[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [00:05.840 --> 00:13.480] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.480 --> 00:21.360] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.360 --> 00:25.040] Markets for Wednesday, the 5th of October, 2016, are currently trending with gold at [00:25.040 --> 00:33.640] $1,266.60 an ounce, silver at $17.72 an ounce, Texas crude at $48.69 a barrel, and Bitcoin [00:33.640 --> 00:43.320] is currently sitting at about $613 U.S. currency. [00:43.320 --> 00:48.320] Today in history, the year 1947, the first televised White House presidential address [00:48.320 --> 00:56.360] is given by then U.S. President Harry S. Truman, today in history. [00:56.360 --> 01:00.600] In recent news, the Paris Climate Agreement is set to take effect next month, adopted [01:00.600 --> 01:07.400] by consensus on December 12, 2015, at the 21st Conference of the Parties of the UNFCCC, [01:07.400 --> 01:11.940] or United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris, and open for signatures [01:11.940 --> 01:16.680] on the 22nd of April, 2016, Earth Day, and a ceremony in New York City. [01:16.680 --> 01:19.040] It is set to take effect on November 4. [01:19.040 --> 01:23.000] It is essentially a global agreement for the redirecting of the world economy away from [01:23.000 --> 01:26.720] fossil fuels towards more greenhouse-friendly forms of energy. [01:26.720 --> 01:31.040] President Obama, speaking from the Rose Garden, talking about the agreement, said that, quote, [01:31.040 --> 01:35.760] this gives us the best possible shot to save the one planet we've got, and that one of [01:35.760 --> 01:39.880] the reasons I took this office was to make America the leader in this mission. [01:39.880 --> 01:44.400] The agreement already has support from major greenhouse gas emitters like China, the United [01:44.400 --> 01:49.620] States and India, and in total 72 out of 195 countries have ratified the agreement, according [01:49.620 --> 01:50.620] to the UN. [01:50.620 --> 01:54.600] Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump opposes the agreement since it lacks the approval [01:54.600 --> 02:04.300] of the U.S. Congress, while Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton is a strong supporter. [02:04.300 --> 02:08.160] More than 50 correctional officers and inmates inside Maryland's largest state prison were [02:08.160 --> 02:12.080] charged by prosecutors Wednesday, today, with bribery and drug conspiracy. [02:12.080 --> 02:16.080] Prison guards are accused of smuggling cell phones, tobacco and drugs into the Eastern [02:16.080 --> 02:20.920] Shore facility in exchange for money and sex, according to indictments unsealed in a federal [02:20.920 --> 02:21.920] investigation. [02:21.920 --> 02:25.840] Apparently, prison guards were passing through security with undetected heroin, cocaine and [02:25.840 --> 02:29.840] pornographic videos, which were then handed off to inmates in exchange for hundreds of [02:29.840 --> 02:30.840] dollars. [02:30.840 --> 02:34.480] They were also being accused of warning inmates when prison officials were preparing to search [02:34.480 --> 02:39.760] cells and of using force and intimidation to silence inmates who were reporting the smuggling. [02:39.760 --> 02:43.280] According to court records, inmates were using the prison phones and their contraband cell [02:43.280 --> 02:46.240] phones to pay off correctional officers through PayPal. [02:46.240 --> 02:51.120] They were hustling $500 for each package on average and as much as $3,000 a week, according [02:51.120 --> 02:52.120] to investigators. [02:52.120 --> 03:11.120] This is Rick Rodeo with your Lowdown for October 5th, 2016. [03:11.120 --> 03:31.080] Thank you for joining us on this special edition of The Lowdown for October 5th, 2016. [03:31.080 --> 03:41.080] Thank you for joining us on this special edition of The Lowdown for October 5th, 2016. [03:41.080 --> 03:48.080] Thank you for joining us on this special edition of The Lowdown for October 5th, 2016. [04:11.080 --> 04:36.080] Thank you for joining us on this special edition of The Lowdown for October 5th, 2016. [04:36.080 --> 04:41.080] Alright folks, good evening, this is the Bundy Knight Rule of Law Radio Show with your host, [04:41.080 --> 04:42.080] Eddie Craig. [04:42.080 --> 04:48.120] It is October something or other, heck, I can't even tell you at the moment, 24th, something [04:48.120 --> 04:49.760] like that. [04:49.760 --> 04:53.600] We are live tonight, it is not in archive. [04:53.600 --> 04:59.200] Now as you all know, I have been spending the last several weeks working on a felony [04:59.200 --> 05:00.200] evasion case. [05:00.200 --> 05:06.060] I got the paperwork finished for that to disqualify the two district judges to hopefully get the [05:06.060 --> 05:12.040] indictment against the individual quashed because of all of the due process and violations [05:12.040 --> 05:17.200] of law that these people performed to get this indictment. [05:17.200 --> 05:22.440] Some of these people should be going to prison over this, but they won't. [05:22.440 --> 05:28.840] And the reason they won't is because the public is not aware of what's going on. [05:28.840 --> 05:33.640] And the public is not aware of what's going on, not simply because there's not enough [05:33.640 --> 05:38.600] information out there to tell them, but because they're too apathetic to actually care when [05:38.600 --> 05:41.040] it's made known to them. [05:41.040 --> 05:47.720] And so good people suffer from the apathy of the ignorant. [05:47.720 --> 05:56.120] And that's what this show and all the shows on this network are here to try to change. [05:56.120 --> 06:02.840] We try to not only bring you the information and make it as accurate and truthful and as [06:02.840 --> 06:10.400] researchable as possible when we do it, but we also try to motivate you to understand [06:10.400 --> 06:15.040] that knowing is not enough. [06:15.040 --> 06:20.840] There has to be some doing involved with the knowing. [06:20.840 --> 06:27.000] Now I've been accused by lawyers of wanting to be, or attorneys rather, of wanting to [06:27.000 --> 06:29.880] be an attorney. [06:29.880 --> 06:35.080] No way in hell do I want to be an attorney. [06:35.080 --> 06:41.200] To be an attorney means to be a liar and a thief, a dishonest individual. [06:41.200 --> 06:46.600] I will never desire to be an attorney. [06:46.600 --> 06:52.360] All of us, however, have the potential to be lawyers, because the definition of a lawyer [06:52.360 --> 06:56.800] is simply someone knowledgeable in the law. [06:56.800 --> 07:02.280] Now the difference between what we understand law to be and what the attorneys understand [07:02.280 --> 07:08.000] law to be are very, very different things. [07:08.000 --> 07:13.720] Attorneys see law only as that which is created by the courts and ruled upon by the courts [07:13.720 --> 07:19.000] to mean whatever it says, whether that's the actual words and language used to make it [07:19.000 --> 07:20.000] or not. [07:20.000 --> 07:28.280] In other words, they are perverters of law, okay? [07:28.280 --> 07:35.600] They reinterpret it and change its meaning beyond the words it contains. [07:35.600 --> 07:43.560] When the only delegated power they actually have is to determine whether or not as written [07:43.560 --> 07:47.720] that law would be constitutional. [07:47.720 --> 07:52.640] Now they're not the only ones with the power to determine whether or not anything in law [07:52.640 --> 07:59.900] is constitutional or whether any action by a government official is constitutional. [07:59.900 --> 08:07.520] Every branch of government, being an independent branch, has the ability to make that determination. [08:07.520 --> 08:12.320] And when the executive department sees the judicial department doing something that's [08:12.320 --> 08:19.760] not only unconstitutional but illegal, they should be charging and arresting and prosecuting [08:19.760 --> 08:27.200] those judicial individuals, and vice versa. [08:27.200 --> 08:32.800] But that doesn't happen, and the reason it doesn't happen is because our independent [08:32.800 --> 08:39.160] branches of government have become a unified force against the sovereignty and individual [08:39.160 --> 08:44.080] rights of we the people. [08:44.080 --> 08:47.020] They were supposed to remain separate and independent. [08:47.020 --> 08:52.000] They no longer are and have not been for quite some time. [08:52.000 --> 08:56.840] The judiciary makes the argument that it has to do certain things a certain way and grant [08:56.840 --> 09:03.960] itself and every other agency some unknown form of immunity that we never gave them the [09:03.960 --> 09:10.080] authority to have to protect the ability of government to function, and not just the judiciary [09:10.080 --> 09:12.160] but every single department. [09:12.160 --> 09:19.160] Now that means that the courts are unilaterally declaring themselves the arbiter of what is [09:19.160 --> 09:24.800] constitutional and proper for every other department to perform those functions. [09:24.800 --> 09:29.420] And they're not authorized to do that either. [09:29.420 --> 09:33.560] They want to claim no other department can tell them how to perform judicial functions, [09:33.560 --> 09:39.320] but they are sitting up here and rewriting statute and law to suit their own ends and [09:39.320 --> 09:45.840] to further governmental power over individual liberty at every turn. [09:45.840 --> 09:54.200] And you have been taught and indoctrinated into the idea that this is not only acceptable [09:54.200 --> 10:03.440] but was the way that it was originally designed, and that is not true. [10:03.440 --> 10:10.320] While I was going through this and writing the pleadings for this case, I could make [10:10.320 --> 10:19.040] note of so many violations of rights just in the way the procedures are already written [10:19.040 --> 10:23.840] to fill a book of legal argument. [10:23.840 --> 10:29.900] Not to mention when you compound it with case law that demonstrably goes against the law [10:29.900 --> 10:38.480] even as it is written and further harms the individual being accused and deprives them [10:38.480 --> 10:46.840] of necessary precious rights to substantive and procedural due process. [10:46.840 --> 10:54.480] Rights for which there is no existing remedy in the law. [10:54.480 --> 11:04.080] And the courts compound that fact by creating a greater level of harm through their opinions. [11:04.080 --> 11:09.840] Now once you, I'm posting a new article on the blog which is getting gone through to [11:09.840 --> 11:12.600] get it formatted and everything properly so it reads right. [11:12.600 --> 11:17.440] And I'm going to attach the actual Word documents and some PDF version documents of the case [11:17.440 --> 11:21.560] law that are discussed in some of this paperwork. [11:21.560 --> 11:27.800] But you will see seven or eight Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the Supreme Court on [11:27.800 --> 11:39.120] the criminal side here in Texas, opinions that blatantly violate Texas law and Texas [11:39.120 --> 11:42.640] statute and Texas rules and procedure. [11:42.640 --> 11:47.960] But not only does it violate those things, the way the opinions are written and what [11:47.960 --> 11:55.920] they say and do directly violates the most fundamental due process rights of the individual [11:55.920 --> 11:59.780] that you can imagine. [11:59.780 --> 12:04.360] And all that's going to be in the paperwork that's up there on the blog when I get it [12:04.360 --> 12:05.360] posted. [12:05.360 --> 12:07.840] You'll see it. [12:07.840 --> 12:21.400] But it is astounding to me that every Sunday how few people actually show up for the live [12:21.400 --> 12:22.400] class. [12:22.400 --> 12:27.280] It astounds me how many people show up when we actually are able to stream the class in [12:27.280 --> 12:32.120] the online presence. [12:32.120 --> 12:39.240] And it is becoming more and more apparent to me that people just don't give a damn [12:39.240 --> 12:41.400] anymore. [12:41.400 --> 12:46.480] They have too many other things eaten into their day to have any concern over something [12:46.480 --> 12:51.360] that they perceive as not directly affecting them at the moment. [12:51.360 --> 12:57.640] Now they're the first ones to scream bloody murder when they need help and the last ones [12:57.640 --> 13:03.800] to actually begin to help themselves. [13:03.800 --> 13:10.240] And yet when they have the opportunity before there's a problem to prepare for that problem, [13:10.240 --> 13:15.280] they don't. [13:15.280 --> 13:21.600] And I cannot understand this mindset. [13:21.600 --> 13:23.840] I can't. [13:23.840 --> 13:28.440] If I knew that there was a problem headed my way that if I didn't do something about [13:28.440 --> 13:36.040] it was going to hit me like a tsunami on the coastline, and you knew that I knew this and [13:36.040 --> 13:40.020] you could stand apart from it and look at it and see it coming and see me doing nothing [13:40.020 --> 13:42.560] about it and look at me and go, what kind of fool are you? [13:42.560 --> 13:46.320] You're not doing anything to either get out of the way or stop this. [13:46.320 --> 13:50.520] What's going on? [13:50.520 --> 13:56.360] And to me these, you put someone in that situation and they try and look at you go, it's a tsunami. [13:56.360 --> 14:00.440] What do you want me to do? [14:00.440 --> 14:05.720] Well hell, if nothing else, find a hill, okay? [14:05.720 --> 14:10.040] Something that's going to be at least higher than the water when it gets there. [14:10.040 --> 14:13.140] At least that's something. [14:13.140 --> 14:16.960] But instead, you sit there and stare at the sunset so you don't miss one before it actually [14:16.960 --> 14:21.560] gets to you. [14:21.560 --> 14:29.240] People if we don't get out of our damned armchairs and get off our lazy behinds and start learning [14:29.240 --> 14:37.960] what our public servants under the guise of law and proper authority are doing to us, [14:37.960 --> 14:42.940] this country is as good as gone. [14:42.940 --> 14:45.800] There will be no more America. [14:45.800 --> 14:51.400] There will be FEMA region seven. [14:51.400 --> 14:57.720] But there won't be an America. [14:57.720 --> 15:02.600] We will be global dominated continent three. [15:02.600 --> 15:05.480] But we will not be America. [15:05.480 --> 15:09.880] You will not be free as you understand free, though most of you, even though you're not [15:09.880 --> 15:17.480] free now, can't seem to conceptualize why that is. [15:17.480 --> 15:23.040] It's very easy to stand up and proclaim yourself a free man when there's no one standing next [15:23.040 --> 15:31.280] to you with a stick to tell you, oh no, you're not, and at the same time not realize that [15:31.280 --> 15:36.480] they are walking your direction. [15:36.480 --> 15:39.860] You want to know the epitome of stupidity and irony? [15:39.860 --> 15:45.160] It's when you're the kind of person that puts a come and take it banner on the windshield [15:45.160 --> 15:49.720] of your truck or on the back window of your truck, at the same time you put the thin blue [15:49.720 --> 15:53.240] line support logo right there on top of it. [15:53.240 --> 15:55.040] You dig the irony here? [15:55.040 --> 15:59.280] The very people you're supporting are the same ones that are going to come and take [15:59.280 --> 16:01.200] it when they're ordered to. [16:01.200 --> 16:08.760] Now yes, that's a meme on Facebook, but it's still in my mind the mindset of everyone in [16:08.760 --> 16:10.400] this country right now. [16:10.400 --> 16:16.520] You do not understand the paradoxes that you are allowing to be created by what you do [16:16.520 --> 16:22.400] and do not do. [16:22.400 --> 16:30.000] Everything you ignore is going to come back and bite you squarely in the butt, and it's [16:30.000 --> 16:36.380] going to get everyone near you bitten as well. [16:36.380 --> 16:46.360] If you do not wake up, put up, get up, and get going, you're going to get washed away. [16:46.360 --> 16:50.280] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio. [16:50.280 --> 16:54.920] The calling number is 512-646-1984. [16:54.920 --> 17:00.720] Give us a call, get in line, we will be right back after this break. [17:00.720 --> 17:05.320] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [17:05.320 --> 17:06.760] of nutrition. [17:06.760 --> 17:11.520] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [17:11.520 --> 17:17.240] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [17:17.240 --> 17:23.560] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [17:23.560 --> 17:25.680] provide the nutrients you need. [17:25.680 --> 17:30.640] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [17:30.640 --> 17:31.780] we reject. [17:31.780 --> 17:37.040] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [17:37.040 --> 17:39.920] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [17:39.920 --> 17:46.160] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [17:46.160 --> 17:47.160] quality radio. [17:47.160 --> 17:51.720] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [17:51.720 --> 17:57.360] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [17:57.360 --> 17:59.320] increase your income. [17:59.320 --> 18:00.320] Order now. [18:00.320 --> 18:05.400] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.400 --> 18:09.440] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.440 --> 18:13.760] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.760 --> 18:14.760] can win too. [18:14.760 --> 18:19.560] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.560 --> 18:25.440] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [18:25.440 --> 18:29.960] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [18:29.960 --> 18:34.200] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.200 --> 18:39.320] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.320 --> 18:41.440] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.440 --> 18:47.080] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [18:47.080 --> 18:49.960] or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [18:49.960 --> 18:58.960] 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 [18:58.960 --> 18:59.960] collectors now. [18:59.960 --> 19:08.960] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:08.960 --> 19:25.960] Hi, folks. [19:25.960 --> 19:26.960] We are back. [19:26.960 --> 19:28.960] This is Rule of Law Radio. [19:28.960 --> 19:31.960] The calling number is 512-646-1984. [19:31.960 --> 19:35.960] Right now, we have John in Texas. [19:35.960 --> 19:37.960] John, what can we do for you? [19:37.960 --> 19:44.960] Yeah, I'm fighting a speeding ticket in Texas right now, and I had talked to Randy a couple [19:44.960 --> 19:51.960] of weeks ago, and he sent me some paperwork that he had used before in another case, and [19:51.960 --> 19:53.960] I kind of appropriated it to myself. [19:53.960 --> 19:55.960] I don't have it in front of me. [19:55.960 --> 20:05.960] I think it was 26.01, but it was trying to get the officer to say whether he's one of [20:05.960 --> 20:12.960] the four that the commissioner has appointed to work traffic. [20:12.960 --> 20:15.960] Was it a deputy sheriff that wrote the ticket? [20:15.960 --> 20:18.960] No, it was a constable. [20:18.960 --> 20:19.960] Okay, yeah. [20:19.960 --> 20:21.960] Well, he's still a county officer. [20:21.960 --> 20:24.960] Okay, so I sent that to him. [20:24.960 --> 20:27.960] The problem here is this for a constable. [20:27.960 --> 20:35.960] A constable is only authorized under the transportation code to operate way stations and to work as [20:35.960 --> 20:37.960] a chaser at a way station. [20:37.960 --> 20:39.960] He is not authorized to write traffic citations. [20:39.960 --> 20:44.960] He is not authorized to do any other sort of traffic enforcement. [20:44.960 --> 20:45.960] Oh, that's interesting. [20:45.960 --> 20:46.960] I didn't know that one. [20:46.960 --> 20:47.960] Yeah. [20:47.960 --> 20:51.960] Well, I got him to initial off, but he had them, and he also sent me a letter back saying [20:51.960 --> 20:59.960] he didn't have the... He said he doesn't have any paperwork to say that he is one of [20:59.960 --> 21:04.960] those people that's been appointed to work traffic. [21:04.960 --> 21:08.960] Then what does he say, and he has? [21:08.960 --> 21:10.960] He didn't say anything. [21:10.960 --> 21:14.960] He just said that in the letter... I wish I had it in front of me, but I'm driving. [21:14.960 --> 21:15.960] He says that- [21:15.960 --> 21:16.960] I'm sorry, you're what? [21:16.960 --> 21:17.960] I don't have that. [21:17.960 --> 21:18.960] I'm driving. [21:18.960 --> 21:19.960] You're what? [21:19.960 --> 21:20.960] I'm not driving. [21:20.960 --> 21:21.960] I'm traveling. [21:21.960 --> 21:30.960] He just said he doesn't have any of the paperwork that I've asked for. [21:30.960 --> 21:32.960] That's all he said back. [21:32.960 --> 21:37.960] Well, you just happen to be in luck because sometime tomorrow I'm going to be publishing [21:37.960 --> 21:44.960] an article on the blog complete with an entire motion as well as the posting of the motion, [21:44.960 --> 21:49.960] but there'll be a LinkedIn document at the bottom for the motion on how to beat a speeding [21:49.960 --> 21:52.960] charge in Texas on the merits. [21:52.960 --> 21:59.960] It will be an actual motion to dismiss that argues in detail the merits to dismiss a speeding [21:59.960 --> 22:01.960] charge. [22:01.960 --> 22:07.960] Believe me, you're going to lose at trial, but the Court of Appeals is going to have [22:07.960 --> 22:15.960] a hell of a time trying to deny that they had no authority to write this citation. [22:15.960 --> 22:19.960] Okay. [22:19.960 --> 22:25.960] Do you think that the paperwork that I sent to the officer I should send- [22:25.960 --> 22:26.960] I have no idea. [22:26.960 --> 22:28.960] I don't know what you sent. [22:28.960 --> 22:29.960] Okay. [22:29.960 --> 22:32.960] You got to send it to me to look at before I can tell you whether or not it should have [22:32.960 --> 22:34.960] been used. [22:34.960 --> 22:35.960] I got you. [22:35.960 --> 22:38.960] Well, I just talked to Randy a few weeks ago. [22:38.960 --> 22:41.960] Yeah, but Randy always gives advice without consulting me when it comes to this stuff, [22:41.960 --> 22:45.960] so I have no idea what he told you or where to look for it or what kind of argument he [22:45.960 --> 22:47.960] situated around it. [22:47.960 --> 22:49.960] I'm not saying it's wrong. [22:49.960 --> 22:52.960] I'm just saying I don't know what it is. [22:52.960 --> 22:54.960] All right. [22:54.960 --> 22:56.960] Well, that makes sense. [22:56.960 --> 22:57.960] Okay. [22:57.960 --> 23:02.960] Well, at least it helped me out with knowing that they're only supposed to work way stations. [23:02.960 --> 23:03.960] Yeah. [23:03.960 --> 23:09.960] You can do a search in the entire transportation code online for constable, and you will find [23:09.960 --> 23:14.960] that the only place where they're specifically authorized to do anything is to operate a [23:14.960 --> 23:16.960] way station. [23:16.960 --> 23:18.960] Yeah. [23:18.960 --> 23:26.960] Well, the-I just-the one he has sent me said something to the effect of if it's a county [23:26.960 --> 23:31.960] under 3 million people, they can only appoint four officers to work traffic. [23:31.960 --> 23:36.960] Yeah, but those officers all have to be deputy sheriffs, not constables. [23:36.960 --> 23:38.960] Okay. [23:38.960 --> 23:39.960] All right. [23:39.960 --> 23:41.960] So, okay. [23:41.960 --> 23:46.960] Well, I think that gets me to where-at least that gives me an answer to what I needed to [23:46.960 --> 23:47.960] know. [23:47.960 --> 23:48.960] Okay. [23:48.960 --> 23:49.960] I appreciate it. [23:49.960 --> 23:50.960] All right. [23:50.960 --> 23:51.960] All right. [23:51.960 --> 23:52.960] Thank you. [23:52.960 --> 23:53.960] Yes, sir. [23:53.960 --> 23:54.960] Thanks for calling in. [23:54.960 --> 23:55.960] All right. [23:55.960 --> 23:56.960] Now we have Tommy in Texas. [23:56.960 --> 23:59.960] Tommy, what can we do for you? [23:59.960 --> 24:00.960] Hey, Eddie. [24:00.960 --> 24:01.960] Good evening. [24:01.960 --> 24:02.960] Thanks for taking my call. [24:02.960 --> 24:03.960] Yes, sir. [24:03.960 --> 24:07.960] I believe you saw the video I posted on the- [24:07.960 --> 24:08.960] I haven't got to watch the video. [24:08.960 --> 24:11.960] I saw the posting of it, but I haven't got to sit and watch it yet. [24:11.960 --> 24:14.960] I've been heads down on this felony stuff. [24:14.960 --> 24:15.960] Okay. [24:15.960 --> 24:24.960] Well, the gist of it is I refused to give the Texas State Trooper a driver's license [24:24.960 --> 24:26.960] or proof of insurance. [24:26.960 --> 24:31.960] And specifically, I told him upfront, I am not engaged in transportation. [24:31.960 --> 24:33.960] And it didn't get much further than that. [24:33.960 --> 24:44.960] And I had my window half rolled down on the right side of my truck because it's so tall. [24:44.960 --> 24:45.960] I couldn't see them. [24:45.960 --> 24:46.960] They couldn't see me. [24:46.960 --> 24:49.960] And they couldn't- it's hard to talk in the window. [24:49.960 --> 24:56.960] Anyway, he reached in and unlocked my truck, jumped in, and grabbed my phone, which I [24:56.960 --> 24:57.960] was recording with. [24:57.960 --> 25:00.960] You know that's burglary of a vehicle, right? [25:00.960 --> 25:05.960] I would say aggravated because he was displaying a weapon. [25:05.960 --> 25:08.960] He had a weapon on his side. [25:08.960 --> 25:09.960] Yeah. [25:09.960 --> 25:10.960] So here's the problem. [25:10.960 --> 25:12.960] See, you just bought what I told you, hook, line, and sinker. [25:12.960 --> 25:18.960] If you read the statute on burglary of a vehicle, a vehicle only applies to commercial vehicles. [25:18.960 --> 25:20.960] That's exactly what it says in the statute. [25:20.960 --> 25:23.960] You can only burglarize a commercial vehicle. [25:23.960 --> 25:26.960] Okay. [25:26.960 --> 25:29.960] Well, I would say it's aggravated robbery. [25:29.960 --> 25:34.960] That would work because that's not vehicle-based. [25:34.960 --> 25:37.960] Right, but aggravated robbery. [25:37.960 --> 25:47.960] And then when they took me out of the truck and then handcuffed me and just wrenched the [25:47.960 --> 25:51.960] cuffs down on my wrist, I said, hey, loosen those cuffs. [25:51.960 --> 25:52.960] I said, you're cutting off circulation. [25:52.960 --> 25:53.960] That hurts. [25:53.960 --> 25:54.960] He goes, they're handcuffs. [25:54.960 --> 25:55.960] They're supposed to hurt. [25:55.960 --> 25:56.960] Yeah. [25:56.960 --> 26:00.960] That right there, you've got audio right now of aggravated assault. [26:00.960 --> 26:01.960] Yep. [26:01.960 --> 26:07.960] All they have to do to commit aggravated assault as public servants is to commit simple assault [26:07.960 --> 26:10.960] while wearing that gun. [26:10.960 --> 26:13.960] And he didn't search my whole body. [26:13.960 --> 26:17.960] He specifically wanted my driver's license, a driver's license. [26:17.960 --> 26:21.960] And so after he cuffed me, he reached into my pocket without my license. [26:21.960 --> 26:26.960] That's a Fourth Amendment violation on illegal search and seizure. [26:26.960 --> 26:32.960] Then he went back to my truck and against my consent and against my protestations, proceeded [26:32.960 --> 26:38.960] to search my truck and then took my phone out of my truck and went and took it to the [26:38.960 --> 26:40.960] inside of his cruiser. [26:40.960 --> 26:42.960] And downloaded everything on it. [26:42.960 --> 26:43.960] I don't know what he did. [26:43.960 --> 26:46.960] No, guarantee you that's exactly what he did. [26:46.960 --> 26:49.960] He downloaded everything on it. [26:49.960 --> 26:52.960] Yeah. [26:52.960 --> 26:53.960] So and then... [26:53.960 --> 26:59.960] They have a machine that can clone your phone without even having to log into it. [26:59.960 --> 27:01.960] Well, then that's what they did. [27:01.960 --> 27:05.960] The only way to prevent them from getting away with that is to make sure that your phone [27:05.960 --> 27:07.960] encrypts the data that's stored on it. [27:07.960 --> 27:14.960] If you don't turn on encryption, they can get at everything without ever getting your password. [27:14.960 --> 27:19.960] Okay, I need to figure out how to do that then. [27:19.960 --> 27:22.960] And then the citation that they issued, it was issued... [27:22.960 --> 27:23.960] There were two troopers there. [27:23.960 --> 27:25.960] One apparently was in training. [27:25.960 --> 27:28.960] He's the one that typed up the citation. [27:28.960 --> 27:33.960] But it was typed under the other trooper, the trainer's name. [27:33.960 --> 27:34.960] Neither one signed it. [27:34.960 --> 27:35.960] I didn't sign it. [27:35.960 --> 27:36.960] I asked them. [27:36.960 --> 27:37.960] They told me to sign it. [27:37.960 --> 27:38.960] I said, what's going to happen if I don't? [27:38.960 --> 27:39.960] You're going to take me to jail? [27:39.960 --> 27:42.960] They said, no, but I'm not signing it. [27:42.960 --> 27:46.960] I never signed the citation. [27:46.960 --> 27:52.960] And I did go to court, but I didn't plead. [27:52.960 --> 27:59.960] All I did, I saw the court clerk, and I gave her a public information request for the contents [27:59.960 --> 28:03.960] of the case file, which there was just one electronic document. [28:03.960 --> 28:06.960] And that was a copy of the citation. [28:06.960 --> 28:09.960] But it had the officer's input on it. [28:09.960 --> 28:13.960] And he flat out, they didn't mention the search. [28:13.960 --> 28:16.960] There's a box for checking for a search. [28:16.960 --> 28:18.960] That was not checked. [28:18.960 --> 28:27.960] He said, the driver wanted to provide license and proof of insurance, which actually I refused [28:27.960 --> 28:29.960] to provide any of that. [28:29.960 --> 28:32.960] They took it from me against my will. [28:32.960 --> 28:37.960] So that there, I don't know if that really can be considered aggravated perjury. [28:37.960 --> 28:40.960] Absolutely, they're falsifying their reports. [28:40.960 --> 28:43.960] They're falsifying their statements. [28:43.960 --> 28:49.960] They're committing felonies. [28:49.960 --> 28:54.960] You need to get your hands on the police cruiser video. [28:54.960 --> 28:56.960] What about the police cruiser video? [28:56.960 --> 28:58.960] You need to get a copy of it. [28:58.960 --> 29:03.960] File a motion for discovery and get the video from the cruiser. [29:03.960 --> 29:10.960] Any audio or video from the cruiser, body cameras and body mics. [29:10.960 --> 29:12.960] You want a copy of any CAD reports. [29:12.960 --> 29:19.960] You want a copy of any and all radio communications between that trooper and the base. [29:19.960 --> 29:21.960] You want all of that. [29:21.960 --> 29:26.960] I've already got that written up into the discovery request already. [29:26.960 --> 29:31.960] I've got a copy of the video already, which I posted on the Title 42 website. [29:31.960 --> 29:34.960] That's the actual trooper video. [29:34.960 --> 29:36.960] You're sure that's the whole thing? [29:36.960 --> 29:37.960] They said it was. [29:37.960 --> 29:41.960] I questioned it because only the trainee's voice is recorded. [29:41.960 --> 29:46.960] The trainer who was with me outside the trooper vehicle, his voice is not on the recording. [29:46.960 --> 29:51.960] Right, so either he had his mic intentionally turned off or they've edited him out. [29:51.960 --> 29:53.960] All right, Tommy, hang on just a second. [29:53.960 --> 29:55.960] We'll be right back after this break to finish this up. [29:55.960 --> 29:57.960] All right, folks, y'all hang in there. [29:57.960 --> 30:02.960] We'll be right back. [30:27.960 --> 30:32.960] We'll be right back. [30:57.960 --> 31:02.960] We'll be right back. [31:28.960 --> 31:31.960] What are you thinking? [31:31.960 --> 31:37.960] Micro plant powder with iodine and probiotics for a total body detox for around $10 a month. [31:37.960 --> 31:43.960] If USA.org has 12 formulations of micro plant powder for absorbing and removing toxins from your kidneys, [31:43.960 --> 31:48.960] liver, blood, lungs, stomach, and colon, and feel better than ever, it alkalizes. [31:48.960 --> 31:54.960] Oxygen A kills parasites, does the job of 10 products, that saves you space, time, and money. [31:54.960 --> 31:59.960] Call 888-910-4367 only at NUSA.org. [31:59.960 --> 32:04.960] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:04.960 --> 32:09.960] 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, [32:09.960 --> 32:12.960] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.960 --> 32:16.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:16.960 --> 32:19.960] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.960 --> 32:24.960] Public courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:24.960 --> 32:27.960] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:27.960 --> 32:32.960] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [32:32.960 --> 32:34.960] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:34.960 --> 32:39.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:39.960 --> 32:44.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:44.960 --> 32:49.960] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:49.960 --> 32:53.960] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:53.960 --> 32:58.960] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [32:58.960 --> 33:01.960] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:28.960 --> 33:40.960] All right, folks, we are back. [33:40.960 --> 33:45.960] This is Rule of Law Radio, the call in number 512-646-1984. [33:45.960 --> 33:47.960] We are speaking with Tommy in Texas. [33:47.960 --> 33:50.960] All right, Tommy, go ahead. [33:50.960 --> 33:59.960] Another note of interest during this stop, so as the trooper that's riding the ticket, the trainee, [33:59.960 --> 34:05.960] and I know we just discussed that either one or both, or the trainer didn't have his mic turned on, [34:05.960 --> 34:12.960] what they indicated was that only one mic would work at a time is what I was told. [34:12.960 --> 34:14.960] They're full of it. [34:14.960 --> 34:18.960] They are completely full of it. [34:18.960 --> 34:25.960] Well, that's what they're telling me, so I don't know how to investigate that further, really. [34:25.960 --> 34:28.960] One note of interest, as we're standing in front of the cruiser, [34:28.960 --> 34:33.960] this trainer is trying to look up something on the Internet to show me some legal opinion [34:33.960 --> 34:39.960] about requirements to provide a driver's license upon demand. [34:39.960 --> 34:42.960] And I said, well, look, no, I said I don't even want to see it. [34:42.960 --> 34:45.960] I said, you want to look something up, look up transportation code, [34:45.960 --> 34:50.960] which is transportation code 201.904. [34:50.960 --> 34:53.960] And so he looks it up, and then he refuses to. [34:53.960 --> 34:56.960] I said, no, go ahead and read it out loud for the video audio. [34:56.960 --> 34:57.960] Go ahead. [34:57.960 --> 34:59.960] And he said, I don't need to do that. [34:59.960 --> 35:01.960] I know what it says. [35:01.960 --> 35:05.960] Right, that's why he had to look it up, because he knew what it said. [35:05.960 --> 35:07.960] Exactly. [35:07.960 --> 35:15.960] So I think this is a textbook case of what not to do as far as the troopers in a traffic stop, [35:15.960 --> 35:20.960] because I do believe they completely violated my rights. [35:20.960 --> 35:24.960] I think the minute I told them, hey, look, I'm not engaged in transportation, [35:24.960 --> 35:27.960] that should have stopped them right there. [35:27.960 --> 35:30.960] Well, it should have, but you're talking to a moron. [35:30.960 --> 35:36.960] They called their supervisor to the scene, and they refused to do that. [35:36.960 --> 35:37.960] Well, they're DPS. [35:37.960 --> 35:43.960] They're supervisors a long way away most of the time. [35:43.960 --> 35:48.960] They're supervisors like five minutes away. [35:48.960 --> 35:54.960] So I'm waiting for the outcome of this court case to probably file a title. [35:54.960 --> 36:05.960] I think I have a good Title 42, 1983 lawsuit that I think is pretty solid. [36:05.960 --> 36:07.960] Is that possible? [36:07.960 --> 36:16.960] Yeah, I don't know what the federal court here in the southern region is going to be like as far as the, [36:16.960 --> 36:19.960] you know, how well they're going to interpret that. [36:19.960 --> 36:22.960] I've got the facts down pretty solid, I believe. [36:22.960 --> 36:26.960] Simple, no conclusionary statements. [36:26.960 --> 36:28.960] Okay. [36:28.960 --> 36:34.960] Now, one other thing I want to ask you, I was thinking about filing a motion to quash the citation. [36:34.960 --> 36:42.960] Don't know if that would kind of like put them into like a probable cause hearing, [36:42.960 --> 36:45.960] which I don't know if they're going to buy off on that or if the court clerk or even... [36:45.960 --> 36:48.960] Well, the thing is an examining trial is a probable cause hearing, [36:48.960 --> 36:50.960] and they're not going to conduct one of those. [36:50.960 --> 36:53.960] They will avoid that at all costs. [36:53.960 --> 36:55.960] So if I file that motion to quash the citation, [36:55.960 --> 36:57.960] they'll never even hear it is what you're telling me, right? [36:57.960 --> 36:58.960] No, no, no. [36:58.960 --> 36:59.960] They have to hear it. [36:59.960 --> 37:02.960] The problem is that they won't hear it in a proper setting, [37:02.960 --> 37:05.960] and they will simply deny it out of hand. [37:05.960 --> 37:07.960] That's what I'm trying to tell you. [37:07.960 --> 37:09.960] They're going to do one of two things. [37:09.960 --> 37:13.960] You file this motion as I'm writing it up here on this document, [37:13.960 --> 37:20.960] and they're going to ignore the arguments until the Court of Appeals gets a hold of it, okay? [37:20.960 --> 37:25.960] If you file a motion to quash the complaint, they're going to deny it. [37:25.960 --> 37:27.960] They're not even going to hold a hearing on it. [37:27.960 --> 37:30.960] They're just going to deny it. [37:30.960 --> 37:33.960] That's what I'm trying to get you to understand. [37:33.960 --> 37:34.960] Okay, I understand that. [37:34.960 --> 37:39.960] The only way you're going to get those motions heard is to have them reviewed at the appellate level. [37:39.960 --> 37:42.960] Now, if this is a court of no record that you're in, [37:42.960 --> 37:46.960] that compounds the problem because you've got to go through the entire process all over again [37:46.960 --> 37:49.960] in a de novo court at the county level. [37:49.960 --> 37:52.960] Yeah, it is a JP court, so I understand. [37:52.960 --> 37:56.960] Yeah, so you're going to wind up doing the exact same thing all over again at the county court level, [37:56.960 --> 38:00.960] but at least it will be on the record then. [38:00.960 --> 38:05.960] But you will be able to prove that the JP acted without jurisdiction [38:05.960 --> 38:09.960] if you get these arguments on the record the way they're written. [38:09.960 --> 38:12.960] Okay, well, I'm glad I waited to file anything [38:12.960 --> 38:16.960] since I just heard you say you're putting that on your blog tomorrow, [38:16.960 --> 38:19.960] so I will be anxiously awaiting that. [38:19.960 --> 38:22.960] Okay. [38:22.960 --> 38:26.960] So that's really all I had, unless you have any other comments on my... [38:26.960 --> 38:27.960] At the moment, I don't. [38:27.960 --> 38:30.960] Like I say, I hadn't actually got to watch the video yet. [38:30.960 --> 38:32.960] I have been heads down on this other stuff. [38:32.960 --> 38:36.960] I can look at the comments and get the general idea of what was going on, [38:36.960 --> 38:39.960] but I didn't get to watch the video yet. [38:39.960 --> 38:40.960] Yeah, okay. [38:40.960 --> 38:42.960] Well, hey, Eddie, thanks a whole bunch. [38:42.960 --> 38:43.960] Sure, no problem, Tommy. [38:43.960 --> 38:44.960] All right, see you next time. [38:44.960 --> 38:46.960] All right, bye-bye. [38:46.960 --> 38:50.960] All right, now we have Truth Raider in Oregon. [38:50.960 --> 38:52.960] Raider, what can I do for you? [38:52.960 --> 38:53.960] Hello, Eddie. [38:53.960 --> 38:55.960] Well, just a few minutes of your time. [38:55.960 --> 38:56.960] I really appreciate it. [38:56.960 --> 38:57.960] I know you're... [38:57.960 --> 38:58.960] Well, you got five. [38:58.960 --> 39:00.960] Actually, you got four and a half. [39:00.960 --> 39:01.960] Good enough. [39:01.960 --> 39:02.960] That's all it'll take. [39:02.960 --> 39:07.960] I picked up my fee waivers papers and all of the instructions in here [39:07.960 --> 39:09.960] just to let you know because you're so busy [39:09.960 --> 39:12.960] that I haven't had a chance to send any emails to you [39:12.960 --> 39:15.960] because I'm sure you don't have time to really watch [39:15.960 --> 39:18.960] or get into the emails very much these days. [39:18.960 --> 39:22.960] But I got that all set to go and I have a year and one week. [39:22.960 --> 39:24.960] And let's see how it works. [39:24.960 --> 39:25.960] I'm going to do my studies. [39:25.960 --> 39:29.960] I'm going to do what I need to do in order to do this correctly. [39:29.960 --> 39:34.960] This is my one shot, my shot to get justice. [39:34.960 --> 39:37.960] Okay. [39:37.960 --> 39:39.960] So are you building this up for the suspense of it [39:39.960 --> 39:42.960] or do you have something particular in mind? [39:42.960 --> 39:45.960] No, just letting you know what's going on, just giving you an update. [39:45.960 --> 39:46.960] Okay. [39:46.960 --> 39:47.960] Well, good luck. [39:47.960 --> 39:48.960] Yes. [39:48.960 --> 39:50.960] And other than that, they had three opportunities, [39:50.960 --> 39:54.960] one sheriff's deputy and two city patrolmen. [39:54.960 --> 39:58.960] They had their chance to pull me over and they decided, ooh. [39:58.960 --> 40:01.960] They said, nah, we've already been in enough trouble. [40:01.960 --> 40:04.960] We don't want any more. [40:04.960 --> 40:06.960] Well, that works too. [40:06.960 --> 40:07.960] Yeah, that's right. [40:07.960 --> 40:08.960] That's a success. [40:08.960 --> 40:11.960] Just want to keep you up to date what's going on step by step. [40:11.960 --> 40:12.960] Okay. [40:12.960 --> 40:13.960] I'll be in touch with you in the weeks to come [40:13.960 --> 40:16.960] to let you know how the process is going. [40:16.960 --> 40:17.960] All right. [40:17.960 --> 40:18.960] Appreciate it. [40:18.960 --> 40:19.960] You bet. [40:19.960 --> 40:20.960] All right. [40:20.960 --> 40:21.960] Take care. [40:21.960 --> 40:22.960] God bless, Eddie. [40:22.960 --> 40:23.960] You too. [40:23.960 --> 40:24.960] Bye-bye. [40:24.960 --> 40:25.960] Okay. [40:25.960 --> 40:26.960] All right. [40:26.960 --> 40:27.960] Now we have Thomas. [40:27.960 --> 40:31.960] I don't know where, but Thomas. [40:31.960 --> 40:36.960] Hello, Thomas. [40:36.960 --> 40:43.960] Area code 708, Thomas. [40:43.960 --> 40:44.960] All right. [40:44.960 --> 40:46.960] Next in line, Ralph in Texas. [40:46.960 --> 40:48.960] Ralph, you've got about two and a half minutes. [40:48.960 --> 40:53.960] Then I'll have to take a break and you can hang on to the other side if you need to. [40:53.960 --> 40:54.960] Okay. [40:54.960 --> 40:55.960] Howdy. [40:55.960 --> 40:57.960] I heard Tommy talking. [40:57.960 --> 41:00.960] I think I've heard him on the show before. [41:00.960 --> 41:03.960] And I'd kind of like to get in touch with him. [41:03.960 --> 41:06.960] I'm doing a Title 42, 1983. [41:06.960 --> 41:11.960] And so I can do my heads up on what may be coming his way if he decides to do that. [41:11.960 --> 41:13.960] And no charts. [41:13.960 --> 41:17.960] Just, you know, share with him what's been going on in my case, sending some papers or [41:17.960 --> 41:21.960] giving the case number, and he can check it out through Pacer. [41:21.960 --> 41:22.960] Okay? [41:22.960 --> 41:23.960] Okay. [41:23.960 --> 41:28.960] So if you could send him my email or send me his email or something, I'd appreciate it. [41:28.960 --> 41:32.960] Also, this video he was talking about, is that something the rest of us can do? [41:32.960 --> 41:33.960] What else can you give me an answer? [41:33.960 --> 41:35.960] I don't know if he has it up on YouTube or not. [41:35.960 --> 41:37.960] He's got it posted in Facebook. [41:37.960 --> 41:38.960] It might link over to YouTube. [41:38.960 --> 41:42.960] But like I say, I haven't had a chance to watch it, so I don't know. [41:42.960 --> 41:43.960] Okay. [41:43.960 --> 41:46.960] Now, I looked at Dow of Law today. [41:46.960 --> 41:47.960] I didn't read everything on it. [41:47.960 --> 41:48.960] Legalese. [41:48.960 --> 41:52.960] And you had a lot of bloggers on there, I guess is what it's called. [41:52.960 --> 41:55.960] And I was going to respond to something that Jerry had written. [41:55.960 --> 41:59.960] And I have to have a Facebook account to get on WordPress? [41:59.960 --> 42:01.960] No, you don't. [42:01.960 --> 42:02.960] You shouldn't. [42:02.960 --> 42:05.960] You could have a Google account or anything like that. [42:05.960 --> 42:09.960] Well, I was going to respond to something Jerry Howe had written. [42:09.960 --> 42:15.960] And it took me to a Facebook sign-in page. [42:15.960 --> 42:26.960] Well, unless you're actually – unless what his comment is is linked to a post he made on Facebook, it shouldn't do that. [42:26.960 --> 42:27.960] Well, I didn't see a link to it. [42:27.960 --> 42:29.960] I didn't know. [42:29.960 --> 42:35.960] I'm hoping to kind of network with some people that have been in the federal courts or like Jerry Howe. [42:35.960 --> 42:39.960] I don't know if he's been there or not, but he seems to have experience with it. [42:39.960 --> 42:44.960] There's – you know, whatever court you're in, all you're doing is preparing for an appeal. [42:44.960 --> 42:46.960] And so there's only so much I can read about it. [42:46.960 --> 42:51.960] I would like to, you know, talk to people that have been there and done that. [42:51.960 --> 42:52.960] Okay. [42:52.960 --> 43:02.960] I did have – so if you can, you know, send something to me or just tell me, do I have to get on Facebook to get to any of these legal groups? [43:02.960 --> 43:06.960] You should not have to get on Facebook to get to my blog. [43:06.960 --> 43:12.960] You should not have to be on Facebook to post a comment on my blog. [43:12.960 --> 43:21.960] Now, if you try to comment directly to something that someone else has posted, that's going to depend on how they linked their comment into my blog. [43:21.960 --> 43:28.960] If the link takes you back to their Facebook account, then that's why you're asking to be logged in. [43:28.960 --> 43:32.960] That was probably it because I was trying to reply to his comment. [43:32.960 --> 43:33.960] That may have been it. [43:33.960 --> 43:34.960] Yeah. [43:34.960 --> 43:43.960] Just reply to the – just reply overall and just reference his name in it if you want to do that, if it's making you go to his website or his Facebook account to do it. [43:43.960 --> 43:48.960] Just do your own comment on the blog and just put his name in it. [43:48.960 --> 43:49.960] Right. [43:49.960 --> 43:50.960] I've got one other thing about me. [43:50.960 --> 43:51.960] Okay. [43:51.960 --> 43:52.960] Well, hang on just a second, Ralph. [43:52.960 --> 43:54.960] I've got a break and then we'll pick it up on the other side. [43:54.960 --> 43:55.960] All right, folks. [43:55.960 --> 43:58.960] We'll be right back after the break. [44:25.960 --> 44:27.960] And now you can too. [44:27.960 --> 44:33.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:33.960 --> 44:42.960] 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. [44:42.960 --> 44:51.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [44:51.960 --> 45:02.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [45:02.960 --> 45:03.960] Hello. [45:03.960 --> 45:06.960] My name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com. [45:06.960 --> 45:12.960] And I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas. [45:12.960 --> 45:18.960] I'm Brave New Books and Chase Tank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [45:18.960 --> 45:22.960] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:22.960 --> 45:30.960] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian Eme oil, lotion candles, olive oil soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [45:30.960 --> 45:37.960] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [45:37.960 --> 45:43.960] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [45:43.960 --> 45:47.960] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [45:47.960 --> 45:50.960] Naturespureorganics.com. [46:18.960 --> 46:21.960] All right, folks, we are back. [46:21.960 --> 46:25.960] This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are talking with Ralph in Texas. [46:25.960 --> 46:27.960] All right, Ralph, go ahead. [46:27.960 --> 46:41.960] Okay, Eddie, would it be safe to say, and correct to say, that the Transportation Code is purely malum prohibitum, as in malum prohibitum statutes laws? [46:41.960 --> 46:43.960] Absolutely. [46:43.960 --> 46:48.960] Okay, would it be safe to say that the Penal Code is malum insane? [46:48.960 --> 46:50.960] No. [46:50.960 --> 46:51.960] No. [46:51.960 --> 46:54.960] Okay, so there is some malum prohibitum in the Penal Code? [46:54.960 --> 46:55.960] Correct. [46:55.960 --> 46:59.960] 3804, for example, is a malum prohibitum. [46:59.960 --> 47:01.960] 3804, okay, I'll look that up. [47:01.960 --> 47:07.960] Evading arrest or detention. [47:07.960 --> 47:10.960] Well, since that can only happen if you've already been arrested for... [47:10.960 --> 47:12.960] No, no, no, no, no. [47:12.960 --> 47:16.960] It happens because they're attempting to arrest you. [47:16.960 --> 47:22.960] But that doesn't mean there's a victim for whatever it is they're trying to arrest you for. [47:22.960 --> 47:29.960] It doesn't mean that you had criminal intent to commit any crime for which they could arrest you. [47:29.960 --> 47:35.960] And they're claiming the only injured party in that statute is the state. [47:35.960 --> 47:37.960] Okay. [47:37.960 --> 47:46.960] The only way you can commit a non-malum prohibitum act under 3804 is to cause injury to someone else [47:46.960 --> 47:51.960] or their property while you're evading. [47:51.960 --> 47:53.960] Okay. [47:53.960 --> 47:57.960] Yeah, 3804, okay. [47:57.960 --> 48:00.960] What do you know of any others or is that the only one you know of? [48:00.960 --> 48:02.960] Yeah, terroristic threat. [48:02.960 --> 48:04.960] There are all kinds of them in there. [48:04.960 --> 48:05.960] Oh, okay. [48:05.960 --> 48:09.960] Well, I thought I was on to something, but I guess not. [48:09.960 --> 48:14.960] I was looking for a crime to exist that must be an injured party. [48:14.960 --> 48:15.960] Correct. [48:15.960 --> 48:16.960] And I thought, well, that's... [48:16.960 --> 48:20.960] But the thing is, is the injury must be palpable. [48:20.960 --> 48:23.960] They must be able to show it. [48:23.960 --> 48:26.960] Not simply presume it, not simply elicit it. [48:26.960 --> 48:29.960] They have to be able to show it. [48:29.960 --> 48:32.960] Yeah, it's called corpus delecti maybe? [48:32.960 --> 48:37.960] No, no, no. That is someone who suffered the injury who can demonstrate the injury. [48:37.960 --> 48:41.960] If you've got a corpus delecti, all they have to do is show how they were harmed. [48:41.960 --> 48:46.960] But that harm has to be something they can show. [48:46.960 --> 48:47.960] Okay. [48:47.960 --> 48:49.960] Well, I was trying to make sense out of that. [48:49.960 --> 48:53.960] Sure, V. Cullen, 481F945. [48:53.960 --> 48:58.960] And the penal code versus transportation code, because I was thinking, oh, okay. [48:58.960 --> 49:04.960] Transportation code is malum prohibitum, and it applies to people in transportation. [49:04.960 --> 49:10.960] Here is the main issue with malum prohibitum versus malum inse. [49:10.960 --> 49:20.960] In a malum inse crime, it is easy to identify that a crime has potentially been committed because there is an injured party. [49:20.960 --> 49:21.960] Okay. [49:21.960 --> 49:33.960] And if the injured party is claiming that the injury was not self-inflicted, not participatory, and not wanted, then we have a criminal act. [49:33.960 --> 49:44.960] Whereas in a malum prohibitum, every single element of the offense must exist before even an allegation of the offense can be made [49:44.960 --> 49:50.960] because you can't prove a malum prohibitum without every single element. [49:50.960 --> 49:56.960] Therefore, you should not be able to allege a malum prohibitum without every single element. [49:56.960 --> 49:59.960] And these idiots don't even know the elements. [49:59.960 --> 50:04.960] So how can they allege them when they say you're committing a crime for speeding because I'm going to pull you over? [50:04.960 --> 50:10.960] Because there are 21 elements to a speeding charge in Texas, 21. [50:10.960 --> 50:19.960] The most I have ever seen stated in any criminal complaint is 9 out of 21. [50:19.960 --> 50:28.960] They have never, ever proven a speeding charge in accordance with law ever in the entire state of Texas, ever. [50:28.960 --> 50:34.960] The definition you just gave for malum prohibitum, now, that's not in blacks. [50:34.960 --> 50:36.960] Are you speaking from accumulation? [50:36.960 --> 50:37.960] No. [50:37.960 --> 50:38.960] Think about it. [50:38.960 --> 50:39.960] Think about it. [50:39.960 --> 50:49.960] How can you allege someone has committed a malum prohibitum act unless you know for a fact what every single element of that act requires [50:49.960 --> 50:53.960] and know for a fact that every single one of them exists? [50:53.960 --> 50:57.960] Because every single one of them must be proven. [50:57.960 --> 51:01.960] You can't presume any of them, not be valid. [51:01.960 --> 51:12.960] However, in a malum in say instance, you can show that there's an injury and that the injury was not one that was supposed to happen. [51:12.960 --> 51:18.960] Therefore, the presumption of a criminal act can be incurred without knowing all of the elements. [51:18.960 --> 51:21.960] You see the difference? [51:21.960 --> 51:25.960] I would have to study what you said, but yes, I believe I can see the difference. [51:25.960 --> 51:31.960] I don't know if I could explain it any better, but I could, yeah. [51:31.960 --> 51:39.960] There's several elements to a malum prohibitum, whereas the malum in say is what would be called obvious or prima facie, maybe? [51:39.960 --> 51:40.960] Right. [51:40.960 --> 51:48.960] There are prima facie elements in a malum in say that cannot be presumed in a malum prohibitum. [51:48.960 --> 51:49.960] Okay. [51:49.960 --> 51:58.960] For instance, let's say that there's a sign that says keep off the grass, and it's a Class C misdemeanor to violate the keep off the grass statute. [51:58.960 --> 52:00.960] Okay. [52:00.960 --> 52:03.960] However, the statute lists specific exceptions. [52:03.960 --> 52:06.960] It exempts groundskeepers. [52:06.960 --> 52:18.960] It exempts the legislative members and particular other officers from that statute. [52:18.960 --> 52:31.960] Now, let's say that an officer sees someone walking on the grass, and he says he's going to write them a citation, but he has done nothing to verify the exemption requirement. [52:31.960 --> 52:40.960] Is his seizure and allegation lawful without that exemption requirement? [52:40.960 --> 52:41.960] I would think not. [52:41.960 --> 52:45.960] Exactly. [52:45.960 --> 52:48.960] Okay. [52:48.960 --> 52:57.960] How can he honestly charge someone with the offense without already knowing if they are one of the exempted parties? [52:57.960 --> 53:01.960] I would imagine there are tons of case law on that very subject. [53:01.960 --> 53:02.960] Want a bet? [53:02.960 --> 53:05.960] Probably wouldn't. [53:05.960 --> 53:12.960] Well, I don't know what a bet against you, but I would be tempted to spend some time looking for it. [53:12.960 --> 53:14.960] Hey, be my guest. [53:14.960 --> 53:17.960] Maybe you'll have better luck than I did. [53:17.960 --> 53:20.960] Well, you never know. [53:20.960 --> 53:22.960] Like I say, that's fine. [53:22.960 --> 53:24.960] If you can find it, be my guest. [53:24.960 --> 53:30.960] I don't claim to be an expert in legal research, but I do the best I can with what I've got. [53:30.960 --> 53:46.960] And I haven't been able to locate anything that indicates that there has ever been a case opinion on what an officer or any other person is required to know about the elements of a mal and prohibitive in order to allege an offense. [53:46.960 --> 53:48.960] That's mal and prohibitive. [53:48.960 --> 53:50.960] Because let's look at something else about that sign. [53:50.960 --> 54:01.960] Let's say that the sign actually limits the time when that offense can be occurred to every weekday, but not on Saturday or Sunday. [54:01.960 --> 54:03.960] Okay? [54:03.960 --> 54:19.960] So without knowing that exception, if the officer sees somebody on Saturday or Sunday, his action is illegal because he didn't know the element that he isn't even accessing at this point to determine whether or not his actions are lawful. [54:19.960 --> 54:29.960] And which of the elements required to make the mal and prohibitive offense are the ones the officer would be required to know if he was only required to know some of them? [54:29.960 --> 54:39.960] Which ones take precedent over the others as being the ones necessary to make a mal and prohibitive allegation over the ones that are actually required to prove it? [54:39.960 --> 54:45.960] You see the problem here with a mal and prohibitive versus a mal and insake? [54:45.960 --> 54:53.960] Okay, yeah, I'm seeing several. Would he again, I like what you did with the unrebuttal presumption, legal presumption. [54:53.960 --> 54:55.960] Would he be doing that same thing? [54:55.960 --> 54:57.960] That's exactly what he's doing. [54:57.960 --> 55:01.960] He's replacing the elements with presumptions. [55:01.960 --> 55:11.960] And his presumptions are wrong under the law. [55:11.960 --> 55:17.960] So the question becomes is how can he be excused for not knowing these? [55:17.960 --> 55:23.960] And which ones could you say he's actually required to know versus the ones he isn't? [55:23.960 --> 55:37.960] For instance, in speeding, if you have 21 elements but you can only allege three of them as your basis for making the allegation, what the hell makes those three more important than the other 18? [55:37.960 --> 55:49.960] How did you determine that those three were the ones that would give you probable cause versus all of the 18 you don't have? [55:49.960 --> 56:05.960] Okay, well, something that struck me just a moment before this was part of your script or part of your educational program, so to speak, is given the officer notice that you're not in transportation. [56:05.960 --> 56:11.960] Right, which is one of the required elements of any offense in that code. [56:11.960 --> 56:22.960] Well, yeah, so if you're, if the officer, if there's a question about what the officer is required to know, he knows about the Monday through Friday, but he doesn't know about the Saturday or Sunday. [56:22.960 --> 56:28.960] Okay, well, if he's put on notice, you know, ka-ching, hey, you're put on notice. [56:28.960 --> 56:38.960] You've been notified that there's a problem here, officer, so all of a sudden he can't call, rely back on, well, you know, was I, or it can't even be a legal question. [56:38.960 --> 56:43.960] Precisely, precisely, he now has a duty to know. [56:43.960 --> 56:49.960] He cannot claim ignorance when his error has been pointed out to him. [56:49.960 --> 56:54.960] He cannot claim his actions are valid when his error has been pointed out to him. [56:54.960 --> 57:00.960] And that's exactly the issue with the script when you say, officer, I am not engaging in transportation. [57:00.960 --> 57:05.960] Transportation is not an element of these offenses. [57:05.960 --> 57:09.960] It is the element of these offenses. [57:09.960 --> 57:16.960] Without it, there is no offense. [57:16.960 --> 57:31.960] Right. So it's, all those aspects of the script, it would help the people understood just how important, or just actually what each item in it does. [57:31.960 --> 57:34.960] I agree, but here's the problem. [57:34.960 --> 57:45.960] How much of an issue do you think it was to get them to read seven pages, much less the 25 it would take to explain each one? [57:45.960 --> 57:50.960] Right, right. Well, you know, I'm willing to work with people if they want to work with me. [57:50.960 --> 57:54.960] Well, see, that's why I did that other presentation on Infowars on this script. [57:54.960 --> 58:01.960] I have a video out there specifically on this script that does all that explaining. [58:01.960 --> 58:06.960] I've seen it, and that's a good one. That is an excellent one. [58:06.960 --> 58:10.960] No, not the two and a half hour one now. Not that one. That's about transportation in general. [58:10.960 --> 58:14.960] I'm talking about I did one specifically on the script. [58:14.960 --> 58:19.960] Well, I've seen several of your videos. It's been so long. I thought I'd seen it. Maybe not. [58:19.960 --> 58:23.960] Well, I don't know if you have or not. You may have. I just want to make sure that we have that clarification. [58:23.960 --> 58:26.960] That it's not the two and a half hour one. [58:26.960 --> 58:27.960] Okay. [58:27.960 --> 58:28.960] Okay. [58:28.960 --> 58:35.960] All right, Ralph. Anything else? Because I got to go on my break here, and then I got to get to somebody else, wouldn't you? [58:35.960 --> 58:36.960] You want to hold on? [58:36.960 --> 58:37.960] Fair enough. [58:37.960 --> 58:38.960] Okay. Thanks, Ralph. [58:38.960 --> 58:39.960] Thank you. [58:39.960 --> 58:46.960] We'll be right back after this break. Call in number 512-646-1984. We will be right back. [59:09.960 --> 59:17.960] This new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.960 --> 59:27.960] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.960 --> 59:32.960] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.960 --> 59:46.960] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:46.960 --> 59:49.960] That's freestudybible.com. [59:49.960 --> 59:59.960] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.960 --> 01:00:07.960] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the daily bulletins for the commodities market. [01:00:07.960 --> 01:00:20.960] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.960 --> 01:00:42.960] Markets for Wednesday, the 5th of October, 2016, are currently trending with gold at $1,266.60 an ounce, silver at $17.72 an ounce, Texas crude at $48.69 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently sitting at about $613 U.S. currency. [01:00:42.960 --> 01:00:55.960] Today in history, the year 1947, the first televised White House presidential address is given by then U.S. President Harry S. Truman today in history. [01:00:55.960 --> 01:01:16.960] In recent news, the Paris Climate Agreement is set to take effect next month, adopted by consensus on December 12, 2015, at the 21st Conference of the Parties of the UNFCCC or United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris and open for signatures on the 22nd of April, 2016, Earth Day, and a ceremony in New York City. [01:01:16.960 --> 01:01:26.960] It is set to take effect on November 4. It is essentially a global agreement for the redirecting of the world economy away from fossil fuels towards more greenhouse-friendly forms of energy. [01:01:26.960 --> 01:01:39.960] President Obama, speaking from the Rose Garden, talking about the agreement, said that, quote, this gives us the best possible shot to save the one planet we've got and that one of the reasons I took this office was to make America the leader in this mission. [01:01:39.960 --> 01:01:50.960] The agreement already has support from major greenhouse gas emitters like China, the United States, and India, and in total, 72 out of 195 countries have ratified the agreement, according to the UN. [01:01:50.960 --> 01:02:03.960] Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump opposes the agreement since it lacks the approval of the U.S. Congress, while Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton is a strong supporter. [01:02:03.960 --> 01:02:11.960] More than 50 correctional officers and inmates inside Maryland's largest state prison were charged by prosecutors Wednesday, today, with bribery and drug conspiracy. [01:02:11.960 --> 01:02:21.960] The guards are accused of smuggling cell phones, tobacco, and drugs into the Eastern Shore facility in exchange for money and sex, according to indictments unsealed in a federal investigation. [01:02:21.960 --> 01:02:30.960] Apparently, prison guards were passing through security with undetected heroin, cocaine, and pornographic videos, which were then handed off to inmates in exchange for hundreds of dollars. [01:02:30.960 --> 01:02:39.960] They were also being accused of warning inmates when prison officials were preparing to search cells and of using force and intimidation to silence inmates who were reporting the smuggling. [01:02:39.960 --> 01:02:45.960] According to court records, inmates were using the prison phones and their contraband cell phones to pay off correctional officers through PayPal. [01:02:45.960 --> 01:02:53.960] They were hustling $500 for each package on average and as much as $3,000 a week, according to investigators. [01:02:53.960 --> 01:03:00.960] This is Brooke Rowdy with your Lowdown for October 5th, 2016. [01:03:00.960 --> 01:03:25.960] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:03:25.960 --> 01:03:33.960] All right. Now, back to our callers here. We have Robert in California. Robert, what can we do for you? [01:03:33.960 --> 01:03:34.960] Hi, Eddie. [01:03:34.960 --> 01:03:35.960] Howdy. [01:03:35.960 --> 01:03:47.960] I've been listening for a little while and I heard where you guys were saying traffic commissioners are incompetent to hear their cases in a judicial capacity. [01:03:47.960 --> 01:03:53.960] That's because they're not judicial officers. That's why they're incapable of hearing it in a judicial capacity. [01:03:53.960 --> 01:04:02.960] Okay. And I asserted that to an officer, you know, to the seat and he said, we're not on the record. And I said, oh, I am. [01:04:02.960 --> 01:04:08.960] And I showed him my phone. He told the bailiff to take my phone from me and the bailiff erased the record on my phone. [01:04:08.960 --> 01:04:20.960] But subsequently to that, I have another ticket. The officers, one of the officers is the same officer from the previous case, that they asserted that my right brake light didn't work. [01:04:20.960 --> 01:04:31.960] And I missed out on the earlier part. I was just coming in the earlier part when you're talking about obtaining that information for the video and audio of the officer's car and that. [01:04:31.960 --> 01:04:40.960] Because I didn't stop until after they turned the siren and the lights on. So they turned the lights on first and then they turned the siren on because I wasn't paying attention to them. [01:04:40.960 --> 01:04:45.960] Okay. Now, correct me if I'm wrong. This occurred in California, right? [01:04:45.960 --> 01:04:46.960] Correct. [01:04:46.960 --> 01:04:50.960] You're being charged with a civil infraction, right? [01:04:50.960 --> 01:05:05.960] On both of them. They stopped me for a civil infraction, but they subsequently got me for driving, asserted that I was driving on a suspended license, which I told them I was on my way to the recycle yard to exchange my recyclables for money. [01:05:05.960 --> 01:05:08.960] Okay. So that is in commerce for profit and gain, but. [01:05:08.960 --> 01:05:13.960] No, it's not. It's your stuff. [01:05:13.960 --> 01:05:17.960] Okay. [01:05:17.960 --> 01:05:28.960] I understand you are not in commerce when you're hauling your stuff on the road, even if the reason you're hauling it is to sell it somewhere else. [01:05:28.960 --> 01:05:30.960] Okay. [01:05:30.960 --> 01:05:35.960] I'm wondering if you could send us some like research I can. [01:05:35.960 --> 01:05:39.960] Okay, you're kind of missing the point on the civil infraction here. [01:05:39.960 --> 01:05:42.960] Here's the problem for them. [01:05:42.960 --> 01:05:54.960] If the initial basis for their seizure of your person and preventing you from movement at your liberty was a civil infraction, the seizure was illegal. [01:05:54.960 --> 01:05:57.960] Doesn't matter what they found out after the fact. [01:05:57.960 --> 01:06:02.960] The seizure from the very beginning was illegal. [01:06:02.960 --> 01:06:05.960] Can you tell me why? [01:06:05.960 --> 01:06:08.960] Because they had no probable cause or warrant. [01:06:08.960 --> 01:06:14.960] Right. No probable cause to believe what? [01:06:14.960 --> 01:06:21.960] Bingo. Hence the reason it's called a civil infraction. [01:06:21.960 --> 01:06:31.960] No probable cause, no articulable suspicion of a crime, no lawful seizure without a warrant. [01:06:31.960 --> 01:06:40.960] In the first case, the officer asserted under testimony that it was a suspiciously occupied vehicle, which I didn't have an understanding. [01:06:40.960 --> 01:06:47.960] That is a bogus statement, suspiciously occupied. Just what in the hell does that mean? [01:06:47.960 --> 01:06:52.960] Yeah, I know. That's what I need to get better questions and stuff like that. [01:06:52.960 --> 01:07:02.960] Okay. Anyway, go to my blog site, tauoflaw.wordpress.com. [01:07:02.960 --> 01:07:06.960] Do a search there for civil infractions. [01:07:06.960 --> 01:07:12.960] You will find an article, civil infractions, what to do if your state has them. [01:07:12.960 --> 01:07:15.960] Read at the bottom down there, read the whole thing. [01:07:15.960 --> 01:07:25.960] But at the bottom are seven specific interrogatories relating to civil infractions and probable cause. [01:07:25.960 --> 01:07:34.960] The interrogatories will prove that they had no probable cause. [01:07:34.960 --> 01:07:42.960] You stand your ground, you threaten to sue, you bring in a tort letter showing you intend to sue. [01:07:42.960 --> 01:07:48.960] And if they don't drop this like a hot rock, I will be most surprised. [01:07:48.960 --> 01:07:52.960] Because every damn one of them knows that they acted illegally. [01:07:52.960 --> 01:07:58.960] And once you make it known that you know that too, and you're going to do something about it, [01:07:58.960 --> 01:08:07.960] generally they will want to get rid of you as quickly as they possibly can. [01:08:07.960 --> 01:08:17.960] Now this has worked numerous times because it is the actual way the law is supposed to work. [01:08:17.960 --> 01:08:19.960] Well, the judges don't seem to understand it. [01:08:19.960 --> 01:08:24.960] It's not a judge. It's an administrative moron. [01:08:24.960 --> 01:08:32.960] It is a court clerk pretending to know what the hell they're doing. [01:08:32.960 --> 01:08:42.960] If they're even that well-educated. [01:08:42.960 --> 01:08:47.960] And subsequently to that, while I was at the law library, [01:08:47.960 --> 01:08:53.960] I got parking attendants telling me I got to move my 30-foot RV that I live out of, okay. [01:08:53.960 --> 01:08:56.960] So I got to park in front of the law library where I could watch it. [01:08:56.960 --> 01:09:03.960] And since I don't want to move it, they want to give me a ticket for being parked outside the line. [01:09:03.960 --> 01:09:08.960] So now I take up one and a half spots. [01:09:08.960 --> 01:09:10.960] Okay. [01:09:10.960 --> 01:09:13.960] Did you ask them if they had any other parking accommodations [01:09:13.960 --> 01:09:18.960] for something the size of your particular private conveyance? [01:09:18.960 --> 01:09:22.960] No. And they're not offering it. [01:09:22.960 --> 01:09:29.960] It doesn't matter if they offer, ask. Then you can show that you tried to be cooperative. [01:09:29.960 --> 01:09:37.960] I was thinking about asking them where on the notice where it says the timing that you can't park there, [01:09:37.960 --> 01:09:39.960] you know, the requirements and stuff like that. [01:09:39.960 --> 01:09:45.960] Where on the notice it says you must park this way or that way or, you know, [01:09:45.960 --> 01:09:48.960] it doesn't have any notices like that. [01:09:48.960 --> 01:09:53.960] So there's no full disclosure. [01:09:53.960 --> 01:09:54.960] Okay. [01:09:54.960 --> 01:10:00.960] They're just trying to set you up for that fine. [01:10:00.960 --> 01:10:07.960] So just frustrating. I keep getting more harassment, though. [01:10:07.960 --> 01:10:09.960] Well, go to the blog and read. [01:10:09.960 --> 01:10:10.960] Learn more stuff. [01:10:10.960 --> 01:10:14.960] Go to the blog and read. The interrogatories alone will open your eyes somewhat. [01:10:14.960 --> 01:10:19.960] I can't guarantee how wide, but they'll open them somewhat. [01:10:19.960 --> 01:10:21.960] Oh, I got those there. [01:10:21.960 --> 01:10:22.960] I just need to do more research. [01:10:22.960 --> 01:10:25.960] And I was hoping you had more research that you could write down somewhere [01:10:25.960 --> 01:10:27.960] so the rest of us can look it up. [01:10:27.960 --> 01:10:30.960] Well, I've got lots of stuff for California, [01:10:30.960 --> 01:10:34.960] but the thing is is it's not going to help you if you don't understand how these other things work. [01:10:34.960 --> 01:10:38.960] If you don't understand what a civil infraction is and how it works, [01:10:38.960 --> 01:10:42.960] any other information I got is not going to help you. [01:10:42.960 --> 01:10:49.960] You have to understand that their ability to do what they're doing is limited to what the law allows. [01:10:49.960 --> 01:10:54.960] And the law does not allow a warrantless seizure for a civil infraction. [01:10:54.960 --> 01:11:01.960] It can't, because that would be a violation of constitutional principles [01:11:01.960 --> 01:11:04.960] in that no warrant and no person shall be seized [01:11:04.960 --> 01:11:09.960] unless they can give you a reasonable idea that a crime is being committed. [01:11:09.960 --> 01:11:12.960] And since these are civil, there is no crime. [01:11:12.960 --> 01:11:21.960] Therefore, it is inherently unreasonable to see someone at their liberty in these circumstances. [01:11:21.960 --> 01:11:26.960] The cop that wrote me up and stopped me and detained me for the no-break life, [01:11:26.960 --> 01:11:29.960] I told him that civil infraction is not a crime. [01:11:29.960 --> 01:11:31.960] I told him people work versus battle. [01:11:31.960 --> 01:11:36.960] And he came back at me and told me, yes, civil infraction is a crime. [01:11:36.960 --> 01:11:38.960] Well, he's an idiot. [01:11:38.960 --> 01:11:41.960] And there are actually, in that article at the bottom, [01:11:41.960 --> 01:11:51.960] is linked in either three or four California cases that say very clearly they're not criminal. [01:11:51.960 --> 01:11:54.960] Okay. [01:11:54.960 --> 01:11:56.960] I appreciate you guys a lot. [01:11:56.960 --> 01:12:02.960] If Debra want to stay on after you get off on that, I want to ask about maybe donating. [01:12:02.960 --> 01:12:06.960] I don't have a whole lot of money, but I donate a little something. [01:12:06.960 --> 01:12:10.960] All right. Well, I'll let Debra know to pick up the line and give you a call. [01:12:10.960 --> 01:12:12.960] So don't hang up after I mute you. [01:12:12.960 --> 01:12:15.960] I'll get her to pick you up, okay? [01:12:15.960 --> 01:12:16.960] Okay. [01:12:16.960 --> 01:12:17.960] All right. Hang in there, Robert. [01:12:17.960 --> 01:12:20.960] All right. Richard in Louisiana. [01:12:20.960 --> 01:12:23.960] Richard, what can we do for you? [01:12:23.960 --> 01:12:25.960] Good evening, Eddie. [01:12:25.960 --> 01:12:28.960] I hope you can clear up some confusion. [01:12:28.960 --> 01:12:35.960] Are statutory citizens of the United States domiciled on federal territory? [01:12:35.960 --> 01:12:37.960] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. [01:12:37.960 --> 01:12:40.960] What are we talking about statutory citizen? [01:12:40.960 --> 01:12:42.960] Explain that. [01:12:42.960 --> 01:12:49.960] I believe it's 7701 of Title 26 makes you an individual, [01:12:49.960 --> 01:12:57.960] a citizen of the United States domiciled in federal territory. [01:12:57.960 --> 01:13:00.960] So what's the question in that context? [01:13:00.960 --> 01:13:07.960] Do you understand what the individual definitions of all those terms you just read to me are in that code? [01:13:07.960 --> 01:13:10.960] That's the IRS code. [01:13:10.960 --> 01:13:13.960] I know what code it is. That is not my question. [01:13:13.960 --> 01:13:23.960] I asked if you understand the actual legal definition for each of those terms you just gave me as they are defined in that code. [01:13:23.960 --> 01:13:28.960] Oh, I have the statute at hand. No, I couldn't recite it off the top of my head. [01:13:28.960 --> 01:13:34.960] But you know what the definition for those terms is. You know what an individual is. [01:13:34.960 --> 01:13:37.960] Yeah, a corporation, a state, et cetera. [01:13:37.960 --> 01:13:40.960] I'm just trying to think what they were without looking at the statute. [01:13:40.960 --> 01:13:47.960] A corporation, a foreign, an alien individual, or a federal employee. [01:13:47.960 --> 01:14:00.960] Okay. And from my research through you and George Gordon and the sovereignty education system, and I hope this isn't erroneous information, [01:14:00.960 --> 01:14:08.960] but what I've learned was somehow I was born in my state and through my own ignorance, [01:14:08.960 --> 01:14:21.960] for signing up for social security and driver's licenses and birth certificates somehow transferred me from a state-domiciled state citizen to a federal citizen. [01:14:21.960 --> 01:14:23.960] Is that right so far? [01:14:23.960 --> 01:14:24.960] No. [01:14:24.960 --> 01:14:27.960] No. Please enlighten me to where I erred. [01:14:27.960 --> 01:14:33.960] First off, what is the definition of a federal citizen? It is a 14th Amendment individual. [01:14:33.960 --> 01:14:35.960] Okay. [01:14:35.960 --> 01:14:41.960] The courts is the one that mutated the proper application of the 14th Amendment to the states. [01:14:41.960 --> 01:14:46.960] It's not a valid application. It has never been a valid application. [01:14:46.960 --> 01:14:54.960] The 14th Amendment as written applied to the slaves and only the slaves, period. [01:14:54.960 --> 01:14:59.960] Let me ask you this. How did I get hooked on to federal income tax? [01:14:59.960 --> 01:15:07.960] Because you got a social security number, which is a requirement of an alien individual. [01:15:07.960 --> 01:15:13.960] Okay. So my status is a federal, am I a statutory U.S. citizen? [01:15:13.960 --> 01:15:21.960] No. Stop trying to recategorize one thing into another thing. They're not defined the same. [01:15:21.960 --> 01:15:29.960] An alien individual is not a federal citizen. They're completely different things. [01:15:29.960 --> 01:15:30.960] Okay. [01:15:30.960 --> 01:15:33.960] But they are both subject to the income tax. [01:15:33.960 --> 01:15:39.960] Okay. Okay. What status? I got the social security. [01:15:39.960 --> 01:15:44.960] I had the birth certificate and the driver's licenses so far for the contracts. [01:15:44.960 --> 01:15:52.960] I think the only ones I could think I meant. Where does that put my status? [01:15:52.960 --> 01:15:55.960] Where do you want it to be? [01:15:55.960 --> 01:16:00.960] I want to be from what I think I've been learning from the previous people. [01:16:00.960 --> 01:16:10.960] I said, I think I want to be a citizen of my state. Yeah, a state citizen. [01:16:10.960 --> 01:16:13.960] You want to be a state national. [01:16:13.960 --> 01:16:16.960] A state national. That's what I want to be. Okay. [01:16:16.960 --> 01:16:20.960] And what makes you think you aren't? [01:16:20.960 --> 01:16:23.960] Because I get, I'm obligated to pay an income tax. [01:16:23.960 --> 01:16:28.960] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Says who? [01:16:28.960 --> 01:16:32.960] The people who have written me and told me. [01:16:32.960 --> 01:16:34.960] Who is that? [01:16:34.960 --> 01:16:37.960] It's the RRS on the envelope. [01:16:37.960 --> 01:16:42.960] Okay. Well, they tend to tell that to everybody, whether it's true or not. [01:16:42.960 --> 01:16:43.960] Okay. [01:16:43.960 --> 01:16:45.960] I'd be happy to hold on to continue this conversation. [01:16:45.960 --> 01:16:48.960] Yeah, please do that. Hang on just a minute. [01:16:48.960 --> 01:16:49.960] Okay. [01:16:49.960 --> 01:16:54.960] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio, the call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:54.960 --> 01:16:59.960] We've got three segments left, so y'all get in line and let's talk. [01:16:59.960 --> 01:17:08.960] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [01:17:08.960 --> 01:17:13.960] We provide a wide assortment of your favorite products featuring a great selection of high-quality coins and precious metals. [01:17:13.960 --> 01:17:17.960] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [01:17:17.960 --> 01:17:23.960] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metals dealers and journalists. [01:17:23.960 --> 01:17:26.960] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [01:17:26.960 --> 01:17:31.960] In addition, we carry popular young Jeopardy products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Polymbers. [01:17:31.960 --> 01:17:38.960] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storable Foods, Berkey Water Products, ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [01:17:38.960 --> 01:17:42.960] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:17:42.960 --> 01:17:45.960] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:17:45.960 --> 01:17:50.960] We're located at 7304 Burnet Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:17:50.960 --> 01:17:53.960] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:17:53.960 --> 01:17:59.960] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:17:59.960 --> 01:18:06.960] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:18:06.960 --> 01:18:11.960] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:18:11.960 --> 01:18:17.960] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:18:17.960 --> 01:18:25.960] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jeopardy can provide the nutrients you need. [01:18:25.960 --> 01:18:31.960] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:18:31.960 --> 01:18:39.960] We have come to trust Young Jeopardy so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:18:39.960 --> 01:18:47.960] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:18:47.960 --> 01:18:51.960] As you realize the benefits of Young Jeopardy, you may want to join us. [01:18:51.960 --> 01:18:58.960] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:18:58.960 --> 01:19:22.960] Order now. [01:19:28.960 --> 01:19:57.960] All right, folks. [01:19:57.960 --> 01:19:58.960] We are back. [01:19:58.960 --> 01:20:02.960] This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are talking to Richard in Louisiana. [01:20:02.960 --> 01:20:04.960] All right, Richard, go ahead. [01:20:04.960 --> 01:20:05.960] Yes, sir. [01:20:05.960 --> 01:20:06.960] Okay. [01:20:06.960 --> 01:20:10.960] I want to be a state national. [01:20:10.960 --> 01:20:18.960] At my birth here in New Orleans in Mercy Hospital, that's the moment of my coming out of the womb. [01:20:18.960 --> 01:20:21.960] What was my status according to the government? [01:20:21.960 --> 01:20:23.960] Very young. [01:20:23.960 --> 01:20:25.960] Eagly. [01:20:25.960 --> 01:20:28.960] Legally, the government didn't care. [01:20:28.960 --> 01:20:34.960] See, okay, let me try to get through to some of this here. [01:20:34.960 --> 01:20:41.960] A lot of the stuff that you're talking about is someone's misinformation on how things actually function. [01:20:41.960 --> 01:20:46.960] It's not all untrue, but it's not all completely true either. [01:20:46.960 --> 01:20:47.960] Okay. [01:20:47.960 --> 01:20:48.960] Okay? [01:20:48.960 --> 01:20:58.960] The problem is, is how they connect their dots, and their dots are connected like a ball of 10-year-old Christmas lights you haven't hung up recently. [01:20:58.960 --> 01:21:00.960] You know what I mean? [01:21:00.960 --> 01:21:01.960] Yes, I do. [01:21:01.960 --> 01:21:02.960] Okay. [01:21:02.960 --> 01:21:14.960] So the fact of the matter is, is what your status was at the moment you were born doesn't change because they created a birth certificate that documented your birth. [01:21:14.960 --> 01:21:16.960] Your status didn't change. [01:21:16.960 --> 01:21:27.960] Now, what they may have done with your birth in relation to other things that they do is a completely different story, but it doesn't change who you are. [01:21:27.960 --> 01:21:30.960] It couldn't change who you are. [01:21:30.960 --> 01:21:31.960] Okay. [01:21:31.960 --> 01:21:32.960] Okay? [01:21:32.960 --> 01:21:33.960] Yes, sir. [01:21:33.960 --> 01:21:43.960] If you enter into any agreement without the other party giving you full disclosure, is that agreement valid? [01:21:43.960 --> 01:21:44.960] No. [01:21:44.960 --> 01:21:46.960] Bingo. [01:21:46.960 --> 01:21:53.960] Hence the reason why the Social Security number is also not binding upon you, and you can revoke it. [01:21:53.960 --> 01:22:00.960] Which I applied at 15 years old, which was I legally capable of engaging in it? [01:22:00.960 --> 01:22:04.960] That's a whole nother question of whether or not you could engage in it at all. [01:22:04.960 --> 01:22:05.960] Okay. [01:22:05.960 --> 01:22:06.960] All right? [01:22:06.960 --> 01:22:09.960] So two things go out for me so far. [01:22:09.960 --> 01:22:14.960] Well, common sense should tell you that this is not the way it works. [01:22:14.960 --> 01:22:22.960] They cannot convert you into something without your knowledge and consent from what you actually are, a free individual. [01:22:22.960 --> 01:22:34.960] Now, you can voluntarily engage into certain agreements that may take away some of your rights under that agreement if they can be taken away or waived. [01:22:34.960 --> 01:22:36.960] But I did it unknowingly. [01:22:36.960 --> 01:22:39.960] You're missing the point here. [01:22:39.960 --> 01:22:45.960] An unalienable right cannot be given away by contract, period. [01:22:45.960 --> 01:22:49.960] I don't give a crap what the contract is for. [01:22:49.960 --> 01:22:53.960] It wouldn't be unalienable if you could do that, would it? [01:22:53.960 --> 01:22:56.960] That's what I wanted to get at, Eddie. [01:22:56.960 --> 01:23:01.960] And this is maybe some other erroneous information I'm getting from Ralph Wetterowd. [01:23:01.960 --> 01:23:03.960] Oh, God, please. [01:23:03.960 --> 01:23:07.960] Everything Ralph puts out is conjecture. [01:23:07.960 --> 01:23:09.960] He will tell you himself. [01:23:09.960 --> 01:23:11.960] He can't prove any of it. [01:23:11.960 --> 01:23:14.960] It's a damn theory to him. [01:23:14.960 --> 01:23:16.960] Okay. [01:23:16.960 --> 01:23:19.960] He's made that admission to Randy on the radio show. [01:23:19.960 --> 01:23:20.960] I don't know. [01:23:20.960 --> 01:23:23.960] It just seemed right. [01:23:23.960 --> 01:23:24.960] Okay. [01:23:24.960 --> 01:23:26.960] Okay. [01:23:26.960 --> 01:23:33.960] So now I need to rescind and adjust my status to affidavit. [01:23:33.960 --> 01:23:34.960] Wait a minute. [01:23:34.960 --> 01:23:35.960] Wait a minute. [01:23:35.960 --> 01:23:38.960] Let's get back to the adjust your status. [01:23:38.960 --> 01:23:42.960] What status are you trying to adjust? [01:23:42.960 --> 01:23:46.960] Are you trying to adjust your so-called citizenship? [01:23:46.960 --> 01:23:50.960] Are you trying to adjust your taxpayer status? [01:23:50.960 --> 01:23:52.960] Because they're not the same thing. [01:23:52.960 --> 01:23:55.960] They're linked together, but they're not the same thing. [01:23:55.960 --> 01:23:56.960] Yeah. [01:23:56.960 --> 01:24:01.960] Then I want both, I think. [01:24:01.960 --> 01:24:04.960] Okay. [01:24:04.960 --> 01:24:05.960] I think. [01:24:05.960 --> 01:24:08.960] Are you familiar with Dave Champion? [01:24:08.960 --> 01:24:09.960] No, sir. [01:24:09.960 --> 01:24:11.960] Then you need to be. [01:24:11.960 --> 01:24:22.960] Dave Champion is the only person on this planet that has meticulously dissected the tax code line by line. [01:24:22.960 --> 01:24:27.960] And he has written a book that explains everything about that tax code. [01:24:27.960 --> 01:24:31.960] Dave is a highly intelligent individual. [01:24:31.960 --> 01:24:33.960] Dave does his due diligence. [01:24:33.960 --> 01:24:37.960] He knows what the hell he's talking about in that book. [01:24:37.960 --> 01:24:41.960] Before I even knew his name, I did all that research on my own. [01:24:41.960 --> 01:24:46.960] It took me a lot longer than 17 years, but then again, I had a family to worry about at the time, too. [01:24:46.960 --> 01:24:48.960] But I got it done. [01:24:48.960 --> 01:24:49.960] Yeah. [01:24:49.960 --> 01:24:57.960] If I knew about him, I'd already reached all the same conclusions as he had about what the law said and what it meant. [01:24:57.960 --> 01:25:03.960] And that's one of the reasons we can converse on the subject is because I've already been there, too. [01:25:03.960 --> 01:25:05.960] He is correct. [01:25:05.960 --> 01:25:07.960] You just need to get his book. [01:25:07.960 --> 01:25:10.960] And right now, he's selling it for $50 instead of the usual $100. [01:25:10.960 --> 01:25:19.960] So go to taxrevolt.org or taxrevolt.us, I'm sorry, and look there at his book. [01:25:19.960 --> 01:25:29.960] His book will tell you every federal case, every Supreme Court case, every statute in the tax code that proves Americans, [01:25:29.960 --> 01:25:37.960] as a general principle, do not owe and have to pay the income tax. [01:25:37.960 --> 01:25:40.960] Okay. Now what about the status? [01:25:40.960 --> 01:25:42.960] What about the status? [01:25:42.960 --> 01:25:45.960] Does one have to adjust it? [01:25:45.960 --> 01:25:50.960] How do you adjust something that you already are? [01:25:50.960 --> 01:25:54.960] How did you stop being a state national? [01:25:54.960 --> 01:25:55.960] Yeah. [01:25:55.960 --> 01:26:03.960] You see, this is what years of listening to other people, I assumed, which is wrong. [01:26:03.960 --> 01:26:12.960] What I gathered from all of this was through my signing up for a Social Security card and getting a driver's license. [01:26:12.960 --> 01:26:13.960] We just covered that. [01:26:13.960 --> 01:26:17.960] A driver's license ain't got a damn thing to do with your citizenship. [01:26:17.960 --> 01:26:19.960] Absolutely nothing. [01:26:19.960 --> 01:26:22.960] That's as retarded an argument as I have ever heard somebody make. [01:26:22.960 --> 01:26:26.960] Not speaking of you, but whatever source you got it from. [01:26:26.960 --> 01:26:27.960] Right. [01:26:27.960 --> 01:26:28.960] That's the illegal aliens. [01:26:28.960 --> 01:26:29.960] Yeah. [01:26:29.960 --> 01:26:30.960] Okay. [01:26:30.960 --> 01:26:33.960] It doesn't do a damn thing for your citizenship. [01:26:33.960 --> 01:26:39.960] So I want to be subject to if I harm somebody. [01:26:39.960 --> 01:26:40.960] I don't want to be under these. [01:26:40.960 --> 01:26:47.960] You and everybody else, but you're talking about what they've arranged things to be versus what they're supposed to be. [01:26:47.960 --> 01:26:48.960] Okay. [01:26:48.960 --> 01:26:58.960] What they're doing in the states is trying to make us all global citizens, make us all global servants and subjects to be more accurate. [01:26:58.960 --> 01:27:06.960] Okay, rather than individual sovereign states and individual sovereign individuals over ourselves. [01:27:06.960 --> 01:27:12.960] In other words, once again, make us equal as men. [01:27:12.960 --> 01:27:13.960] All right. [01:27:13.960 --> 01:27:14.960] All right. [01:27:14.960 --> 01:27:15.960] So. [01:27:15.960 --> 01:27:20.960] So rescinding these contracts is part of the process? [01:27:20.960 --> 01:27:21.960] It's part of it. [01:27:21.960 --> 01:27:29.960] Rescinding the Social Security number is your best beginning for it because that is what designates you as someone liable for the income tax. [01:27:29.960 --> 01:27:30.960] Okay. [01:27:30.960 --> 01:27:35.960] And that's I did get a form from the sovereign defense ministry. [01:27:35.960 --> 01:27:36.960] Oh, God. [01:27:36.960 --> 01:27:37.960] No. [01:27:37.960 --> 01:27:38.960] No. [01:27:38.960 --> 01:27:39.960] No. [01:27:39.960 --> 01:27:40.960] Don't use that form. [01:27:40.960 --> 01:27:41.960] No. [01:27:41.960 --> 01:27:43.960] Read day's book. [01:27:43.960 --> 01:27:44.960] Okay. [01:27:44.960 --> 01:27:45.960] Okay. [01:27:45.960 --> 01:27:46.960] All right. [01:27:46.960 --> 01:27:47.960] I'll clear the line. [01:27:47.960 --> 01:27:50.960] But if you want to further talk on that. [01:27:50.960 --> 01:27:51.960] All right. [01:27:51.960 --> 01:27:53.960] Let me put it to you this way, Richard. [01:27:53.960 --> 01:28:02.960] If you cannot find the information all of these people are telling you and you cannot make those dots connect in exactly the way for them to make sense. [01:28:02.960 --> 01:28:08.960] I mean common sense, not just legal sense, but flat out common sense. [01:28:08.960 --> 01:28:12.960] They're wrong. [01:28:12.960 --> 01:28:23.960] Despite all of the stuff they do in these statutes, there's one thing is that the way they connect has to make sense. [01:28:23.960 --> 01:28:28.960] And it does once you learn to understand it. [01:28:28.960 --> 01:28:29.960] Yeah. [01:28:29.960 --> 01:28:30.960] And that's a process. [01:28:30.960 --> 01:28:31.960] Yeah. [01:28:31.960 --> 01:28:38.960] Something that most of these folks you're taking this information from have not learned to do. [01:28:38.960 --> 01:28:43.960] Okay. [01:28:43.960 --> 01:28:44.960] I'm sorry. [01:28:44.960 --> 01:28:45.960] I forget his name. [01:28:45.960 --> 01:28:46.960] It's Steve. [01:28:46.960 --> 01:28:48.960] Steven. [01:28:48.960 --> 01:28:49.960] I'm sorry. [01:28:49.960 --> 01:28:50.960] All right. [01:28:50.960 --> 01:28:53.960] Anyway, Eddie, if you could elaborate on that, I'd really appreciate it. [01:28:53.960 --> 01:28:55.960] You've been very enlightening so far. [01:28:55.960 --> 01:28:56.960] Wait. [01:28:56.960 --> 01:28:58.960] Elaborate on which part? [01:28:58.960 --> 01:29:01.960] Just the misconfusion that's going on out there. [01:29:01.960 --> 01:29:02.960] Oh, God, man. [01:29:02.960 --> 01:29:14.960] I would need a month of 24-7 to do that because all these patronuts have created so much of it that you couldn't boil it down in that amount of time. [01:29:14.960 --> 01:29:15.960] Yeah. [01:29:15.960 --> 01:29:16.960] All right. [01:29:16.960 --> 01:29:19.960] So here is the simplest way to unravel the knot. [01:29:19.960 --> 01:29:20.960] Okay. [01:29:20.960 --> 01:29:23.960] Read the damn statutes for yourself. [01:29:23.960 --> 01:29:27.960] Learn how to read them properly and understand them. [01:29:27.960 --> 01:29:33.960] Then use that to verify what you're seeing somewhere else. [01:29:33.960 --> 01:29:40.960] And you will see very quickly that what you're being told somewhere else does not jive with what you're reading. [01:29:40.960 --> 01:29:41.960] Okay. [01:29:41.960 --> 01:29:47.960] And then eventually become a state nationalist is my... [01:29:47.960 --> 01:29:49.960] That's your goal, yes. [01:29:49.960 --> 01:29:50.960] All right, Eddie. [01:29:50.960 --> 01:29:51.960] Thank you very much, man. [01:29:51.960 --> 01:29:52.960] You're welcome. [01:29:52.960 --> 01:29:53.960] No problem. [01:29:53.960 --> 01:29:54.960] All right, folks. [01:29:54.960 --> 01:29:55.960] Hang in there. [01:29:55.960 --> 01:29:56.960] We've got a half an hour to go. [01:29:56.960 --> 01:30:01.960] Let's get this break. [01:30:01.960 --> 01:30:10.960] The Stasi, East German secret police, used to capture prisoners' scent on pieces of felt stored in glass jars so dogs could hunt them down later. [01:30:10.960 --> 01:30:12.960] Unfortunately, some things never change. [01:30:12.960 --> 01:30:16.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back with more. [01:30:16.960 --> 01:30:18.960] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.960 --> 01:30:21.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.960 --> 01:30:26.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.960 --> 01:30:31.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.960 --> 01:30:34.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.960 --> 01:30:41.960] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.960 --> 01:30:45.960] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:45.960 --> 01:30:55.960] In Germany, 68-year-old leftist Fritz S. thought he'd seen it all till officials knocked on his door in 2007 demanding something new, his smell. [01:30:55.960 --> 01:31:04.960] They thought the aging revolutionary might disrupt the G8 summit, so they made him hold little metal tubes in his hands for several minutes to collect his scent just in case. [01:31:04.960 --> 01:31:12.960] Around that same time, the U.S. government sought research proposals for a similar system to collect human scent for tracking purposes. [01:31:12.960 --> 01:31:20.960] Those creepy interrogation jars I mentioned can be seen at the Stasi Museum in Berlin, along with other devices of surveillance and state control. [01:31:20.960 --> 01:31:23.960] Look closely. You may see our future. [01:31:23.960 --> 01:31:29.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.960 --> 01:31:35.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.960 --> 01:31:42.960] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.960 --> 01:31:48.960] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.960 --> 01:31:54.960] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.960 --> 01:32:06.960] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:24.960 --> 01:32:32.960] If you have a business bureau with zero complaints, you can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:32.960 --> 01:32:38.960] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.960 --> 01:32:45.960] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.960 --> 01:32:50.960] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.960 --> 01:32:58.960] Call 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.960 --> 01:33:03.960] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.960 --> 01:33:12.960] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:12.960 --> 01:33:20.960] And who you want to chip in? Who you take me for? Free Tully? Who you want to chip in? I'm not free Tully. You can't chip me. [01:33:20.960 --> 01:33:25.960] Don't let them chip you in the morning. Chip you in the evening. Put a chip in your body. [01:33:25.960 --> 01:33:30.960] And then when you go computer reading, you can't hide me from nobody. [01:33:30.960 --> 01:33:38.960] Chip in your mom. Chip in your daddy. Chip in your grandpa and the granny. Chip in your me. Chip in your baby. [01:33:38.960 --> 01:33:44.960] Chip in your family. Who will family? Chip in your dad and the cat around me. Chip in your baby. [01:33:44.960 --> 01:33:50.960] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:50.960 --> 01:33:56.960] And right now we've got Olivier in Tennessee. Olivier, what's up? [01:33:56.960 --> 01:33:57.960] How you doing, bro? [01:33:57.960 --> 01:33:58.960] Doing all right. [01:33:58.960 --> 01:34:03.960] I'm trying to figure out the judicial problem complaints. They're getting interesting. [01:34:03.960 --> 01:34:13.960] These judges over here in Montgomery County, they like to deny and do things without putting descriptive law. [01:34:13.960 --> 01:34:22.960] And also, I think me and my friends have got about eight habeas corpus where they did not provide an attorney. [01:34:22.960 --> 01:34:33.960] They did not even respond to the habeas corpus instainer or... [01:34:33.960 --> 01:34:34.960] Instanter. [01:34:34.960 --> 01:34:40.960] Instanter. Thank you. Instanter. And they failed to... [01:34:40.960 --> 01:34:48.960] They denied our habeas corpus saying that we were not restrained of our liberty. [01:34:48.960 --> 01:35:01.960] And when I went and did my research, I could put at least eight books together on federal and appeal court decisions, [01:35:01.960 --> 01:35:11.960] restricting them from doing that when the individual has been arrested or due process violation has happened. [01:35:11.960 --> 01:35:19.960] And it says that bail, being out on bail is a restriction of liberty. [01:35:19.960 --> 01:35:25.960] Yeah, exactly. Which is why you could habeas a bond. [01:35:25.960 --> 01:35:34.960] Okay. Right. So how much of a bond do you have to get them into to get them off the seat? [01:35:34.960 --> 01:35:41.960] Because I want to see this. I think I'm the right person to get one off the seat to see how the party jumps off. [01:35:41.960 --> 01:35:42.960] Well... [01:35:42.960 --> 01:35:43.960] And I'm trying to see... [01:35:43.960 --> 01:35:48.960] When you say how much of a bond, how much of a lawsuit or how much of... What are we talking about here? [01:35:48.960 --> 01:35:54.960] How much of a bind, because I have me and my brother and my other friend... [01:35:54.960 --> 01:35:59.960] Well, if you can show that they have a gross negligent pattern of violating law, [01:35:59.960 --> 01:36:05.960] and you can go back to other cases besides yours and prove that they've done this more than once? [01:36:05.960 --> 01:36:15.960] Oh, yeah. I have that. Also, my lawsuit, he denies several of those without authority and which is restricted by law. [01:36:15.960 --> 01:36:18.960] So I have about close to 20. [01:36:18.960 --> 01:36:23.960] Okay. Well, then what you should be able to do is to send that to the State Judicial Conduct Commission, [01:36:23.960 --> 01:36:29.960] whatever that may be in Tennessee, and demand his removal from the bench. [01:36:29.960 --> 01:36:34.960] Now, odds are you're not going to get it, and odds are they may not even discipline this, [01:36:34.960 --> 01:36:40.960] but this is the inherent problem with letting morons be the checks and balances of other morons, [01:36:40.960 --> 01:36:46.960] especially greedy, self-entitled morons. [01:36:46.960 --> 01:36:47.960] Okay. [01:36:47.960 --> 01:36:53.960] Now, that doesn't mean you shouldn't try. Every now and then, somebody will have a ax to grind [01:36:53.960 --> 01:36:56.960] and want to do something about it and actually carry it forward. [01:36:56.960 --> 01:37:01.960] And you never know until you try whether or not that ax may actually be in there. [01:37:01.960 --> 01:37:09.960] Okay. So I've got concrete issues that if this system works, then something should happen. [01:37:09.960 --> 01:37:12.960] Or the next time I file a hate bill court, then... [01:37:12.960 --> 01:37:18.960] If this system actually worked, Olivier, there wouldn't be any attorneys. [01:37:18.960 --> 01:37:29.960] They would all already be making little granite chunks out of huge granite boulders, preferably with their head. [01:37:29.960 --> 01:37:36.960] Okay. Well, how about the procedures that we have at hand? I mean, we are... [01:37:36.960 --> 01:37:42.960] The problem is, is we don't really have any procedures at hand other than to put it in their hands. [01:37:42.960 --> 01:37:46.960] I don't like it at all. Do I like it? [01:37:46.960 --> 01:37:54.960] But unless we're willing to start shooting first and asking them to do something second, it's what we've got. [01:37:54.960 --> 01:38:00.960] Okay. Well, in your situation, has it worked out for you? [01:38:00.960 --> 01:38:05.960] Getting them disqualified is not a problem. [01:38:05.960 --> 01:38:10.960] But as far as getting any action against them, that's always a problem [01:38:10.960 --> 01:38:16.960] because they're always being protected by the Judicial Conduct Commission, who always... [01:38:16.960 --> 01:38:18.960] Let me put it this way. [01:38:18.960 --> 01:38:26.960] They have to have multiple scapegoats in the hierarchy before they will decide to punish the lower rung on that ladder [01:38:26.960 --> 01:38:31.960] to set an example to avoid having to punish the one further up the chain. [01:38:31.960 --> 01:38:38.960] That will be about the only time you will see any actual discipline occur. [01:38:38.960 --> 01:38:46.960] And it will never be disciplined on par with the acts they perpetrated to deserve the discipline. [01:38:46.960 --> 01:38:57.960] It will always be a slap on the wrist, if even anything more than a tap on the wrist, from what they deserve. [01:38:57.960 --> 01:39:04.960] Okay. All right. Well, I'm going to keep you updated and tell you what happens on that. [01:39:04.960 --> 01:39:11.960] This Friday, last time I submitted a motion of 30 days, they told me that the judges denied it. [01:39:11.960 --> 01:39:18.960] They said that the city had 60 days since they were under the UCLA statute. [01:39:18.960 --> 01:39:20.960] So I found that they were correct. [01:39:20.960 --> 01:39:27.960] And now we're past, way past 60 days, probably in the 70s, 72, 73, something like that. [01:39:27.960 --> 01:39:35.960] I courted Friday for default, for motions, yeah, default. [01:39:35.960 --> 01:39:49.960] And I went in and out, and I couldn't find any excuse that the city can use to get out of this default judgment. [01:39:49.960 --> 01:40:00.960] And I'm trying to figure out what, because I know you encountered a lot of things. [01:40:00.960 --> 01:40:07.960] What could possibly happen that I can't see? [01:40:07.960 --> 01:40:13.960] Well, the thing is, is you've got to make sure that you've done all of your administrative stuff at the state level. [01:40:13.960 --> 01:40:16.960] And then from there, you can move it up. [01:40:16.960 --> 01:40:21.960] So exhaust your administrative remedy, have these people keep denying you access to the courts. [01:40:21.960 --> 01:40:31.960] And then when you run out of courts to appeal that denial to, you can go federal. [01:40:31.960 --> 01:40:39.960] That's the best option you have right now, replace one den of crooks with another den of crooks. [01:40:39.960 --> 01:40:46.960] He could deny the suit. I mean, he can deny my- Yeah, which means you can appeal it. [01:40:46.960 --> 01:40:49.960] Whatever he does, you can appeal. [01:40:49.960 --> 01:40:58.960] Well, okay. I'm thinking, why would he deny my default judgment if he didn't dismiss the cases already? [01:40:58.960 --> 01:41:05.960] Because they tried to submit a motion for dismissal, but the motion was such in my favor. [01:41:05.960 --> 01:41:13.960] Each law that they wrote down clearly showed that they were liable for suit. [01:41:13.960 --> 01:41:20.960] Yeah. And this is what the system does, is it protects itself. [01:41:20.960 --> 01:41:23.960] Well, okay. If they don't allow default judgment. [01:41:23.960 --> 01:41:30.960] So now the case proceeds to trial, because if they haven't answered it, it's still in the court system as open. [01:41:30.960 --> 01:41:39.960] Yeah. You can file a motion demanding a trial date. [01:41:39.960 --> 01:41:47.960] Call the clerk of the court, find out when the calendar is open to make a set of trial date for, [01:41:47.960 --> 01:41:50.960] and then file a motion demanding that trial date. [01:41:50.960 --> 01:41:54.960] Just make sure it's at least 30 days from the time you file the motion. [01:41:54.960 --> 01:41:58.960] Okay. And that's after I go for the default judgment. [01:41:58.960 --> 01:42:00.960] Right. [01:42:00.960 --> 01:42:07.960] Okay. So if he awards a default judgment, then I'm just in the winning bucket? [01:42:07.960 --> 01:42:12.960] Potentially, yeah. [01:42:12.960 --> 01:42:18.960] It really depends on how he dismisses it or doesn't grant it. [01:42:18.960 --> 01:42:24.960] If you can show his actions to be biased or prejudiced in some way, that changes what you do next. [01:42:24.960 --> 01:42:28.960] No, no, no. I mean, like, if he grants it, because- [01:42:28.960 --> 01:42:33.960] Oh, if he grants your default, then yeah. All you have to do then is file an order of judgment. [01:42:33.960 --> 01:42:37.960] Yeah. Since I've been filling them out on these two cases. [01:42:37.960 --> 01:42:42.960] I mean, the other cases, he's been ruling them out immediately. [01:42:42.960 --> 01:42:45.960] On these two, he hasn't touched them, hasn't said anything. [01:42:45.960 --> 01:42:49.960] Every time the state has done something, he's ruled in my favor. [01:42:49.960 --> 01:42:57.960] The only time he didn't rule in my favor was when it was clear as day that they had 60 days instead of 30. [01:42:57.960 --> 01:43:01.960] Okay. Yeah. [01:43:01.960 --> 01:43:05.960] If you filed your motion for default judgment, have you? [01:43:05.960 --> 01:43:07.960] Yes, I filed it already. [01:43:07.960 --> 01:43:09.960] But he hasn't ruled on it? [01:43:09.960 --> 01:43:12.960] No, it's coming up on the 20th, on the 5th, on Friday. [01:43:12.960 --> 01:43:13.960] Okay. [01:43:13.960 --> 01:43:14.960] It's coming up Friday. [01:43:14.960 --> 01:43:20.960] So if he does not grant default judgment, then move for a trial date. [01:43:20.960 --> 01:43:23.960] Get a- file a motion demanding a trial date. [01:43:23.960 --> 01:43:29.960] Just get a date from the clerk of the court that's at least 30 to 45 days out or whatever state law requires. [01:43:29.960 --> 01:43:31.960] It could be 60. I don't know. [01:43:31.960 --> 01:43:40.960] But find out from her what's required, file a motion demanding a date at that future time, and see what they do. [01:43:40.960 --> 01:43:41.960] All right. Thanks, Eddie. [01:43:41.960 --> 01:43:43.960] Yes, sir. [01:43:43.960 --> 01:43:44.960] All right. [01:43:44.960 --> 01:43:51.960] We're about to take another break and enter into our last segment on the show where we have, I believe, a different John in California to talk to. [01:43:51.960 --> 01:43:54.960] Oh, Olivier, send me an email if you're still listening. [01:43:54.960 --> 01:43:57.960] I need someone that needs to get in touch with you. [01:43:57.960 --> 01:43:58.960] We'll be right back. [01:43:58.960 --> 01:43:59.960] Hang on. [01:43:59.960 --> 01:44:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:44:04.960 --> 01:44:08.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:44:08.960 --> 01:44:13.960] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:44:13.960 --> 01:44:33.960] 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 phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.960 --> 01:44:38.960] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:38.960 --> 01:44:40.960] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:40.960 --> 01:44:48.960] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:44:48.960 --> 01:45:00.960] 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. [01:45:00.960 --> 01:45:03.960] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.960 --> 01:45:14.960] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.960 --> 01:45:18.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.960 --> 01:45:22.960] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.960 --> 01:45:27.960] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.960 --> 01:45:33.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.960 --> 01:45:42.960] 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. [01:45:42.960 --> 01:45:51.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.960 --> 01:46:00.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.960 --> 01:46:36.960] All right, folks. [01:46:36.960 --> 01:46:43.960] We are back and in the last segment of the show, and we are going to be talking here now to John in California. [01:46:43.960 --> 01:46:46.960] John, what can we do for you? [01:46:46.960 --> 01:46:47.960] Hey, Eddie. [01:46:47.960 --> 01:46:48.960] Good evening. [01:46:48.960 --> 01:46:51.960] Okay, I had a question. [01:46:51.960 --> 01:47:00.960] Regarding your paperwork, how does treaties, do treaties ever enter into your paperwork? [01:47:00.960 --> 01:47:10.960] I'm looking at the Constitution and one other case, but Article 1, Section 8, Clause 10 talks about the law of nations. [01:47:10.960 --> 01:47:13.960] What's your opinion on it? [01:47:13.960 --> 01:47:17.960] Why would any of that go into my paperwork? [01:47:17.960 --> 01:47:25.960] Well, you know, I'm just kind of analyzing, you know, how we're being treated in the courts. [01:47:25.960 --> 01:47:33.960] And is it that they're really trying to rail with us, or is there like a bigger elephant in the room? [01:47:33.960 --> 01:47:43.960] Are the justices and the judges really going by a different law that they're not telling us about? [01:47:43.960 --> 01:47:51.960] I mean, yeah, I got the statutes part of it, I got the codes and ordinances, and we got the Constitution and all that. [01:47:51.960 --> 01:47:57.960] But in the Constitution, it specifically has it there, and it's like it's just staring at me. [01:47:57.960 --> 01:48:03.960] You know, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 10, it talks about the law of nations. [01:48:03.960 --> 01:48:06.960] Okay, the problem, John, John, hang on a sec. [01:48:06.960 --> 01:48:13.960] The problem as I see it can actually be much more simplified than that. [01:48:13.960 --> 01:48:22.960] We're dealing with criminals, criminals that have found a way to seize control of the bank vault, so to speak. [01:48:22.960 --> 01:48:27.960] They now actually operate from within the bank to take whatever they want. [01:48:27.960 --> 01:48:35.960] And they're the ones that fill out all the paper that determines whether or not what they take is legal and how much they can have. [01:48:35.960 --> 01:48:41.960] They write the policy, they write the instruments, they write it all. [01:48:41.960 --> 01:48:44.960] And they can use them any way they want to. [01:48:44.960 --> 01:48:47.960] Yeah, and that's kind of what I was thinking. [01:48:47.960 --> 01:48:55.960] I would agree that they're taking everything that's, even if it's bolted down or put out the kitchen sink, it's ridiculous. [01:48:55.960 --> 01:48:57.960] If they can take it, they can. [01:48:57.960 --> 01:48:58.960] Exactly. [01:48:58.960 --> 01:49:05.960] And they use their legal constructs to steal that which they could otherwise have never touched. [01:49:05.960 --> 01:49:08.960] Well, you know, I've been listening for a while. [01:49:08.960 --> 01:49:17.960] And my thing is that, so what if it really is, instead of that whole money thing, what if it's really something more sinister? [01:49:17.960 --> 01:49:27.960] What if they really are going, if they're following another body of law and they're just not telling us, you know, what I'm saying? [01:49:27.960 --> 01:49:32.960] Well, I guess it would really depend on what you're calling law at that point. [01:49:32.960 --> 01:49:41.960] If all they're following is their own motives and their own personal ethics about those motives, that's their law, not ours. [01:49:41.960 --> 01:49:47.960] It doesn't necessarily have to be any kind of black and white law or Roman law or Vatican law or anything else. [01:49:47.960 --> 01:49:54.960] It can be entirely personal, let's make a deal and screw everybody else kind of law. [01:49:54.960 --> 01:49:55.960] Exactly. [01:49:55.960 --> 01:49:56.960] Exactly. [01:49:56.960 --> 01:50:00.960] And they did that through what's known as the Business and Commerce Code. [01:50:00.960 --> 01:50:02.960] Yeah. [01:50:02.960 --> 01:50:06.960] So we're looking at the 14th Amendment after part of the reconstruction. [01:50:06.960 --> 01:50:08.960] That's also part of it. [01:50:08.960 --> 01:50:17.960] The way that they rewrite the Constitution to make what they do valid and what we do as permission, that's one way they're doing it. [01:50:17.960 --> 01:50:31.960] To say that they're following some other law would predict that there or predicate that there would be some law in existence that already knew about and included the Constitution so that they could alter it. [01:50:31.960 --> 01:50:36.960] It already know about the Declaration of Independence so that they can talk about it and alter it. [01:50:36.960 --> 01:50:43.960] This would not have been foreseen by the Vatican 3,000 years ago as everybody would like to put it in the patronet community. [01:50:43.960 --> 01:50:44.960] Yeah. [01:50:44.960 --> 01:50:45.960] Okay. [01:50:45.960 --> 01:50:52.960] What they have done is take the law as it was intended to work and they have corrupted it. [01:50:52.960 --> 01:50:58.960] It's like pouring poison on the root of a fruit tree. [01:50:58.960 --> 01:50:59.960] Okay. [01:50:59.960 --> 01:51:00.960] Yeah. [01:51:00.960 --> 01:51:05.960] And it being absorbed up into the fruit and then you feeding the masses with it. [01:51:05.960 --> 01:51:11.960] That's what they've done to the American way of life and the American form of law. [01:51:11.960 --> 01:51:22.960] They have poisoned it at the roots and corrupted it out to the very last leaf and twig. [01:51:22.960 --> 01:51:25.960] This is what an attorney is good for. [01:51:25.960 --> 01:51:31.960] It's all that they're good for. [01:51:31.960 --> 01:51:42.960] Now, you had mentioned the attorneys. Now, they use code statutes and ordinances. It's codified by West. [01:51:42.960 --> 01:51:47.960] It's copywritten. It's patented. Do we really have the right to even use it? [01:51:47.960 --> 01:51:50.960] Okay. Stop. Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop. [01:51:50.960 --> 01:51:55.960] The law is not copyrighted or patented. It is not. [01:51:55.960 --> 01:51:59.960] The law is not. [01:51:59.960 --> 01:52:05.960] The way it is printed in the books is the format, the reference materials, the cross-references, the organization. [01:52:05.960 --> 01:52:16.960] That process is copyrighted. That process is patented. But the law itself is not. [01:52:16.960 --> 01:52:22.960] Got it. Got it. Okay, sir. Well, thank you very much. Bye. [01:52:22.960 --> 01:52:23.960] Okay. Thanks for calling in. [01:52:23.960 --> 01:52:25.960] All right. Yeah, you have a good night. [01:52:25.960 --> 01:52:26.960] You too. [01:52:26.960 --> 01:52:32.960] All right. Well, that gives me an empty-collar board and six minutes to go. That's okay. [01:52:32.960 --> 01:52:39.960] Now, folks, when I started this show tonight, I wanted you to understand something about how our system has been screwed over. [01:52:39.960 --> 01:52:43.960] If you can't look around and see it, you're the one that's kidding yourself. [01:52:43.960 --> 01:52:46.960] You're the one with your head buried in the sand. [01:52:46.960 --> 01:52:54.960] You're the one that is causing the problems we have through your ignorance and apathy of the situation. [01:52:54.960 --> 01:52:57.960] Not wanting to know makes you willfully ignorant. [01:52:57.960 --> 01:53:04.960] You being willfully ignorant makes you a detriment to society as a whole because you are the stone [01:53:04.960 --> 01:53:13.960] around the neck of the rest of us that are trying to tread water and swim to a solid standing on shore. [01:53:13.960 --> 01:53:18.960] When you will not pull your own weight, someone else has to pull it for you. [01:53:18.960 --> 01:53:24.960] And that sucks when they're treading water. [01:53:24.960 --> 01:53:29.960] If you don't wake up, you will drown us all. [01:53:29.960 --> 01:53:33.960] Understand that. [01:53:33.960 --> 01:53:41.960] No one person, not me, not anyone else on this network, not anyone on any network, can save this country. [01:53:41.960 --> 01:53:45.960] Not even a small handful can save this country. [01:53:45.960 --> 01:53:51.960] It's going to take a lot more today than it took before. [01:53:51.960 --> 01:53:53.960] We have the means. [01:53:53.960 --> 01:54:02.960] We have, as the $6 million man showed you to say, the technology to make them better, faster, stronger. [01:54:02.960 --> 01:54:07.960] But none of you want to use it. [01:54:07.960 --> 01:54:14.960] And if you do use it, you don't want the responsibility for what you find out by using it. [01:54:14.960 --> 01:54:22.960] And thus, the weight that you would normally bear is put off on the rest of us that try. [01:54:22.960 --> 01:54:24.960] This is no way to live, folks. [01:54:24.960 --> 01:54:26.960] This is survival. [01:54:26.960 --> 01:54:27.960] That's all it is. [01:54:27.960 --> 01:54:30.960] It's not living. [01:54:30.960 --> 01:54:38.960] And it's not going to be long until the survivors are wiped out because there's no one to replace them. [01:54:38.960 --> 01:54:43.960] There's no one to support them. [01:54:43.960 --> 01:54:52.960] If we don't come together very, very soon, preferably even before this election takes place, [01:54:52.960 --> 01:55:00.960] I don't know if we're ever going to be able to recover from this short of spilling blood and not even sure we can do it then [01:55:00.960 --> 01:55:09.960] because the question will always remain, will the apathetic remain apathetic even when it's time to fight? [01:55:09.960 --> 01:55:18.960] And if they are, will they allow themselves to be destroyed or will they be swept in on the other side [01:55:18.960 --> 01:55:33.960] and just put into the background while the rest of us, once again, have to bear the brunt of standing up? [01:55:33.960 --> 01:55:43.960] If we're going to water the tree with the blood of patriots and tyrants, then you better figure out which one you are. [01:55:43.960 --> 01:55:49.960] I don't have a problem with spilling my blood for that as a patriot. [01:55:49.960 --> 01:55:56.960] And I don't honestly have a problem with having to spill it of a tyrant. [01:55:56.960 --> 01:56:00.960] It's not the course I wish to take. [01:56:00.960 --> 01:56:04.960] But if push comes to shove, I will be one of those that will take it [01:56:04.960 --> 01:56:11.960] rather than see everything that I have held dear and believed in my whole life destroyed [01:56:11.960 --> 01:56:18.960] and everything that I love put in danger because of it. [01:56:18.960 --> 01:56:28.960] If you cannot understand that, then you're what's wrong with this nation. [01:56:28.960 --> 01:56:31.960] There can be no other way to look at it. [01:56:31.960 --> 01:56:37.960] You are what is wrong with this nation if you can't understand that concept. [01:56:37.960 --> 01:56:44.960] If you do not know why fighting is the right thing to do and you don't know why you should be doing it right now [01:56:44.960 --> 01:56:54.960] and you don't even understand how to do it and what the problem is that makes you need to do it, you are what's wrong. [01:56:54.960 --> 01:56:59.960] Now, Stephen, I see you pop up on the board there. I don't think I'm going to have enough time to take a call [01:56:59.960 --> 01:57:01.960] because I've only got a minute and a half left in this show. [01:57:01.960 --> 01:57:05.960] So if you've got something you need to ask me about, please send it to me in an email [01:57:05.960 --> 01:57:11.960] because I'm not going to have time to address anything before the music starts and the show ends. [01:57:11.960 --> 01:57:18.960] Now, folks, I know it may sound like I'm trying to cheer on revolution. I'm not. [01:57:18.960 --> 01:57:22.960] I'm not trying to be the person that starts a war. [01:57:22.960 --> 01:57:31.960] But I'm damn sure trying to get you to understand that if we don't do something soon, war is all we've got left. [01:57:31.960 --> 01:57:35.960] And then what? [01:57:35.960 --> 01:57:43.960] What do we leave behind to regain what we've lost? [01:57:43.960 --> 01:57:47.960] If you don't know, you're not asking yourself the right question [01:57:47.960 --> 01:57:53.960] because all you should have to do is to look around and see your family's faces and understand what you're fighting for [01:57:53.960 --> 01:58:02.960] and whether or not you care enough about their future as well as your own to do what needs to be done and change this [01:58:02.960 --> 01:58:09.960] because you're sure as hell not going to do it watching your sports broadcasts, [01:58:09.960 --> 01:58:17.960] keeping your head stuck in the sand, and denying that there is a serious problem in America [01:58:17.960 --> 01:58:22.960] and that you are one of its biggest contributors. [01:58:22.960 --> 01:58:26.960] All right, folks, this has been the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show with your host, Eddie Craig. [01:58:26.960 --> 01:58:30.960] Please keep us in your financial support whenever you can. [01:58:30.960 --> 01:58:34.960] It's what keeps us going and keeps us talking with you and giving you information and helping you out. [01:58:34.960 --> 01:58:37.960] So please support us whenever and however you can. [01:58:37.960 --> 01:58:39.960] Donate at the website. [01:58:39.960 --> 01:58:43.960] Thanks for the emails. Thanks for the support that you do give. [01:58:43.960 --> 01:58:45.960] And thanks for being out there listening. [01:58:45.960 --> 01:58:49.960] Y'all have a great week, good night, and God bless. [01:58:49.960 --> 01:58:57.960] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.960 --> 01:59:02.960] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says, [01:59:02.960 --> 01:59:07.960] verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:07.960 --> 01:59:10.960] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:10.960 --> 01:59:19.960] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:19.960 --> 01:59:25.960] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:25.960 --> 01:59:29.960] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.960 --> 01:59:32.960] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.960 --> 01:59:40.960] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.960 --> 01:59:49.960] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:49.960 --> 01:59:53.960] Looking for some truth? You found it. [01:59:53.960 --> 01:59:59.960] Logosradionetwork.com