them, okay? [01:10:12.000 --> 01:10:14.000] It's the court's own language. [01:10:14.000 --> 01:10:16.000] It's their buzzwords. [01:10:16.000 --> 01:10:21.000] That's why you want to use it because it immediately draws attention to what [01:10:21.000 --> 01:10:26.000] you're doing and why you're doing it. [01:10:26.000 --> 01:10:29.000] Officer, I've invoked my right to remain silent, my right to assistance of [01:10:29.000 --> 01:10:33.000] counsel, and I will not waive those rights to comply with your demands. [01:10:33.000 --> 01:10:39.000] Do you intend to arrest, incarcerate, punish, or harm me in any way or my [01:10:39.000 --> 01:10:45.000] property because I have invoked my protected fundamental rights? [01:10:45.000 --> 01:10:49.000] Repeat that over and over and over again if he is threatening violence against [01:10:49.000 --> 01:10:53.000] you or your car or anybody else. [01:10:53.000 --> 01:10:57.000] Because that is not going to look good for them in a courtroom. [01:10:57.000 --> 01:11:02.000] It's not going to look good for them in a federal lawsuit either. [01:11:02.000 --> 01:11:09.000] The script's got three prerogatives, only three. [01:11:09.000 --> 01:11:17.000] The last thing I want to receive in my email is a link to a video or an audio [01:11:17.000 --> 01:11:23.000] with the message, hey, man, I followed your script and this is what happened. [01:11:23.000 --> 01:11:29.000] And then when I go listen to it, there ain't nothing in that recording that [01:11:29.000 --> 01:11:37.000] goes with my script except the what not to do parts of it. [01:11:37.000 --> 01:11:40.000] It's written the way it is for a reason, believe it or not. [01:11:40.000 --> 01:11:44.000] It was not haphazard and I didn't do it in ten minutes. [01:11:44.000 --> 01:11:49.000] It took me a couple days to hash out the words that's used in that script the [01:11:49.000 --> 01:11:51.000] way they are. [01:11:51.000 --> 01:11:57.000] And I did a lot of case law reading to formulate what's in there the way it [01:11:57.000 --> 01:11:59.000] is. [01:11:59.000 --> 01:12:03.000] Now, you want to go do all that research and take all that time and understand [01:12:03.000 --> 01:12:06.000] all of the legal things the court goes through to make the determinations [01:12:06.000 --> 01:12:09.000] about when your rights are properly invoked and when they aren't? [01:12:09.000 --> 01:12:14.000] Hey, knock yourself out, okay? [01:12:14.000 --> 01:12:19.000] But when you do that, you don't have to come to me and say, hey, I followed [01:12:19.000 --> 01:12:21.000] your script. [01:12:21.000 --> 01:12:25.000] You're perfectly capable of making one of your own now, aren't you? [01:12:25.000 --> 01:12:29.000] Because by now you should be able to understand what the court's going to look [01:12:29.000 --> 01:12:33.000] at when you try to make that claim in court about why you didn't comply with [01:12:33.000 --> 01:12:38.000] that officer's unlawful demand and why in fact it was an unlawful demand. [01:12:38.000 --> 01:12:42.000] He was ordering you to waive a protected right so that he could have his way [01:12:42.000 --> 01:12:48.000] with your evidence and information. [01:12:48.000 --> 01:12:54.000] So until you realize that, he's going to take advantage of you. [01:12:54.000 --> 01:12:58.000] Now, since you're trusting that I did all that research and information, you're [01:12:58.000 --> 01:13:02.000] going to use the script, well, then don't come back and lay the blame at my feet [01:13:02.000 --> 01:13:11.000] for what happens when the video and audio shows you didn't follow it. [01:13:11.000 --> 01:13:14.000] And I've actually had a lot of that. [01:13:14.000 --> 01:13:18.000] You'll get one or two questions in and then suddenly you've charted your own [01:13:18.000 --> 01:13:20.000] course. [01:13:20.000 --> 01:13:24.000] And we're back to that toward a cliff at a high speed argument all over again [01:13:24.000 --> 01:13:28.000] in some cases. [01:13:28.000 --> 01:13:33.000] The important thing to remember is the script is designed to be fluid. [01:13:33.000 --> 01:13:37.000] In other words, you don't have to follow it from top to bottom. [01:13:37.000 --> 01:13:43.000] It's made where you may have to jump around based upon what's happening on [01:13:43.000 --> 01:13:47.000] site in the moment. [01:13:47.000 --> 01:13:52.000] You may literally have to jump down to the fourth or fifth or sixth page of the [01:13:52.000 --> 01:13:55.000] script in order to remember what you're supposed to say. [01:13:55.000 --> 01:14:00.000] But that, again, is why you're supposed to practice it as well. [01:14:00.000 --> 01:14:04.000] If you know what's in the script and you know the situation that would invoke [01:14:04.000 --> 01:14:09.000] that part of the script, then it shouldn't be a problem to pull it out of [01:14:09.000 --> 01:14:13.000] memory rather than thumbing through a page to go, okay, hold on, you asked me [01:14:13.000 --> 01:14:15.000] for this information. [01:14:15.000 --> 01:14:18.000] Well, officer, is that information anything you can use against me in a court [01:14:18.000 --> 01:14:22.000] of law or potentially used to incriminate me in any way? [01:14:22.000 --> 01:14:26.000] If so, then I must decline. [01:14:26.000 --> 01:14:28.000] See, not hard. [01:14:28.000 --> 01:14:30.000] Well, where are you going tonight? [01:14:30.000 --> 01:14:34.000] Officer, I've invoked my Sixth Amendment or my right to remain silent, my right [01:14:34.000 --> 01:14:36.000] to assistance of counsel. [01:14:36.000 --> 01:14:39.000] I can't answer any of your questions and I will not answer any of your questions. [01:14:39.000 --> 01:14:41.000] Thank you. [01:14:41.000 --> 01:14:46.000] Now, the other thing you'll notice is that there is no Fifth Amendment, Sixth [01:14:46.000 --> 01:14:52.000] Amendment, and things of that nature because we're not going to trust the [01:14:52.000 --> 01:14:56.000] federal constitution or courts with the well-being of our rights. [01:14:56.000 --> 01:15:01.000] We're going to trust them from a fundamental level because they're universal. [01:15:01.000 --> 01:15:03.000] They're not federally granted. [01:15:03.000 --> 01:15:05.000] They're not state granted. [01:15:05.000 --> 01:15:09.000] But they are protected at both levels. [01:15:09.000 --> 01:15:11.000] Treat them as fundamental. [01:15:11.000 --> 01:15:15.000] Don't reference any amendment as being responsible for them. [01:15:15.000 --> 01:15:22.000] Simply assert, my right to remain silent, my right to assistance of counsel. [01:15:22.000 --> 01:15:28.000] They don't have a documented source. [01:15:28.000 --> 01:15:31.000] They exist because you do. [01:15:31.000 --> 01:15:35.000] You are the source. [01:15:35.000 --> 01:15:37.000] Okay? [01:15:37.000 --> 01:15:40.000] And that also prevents you from having to worry about what particular state [01:15:40.000 --> 01:15:45.000] you're in and what its particular state constitution says is the Bill of Rights [01:15:45.000 --> 01:15:46.000] and blah, blah, blah. [01:15:46.000 --> 01:15:49.000] You don't have to remember any of that because these rights are yours no [01:15:49.000 --> 01:15:55.000] matter where you're at under what constitution. [01:15:55.000 --> 01:15:57.000] Okay? [01:15:57.000 --> 01:15:58.000] All right. [01:15:58.000 --> 01:16:00.000] We got a couple of other callers up on the board here. [01:16:00.000 --> 01:16:03.000] Gentlemen, y'all hang on because we've only got about another minute before we [01:16:03.000 --> 01:16:06.000] go to break here, less than that actually at this point. [01:16:06.000 --> 01:16:10.000] And so I will take the two calls I've got as soon as we come back from that [01:16:10.000 --> 01:16:11.000] break. [01:16:11.000 --> 01:16:14.000] So David, Brandon, y'all hang on and I'll get to you as soon as we get back up [01:16:14.000 --> 01:16:16.000] here. [01:16:16.000 --> 01:16:21.000] But folks, you really got to understand learning this script and committing it [01:16:21.000 --> 01:16:24.000] to memory is important. [01:16:24.000 --> 01:16:27.000] And you'll realize how important it is if you come to this class on the day [01:16:27.000 --> 01:16:29.000] when we're doing traffic stops. [01:16:29.000 --> 01:16:33.000] Because when I get in your face like any real cop's going to get in your face [01:16:33.000 --> 01:16:38.000] and start yelling at you and you don't have that thing committed to memory, I [01:16:38.000 --> 01:16:41.000] guarantee you the only response you're going to be able to give me is a [01:16:41.000 --> 01:16:44.000] trembling lip and a panic look. [01:16:44.000 --> 01:16:48.000] And that is not where you want to be. [01:16:48.000 --> 01:16:52.000] So study, commit to memory, be ready. [01:16:52.000 --> 01:16:56.000] All right, 512-646-1984. [01:16:56.000 --> 01:17:01.000] We will be right back. [01:17:01.000 --> 01:17:04.000] At Capital Coin and Boolean, our mission is to be your preferred shopping [01:17:04.000 --> 01:17:07.000] destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at [01:17:07.000 --> 01:17:09.000] an affordable price. 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[01:17:39.000 --> 01:17:43.000] We've worked for Metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:17:43.000 --> 01:17:46.000] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:17:46.000 --> 01:17:50.000] We're located at 7304 Burnet Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of [01:17:50.000 --> 01:17:51.000] Anderson. [01:17:51.000 --> 01:17:54.000] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:17:54.000 --> 01:18:00.000] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullying.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:18:00.000 --> 01:18:02.000] My name is Jessica Arman. [01:18:02.000 --> 01:18:05.000] I'm an activist, a GCN listener, and mother of three. [01:18:05.000 --> 01:18:09.000] Our drinking water and food are filled with fluoride and other contaminants that [01:18:09.000 --> 01:18:10.000] harm our teeth and gums. [01:18:10.000 --> 01:18:14.000] To protect my family, I created My Magic Mud, an all natural teeth brightening [01:18:14.000 --> 01:18:15.000] and strengthening remedy. [01:18:15.000 --> 01:18:19.000] My Magic Mud is a soft powder that polishes your teeth, reduces sensitivity, [01:18:19.000 --> 01:18:22.000] and removes harmful toxins from deep inside your mouth. [01:18:22.000 --> 01:18:24.000] You deserve a bright, healthy smile. [01:18:24.000 --> 01:18:27.000] Visit mymagicmud.com and get yours today. [01:18:27.000 --> 01:18:29.000] That's mymagicmud.com. [01:18:29.000 --> 01:18:30.000] Hi, this is Kurt Hildebrand. [01:18:30.000 --> 01:18:33.000] I've been using Magic Mud for a while now and I just can't believe how much [01:18:33.000 --> 01:18:35.000] healthier my teeth and gums feel. [01:18:35.000 --> 01:18:36.000] I love the product. [01:18:36.000 --> 01:18:38.000] This is Anna Martin, the Libertarian Homeschooler. [01:18:38.000 --> 01:18:40.000] I homeschool, so I drink coffee. [01:18:40.000 --> 01:18:42.000] And I drink coffee, so I use Magic Mud. [01:18:42.000 --> 01:18:44.000] It gets my teeth really clean. [01:18:44.000 --> 01:18:45.000] Give it a try. [01:18:45.000 --> 01:18:47.000] This is John Bush of the Liberty Beat. [01:18:47.000 --> 01:18:50.000] My wife and I use My Magic Mud because it brightens our smile and our daughter [01:18:50.000 --> 01:18:52.000] uses it because it makes brushing fun. [01:18:52.000 --> 01:18:57.000] To get your can of My Magic Mud, go to Brave New Books or order it online [01:18:57.000 --> 01:19:00.000] at mymagicmud.com. [01:19:00.000 --> 01:19:21.000] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:21.000 --> 01:19:35.000] All right, folks, we are back. [01:19:35.000 --> 01:19:37.000] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:37.000 --> 01:19:40.000] All right, we've got about 45 minutes in the show. [01:19:40.000 --> 01:19:42.000] We've got two other callers up on the board. [01:19:42.000 --> 01:19:45.000] We're still going to need some more people here unless these questions wind up [01:19:45.000 --> 01:19:49.000] being long, 512-646-1984. [01:19:49.000 --> 01:19:51.000] And we're going to go to David in South Dakota. [01:19:51.000 --> 01:19:54.000] David, what can we do for you? [01:19:54.000 --> 01:19:55.000] Hi, Eddie, this is David. [01:19:55.000 --> 01:19:58.000] I appreciate all you do and have done. [01:19:58.000 --> 01:20:03.000] I have two questions, I believe, quick. [01:20:03.000 --> 01:20:10.000] I'm a licensed commercial operator, and I have been since I was age 13, [01:20:10.000 --> 01:20:13.000] and I'm well over 50. [01:20:13.000 --> 01:20:18.000] Anyway, I now find that there's a requirement for me to drive commercially [01:20:18.000 --> 01:20:26.000] and be paid to drive commercially, I have to have a DOT medical card. [01:20:26.000 --> 01:20:27.000] Here's my question. [01:20:27.000 --> 01:20:32.000] My commercial Class A license is out of Boston, Texas. [01:20:32.000 --> 01:20:35.000] I'm actually in South Dakota. [01:20:35.000 --> 01:20:38.000] Is there a requirement you know of? [01:20:38.000 --> 01:20:43.000] I can't find where this requirement for DOT medical card comes in, [01:20:43.000 --> 01:20:49.000] but they're telling me the company that wants me to drive tells me I have to have it. [01:20:49.000 --> 01:20:56.000] My question is, can I have a South Dakota medical card and a Texas Class A commercial? [01:20:56.000 --> 01:21:02.000] Well, that all depends on what the criteria is for needing the medical card. [01:21:02.000 --> 01:21:05.000] Is it a company thing or is it a federal thing? [01:21:05.000 --> 01:21:11.000] If it's federal, then I would assume that it has no state basis for that card. [01:21:11.000 --> 01:21:16.000] Well, it's a federal thing, but it's being enforced by a Missouri company. [01:21:16.000 --> 01:21:22.000] They're the dispatchers of the light and medium weight vehicles. [01:21:22.000 --> 01:21:26.000] They won't transport it across this United States. [01:21:26.000 --> 01:21:30.000] Well, then you're going to have to work under whatever terms that company says to work under [01:21:30.000 --> 01:21:32.000] if you're going to work for them. [01:21:32.000 --> 01:21:36.000] But see, they don't tell me about the state requirement. [01:21:36.000 --> 01:21:45.000] They just say that I must have a Class A commercial license and I must have a DOT medical card. [01:21:45.000 --> 01:21:48.000] Okay, but DOT in what location? [01:21:48.000 --> 01:21:53.000] Federal DOT or state DOT in which state? [01:21:53.000 --> 01:21:57.000] No, federal Department of Transportation. [01:21:57.000 --> 01:22:00.000] Okay, then it doesn't have a state. [01:22:00.000 --> 01:22:06.000] So the answer to your question, the way you asked it is, I don't see a problem. [01:22:06.000 --> 01:22:11.000] In other words, any DOT is going to be for the same federal? [01:22:11.000 --> 01:22:21.000] No, it depends on whether or not it's a federal DOT requirement versus a state DOT requirement. [01:22:21.000 --> 01:22:23.000] No, it's fed. It's fed. [01:22:23.000 --> 01:22:31.000] The requirements fed, but where you get it is the state where you are at the time, I believe. [01:22:31.000 --> 01:22:38.000] Well, then where in the state that you're located or that you're working in do you get one? [01:22:38.000 --> 01:22:40.000] Well, I know where to get them in South Dakota. [01:22:40.000 --> 01:22:46.000] I just don't want to get one in South Dakota and then have to come back to Texas and get another one. [01:22:46.000 --> 01:22:50.000] I don't even know that Texas requires one. [01:22:50.000 --> 01:22:53.000] It doesn't sound like it's the state that's requiring it. [01:22:53.000 --> 01:22:55.000] It's the company. [01:22:55.000 --> 01:22:59.000] Well, the company is enforcing it, but it is a federal. [01:22:59.000 --> 01:23:09.000] No, I got that part, and I realize that if the company may be in a state that the state itself is enforcing it. [01:23:09.000 --> 01:23:15.000] The company cannot enforce it unless it's a federally owned company. [01:23:15.000 --> 01:23:22.000] No, no, it's not. It's DriveAwayUSA, and let's say you want to move to California and you've got three cars. [01:23:22.000 --> 01:23:30.000] Well, you call DriveAway and they'll drive one of your vehicles out there and charge you when they deliver it. [01:23:30.000 --> 01:23:32.000] Yeah. [01:23:32.000 --> 01:23:41.000] Okay. But to be one of those drivers for DriveAway, your contract driver, you must have a commercial license, [01:23:41.000 --> 01:23:49.000] a good driving record, and a federal medical card. [01:23:49.000 --> 01:23:51.000] Okay. [01:23:51.000 --> 01:23:58.000] Anyway, that's the company requirements, though. But the card, is it actually a federal issued card? [01:23:58.000 --> 01:24:01.000] Well, is it an Obamacare card? [01:24:01.000 --> 01:24:09.000] No, no, I don't know. It must have something to do with Obama because the last time I looked into it, there was no DOT card ever. [01:24:09.000 --> 01:24:12.000] Well, then it could be something new because of that. [01:24:12.000 --> 01:24:19.000] Yeah, yeah. Okay. Well, I thought I'd check with you. The other thing you might want to call me when we're not on the air, [01:24:19.000 --> 01:24:29.000] I was in that original class back five years ago, your first seminar class, and my name was on that list of 25 or 30 people [01:24:29.000 --> 01:24:36.000] that came and paid you for the seminar and we were going to get additional information. [01:24:36.000 --> 01:24:45.000] I either can't find or never receive my additional information, and even if I did, I can't find it. [01:24:45.000 --> 01:24:53.000] So, I want to know what you're going to charge the difference in that first buy-in and what you're publishing today [01:24:53.000 --> 01:24:56.000] because I need to boost up on it. [01:24:56.000 --> 01:25:04.000] Well, the new book I'm doing, if you already own the seminar material, I'm figuring the new book will be about 90 bucks by itself. [01:25:04.000 --> 01:25:11.000] If you're a first-time purchaser of the material when you get the new book, then you'll get it packaged differently. [01:25:11.000 --> 01:25:16.000] You guys, when you bought it, the only book we had was the one teaching you how to read the statutes, [01:25:16.000 --> 01:25:20.000] research them and all that kind of stuff, the transportation book. [01:25:20.000 --> 01:25:24.000] And we coupled a lot of court documents to go in conjunction with that. [01:25:24.000 --> 01:25:28.000] Well, we've gone way beyond that in the realm of the court documents now. [01:25:28.000 --> 01:25:34.000] And so, the book I'm doing is specifically directed at the court process. [01:25:34.000 --> 01:25:40.000] It starts all the way from the step-by-step of here's what you do and here's why you do it and here's how you do it [01:25:40.000 --> 01:25:46.000] and here's the paperwork and here's all the statutes that you're having to deal with right here at this step [01:25:46.000 --> 01:25:49.000] and then here it is at this step and here it is at that step. [01:25:49.000 --> 01:25:51.000] That's all going to be in this new book. [01:25:51.000 --> 01:25:59.000] And every single document in there is going to be directly attached to specific parts of what you learned in this new book. [01:25:59.000 --> 01:26:07.000] So, if you haven't bought the seminar material before, then that's what you will get for the original 250 after this goes out. [01:26:07.000 --> 01:26:15.000] And then the traffic book will be switched over to $90 in addition if you want to get both of them. [01:26:15.000 --> 01:26:19.000] So, either way, if you have it, it'll be $90 more or approximately. [01:26:19.000 --> 01:26:22.000] That's what I'm guessing at about right now for everything. [01:26:22.000 --> 01:26:29.000] For the new book or first-time buyer, you can get the 250 with the new book in it [01:26:29.000 --> 01:26:34.000] and then if you need the book on learning how to read and understand statute, which you're going to eventually, [01:26:34.000 --> 01:26:37.000] you can do $90 to get that. [01:26:37.000 --> 01:26:42.000] Well, how did you send those original ones out? [01:26:42.000 --> 01:26:45.000] Were they by email or were they hard copy? [01:26:45.000 --> 01:26:51.000] Only the books that were handed out in the three-ring binders were hard copy. [01:26:51.000 --> 01:26:54.000] Those were given out to the people at the seminar. [01:26:54.000 --> 01:27:01.000] Everything else, however, was electronic on the DVD that was in it. [01:27:01.000 --> 01:27:08.000] And if you actually were a participant, all you have to do is send Deborah an email [01:27:08.000 --> 01:27:11.000] letting her know that you went to the original seminar. [01:27:11.000 --> 01:27:15.000] Here's the email address I used and my name. [01:27:15.000 --> 01:27:21.000] Can you please send me any updates to the seminar as it currently exists? [01:27:21.000 --> 01:27:25.000] And what's Deborah's email? [01:27:25.000 --> 01:27:30.000] Debra at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:27:30.000 --> 01:27:32.000] At ruleoflawradio.com. [01:27:32.000 --> 01:27:33.000] Okay. [01:27:33.000 --> 01:27:34.000] I'll do that. [01:27:34.000 --> 01:27:35.000] Okay. [01:27:35.000 --> 01:27:43.000] I'll get the updates, but the folder you handed out, that original meeting, [01:27:43.000 --> 01:27:46.000] was a three-ring binder folder? [01:27:46.000 --> 01:27:48.000] Is that what your... [01:27:48.000 --> 01:27:53.000] The three-ring binder was a printed copy of the seminar book, yes. [01:27:53.000 --> 01:27:54.000] Okay. [01:27:54.000 --> 01:27:59.000] Well, that's probably what I can't find, so maybe I should just buy the whole thing even though it... [01:27:59.000 --> 01:28:05.000] If you were at the original seminar, David, you don't have to repurchase it. [01:28:05.000 --> 01:28:09.000] Deborah will have a list, a digitized list of everybody that was at that. [01:28:09.000 --> 01:28:12.000] You just have to give her the correct name and information. [01:28:12.000 --> 01:28:13.000] I will. [01:28:13.000 --> 01:28:14.000] Okay. [01:28:14.000 --> 01:28:15.000] Okay. [01:28:15.000 --> 01:28:18.000] Well, I'll send her an email, Eddie. [01:28:18.000 --> 01:28:19.000] Okay. [01:28:19.000 --> 01:28:24.000] And I'll get squared away and then study that whole situation. [01:28:24.000 --> 01:28:26.000] That way I'll understand it much better. [01:28:26.000 --> 01:28:27.000] All right, David. [01:28:27.000 --> 01:28:28.000] Thanks for calling in. [01:28:28.000 --> 01:28:29.000] You're welcome, sir. [01:28:29.000 --> 01:28:30.000] Thank you. [01:28:30.000 --> 01:28:31.000] And God bless you. [01:28:31.000 --> 01:28:32.000] Thank you. [01:28:32.000 --> 01:28:33.000] Bye-bye. [01:28:33.000 --> 01:28:34.000] You're welcome. [01:28:34.000 --> 01:28:35.000] All right. [01:28:35.000 --> 01:28:37.000] Now we're going to go to Brandon in Texas. [01:28:37.000 --> 01:28:41.000] Brandon, we got about one minute before I have to cut you off for a break. [01:28:41.000 --> 01:28:42.000] So what you got? [01:28:42.000 --> 01:28:43.000] All right. [01:28:43.000 --> 01:28:44.000] No worries. [01:28:44.000 --> 01:28:45.000] I just got a couple of questions. [01:28:45.000 --> 01:28:49.000] One is habeas corpus question, and another one is who can make an affidavit? [01:28:49.000 --> 01:28:54.000] For habeas corpus, if you want to pick it up on the other side, basically, is that something [01:28:54.000 --> 01:28:59.000] that you would do as a remedy for a conviction and misdemeanor? [01:28:59.000 --> 01:29:00.000] Not a conviction. [01:29:00.000 --> 01:29:06.000] Habeas corpus is to remove a body imprisoned, not convicted unless it's wrongfully convicted [01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:07.000] and imprisoned. [01:29:07.000 --> 01:29:08.000] Okay. [01:29:08.000 --> 01:29:12.000] So far as that wrongfully convicted, you know, all that points of error that we're, you know, [01:29:12.000 --> 01:29:14.000] you're teaching all of us to point out and to... [01:29:14.000 --> 01:29:15.000] No, no, no, no. [01:29:15.000 --> 01:29:17.000] Wait, wait, wait, wait. [01:29:17.000 --> 01:29:22.000] Wrongfully convicted in this case of what I'm talking about is this. [01:29:22.000 --> 01:29:29.000] You have evidence that proves the conviction itself was unlawful and unjustly obtained. [01:29:29.000 --> 01:29:37.000] That has been reviewed by court, and the court has ordered release, and that has not happened. [01:29:37.000 --> 01:29:42.000] Now you file a habeas to force them to release the body. [01:29:42.000 --> 01:29:48.000] Big difference in getting a conviction overturned first. [01:29:48.000 --> 01:29:49.000] Follow? [01:29:49.000 --> 01:29:50.000] Okay. [01:29:50.000 --> 01:29:51.000] All right. [01:29:51.000 --> 01:29:53.000] One second, and we'll pick this up on the other side. [01:29:53.000 --> 01:29:56.000] 512-646-1984, folks. [01:29:56.000 --> 01:30:00.000] We will be right back. [01:30:00.000 --> 01:30:04.000] The Ten Commandments are a cornerstone of Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. [01:30:04.000 --> 01:30:09.000] If you're an educated person, you should probably know them, regardless of your religion. [01:30:09.000 --> 01:30:14.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with a tip to help you remember one of the Ten Commandments. [01:30:14.000 --> 01:30:20.000] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [01:30:20.000 --> 01:30:22.000] of your personal information. [01:30:22.000 --> 01:30:23.000] That's creepy. [01:30:23.000 --> 01:30:25.000] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:25.000 --> 01:30:28.000] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:28.000 --> 01:30:33.000] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches, or use tracking cookies, [01:30:33.000 --> 01:30:35.000] and are third-party certified. [01:30:35.000 --> 01:30:39.000] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [01:30:39.000 --> 01:30:41.000] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:41.000 --> 01:30:45.000] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:45.000 --> 01:30:50.000] The Fourth Commandment is about a four-letter word, W-O-R-K, work. [01:30:50.000 --> 01:30:54.000] The Bible says, Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. [01:30:54.000 --> 01:30:59.000] Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God. [01:30:59.000 --> 01:31:05.000] On it you shall not do any work, neither you nor your son or daughter, nor your male or female servant, [01:31:05.000 --> 01:31:08.000] nor your animals, nor any foreigner residing in your towns. [01:31:08.000 --> 01:31:14.000] The Ten Commandments have probably inspired more commitment and controversy than any other moral code. [01:31:14.000 --> 01:31:19.000] The next time they come up in conversation, you'll remember the Fourth Commandment is about that four-letter word, [01:31:19.000 --> 01:31:22.000] work, and when to take a break from it. [01:31:22.000 --> 01:31:31.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:31.000 --> 01:31:36.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.000 --> 01:31:38.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.000 --> 01:31:43.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:46.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.000 --> 01:31:49.000] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.000 --> 01:31:51.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.000 --> 01:31:54.000] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.000 --> 01:31:58.000] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.000 --> 01:32:01.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.000 --> 01:32:05.000] After work, I'm so tired that I want to be left alone to sleep. [01:32:05.000 --> 01:32:08.000] Hey, listen to me. Who are you? [01:32:08.000 --> 01:32:12.000] I'm you years ago when you felt healthy and young and everything worked on your body. [01:32:12.000 --> 01:32:15.000] Do you remember that? Yes. I wish I felt like that now. [01:32:15.000 --> 01:32:20.000] You can feel like that again with a new micro-plant powder formulation called Iodine Now. [01:32:20.000 --> 01:32:25.000] It cleans the entire body from head to toe and feeds the body what it really needs. [01:32:25.000 --> 01:32:28.000] You'll be in a better mood, and you'll find more drive in your romantic life. [01:32:28.000 --> 01:32:32.000] Really? I've got to try Iodine Now. It feels good again. [01:32:32.000 --> 01:32:36.000] It also protects you from radiation, heavy metals, fluoride, chlorine, and bromine, [01:32:36.000 --> 01:32:39.000] including cancer and most major diseases. You'll be amazed. [01:32:39.000 --> 01:32:44.000] You can be your own doctor. I want to keep you out of the hospital and off pharmaceuticals. [01:32:44.000 --> 01:32:47.000] Wow. Why are you so nice to me? Because I'm you. [01:32:47.000 --> 01:32:50.000] You're out of shape, and I need a better-looking future. [01:32:50.000 --> 01:32:56.000] Call 888-910-4367. That's 888-910-4367. [01:32:56.000 --> 01:33:01.000] Or visit microplantpowder.com. microplantpowder.com. [01:33:04.000 --> 01:33:07.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:07.000 --> 01:33:10.000] At logosradio.com. [01:33:37.000 --> 01:33:41.000] All right, folks. We are back. Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:41.000 --> 01:33:45.000] Got a half an hour to go. 512-646-1984. [01:33:45.000 --> 01:33:48.000] We are talking to Brandon in Texas. [01:33:48.000 --> 01:33:51.000] All right, Brandon, did we get that last one, part of your, [01:33:51.000 --> 01:33:55.000] first part of your question covered there on the habeas for Conviction? [01:33:55.000 --> 01:33:56.000] Yes. [01:33:56.000 --> 01:33:57.000] All right. [01:33:57.000 --> 01:33:58.000] All right. [01:33:58.000 --> 01:33:59.000] All right. [01:33:59.000 --> 01:34:00.000] All right. [01:34:00.000 --> 01:34:01.000] All right. [01:34:01.000 --> 01:34:08.000] All right, Brandon, did we get that last one, part of your, first part of your question covered there on the habeas for Convictions? [01:34:08.000 --> 01:34:09.000] All right. [01:34:09.000 --> 01:34:12.000] I want to put it up, put up the Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:34:12.000 --> 01:34:16.000] And maybe I'm just not understanding. [01:34:16.000 --> 01:34:20.000] 1109, Article 1109 says, applicant charged with misdemeanor. [01:34:20.000 --> 01:34:26.000] If a person is confined on the charge of a misdemeanor, he may apply to the county judge of the county in which the misdemeanor is charged [01:34:26.000 --> 01:34:31.000] or committed, or if there be no judge in said county, and so on and so forth. [01:34:31.000 --> 01:34:36.000] Now, I get what you're saying with confined, but then I go down to the Constructive Custody. [01:34:36.000 --> 01:34:43.000] Yeah, Constructive Custody, and it says the words confined, imprisoned, in custody, confinement, [01:34:43.000 --> 01:34:48.000] refer not only to the actual corporeal and forcible detention of a person, [01:34:48.000 --> 01:34:51.000] but likewise to any coercive measures by threats, [01:34:51.000 --> 01:34:58.000] menses, or the fear of injury, whereby one person exercises a control over the person of another. [01:34:58.000 --> 01:35:08.000] If, you know, you're being held to a fine, and obviously the threat of not paying that fine is a warrant for your arrest, [01:35:08.000 --> 01:35:10.000] wouldn't that fall into that Constructive? [01:35:10.000 --> 01:35:18.000] No, because in both instances, what you're reading is pre-conviction. [01:35:18.000 --> 01:35:26.000] Okay. Well, I was reading some case law this weekend, and, you know, I can't remember the cases. [01:35:26.000 --> 01:35:30.000] I don't have them in front of me, but basically when they addressed this point, [01:35:30.000 --> 01:35:41.000] they said, you know, every person has the right to be a habeas corpus to file a writ of habeas corpus. [01:35:41.000 --> 01:35:48.000] Correct. They have the right to challenge any unlawful restriction of their liberty. [01:35:48.000 --> 01:35:50.000] Is that your understanding of it? [01:35:50.000 --> 01:35:51.000] Yes. [01:35:51.000 --> 01:36:00.000] Okay. Is a conviction an unlawful restriction on its face? [01:36:00.000 --> 01:36:01.000] On its face, no. [01:36:01.000 --> 01:36:12.000] Exactly. Whereas you hold me in jail for 64 hours without a commitment order [01:36:12.000 --> 01:36:17.000] or a determination of probable cause by the neutral detached magistrate, [01:36:17.000 --> 01:36:21.000] do you have the authority to do that without that commitment order? [01:36:21.000 --> 01:36:22.000] No. [01:36:22.000 --> 01:36:30.000] Exactly. That incarceration and restriction of my liberty is a violation on its face. [01:36:30.000 --> 01:36:33.000] It is unlawful on its face. [01:36:33.000 --> 01:36:39.000] Okay. I got you now. Okay. All right. I'm good on that. Do I have time for my second one? [01:36:39.000 --> 01:36:40.000] Sure. [01:36:40.000 --> 01:36:44.000] All right. Cool. The other one, once again, I was just reading through some case law, [01:36:44.000 --> 01:36:50.000] and I want to say I remembered the right ones. I had Kennedy v. State and then Ex parte Johnson. [01:36:50.000 --> 01:36:54.000] And basically both of them dealt with who can make an affidavit, [01:36:54.000 --> 01:36:59.000] specifically who is considered a credible person to make an affidavit. [01:36:59.000 --> 01:37:04.000] And both of them contain language that says, you know, affidavits, criminal complaints [01:37:04.000 --> 01:37:10.000] are not made in an official capacity, in somebody's official capacity. [01:37:10.000 --> 01:37:16.000] And I actually wanted clarification on that, so I was wondering if you could speak to that. [01:37:16.000 --> 01:37:23.000] Okay. What it means by that is no one can sign any of those types of documents as [01:37:23.000 --> 01:37:31.000] a peace officer, Brian London. Okay. His capacity has nothing to do with the veracity [01:37:31.000 --> 01:37:35.000] of the statements made that he's swearing to. [01:37:35.000 --> 01:37:39.000] It cannot, he cannot use the power of his office to add an air of legitimacy [01:37:39.000 --> 01:37:44.000] to something that would otherwise be illegitimate on its face either. [01:37:44.000 --> 01:37:50.000] No one makes that type of statement in any sort of capacity other than personal. [01:37:50.000 --> 01:37:55.000] The reason for it is, is because that's the only place where perjury can be committed [01:37:55.000 --> 01:37:59.000] in such an instance. [01:37:59.000 --> 01:38:05.000] So if they are trying to use their official capacity, it's a trick to try to shield themselves [01:38:05.000 --> 01:38:09.000] from perjury. Correct. [01:38:09.000 --> 01:38:16.000] Interesting. So if they do that, because I have a complaint right now against me for a case [01:38:16.000 --> 01:38:22.000] I'm going to court for tomorrow, if said officer's badge number is on that complaint, [01:38:22.000 --> 01:38:25.000] is that a point of error? [01:38:25.000 --> 01:38:29.000] Whether or not the court will rule that as a point of error, I don't know, [01:38:29.000 --> 01:38:32.000] but I would certainly raise it. Okay. [01:38:32.000 --> 01:38:36.000] Be aware, however, that's a quick and easy fix, amended complaint. [01:38:36.000 --> 01:38:43.000] Okay. So the question is, is it your best argument? [01:38:43.000 --> 01:38:49.000] Probably not. Right. It's not going to be your all-appealable argument, I guarantee you that, [01:38:49.000 --> 01:38:54.000] but it definitely ain't the one you want to hang your hat on, in my opinion. [01:38:54.000 --> 01:38:58.000] It's okay to include it, but don't make it the linchpin argument you're going to make [01:38:58.000 --> 01:39:00.000] for appealable error. [01:39:00.000 --> 01:39:04.000] That's definitely not the linchpin. They're doing everything just like you say they do. [01:39:04.000 --> 01:39:06.000] Every mistake, every... [01:39:06.000 --> 01:39:11.000] Yeah, and see, that goes hand in hand with what I was saying earlier about people [01:39:11.000 --> 01:39:15.000] trying to figure this out for themselves. [01:39:15.000 --> 01:39:22.000] I did not fall into a basket of answers on how these people do this stuff. [01:39:22.000 --> 01:39:27.000] I had to spend time figuring this out. I had to go to court. I had to be in court. [01:39:27.000 --> 01:39:32.000] I had to read the rules. I had to tear the rules apart, read the case law and everything else, [01:39:32.000 --> 01:39:37.000] so that I knew if the rule says do this and you're not doing this, [01:39:37.000 --> 01:39:41.000] then here's the things you are doing and why they're wrong. [01:39:41.000 --> 01:39:45.000] And so I try to give you guys that knowledge as much as possible. [01:39:45.000 --> 01:39:48.000] But yeah, that's exactly my point from earlier. [01:39:48.000 --> 01:39:51.000] You're noticing it because I've given you that information. [01:39:51.000 --> 01:39:57.000] If you had to sit down and study all this on your own, would you see it coming the way you do now? [01:39:57.000 --> 01:39:59.000] Oh, absolutely not. I'd never... [01:39:59.000 --> 01:40:03.000] The first time I went through my first case without having purchased the material, [01:40:03.000 --> 01:40:08.000] and yeah, I got completely railroaded. So, you know, hopefully do better this time. [01:40:08.000 --> 01:40:12.000] But I'm definitely more prepared to fight back this time, that's for sure. [01:40:12.000 --> 01:40:18.000] Yep. And that is my whole goal here, to make you able to stand on your own two feet. [01:40:18.000 --> 01:40:22.000] Yes, sir. Well, one last thing. Do you have another caller on the board? [01:40:22.000 --> 01:40:27.000] I do, but I won't have enough time to get to him before we have to go to break on that one. [01:40:27.000 --> 01:40:30.000] So finish up here. You got two and a half, three and a half minutes. [01:40:30.000 --> 01:40:35.000] All right. Just one quick thing. Whenever, you know, we start filing these criminal complaints and whatnot, [01:40:35.000 --> 01:40:41.000] what is the best way to follow up that, you know, if the complaint was actually presented to the grand jury? [01:40:41.000 --> 01:40:42.000] You know, if I put it right... [01:40:42.000 --> 01:40:47.000] Wait until you know when the next grand jury meeting has concluded. [01:40:47.000 --> 01:40:51.000] Go to the county clerk and ask to see the minutes of the grand jury [01:40:51.000 --> 01:40:59.000] and see whether or not they made any notes of the grand jury meeting showing that they addressed what you filed. [01:40:59.000 --> 01:41:04.000] I guess the minutes of the grand jury. [01:41:04.000 --> 01:41:08.000] And then how would I initially find out because, you know, up here and... [01:41:08.000 --> 01:41:12.000] You just asked the clerk, when's the next grand jury session? [01:41:12.000 --> 01:41:16.000] Okay. All right. That's all I have for you tonight. [01:41:16.000 --> 01:41:17.000] All right. [01:41:17.000 --> 01:41:21.000] Yeah. Same as everybody else, you know, thank you for everything that you're doing and... [01:41:21.000 --> 01:41:23.000] Well, I'm glad I can help where I can. [01:41:23.000 --> 01:41:28.000] And I'm glad that you took the initiative to figure out you need to know this stuff. [01:41:28.000 --> 01:41:29.000] Oh, absolutely. [01:41:29.000 --> 01:41:31.000] Yeah. I'm trying to get a friend turned on. [01:41:31.000 --> 01:41:35.000] I'm trying to get him to buy the seminar because I got him turned on to listen to the podcast. [01:41:35.000 --> 01:41:38.000] And, you know, he's interested in it and he's moving to Vegas. [01:41:38.000 --> 01:41:43.000] And, you know, I guess the cops out there are horrible and the justice system out there is terrible. [01:41:43.000 --> 01:41:48.000] So I got him listening to you and hopefully, you know, he goes through and buys the program [01:41:48.000 --> 01:41:50.000] or at the very least, you know, makes the trip down to Austin. [01:41:50.000 --> 01:41:54.000] Well, I wish him the best and you in getting him there. [01:41:54.000 --> 01:41:55.000] Cool. [01:41:55.000 --> 01:41:59.000] All right, Eddie. Thank you again and I'll be with you the rest of the show. [01:41:59.000 --> 01:42:01.000] All right, Brandon. Thanks for calling, man. [01:42:01.000 --> 01:42:02.000] All right. Take it easy. [01:42:02.000 --> 01:42:06.000] All right. Now we're going to go to Cole in Texas. [01:42:06.000 --> 01:42:12.000] Cole, you got about, oh, I don't know, a minute and a half before I got to cut you off and take a break. [01:42:12.000 --> 01:42:15.000] Okay. I'll just lead into it then. [01:42:15.000 --> 01:42:20.000] I called you a while back in regards to an inspection sticker citation I received. [01:42:20.000 --> 01:42:23.000] And I didn't have my notebook in front of me, but I do today. [01:42:23.000 --> 01:42:24.000] Okay. [01:42:24.000 --> 01:42:28.000] Anyway, the charity bond has been processed. [01:42:28.000 --> 01:42:31.000] I'm supposed to be able to go present before the judge again. [01:42:31.000 --> 01:42:37.000] And I was just curious, what do I need to do to try to fight this one? [01:42:37.000 --> 01:42:40.000] You gave me some good points, but like I said, I didn't have a benefit for Andy. [01:42:40.000 --> 01:42:45.000] Okay. Well, fill me back in on exactly what we did cover. [01:42:45.000 --> 01:42:49.000] Okay. I had received a citation for vehicle inspection being out. [01:42:49.000 --> 01:42:54.000] And I was incredibly busy at the time. [01:42:54.000 --> 01:42:59.000] I'm trying to wind down now and just only have a job and go to school instead of two jobs and go to school and all that. [01:42:59.000 --> 01:43:05.000] So I tried to get the inspection a couple of times and just the wait for really long and I had other things to do. [01:43:05.000 --> 01:43:08.000] And I finally got pulled over and cited for it. [01:43:08.000 --> 01:43:14.000] And they said if I could present the receipt of inspection that they would most likely dismiss it. [01:43:14.000 --> 01:43:16.000] That's what the officer told me. [01:43:16.000 --> 01:43:22.000] Yeah, provided you got it renewed within a certain number of days after the issuance of the citation or the expiration date. [01:43:22.000 --> 01:43:30.000] If they issue a citation and it's been expired for a certain length of time, even that won't make any difference. [01:43:30.000 --> 01:43:36.000] Okay. So it was out of date for, I don't know, maybe a month and a half or so. [01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:39.000] Okay. I don't remember if it's 30 or 60 days. [01:43:39.000 --> 01:43:41.000] Okay. Well, I hear the music, so. [01:43:41.000 --> 01:43:42.000] Yeah. All right. [01:43:42.000 --> 01:43:45.000] Well, hang on just a second and I'll pick you up on the other side. [01:43:45.000 --> 01:43:48.000] All right, folks. Mike, I see you there on the board. [01:43:48.000 --> 01:43:53.000] So hang on and I'll get you after coal when we get back on the next and last segment. [01:43:53.000 --> 01:43:56.000] All right, folks. This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:43:56.000 --> 01:43:59.000] Y'all hang on and we will conclude when we get back. [01:43:59.000 --> 01:44:03.000] Do you feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.000 --> 01:44:04.000] Sorry. [01:44:04.000 --> 01:44:07.000] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.000 --> 01:44:08.000] What? [01:44:08.000 --> 01:44:12.000] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.000 --> 01:44:16.000] Hi, my name is Steve Holt and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:16.000 --> 01:44:19.000] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.000 --> 01:44:25.000] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. [01:44:25.000 --> 01:44:30.000] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [01:44:30.000 --> 01:44:36.000] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [01:44:36.000 --> 01:44:40.000] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [01:44:40.000 --> 01:44:43.000] without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.000 --> 01:44:46.000] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.000 --> 01:44:55.000] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:55.000 --> 01:44:58.000] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:58.000 --> 01:45:01.000] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:01.000 --> 01:45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.000 --> 01:45:08.000] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [01:45:08.000 --> 01:45:16.000] The affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:16.000 --> 01:45:20.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:20.000 --> 01:45:24.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.000 --> 01:45:29.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.000 --> 01:45:35.000] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.000 --> 01:45:39.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.000 --> 01:45:44.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.000 --> 01:45:50.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.000 --> 01:45:53.000] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.000 --> 01:46:16.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:16.000 --> 01:46:31.000] All right, folks. [01:46:31.000 --> 01:46:32.000] We are back. [01:46:32.000 --> 01:46:36.000] This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are talking to Cole in Texas. [01:46:36.000 --> 01:46:38.000] All right, Cole, continue, please. [01:46:38.000 --> 01:46:39.000] Okay. [01:46:39.000 --> 01:46:42.000] So, like I said, a surety bond has been processed, [01:46:42.000 --> 01:46:47.000] and I'm going to get a chance to go before the judge here for too long. [01:46:47.000 --> 01:46:54.000] The question I have is what is my ability to defend against out-of-date inspection stricter? [01:46:54.000 --> 01:46:58.000] It may have been without about... [01:46:58.000 --> 01:46:59.000] Okay. [01:46:59.000 --> 01:47:03.000] Well, the first thing is what exactly is your course of action intended to be here? [01:47:03.000 --> 01:47:06.000] Fight it or get it out of my hair? [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:12.000] Well, I kind of want to have the option both. [01:47:12.000 --> 01:47:14.000] No, no, no, no, no, no, no. [01:47:14.000 --> 01:47:16.000] That's where you're making your first mistake. [01:47:16.000 --> 01:47:17.000] Okay. [01:47:17.000 --> 01:47:19.000] It is one or the other. [01:47:19.000 --> 01:47:21.000] It is not both. [01:47:21.000 --> 01:47:26.000] I want it gone, but the warrant they put on me is over $1,000. [01:47:26.000 --> 01:47:28.000] I don't have the money to pay for that. [01:47:28.000 --> 01:47:30.000] And I showed up to the office. [01:47:30.000 --> 01:47:33.000] I said, just put me in jail then, and they said, nope, you're going to pay money. [01:47:33.000 --> 01:47:36.000] They're not going to keep you in long enough to pay it off. [01:47:36.000 --> 01:47:39.000] Well, they can't put you in jail to sit it out anymore. [01:47:39.000 --> 01:47:44.000] There's no law in the books that lets them do that for a fine-only offense. [01:47:44.000 --> 01:47:46.000] So is there any redress of it? [01:47:46.000 --> 01:47:49.000] Is it just going to be pay the fine or... [01:47:49.000 --> 01:47:51.000] No, you have the right to a trial. [01:47:51.000 --> 01:47:56.000] And the maximum fine is, I believe, $200 for an inspection sticker. [01:47:56.000 --> 01:47:59.000] So where do they get $1,000 from? [01:47:59.000 --> 01:48:06.000] Well, that's what they quoted me when I went to Travis County to try to address stuff. [01:48:06.000 --> 01:48:13.000] Well, you better tell them I want an itemized list of where you get this $1,000 from. [01:48:13.000 --> 01:48:16.000] So itemized list from the clerk? [01:48:16.000 --> 01:48:17.000] Yeah. [01:48:17.000 --> 01:48:22.000] Where do you people get this $1,000 alleged fee from for this? [01:48:22.000 --> 01:48:24.000] And go to Chapter... [01:48:24.000 --> 01:48:25.000] Let's see. [01:48:25.000 --> 01:48:27.000] You said it was an inspection sticker, right? [01:48:27.000 --> 01:48:28.000] That's correct. [01:48:28.000 --> 01:48:31.000] Chapter 543 of the Texas Transportation Code, [01:48:31.000 --> 01:48:36.000] and see what it says the maximum fine for an offense is under that chapter. [01:48:36.000 --> 01:48:38.000] Okay. [01:48:38.000 --> 01:48:39.000] All righty. [01:48:39.000 --> 01:48:45.000] And so within this Chapter 543, Texas Transportation? [01:48:45.000 --> 01:48:46.000] Yes. [01:48:46.000 --> 01:48:47.000] All right. [01:48:47.000 --> 01:48:50.000] So is it just going to be... [01:48:50.000 --> 01:48:53.000] I haven't read these statutes before. [01:48:53.000 --> 01:48:57.000] Is it something that I'll be able to discern just with my ability to read, [01:48:57.000 --> 01:48:59.000] you know, legalese? [01:48:59.000 --> 01:49:01.000] You're going to eventually have to figure out legalese, [01:49:01.000 --> 01:49:06.000] but as far as finding a person commits an offense if an offense under this Chapter [01:49:06.000 --> 01:49:10.000] constitutes a fine of, if you can't read and understand that, [01:49:10.000 --> 01:49:12.000] to your worst off shape than you think you are. [01:49:12.000 --> 01:49:15.000] Well, that's what I hope to conquer here. [01:49:15.000 --> 01:49:17.000] I think I can grapple all this stuff. [01:49:17.000 --> 01:49:20.000] I hear you're showing it's great, and I intend to get down to your seminar, [01:49:20.000 --> 01:49:24.000] but I've only recently begun to have Sunday evenings off, so... [01:49:24.000 --> 01:49:26.000] Okay. [01:49:26.000 --> 01:49:27.000] Well, thank you for that. [01:49:27.000 --> 01:49:29.000] I'll let you get to your other caller. [01:49:29.000 --> 01:49:30.000] I think you'd... [01:49:30.000 --> 01:49:31.000] All right, Cole. [01:49:31.000 --> 01:49:32.000] Thanks for calling in. [01:49:32.000 --> 01:49:33.000] All right. [01:49:33.000 --> 01:49:34.000] Thank you. [01:49:34.000 --> 01:49:35.000] All right. [01:49:35.000 --> 01:49:36.000] Bye-bye. [01:49:36.000 --> 01:49:37.000] All right. [01:49:37.000 --> 01:49:38.000] Now we're going to go to Mike in Illinois. [01:49:38.000 --> 01:49:45.000] Mike, what can we do for you? [01:49:45.000 --> 01:49:49.000] Hello, Mike. [01:49:49.000 --> 01:49:52.000] We are not having a whole lot of luck with Mike here. [01:49:52.000 --> 01:49:53.000] Hello. [01:49:53.000 --> 01:49:54.000] There we go. [01:49:54.000 --> 01:49:55.000] Oh, good. [01:49:55.000 --> 01:49:56.000] Evening, Eddie. [01:49:56.000 --> 01:49:58.000] I just had a couple of quick questions for you. [01:49:58.000 --> 01:49:59.000] Okay. [01:49:59.000 --> 01:50:00.000] I want to know, first of all, [01:50:00.000 --> 01:50:03.000] where I get this script you've been talking about. [01:50:03.000 --> 01:50:13.000] Logosradio.com forward slash T-A-O, Tango Alpha Omega. [01:50:13.000 --> 01:50:14.000] T-A-O, okay. [01:50:14.000 --> 01:50:17.000] And when and where are your classes? [01:50:17.000 --> 01:50:24.000] They are Sundays, 2 to 5, 1904 Guadalupe Street, Brave New Books. [01:50:24.000 --> 01:50:27.000] Every Sunday. [01:50:27.000 --> 01:50:28.000] What city? [01:50:28.000 --> 01:50:31.000] Austin. [01:50:31.000 --> 01:50:33.000] Texas. [01:50:33.000 --> 01:50:34.000] That's a ways for me to travel. [01:50:34.000 --> 01:50:37.000] Do you have the program? [01:50:37.000 --> 01:50:42.000] I heard you with another caller talking about some sort of seminar you have. [01:50:42.000 --> 01:50:44.000] Yes. [01:50:44.000 --> 01:50:47.000] There's actually a seminar we use to help financially support the network [01:50:47.000 --> 01:50:51.000] that has court documents, a book on understanding legalese [01:50:51.000 --> 01:50:55.000] and how to read it and research it and everything else [01:50:55.000 --> 01:51:00.000] as far as how it's used in Texas statutes anyway [01:51:00.000 --> 01:51:03.000] and virtually any other state statutes. [01:51:03.000 --> 01:51:04.000] Okay. [01:51:04.000 --> 01:51:06.000] We're going to get that. [01:51:06.000 --> 01:51:07.000] If you're in Austin, [01:51:07.000 --> 01:51:11.000] you can either meet up with me at a class or something and get it, [01:51:11.000 --> 01:51:14.000] or you can order it directly off the Rule of Law Radio website. [01:51:14.000 --> 01:51:15.000] Okay. [01:51:15.000 --> 01:51:17.000] I'll go there. [01:51:17.000 --> 01:51:21.000] Last thing I was just curious about, what do you, I'm assuming that this [01:51:21.000 --> 01:51:23.000] two-hour radio program doesn't pay all your bills, [01:51:23.000 --> 01:51:27.000] what do you do when you're not on the radio here? [01:51:27.000 --> 01:51:31.000] I basically try to help people with cases that they're fighting [01:51:31.000 --> 01:51:34.000] or I try to work on my book so I can get it out there [01:51:34.000 --> 01:51:37.000] and hopefully use it to generate some more money. [01:51:37.000 --> 01:51:38.000] Okay. [01:51:38.000 --> 01:51:39.000] Great. [01:51:39.000 --> 01:51:43.000] Lastly, I'd kind of like to hear in the closing minutes here, [01:51:43.000 --> 01:51:49.000] I'd like to hear your take on the events out in Nevada this past week [01:51:49.000 --> 01:51:54.000] and what your approach would be if you were in that situation. [01:51:54.000 --> 01:51:58.000] Well, I guess it depends on which person I would be in that situation. [01:51:58.000 --> 01:52:00.000] Let's say you're the rancher. [01:52:00.000 --> 01:52:02.000] Well, if I was the rancher, [01:52:02.000 --> 01:52:07.000] based upon what I know about limited jurisdiction and so on and so forth, [01:52:07.000 --> 01:52:10.000] I'd probably be doing exactly the same thing he's doing. [01:52:10.000 --> 01:52:16.000] First off, has any of that land been ceded by the state of Nevada [01:52:16.000 --> 01:52:18.000] to the federal government? [01:52:18.000 --> 01:52:21.000] If not, it isn't theirs. [01:52:21.000 --> 01:52:23.000] They have no say so over it. [01:52:23.000 --> 01:52:25.000] Only the state does. [01:52:25.000 --> 01:52:26.000] Right. [01:52:26.000 --> 01:52:27.000] All right? [01:52:27.000 --> 01:52:28.000] Yep. [01:52:28.000 --> 01:52:32.000] It's the same thing they tried to do here a couple years ago on that [01:52:32.000 --> 01:52:34.000] forest land in one of the other states. [01:52:34.000 --> 01:52:37.000] When they tried to run everybody off of their land that was anywhere near [01:52:37.000 --> 01:52:40.000] that national forest, and turns out the locals said, [01:52:40.000 --> 01:52:42.000] we ain't having it, you're out of here. [01:52:42.000 --> 01:52:45.000] And they threw the land management out there too. [01:52:45.000 --> 01:52:47.000] Wow, good for them. [01:52:47.000 --> 01:52:50.000] So yeah, as far as I understand it, that right has not been ceded, [01:52:50.000 --> 01:52:54.000] but management has been designated. [01:52:54.000 --> 01:52:57.000] Well, management has been usurped. [01:52:57.000 --> 01:52:58.000] There's a difference. [01:52:58.000 --> 01:52:59.000] Okay. [01:52:59.000 --> 01:53:06.000] That all began with Teddy Roosevelt and his national wildlife establishment. [01:53:06.000 --> 01:53:07.000] Oh, okay. [01:53:07.000 --> 01:53:10.000] The Parks and Wildlife was 100% Teddy Roosevelt, [01:53:10.000 --> 01:53:13.000] and this is exactly what it was meant to do. [01:53:13.000 --> 01:53:16.000] It was meant to take care of public lands, [01:53:16.000 --> 01:53:25.000] but it very quickly became a bureaucracy that presumed to own everything it touched. [01:53:25.000 --> 01:53:27.000] Wow. [01:53:27.000 --> 01:53:33.000] I heard the last thing that's happening now is apparently they've fallen back [01:53:33.000 --> 01:53:36.000] and regrouped, and they're bringing in reinforcements. [01:53:36.000 --> 01:53:38.000] What they're doing is strategic. [01:53:38.000 --> 01:53:41.000] It ain't over by a long shot. [01:53:41.000 --> 01:53:43.000] What do you think's going to happen? [01:53:43.000 --> 01:53:47.000] That's difficult to say, but if you think they didn't seriously evaluate [01:53:47.000 --> 01:53:52.000] everything that happened this past week over the number of people that showed up, [01:53:52.000 --> 01:53:56.000] how much interest was really generated, how many of these people were willing [01:53:56.000 --> 01:54:00.000] to do certain things and not do certain things, et cetera, et cetera, [01:54:00.000 --> 01:54:04.000] they pretty much figured out everything they need to do in order to ensure [01:54:04.000 --> 01:54:07.000] the next time they do this, they're going to be successful. [01:54:07.000 --> 01:54:13.000] And if one of the things they need to do to do this is to pull a midnight SWAT raid [01:54:13.000 --> 01:54:20.000] where somebody accidentally dies at the Bundy Homestead, [01:54:20.000 --> 01:54:22.000] that's what's going to happen. [01:54:22.000 --> 01:54:24.000] It happens this past week. [01:54:24.000 --> 01:54:26.000] Well, I hope it doesn't get to that. [01:54:26.000 --> 01:54:27.000] I sincerely do. [01:54:27.000 --> 01:54:31.000] Well, then you're seriously underestimating the corruptness of the agencies [01:54:31.000 --> 01:54:32.000] you're dealing with. [01:54:32.000 --> 01:54:33.000] It happened in Waco. [01:54:33.000 --> 01:54:34.000] It happened at Ruby Ridge. [01:54:34.000 --> 01:54:40.000] It happened in so many places it's not even funny. [01:54:40.000 --> 01:54:45.000] Do you think there's anything that can stop it at this point? [01:54:45.000 --> 01:54:48.000] Yeah, there is. [01:54:48.000 --> 01:54:51.000] Unfortunately, I doubt you're going to see it. [01:54:51.000 --> 01:54:56.000] And that is not just people from out of state standing up and saying enough, [01:54:56.000 --> 01:54:59.000] but a collective effort from people from everywhere, [01:54:59.000 --> 01:55:01.000] including Nevada, saying that's enough. [01:55:01.000 --> 01:55:02.000] We're done. [01:55:02.000 --> 01:55:04.000] Governor, you're doing nothing. [01:55:04.000 --> 01:55:05.000] You're out of office. [01:55:05.000 --> 01:55:06.000] Sheriff, you're doing nothing. [01:55:06.000 --> 01:55:08.000] You're out of office. [01:55:08.000 --> 01:55:11.000] Feds, you're out of our state and you're never to return. [01:55:11.000 --> 01:55:16.000] If you do, you will be shot on sight. [01:55:16.000 --> 01:55:19.000] Yeah, that would stop it. [01:55:19.000 --> 01:55:24.000] But it would take a heck of a lot more people than what they had this past week. [01:55:24.000 --> 01:55:28.000] 2,000 Americans against this is not going to be enough, people. [01:55:28.000 --> 01:55:30.000] I don't care what you believe. [01:55:30.000 --> 01:55:34.000] Two Apache attack helicopters can get rid of that number in a heartbeat. [01:55:34.000 --> 01:55:37.000] Yeah, I personally don't think they're going to go that far [01:55:37.000 --> 01:55:39.000] because that's a little over the top. [01:55:39.000 --> 01:55:46.000] But I think there's a lot of merit to what you say, unfortunately. [01:55:46.000 --> 01:55:51.000] Hey, Eddie Craig for Governor of Nevada. [01:55:51.000 --> 01:55:54.000] Yeah. [01:55:54.000 --> 01:55:56.000] Thanks for that target painting picture. [01:55:56.000 --> 01:55:58.000] That would work. [01:55:58.000 --> 01:56:01.000] Hey, you know, if you're called, you must serve, Eddie. [01:56:01.000 --> 01:56:03.000] You should serve anyway. [01:56:03.000 --> 01:56:06.000] Well, I don't know if Nevada would want me. [01:56:06.000 --> 01:56:08.000] I'm too straight up for a lot of people. [01:56:08.000 --> 01:56:10.000] In Texas, you'd think I'd fit in perfect. [01:56:10.000 --> 01:56:12.000] Turns out I'm the minority here. [01:56:12.000 --> 01:56:14.000] Oh, boy. [01:56:14.000 --> 01:56:18.000] Well, hopefully we can turn it around slowly but surely one day at a time. [01:56:18.000 --> 01:56:19.000] Anyway, thanks very much for your help. [01:56:19.000 --> 01:56:20.000] I appreciate it. [01:56:20.000 --> 01:56:21.000] Well, yes, sir. [01:56:21.000 --> 01:56:22.000] Well, thanks for calling in. [01:56:22.000 --> 01:56:23.000] You're welcome. [01:56:23.000 --> 01:56:24.000] All right. Bye-bye. [01:56:24.000 --> 01:56:25.000] Bye-bye. [01:56:25.000 --> 01:56:26.000] All right. [01:56:26.000 --> 01:56:28.000] Now we're going to go to Terrence in Tennessee. [01:56:28.000 --> 01:56:32.000] Terrence, I've got about two minutes I can give to you. [01:56:32.000 --> 01:56:35.000] Hey, it's actually Eddie, and I don't think I'll need to. [01:56:35.000 --> 01:56:40.000] But for that gentleman in South Dakota with the DOT card, I do mine in Florida, [01:56:40.000 --> 01:56:42.000] and I do it online. [01:56:42.000 --> 01:56:46.000] And I just go to their web page, whatever web page Texas would give them. [01:56:46.000 --> 01:56:50.000] I fill out a little bit of information that's on the actual DOT card, [01:56:50.000 --> 01:56:58.000] and I send them a photograph of the new DOT card, and they either accept it or reject it. [01:56:58.000 --> 01:56:59.000] I just sent one in. [01:56:59.000 --> 01:57:03.000] They rejected it because they couldn't read the bottom line, the expiration date. [01:57:03.000 --> 01:57:06.000] But I just sent them another picture that has the whole card. [01:57:06.000 --> 01:57:08.000] This is the second year into it. [01:57:08.000 --> 01:57:12.000] It's part of the Homeland Security, keeping track of everybody, [01:57:12.000 --> 01:57:15.000] doing everything anywhere all the time. [01:57:15.000 --> 01:57:16.000] Yeah. [01:57:16.000 --> 01:57:17.000] I do it. [01:57:17.000 --> 01:57:20.000] Send a photograph, do it online, and you should be okay. [01:57:20.000 --> 01:57:21.000] Okay. [01:57:21.000 --> 01:57:23.000] Well, thanks for that information, Terrence. [01:57:23.000 --> 01:57:24.000] Maybe David's listening. [01:57:24.000 --> 01:57:25.000] He'll pick up on that. [01:57:25.000 --> 01:57:26.000] Okay. [01:57:26.000 --> 01:57:27.000] Enjoy it. [01:57:27.000 --> 01:57:28.000] Thank you. [01:57:28.000 --> 01:57:29.000] All right. [01:57:29.000 --> 01:57:30.000] Thanks. [01:57:30.000 --> 01:57:31.000] All right. [01:57:31.000 --> 01:57:32.000] Now we're going to go to Rob in Illinois. [01:57:32.000 --> 01:57:36.000] Rob, you've got about 30 to 45 seconds tops. [01:57:36.000 --> 01:57:37.000] All right. [01:57:37.000 --> 01:57:38.000] Thank you, Eddie. [01:57:38.000 --> 01:57:41.000] There was a caller just on here a few minutes ago from Illinois. [01:57:41.000 --> 01:57:44.000] If you can – can I give out my email real fast? [01:57:44.000 --> 01:57:45.000] Sure. [01:57:45.000 --> 01:57:47.000] Rob1802 at mail.com. [01:57:47.000 --> 01:57:52.000] That's rob18021802 at mail.com. [01:57:52.000 --> 01:57:56.000] And I'll email you the – I just downloaded Eddie's latest documents [01:57:56.000 --> 01:57:59.000] for the transportation script and cross-examination. [01:57:59.000 --> 01:58:03.000] I'll send that out to you as well as other stuff for Illinois. [01:58:03.000 --> 01:58:04.000] Okay. [01:58:04.000 --> 01:58:05.000] Thanks, Rob. [01:58:05.000 --> 01:58:06.000] Okay. [01:58:06.000 --> 01:58:07.000] All right, folks. [01:58:07.000 --> 01:58:09.000] I want to thank you all for listening in. [01:58:09.000 --> 01:58:13.000] Like I say, my intention tonight was not to stomp on any toes or hurt any feelings, [01:58:13.000 --> 01:58:19.000] but to make people motivated to understand why I do not want to be the all-seeing oracle [01:58:19.000 --> 01:58:22.000] or the only well in the desert. [01:58:22.000 --> 01:58:27.000] It's imperative that we learn to stand on our own. [01:58:27.000 --> 01:58:30.000] It's imperative that we put the time and effort into what we need to know [01:58:30.000 --> 01:58:37.000] and why we need to know it and make sure that those that we're responsible for know it, too. [01:58:37.000 --> 01:58:41.000] This is about self-reliance and responsibility. [01:58:41.000 --> 01:58:43.000] So, folks, thank you all for listening in. [01:58:43.000 --> 01:58:44.000] Thanks for supporting us. [01:58:44.000 --> 01:58:45.000] You all have a great week. [01:58:45.000 --> 01:58:46.000] Good night. [01:58:46.000 --> 01:59:11.000] God bless. [01:59:16.000 --> 01:59:41.000] Thank you. [01:59:41.000 --> 01:59:57.000] Thank you.