[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.840 --> 00:09.840] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.840 --> 00:11.280] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.280 --> 00:15.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:15.240 --> 00:17.360] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.360 --> 00:18.960] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.960 --> 00:22.560] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.560 --> 00:27.320] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.320 --> 00:32.320] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.320 --> 00:35.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:35.080 --> 00:39.360] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.360 --> 00:42.880] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.880 --> 00:45.120] Start over with Startpage. [00:45.120 --> 00:48.160] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:48.160 --> 00:51.640] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.640 --> 00:54.880] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.880 --> 01:01.960] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.960 --> 01:03.440] and R for religion. [01:03.440 --> 01:07.400] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.400 --> 01:11.240] assembly, and religion, but petition for redress is another matter. [01:11.240 --> 01:14.960] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.960 --> 01:18.480] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.480 --> 01:21.200] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.200 --> 01:31.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.480 --> 01:35.120] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:35.120 --> 01:38.600] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.600 --> 01:40.080] Our liberty depends on it. [01:40.080 --> 01:43.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.960 --> 01:47.100] one of your constitutional rights. [01:47.100 --> 01:48.680] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.680 --> 01:53.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [01:53.080 --> 01:57.080] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:57.080 --> 02:02.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:02.200 --> 02:04.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [02:04.840 --> 02:09.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:09.120 --> 02:12.660] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.660 --> 02:16.240] Start over with StartPage. [02:16.240 --> 02:20.600] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.600 --> 02:22.640] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.640 --> 02:27.160] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:27.160 --> 02:31.000] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:31.000 --> 02:32.000] Get it? [02:32.000 --> 02:34.320] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.320 --> 02:37.920] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.920 --> 02:43.680] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.680 --> 02:48.240] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:48.240 --> 02:50.960] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.960 --> 02:52.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.840 --> 03:16.440] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:22.840 --> 03:51.480] Howdy, howdy, this is Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and I may screw [03:51.480 --> 03:54.400] things up because Bret didn't tell me what year it was. [03:54.400 --> 04:02.960] He told me that it was the 20th day of January, but Bret, what year is it? [04:02.960 --> 04:06.600] You're getting close. [04:06.600 --> 04:12.440] 2022, thank you all for being here. [04:12.440 --> 04:19.040] I am going to open the phone lines right off the bat. [04:19.040 --> 04:22.920] There is something that I am really excited about. [04:22.920 --> 04:34.800] I just got a video on one of my telegram channels of Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister of England, [04:34.800 --> 04:41.800] who went before the English Parliament and told them that they were essentially shutting [04:41.800 --> 04:50.280] down all of the mask, vaccine, and other COVID requirements. [04:50.280 --> 04:59.240] The most incredible part of that was, is he said that we will trust the judgment of the [04:59.240 --> 05:01.200] British people. [05:01.200 --> 05:03.520] Excellent. [05:03.520 --> 05:12.880] I was astounded to hear that, and what that told me was, is these guys are seeing the [05:12.880 --> 05:18.120] political writing on the wall. [05:18.120 --> 05:24.760] The public is telling them, you guys better get your act straight because there's a toilet [05:24.760 --> 05:31.560] flushing coming, and you got to decide whether you want to be in the middle of it or not, [05:31.560 --> 05:38.400] because it's not because I think that these politicians have any consideration for the [05:38.400 --> 05:43.880] public or have any trust in the public. [05:43.880 --> 05:47.120] If they had, it would have shown up before now. [05:47.120 --> 05:48.120] Exactly. [05:48.120 --> 05:53.480] They just see that, and it's kind of like the governor, when I filed that criminal complaint [05:53.480 --> 05:59.440] against him, he didn't rescind all of his executive orders because I filed a criminal [05:59.440 --> 06:01.760] complaint against him. [06:01.760 --> 06:09.760] That was just an opportunity, gave him plausible deniability for rescinding all those things [06:09.760 --> 06:13.920] because he was seeing the political writing on the wall. [06:13.920 --> 06:20.920] He's seeing the mood of the public changing, and he was on the wrong side of it. [06:20.920 --> 06:26.160] He acted quickly and decisively to get himself back on the good side of it, and I think he's [06:26.160 --> 06:29.160] done a good job of that. [06:29.160 --> 06:36.040] I'm hoping that's exactly what I'm seeing in England. [06:36.040 --> 06:45.480] Now we've got Biden and the Democrats trying to continue to promote this stuff with England. [06:45.480 --> 06:55.760] Generally, their staunchest ally and cohort bailed out completely. [06:55.760 --> 07:07.400] This is on the eve of, I think, Austria, about to implement legislation to make it a crime [07:07.400 --> 07:12.520] not to get the vaccine, so I wonder how that's going to affect things. [07:12.520 --> 07:20.560] When do you think we can get them to follow up with all the big tech, keep doing the censorship, [07:20.560 --> 07:23.600] and you have to believe what we told you you're supposed to believe? [07:23.600 --> 07:25.120] You think they'll shut that off too? [07:25.120 --> 07:35.600] I think the American public, and I think the public in general, just appear to be fed up. [07:35.600 --> 07:45.840] The Democrats were trying to stop this filibuster so they could change the voting laws so that [07:45.840 --> 07:53.720] they could take over everything, and even other Democrats blocked them. [07:53.720 --> 07:55.600] That was blocked today. [07:55.600 --> 07:56.840] They're not going to get that done. [07:56.840 --> 07:58.360] The filibuster's not going to stop. [07:58.360 --> 07:59.840] They're going to be out of luck. [07:59.840 --> 08:03.560] There's several things that's going in our favor right now. [08:03.560 --> 08:12.960] I believe they're looking forward to the interim election, and they're looking to be facing [08:12.960 --> 08:17.560] a political bloodbath. [08:17.560 --> 08:25.360] But the Biden administration has been an abject failure, and the public for the most part [08:25.360 --> 08:28.240] has had about all they can stand. [08:28.240 --> 08:33.800] When they get the next opportunity to go to the polls, we're going to have a lot of people [08:33.800 --> 08:39.080] watching the polls much more carefully, and I'm doing everything I can to arm the people [08:39.080 --> 08:47.080] watching the polls with tools they can use to get these people who are trying to push [08:47.080 --> 08:50.960] shenanigans at the polls arrested. [08:50.960 --> 08:53.880] Stop whining and complaining. [08:53.880 --> 08:54.880] Call 9-1-1. [08:54.880 --> 08:58.360] Ask them to be arrested. [08:58.360 --> 09:02.040] If these guys want to play fast and loose with the election laws, let's see if we can't [09:02.040 --> 09:09.080] get them put in jail and see how that works for them, but I see more pressure moving in [09:09.080 --> 09:11.440] that direction. [09:11.440 --> 09:14.160] It's a pendulum, guys. [09:14.160 --> 09:20.000] It's been moving back and forth all our lives. [09:20.000 --> 09:29.040] It has moved way off to the liberal side, and as it always does, it demonstrates that [09:29.040 --> 09:33.960] it just doesn't work. [09:33.960 --> 09:39.640] You cannot support all of the people. [09:39.640 --> 09:44.040] All of the people are not equal. [09:44.040 --> 09:45.440] We may not like that. [09:45.440 --> 09:55.280] We may want people to be equal, but they never have been, and as long as human beings are [09:55.280 --> 10:01.240] human beings, they're not going to be. [10:01.240 --> 10:06.880] We all have different political agendas, and these agendas move around, and they interact [10:06.880 --> 10:12.160] with one another, and it's like this pendulum swinging back and forth. [10:12.160 --> 10:17.760] At this point, the pendulum has swung about as far to the liberal side as it can get, [10:17.760 --> 10:26.840] and it's demonstrating that it's absolutely untenable, and now it's swinging back. [10:26.840 --> 10:34.360] My concern is that it will swing back too far to the Republican side. [10:34.360 --> 10:38.680] We'll go back to garbage like McCarthy. [10:38.680 --> 10:43.880] That was in the 50s and 60s, and the pendulum had swung too far to the right after World [10:43.880 --> 10:49.360] War II, and that became untenable. [10:49.360 --> 10:56.280] In the 60s and 70s, it moved back to the left, and then in the 80s and 90s, it moved back [10:56.280 --> 10:57.280] to the right. [10:57.280 --> 11:04.340] It's been doing this consistently for as long as I've been alive, and we are at the point [11:04.340 --> 11:08.600] right now where we appear to be moving back to the right. [11:08.600 --> 11:16.640] The system will correct itself, and in the next two or three years, things will get better. [11:16.640 --> 11:23.640] That's my story, and I'm sticking to it, and that's all the politics I'm going to do. [11:23.640 --> 11:30.720] I just produced Tom Keiley's show, and Tom Keiley's show is always interesting. [11:30.720 --> 11:37.800] I don't do politics, and he does do politics, and he brings a lot of nice insight into the [11:37.800 --> 11:42.400] political nature of what's going on, and I can certainly use that. [11:42.400 --> 11:43.400] I appreciate Tom. [11:43.400 --> 11:45.920] If you get a chance, listen to him. [11:45.920 --> 11:54.080] He comes on at six o'clock every Thursday evening before our show, and he gives a good [11:54.080 --> 12:01.400] overview of what's going on politically, and he has an understanding of the political side [12:01.400 --> 12:03.880] that I absolutely do not. [12:03.880 --> 12:09.640] We do have a caller, Miss Tina Churlish from California. [12:09.640 --> 12:10.640] Hello, Miss Churlish. [12:10.640 --> 12:11.640] Oh, my. [12:11.640 --> 12:12.640] Oh, hello. [12:12.640 --> 12:13.640] That's going to get her started. [12:13.640 --> 12:14.640] My name's Churlish. [12:14.640 --> 12:15.640] Who are you? [12:15.640 --> 12:20.640] She's going to think you're unmuting somebody else. [12:20.640 --> 12:23.640] No, she's not. [12:23.640 --> 12:26.560] Hello, Miss Tina. [12:26.560 --> 12:27.560] Hello. [12:27.560 --> 12:33.880] I have a little comment to make on what you were just talking about, and I know Barrett [12:33.880 --> 12:34.880] removing all the restrictions. [12:34.880 --> 12:42.240] You do know that he was caught partying at 10 Downing Street, Massmouth, during the lockdown, [12:42.240 --> 12:47.160] telling everyone else they couldn't mix, and he and his cronies were partying. [12:47.160 --> 12:53.120] They even had one party the night before Prince Philip's funeral, and the press are commenting [12:53.120 --> 12:58.480] on the fact that the Queen was sitting alone the next day at the funeral while they were [12:58.480 --> 12:59.480] all partying together. [12:59.480 --> 13:07.400] Now, he claims he wasn't at that party, so he's in a lot of hot water right now, so maybe [13:07.400 --> 13:13.320] there's a little bit more political stuff to that removing the mandates than they're [13:13.320 --> 13:14.320] saying. [13:14.320 --> 13:20.400] I absolutely was sure there was more political stuff to it than what was apparent. [13:20.400 --> 13:21.400] Yeah. [13:21.400 --> 13:30.320] I'm always certain this is a political ploy because they see the pendulum swinging back [13:30.320 --> 13:38.840] and the toilet's about to flush, and they want to get out of the line of fire, but that's [13:38.840 --> 13:39.840] good. [13:39.840 --> 13:43.400] Calling for his eviction because of the partying. [13:43.400 --> 13:46.440] That's how capitalistic societies are supposed to work. [13:46.440 --> 13:51.800] That's how free societies are supposed to work. [13:51.800 --> 13:58.200] We have all these different opinions, and this pendulum swinging back and forth allows [13:58.200 --> 14:05.080] us to exercise all of these different possibilities and sort out the ones that work and the ones [14:05.080 --> 14:06.080] that don't. [14:06.080 --> 14:07.080] Yeah. [14:07.080 --> 14:08.080] Yeah. [14:08.080 --> 14:12.760] I think things are moving in our direction. [14:12.760 --> 14:18.720] My concern is the die-off is already beginning. [14:18.720 --> 14:29.520] I've got some recent information that the death rate amongst people in Texas between [14:29.520 --> 14:42.560] 25 and 40 had increased 65% with a comment that only 30% of that increase could be attributed [14:42.560 --> 14:46.000] to vaccines. [14:46.000 --> 14:47.000] Say what? [14:47.000 --> 14:48.000] Wow. [14:48.000 --> 14:49.000] Only 30%? [14:49.000 --> 14:50.000] Wow. [14:50.000 --> 15:01.680] There's something incongruous about only and 30% in the same sentence. [15:01.680 --> 15:05.840] Is nobody paying attention to that? [15:05.840 --> 15:08.920] I'm struggling here. [15:08.920 --> 15:14.320] I produced Tom Keiley's show and I felt really great when I started, but I'm kind of struggling [15:14.320 --> 15:16.320] now because I'm getting over COVID. [15:16.320 --> 15:21.480] My wife's getting over COVID. [15:21.480 --> 15:28.560] It hit me like a cold. [15:28.560 --> 15:32.000] The colds you've had all your life, that's kind of what it was like. [15:32.000 --> 15:36.640] It left me a little weak, but colds always leave me a little weak. [15:36.640 --> 15:47.160] Because COVID appears to be mutating exactly the way these viruses normally do. [15:47.160 --> 15:54.480] We have a flu strain comes through and kicks our behinds and then it mutates and becomes [15:54.480 --> 15:59.280] less and less virulent, less and less harmful. [15:59.280 --> 16:04.680] COVID seems to be doing the same thing. [16:04.680 --> 16:09.880] COVID never was just a passage in. [16:09.880 --> 16:18.280] It always was a political issue and those who are benefiting from the political issue [16:18.280 --> 16:26.320] are doing everything they can to keep it going and it's just not cooperating. [16:26.320 --> 16:33.760] The wife, she got diarrhea and she was dehydrating badly and I was concerned for her, so I took [16:33.760 --> 16:40.040] her to Harris Hospital, Harris Hospital in Fort Worth, one of the largest. [16:40.040 --> 16:43.920] We've always had good results with you, good service with you. [16:43.920 --> 16:52.200] I took her to a Harris Hospital at Alliance Airport and the parking lot was empty or maybe [16:52.200 --> 16:54.720] a third of the parking lot had cars on it. [16:54.720 --> 16:57.200] I took her to the emergency room. [16:57.200 --> 17:04.200] Tell us the rest of this after our show. [18:27.200 --> 18:31.040] Our second hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse by verse and discuss [18:31.040 --> 18:33.080] the true gospel message. [18:33.080 --> 18:37.720] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.720 --> 18:40.120] and Christian character development. [18:40.120 --> 18:44.640] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.640 --> 18:49.000] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:49.000 --> 18:51.000] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:51.000 --> 18:57.120] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on localsradio.com, Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to 11 p.m. [18:57.120 --> 19:04.120] to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [19:57.120 --> 20:02.320] Okay, we are back. [20:02.320 --> 20:05.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Love Radio. [20:05.200 --> 20:09.760] And Brett told me that I didn't tell him to give the phone number. [20:09.760 --> 20:10.760] What? [20:10.760 --> 20:12.760] Everybody knows our phone number. [20:12.760 --> 20:20.320] Okay, just in case you don't, call in number 512-646-1984. [20:20.320 --> 20:21.800] Phone lines are open. [20:21.800 --> 20:28.880] We have Ms. Tina Charlies on the line and I was talking about the wife got sick. [20:28.880 --> 20:37.600] She got diarrhea and it turned out that apparently either it was in conjunction with COVID or [20:37.600 --> 20:40.240] caused by COVID. [20:40.240 --> 20:45.560] But she has COVID and then I wound up getting COVID. [20:45.560 --> 20:50.440] But she's having diarrhea really bad and finally I'm getting worried about her because she's [20:50.440 --> 20:58.280] really dehydrating so I took her to Harris Hospital, one of the largest in the area. [20:58.280 --> 21:04.000] And this was a new facility near Alliance Airport and we go in there and the parking [21:04.000 --> 21:10.400] lot is almost empty and I take her into the emergency room and a nurse came out and took [21:10.400 --> 21:15.800] her blood pressure and then asked her to wait and get her a wheelchair and asked her to [21:15.800 --> 21:20.800] wait in this emergency entrance room. [21:20.800 --> 21:25.240] Four hours later, no one's talked to her. [21:25.240 --> 21:31.360] She's constantly having to go to the bathroom and she's steadily getting more dehydrated. [21:31.360 --> 21:35.560] There were two or three other people that had been there much, much longer and finally [21:35.560 --> 21:38.040] they just left and went somewhere else. [21:38.040 --> 21:42.520] And after four hours, I went in and got her and I told the staff, get her out here. [21:42.520 --> 21:44.360] Well, no one has seen her yet. [21:44.360 --> 21:48.080] I said, I know no one's seen her yet and you're going to let her sit here and die [21:48.080 --> 21:52.240] of dehydration, get her out here. [21:52.240 --> 21:55.520] And they got all real offy offy and then got her. [21:55.520 --> 22:05.560] I took her home, called 911, the ambulance came out and immediately put her on an IV. [22:05.560 --> 22:12.560] She could have died sitting in that emergency room in an empty hospital and they had no [22:12.560 --> 22:13.560] help. [22:13.560 --> 22:14.560] It's amazing. [22:14.560 --> 22:23.680] I'm wondering, is this, you know, accusing Soros of doing this kind of stuff? [22:23.680 --> 22:28.840] Are they trying to bankrupt these hospitals so they can buy them out for chump change? [22:28.840 --> 22:35.120] This sounds like the kind of thing that's been going on in finance for the last 500 [22:35.120 --> 22:36.120] years. [22:36.120 --> 22:46.920] There's a story about the Templars went to the Holy Land and were billeted in the stable [22:46.920 --> 22:53.880] under the Temple Mount and they found a treasure buried under the Temple Mount. [22:53.880 --> 22:57.040] I think that's Horshmandor. [22:57.040 --> 23:02.960] I think they found a treasure, but it wasn't buried under the Temple Mount. [23:02.960 --> 23:07.200] What they found was the Jewish banking system. [23:07.200 --> 23:10.520] In the Jewish banking system, you can't sell property. [23:10.520 --> 23:12.960] You can only lease it. [23:12.960 --> 23:17.280] And at the Jubilee every 49 years, all the property goes back to the original owners [23:17.280 --> 23:19.760] and it starts all over again. [23:19.760 --> 23:25.760] Since we have been keeping financial records, there has been an economic upheaval every [23:25.760 --> 23:28.720] 50 years. [23:28.720 --> 23:36.280] What the Templars brought back from Israel was the Jewish banking system where they loaned [23:36.280 --> 23:41.480] money out to people to purchase real property. [23:41.480 --> 23:48.680] And then about the time they almost get it paid off, the Templars generated an economic [23:48.680 --> 23:58.200] upheaval, caused everybody to go into default, got all the property back and then sold it [23:58.200 --> 24:01.000] to the grandkids. [24:01.000 --> 24:06.360] As long as we've been keeping financial records, there's been an economic upheaval approximately [24:06.360 --> 24:11.440] every 50 years, just like clockwork. [24:11.440 --> 24:16.360] This is the same thing, except it's 20 years late. [24:16.360 --> 24:20.760] And I'm wondering, is this what the globalists are doing? [24:20.760 --> 24:26.760] Is this what Soros is doing, bankrupting all of these major medical facilities so he can [24:26.760 --> 24:35.280] buy them up for chump change and then bring them back up under his ownership? [24:35.280 --> 24:43.760] I don't know if that's the case, but at the end of the day, follow the money. [24:43.760 --> 24:50.680] I believe we've been pointed in the wrong direction. [24:50.680 --> 24:55.720] We've been pointed at Agenda 21 and Agenda 23. [24:55.720 --> 25:02.720] We should be looking at the big money globalists who are just simply running this same routine [25:02.720 --> 25:09.000] they've been running for at least 600 years. [25:09.000 --> 25:13.680] And nobody seems to get it. [25:13.680 --> 25:18.480] Lease everything out, collect their money. [25:18.480 --> 25:23.280] About the time they get everything paid off, bankrupt them, take back all their equity [25:23.280 --> 25:26.080] and sell it to the grandkids. [25:26.080 --> 25:30.960] What do you think, Brett? [25:30.960 --> 25:34.640] Well, it doesn't sound right to me. [25:34.640 --> 25:38.360] I'd have to see some evidence of that. [25:38.360 --> 25:43.920] I mean, I've heard a lot of conspiracy theories that sound something like that, but it's like [25:43.920 --> 25:52.040] these all caps are fringe on the flag or your mother sold the placenta. [25:52.040 --> 25:59.720] I see these things being said, but I don't see any evidence of it. [25:59.720 --> 26:10.440] The 1929 Depression was triggered by naked short selling. [26:10.440 --> 26:21.080] That's where they sell stocks they don't have and create a run on a set of stock and then [26:21.080 --> 26:24.600] bankrupt the underlying company. [26:24.600 --> 26:29.720] That was forbidden after the 1929 Depression. [26:29.720 --> 26:41.800] The Glass-Steagall Act and the act that forbid, they had what they called bucket shops where [26:41.800 --> 26:50.440] you could go in and place a bet on a stock whether it would increase or decrease without [26:50.440 --> 26:52.920] actually have buying the stock. [26:52.920 --> 27:03.440] In 1907, that caused a minor economic crash, so legislature forbid that. [27:03.440 --> 27:13.280] In 1929, naked short selling was absolutely clear they used that to cause the Depression. [27:13.280 --> 27:22.960] In 2007, the restriction, I'm sorry, in 1999, the Glass-Steagall Act was repealed and it [27:22.960 --> 27:30.920] was put in place to keep something like the 1929 Depression from happening again. [27:30.920 --> 27:36.440] They repealed that in 1999. [27:36.440 --> 27:47.200] In the year 2000, the last thing the legislature did before they closed Cyndi was repeal the [27:47.200 --> 27:52.680] restriction on derivative sales. [27:52.680 --> 27:59.680] Immediately after that, we started a major real estate boom. [27:59.680 --> 28:14.720] It took them seven years in 2007, July of 2007, so July 27, 2007, they removed the prohibition [28:14.720 --> 28:18.960] on naked short selling. [28:18.960 --> 28:25.880] In August 8th or 9th, they bankrupted Shearson Lehman with naked short selling. [28:25.880 --> 28:37.480] It was very carefully crafted and they caused the economic crash that caused the foreclosure [28:37.480 --> 28:43.640] crisis starting in 2008 going up to about 2011 or 2012. [28:43.640 --> 28:47.880] It was carefully engineered. [28:47.880 --> 28:53.400] This kind of stuff has been going on forever. [28:53.400 --> 28:59.440] They get us, they sell us property, we work and we pay for the property and we start building [28:59.440 --> 29:00.440] equity. [29:00.440 --> 29:03.240] That's a big scheme. [29:03.240 --> 29:11.840] How do we tie that with evidence, how do we tie that to being a Jewish problem, a Jewish [29:11.840 --> 29:13.440] banking system? [29:13.440 --> 29:19.960] It's just the method of the Jewish banking system, it follows the pattern. [29:19.960 --> 29:24.160] I'm not accusing the Jews of this, not at all. [29:24.160 --> 29:27.600] This was someone that looked at what the Jews were doing. [29:27.600 --> 29:35.760] You couldn't sell property, you could just lease it out for 50 years, 49 years, the Jubilee, [29:35.760 --> 29:41.720] and then at 49 years it all went back to the original owners and they had to release it. [29:41.720 --> 29:49.680] People spend their whole lives paying on this property but they never accrue any equity. [29:49.680 --> 29:56.360] The Templars looked at this and said, hey, we can do this in a free society. [29:56.360 --> 30:00.040] We can get people to pay toward ownership of their property and then only... [30:00.040 --> 30:06.760] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe but [30:06.760 --> 30:11.560] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.560 --> 30:16.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.360 --> 30:17.920] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.920 --> 30:21.720] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.720 --> 30:26.800] Once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.800 --> 30:27.800] Protect your rights. [30:27.800 --> 30:31.440] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.440 --> 30:34.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.080 --> 30:38.360] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.360 --> 30:41.900] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.900 --> 30:45.560] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.560 --> 30:50.320] Public privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.320 --> 30:54.800] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.800 --> 30:56.480] It's not an idle question. [30:56.480 --> 31:02.040] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security was breached [31:02.040 --> 31:04.000] by hackers in the last year. [31:04.000 --> 31:07.680] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.680 --> 31:12.520] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.520 --> 31:15.920] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.920 --> 31:16.920] to see. [31:16.920 --> 31:17.920] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.920 --> 31:21.520] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.520 --> 31:23.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.480 --> 31:31.240] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.240 --> 31:32.240] I lost my son. [31:32.240 --> 31:33.240] My nephew. [31:33.240 --> 31:34.240] My uncle. [31:34.240 --> 31:35.240] My son. [31:35.240 --> 31:36.240] On September 11th, 2001. [31:36.240 --> 31:39.520] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.520 --> 31:43.680] At Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [31:43.680 --> 31:49.480] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.480 --> 31:53.200] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:53.200 --> 31:54.680] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.680 --> 31:55.680] My uncle. [31:55.680 --> 31:56.680] My nephew. [31:56.680 --> 31:57.680] My son. [31:57.680 --> 31:58.680] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.680 --> 32:01.440] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.440 --> 32:05.760] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.760 --> 32:09.560] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [32:09.560 --> 32:13.160] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.160 --> 32:16.720] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.720 --> 32:20.360] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.360 --> 32:24.600] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.600 --> 32:25.960] our rights through due process. [32:25.960 --> 32:29.960] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.960 --> 32:33.720] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.720 --> 32:35.880] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.880 --> 32:40.080] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:40.080 --> 32:41.440] ordering your copy today. [32:41.440 --> 32:44.800] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.800 --> 32:49.200] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:49.200 --> 32:51.520] documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.520 --> 32:55.480] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.480 --> 33:03.360] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:03.360 --> 33:06.760] The free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:33.360 --> 34:01.160] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and I kind of got off on [34:01.160 --> 34:02.160] this tangent. [34:02.160 --> 34:11.880] This is not the right show for this issue, but I felt like you might need to know what [34:11.880 --> 34:14.080] to look for. [34:14.080 --> 34:16.840] Look all back through history. [34:16.840 --> 34:24.120] We've had this 50-year cycle where people buy property, and they work, and they pay [34:24.120 --> 34:29.840] their mortgage, and they build equity, and then about to the time they get close to paying [34:29.840 --> 34:37.920] it off, an economic upheaval occurs, and they lose everything, and the kids have to start [34:37.920 --> 34:48.280] out from scratch doing the same thing again, and that's how those people with lots and [34:48.280 --> 34:53.840] lots of money get and keep lots and lots of money. [34:53.840 --> 35:03.520] But in their defense, from those I've talked to, they seem to think that we are just a [35:03.520 --> 35:10.600] milling throng, and they are there to keep us from each other's throats. [35:10.600 --> 35:16.400] The best way to do that is to keep us busy, keep us working toward a future that they [35:16.400 --> 35:19.980] don't want us to ever have. [35:19.980 --> 35:29.560] They feel like that it is their place to keep society ordered. [35:29.560 --> 35:30.960] We have to keep them working. [35:30.960 --> 35:39.420] We have to keep them working toward a positive outcome, otherwise society will go crazy. [35:39.420 --> 35:43.860] They think they're absolutely needy in what they're doing. [35:43.860 --> 35:46.720] We just have different perspectives. [35:46.720 --> 35:56.200] I think society is getting sophisticated enough that we can actually be function, and we don't [35:56.200 --> 36:04.960] need these super rich to hold us by our hand and keep us from being at each other's throats. [36:04.960 --> 36:10.200] That's all I'm going to talk about that, just something to look at. [36:10.200 --> 36:12.680] Let's go back to Miss Tina. [36:12.680 --> 36:15.640] Hello, Miss Tina Chirlish. [36:15.640 --> 36:24.600] No, Noah and I are not Chirlish one, and you know that very well, but I will comment on [36:24.600 --> 36:32.920] what you were just talking about, because there's a new book out, and it's called Davosman, [36:32.920 --> 36:33.920] D-A-V-O-S. [36:33.920 --> 36:34.920] Say that again. [36:34.920 --> 36:42.020] How the [36:42.020 --> 36:49.760] Davos is the place in Switzerland where all these governments and big bankers go through [36:49.760 --> 36:55.600] every year, and it says how the billionaires devoured the world. [36:55.600 --> 37:01.760] It literally has just come out this month, and somebody was reading it, and they called [37:01.760 --> 37:02.760] me crying. [37:02.760 --> 37:06.160] They said it talks about the people. [37:06.160 --> 37:15.880] The author is Peter Goodman, and it talks about five of the billionaires that are controlling [37:15.880 --> 37:20.000] the world, like the Mnuchins and the Jamie Dimon. [37:20.000 --> 37:27.880] There's five of them that it focuses on, and this pretty much tells you, and they talk [37:27.880 --> 37:35.920] about how they... Apparently, they talk about, because I haven't read it myself, the mortgage [37:35.920 --> 37:44.480] crisis, because they wanted to take over all the property, and Blackrock is related to [37:44.480 --> 37:53.520] Soros, Dimon, Mnuchin, and others, and they own most of the foreclosed homes. [37:53.520 --> 38:02.360] They have a huge, huge portfolio, and it says Davosman will be read 100 years from now as [38:02.360 --> 38:03.360] a warning. [38:03.360 --> 38:10.280] So, it might be something that people want to take a look on, is drawing on decades of [38:10.280 --> 38:18.560] experience covering the global economy, and it profiles five representative Davosman members [38:18.560 --> 38:25.880] of the billionaire class chronicling how they're shocking exploitation of the global pandemic [38:25.880 --> 38:30.560] of Haitian, the 50-year trend of wealth centralization. [38:30.560 --> 38:39.840] So, in essence, what you're saying, it is true, and this is chronicling all that. [38:39.840 --> 38:42.120] Anyway, that's all I've got to tell you about. [38:42.120 --> 38:44.160] I'll let you go to some other callers. [38:44.160 --> 38:45.160] Wait a minute. [38:45.160 --> 38:49.680] I never let you go to what you called for in the first place. [38:49.680 --> 38:57.360] Just to tell you about that British prime minister who was partying when he told you [38:57.360 --> 39:06.520] he couldn't, and that's why he's rescinded, part of the reason he's rescinded all these [39:06.520 --> 39:11.720] mandates because he's fighting for his political career right now. [39:11.720 --> 39:14.720] That's exactly what I got from it. [39:14.720 --> 39:20.600] It wasn't because he was a nice guy, it wasn't because he trusted the British people, or [39:20.600 --> 39:25.560] maybe it was that he trusted the British people to throw his butt out of office if he didn't [39:25.560 --> 39:32.760] do something to give them a reason not to, and that was a good sign. [39:32.760 --> 39:33.760] Yeah. [39:33.760 --> 39:37.520] Well, let's see what happens. [39:37.520 --> 39:38.520] Okay. [39:38.520 --> 39:42.000] Thank you, Tina, and now we're going to go... [39:42.000 --> 39:47.240] There's one thing I would like to mention before we get too far off about the Jubilee. [39:47.240 --> 39:52.060] You were talking about Jubilee, and I think it might be worthwhile to also consider the [39:52.060 --> 39:55.560] factor of the pricing of the land. [39:55.560 --> 40:01.580] When you were talking about leasing, the price was... [40:01.580 --> 40:07.200] Everybody knew when Jubilee was coming, and so they would adjust their price based on [40:07.200 --> 40:12.800] how many years of harvest because they knew that it gets small. [40:12.800 --> 40:18.640] When it's close to the end, it's almost Jubilee time, they have a small price because they [40:18.640 --> 40:26.800] know they're leasing, and I think it's worth noting that in the picture you were describing. [40:26.800 --> 40:27.800] Yeah. [40:27.800 --> 40:34.120] When I spoke to the Jubilee, I certainly did not intend that to criticize the Jews. [40:34.120 --> 40:39.900] This was just a system that they had, and it's my consideration that the Templars looked [40:39.900 --> 40:50.520] at this system and said, hey, we can use this system to keep control of all of this wealth [40:50.520 --> 40:52.520] and property. [40:52.520 --> 41:03.000] They took the Jubilee, the Jewish system, and bastardized it and created a way to capture [41:03.000 --> 41:04.960] and control wealth. [41:04.960 --> 41:12.680] So, if anybody out there is Jewish, this was not a criticism of the Jewish system. [41:12.680 --> 41:18.120] The Jewish system, unlike this system, was straight up. [41:18.120 --> 41:25.200] Everybody knew that in 50 years or 49 years, that's Jubilee, everything would reset. [41:25.200 --> 41:28.840] The Templars didn't tell them that they were going to do a reset. [41:28.840 --> 41:31.240] They snuck up on it. [41:31.240 --> 41:38.680] I see what you mean, they knew they could trigger huge financial problems and they used [41:38.680 --> 41:47.600] that idea to get everybody to buy in on something and then trigger these financial troubles. [41:47.600 --> 41:49.080] Yeah, exactly. [41:49.080 --> 41:50.400] They found a great idea. [41:50.400 --> 41:54.880] They found a scam under the Temple Mount. [41:54.880 --> 41:59.520] They didn't find gold and goblets. [41:59.520 --> 42:05.600] They found a scam they could run and it cost them. [42:05.600 --> 42:18.720] The Pope and the King of France killed them all so that they could take over their wealth. [42:18.720 --> 42:23.800] That was what Friday the 13th was about when they killed all the Templars. [42:23.800 --> 42:24.800] That's the truth. [42:24.800 --> 42:25.800] So they could steal all their money. [42:25.800 --> 42:29.640] It's always about the money. [42:29.640 --> 42:40.640] Okay, let's go to... I've got Jacob's... Blake, is that like 5-1-3 area code? [42:40.640 --> 42:45.040] Yeah, he called into Tom Keiley's show. [42:45.040 --> 42:49.640] Okay, Jacob's, are you a first time caller? [42:49.640 --> 42:53.080] No, I am a first time caller, yep. [42:53.080 --> 43:00.800] Okay, sometimes our system does... it recognizes you so it... sorry about that. [43:00.800 --> 43:03.600] My phone is acting crazy and I forgot to shut it off. [43:03.600 --> 43:06.680] I called him an hour early. [43:06.680 --> 43:10.480] All right, so Jacob, what state are you located in? [43:10.480 --> 43:12.280] Wait, wait, give us a first name. [43:12.280 --> 43:13.480] That's Jacob's towing. [43:13.480 --> 43:17.000] Give us a first name and state. [43:17.000 --> 43:19.800] Yeah, my name's Chris and I'm from Ohio. [43:19.800 --> 43:23.360] Okay, we'll put that in the database. [43:23.360 --> 43:28.160] Okay, Chris, what do you have for us today? [43:28.160 --> 43:31.280] Well, I don't have much. [43:31.280 --> 43:42.160] I've lived a pretty fairly tethered life and here we're coming up on a break. [43:42.160 --> 43:45.560] Okay, I can see the clock. [43:45.560 --> 43:46.560] How about that? [43:46.560 --> 43:49.000] You just got saved by the first time caller. [43:49.000 --> 43:50.000] Yeah. [43:50.000 --> 43:53.680] Save me from diving off the cliff. [43:53.680 --> 44:00.480] Hang on, Randy Kelvin, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio, we'll be right back. [44:00.480 --> 44:01.480] I love Logos. [44:01.480 --> 44:04.920] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.920 --> 44:07.680] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.680 --> 44:08.880] I need my truth pick. [44:08.880 --> 44:13.520] I'd be lost without Logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.520 --> 44:17.320] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:17.320 --> 44:20.720] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:20.720 --> 44:22.080] How can I help Logos? [44:22.080 --> 44:24.080] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:24.080 --> 44:28.720] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos in ordering your supplies or [44:28.720 --> 44:29.720] holiday gifts. [44:29.720 --> 44:31.760] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.760 --> 44:38.160] Now go to LogosRadioNetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:38.160 --> 44:43.800] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.800 --> 44:44.800] Do I pay extra? [44:44.800 --> 44:45.800] No. [44:45.800 --> 44:47.560] Do I get anything different when I order? [44:47.560 --> 44:48.560] No. [44:48.560 --> 44:49.560] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.560 --> 44:50.560] No. [44:50.560 --> 44:51.560] I mean, yes. [44:51.560 --> 44:52.560] Wow. [44:52.560 --> 44:54.560] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:54.560 --> 44:55.560] This is perfect. [44:55.560 --> 44:56.560] Thank you so much. [44:56.560 --> 44:57.560] We are welcome. [44:57.560 --> 44:58.560] Happy holidays, Logos. [44:58.560 --> 45:04.760] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.760 --> 45:11.520] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.520 --> 45:16.000] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:16.000 --> 45:19.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.240 --> 45:23.520] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.520 --> 45:28.360] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [45:28.360 --> 45:34.920] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.920 --> 45:39.720] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.720 --> 45:43.960] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.960 --> 45:50.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:50.120 --> 45:52.520] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.520 --> 46:10.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:10.720 --> 46:40.520] Thank you. [46:40.720 --> 46:45.720] Watchin' the sparks fly [46:46.720 --> 46:51.720] Watchin' the sparks fly [46:52.720 --> 46:57.720] Watchin' the sparks fly [46:58.720 --> 47:03.720] The virgin isn't a fiction [47:03.720 --> 47:06.720] The hard work can leave you cold as nails [47:06.720 --> 47:10.720] There's a possibility to a drunk quickie [47:10.720 --> 47:13.720] A heavy load of safe and unscathed [47:13.720 --> 47:16.720] The time is colliding with the conflict [47:16.720 --> 47:19.720] You find out after a while [47:19.720 --> 47:40.720] It's not your normal standard [47:49.720 --> 47:53.720] I've always been, you know, pretty much a saint my entire life. [47:53.720 --> 47:58.720] Never really had much problems, but all of a sudden [47:58.720 --> 48:04.720] I'm confronted with this zoning inspector that's [48:04.720 --> 48:10.720] barking down my avenue here looking, you know, for me to... [48:10.720 --> 48:15.720] Oh, are you the one that sent me an email earlier [48:15.720 --> 48:20.720] about some properties that you have that [48:20.720 --> 48:25.720] a municipality's coming after you over zoning issues? [48:25.720 --> 48:26.720] Or... [48:26.720 --> 48:29.720] No, I haven't sent any emails. [48:29.720 --> 48:31.720] Okay, then that's someone else. [48:31.720 --> 48:32.720] Okay. [48:32.720 --> 48:35.720] That's the media. [48:35.720 --> 48:37.720] Bring us up to speed. [48:37.720 --> 48:41.720] Well, they're accusing me of having a commercial vehicle [48:41.720 --> 48:46.720] sitting on my property and that it's a violation of this code. [48:46.720 --> 48:48.720] Oh, please. [48:48.720 --> 48:49.720] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [48:49.720 --> 48:52.720] That doesn't compute. [48:52.720 --> 48:55.720] A commercial vehicle. [48:55.720 --> 49:00.720] Does that mean as opposed to a motor vehicle, [49:00.720 --> 49:05.720] a bicycle, a motorcycle, a car? [49:05.720 --> 49:06.720] Well... [49:06.720 --> 49:10.720] What kind of commercial vehicle are they claiming this is? [49:10.720 --> 49:13.720] Well, it's a truck. [49:13.720 --> 49:15.720] A big one? [49:15.720 --> 49:16.720] Yeah. [49:16.720 --> 49:19.720] Over 26,000 PSI? [49:19.720 --> 49:21.720] PSI. [49:21.720 --> 49:26.720] 26,000 gross carrying capacity. [49:26.720 --> 49:27.720] You're correct. [49:27.720 --> 49:30.720] You're correct on that, yeah. [49:30.720 --> 49:32.720] Okay, for those of you who don't know, [49:32.720 --> 49:36.720] the reason I ask that question that way is in most states, [49:36.720 --> 49:40.720] if you have a standard driver's license, [49:40.720 --> 49:43.720] and in Texas it would be a Class A driver's license, [49:43.720 --> 49:48.720] you can drive a vehicle up to 26,000 pounds. [49:48.720 --> 49:52.720] Anything over that takes a higher level license. [49:52.720 --> 49:56.720] So they're calling this a specifically commercial vehicle [49:56.720 --> 50:01.720] because that vehicle can essentially only be used in commerce [50:01.720 --> 50:07.720] by a professional driver with a professional commercial license. [50:07.720 --> 50:09.720] Actually, that's not true. [50:09.720 --> 50:12.720] Yeah, and I know I was going to say, [50:12.720 --> 50:16.720] you can't say a professional commercial license. [50:16.720 --> 50:20.720] All licenses are commercial. [50:20.720 --> 50:24.720] And this is where the distinction begins to break down. [50:24.720 --> 50:28.720] I don't have to have a commercial... [50:28.720 --> 50:32.720] If I've got a 40-foot tractor trailer [50:32.720 --> 50:39.720] and I'm using it to have a hayride for the local church, [50:39.720 --> 50:45.720] I'm not in commerce, no matter how big it is. [50:45.720 --> 50:48.720] So you're saying that the city is saying [50:48.720 --> 50:50.720] you can't have this parked on your property. [50:50.720 --> 50:52.720] Is that correct? [50:52.720 --> 50:54.720] Correct. [50:54.720 --> 50:57.720] So the city has come up with some sort of municipal ordinance [50:57.720 --> 50:59.720] where they decided that it wasn't okay, [50:59.720 --> 51:03.720] or are they picking on you specifically? [51:03.720 --> 51:07.720] Well, to correct you, it's actually county, [51:07.720 --> 51:12.720] and it's an ordinance. [51:12.720 --> 51:15.720] They cited an ordinance. [51:15.720 --> 51:18.720] Okay, are you familiar with our argument [51:18.720 --> 51:26.720] concerning ordinances as opposed to laws? [51:26.720 --> 51:29.720] Somewhat. I'm trying to get up to speed on this. [51:29.720 --> 51:33.720] Is this like a color or what kind of thing that you're about to say? [51:33.720 --> 51:36.720] Yeah, let me address that. [51:36.720 --> 51:43.720] The legislatures of most states are authorized to write law. [51:43.720 --> 51:51.720] They are, for the most part, authorized to create courts to enforce law. [51:51.720 --> 51:56.720] And they can delegate power to those courts. [51:56.720 --> 52:02.720] What they can't do is delegate the power to write law. [52:02.720 --> 52:13.720] So what they've done is authorized municipalities and counties to write ordinances. [52:13.720 --> 52:18.720] They're not called ordinances facetiously or by mistake. [52:18.720 --> 52:31.720] They're calling them ordinances because the legislature cannot delegate the power to write law. [52:31.720 --> 52:38.720] So the only way an ordinance can have any force in effect [52:38.720 --> 52:50.720] is if it is applied to someone who is in contractual privity with the jurisdiction, [52:50.720 --> 52:59.720] wherein they have agreed to abide by all of their ordinances. [52:59.720 --> 53:03.720] If the ordinance is applied to the general public, [53:03.720 --> 53:11.720] then it has the force and effect of law, and that makes it unconstitutional. [53:11.720 --> 53:17.720] So I have a subject matter jurisdiction challenge that I can send you, [53:17.720 --> 53:28.720] if you will send me an email, to randy at ruleoflawradio.com and ask for that. [53:28.720 --> 53:37.720] We filed this in a case in Texas in the form of a petition for writ of mandamus. [53:37.720 --> 53:42.720] And it was a subject matter jurisdiction challenge filed as a mandamus. [53:42.720 --> 53:54.720] And what that means is we asked the Court of Appeals to issue a mandate to the trial court to dismiss the case [53:54.720 --> 54:04.720] because the ordinances they were attempting to apply to the individual did not apply to that individual, [54:04.720 --> 54:09.720] because if they did attempt to apply them to the individual, [54:09.720 --> 54:23.720] then they would have the force and effect of law, and the county or municipality had no power to write law. [54:23.720 --> 54:25.720] Gotcha, I can do that. [54:25.720 --> 54:33.720] Now, I'm actually not in a phase where I've got any judicial notices or summons to appear. [54:33.720 --> 54:36.720] Actually, I haven't had any summons. [54:36.720 --> 54:40.720] I've had mail sent to my house, but I haven't had any. [54:40.720 --> 54:44.720] There's no court dates or anything assigned. [54:44.720 --> 54:49.720] So we're just right now just playing back and forth. [54:49.720 --> 54:55.720] What are they saying to you in this bit through the mail? [54:55.720 --> 54:58.720] Can you summarize? [54:58.720 --> 55:01.720] If it's even comprehensible? [55:01.720 --> 55:06.720] Thirty days to remove essentially the commercial vehicle from the property. [55:06.720 --> 55:10.720] Otherwise, they'll escalate it to quasi. [55:10.720 --> 55:22.720] They say quasi proceedings and then levy a $500 fine per day for the violation, per day as it goes. [55:22.720 --> 55:24.720] Okay, send me an email. [55:24.720 --> 55:33.720] I will send you this challenge, and that will jerk a knot in their behinds. [55:33.720 --> 55:36.720] There's also something else that comes to mind. [55:36.720 --> 55:47.720] There's a guy that he always used to say, like in this situation, commercial vehicle. [55:47.720 --> 55:49.720] Well, that one right there. [55:49.720 --> 55:51.720] What commercial vehicle? [55:51.720 --> 55:52.720] I don't see any commercial vehicle. [55:52.720 --> 55:55.720] What are you talking about? [55:55.720 --> 55:58.720] Of course, they didn't have any evidence, and they're not allowed on his property, [55:58.720 --> 56:07.720] so they can't just make stuff up, and they can't go get evidence that they don't already have. [56:07.720 --> 56:12.720] That's essentially what I said, because I said the only thing I see is my property out there, [56:12.720 --> 56:21.720] but they actually came onto my property and took photos in that mailing that they sent me. [56:21.720 --> 56:31.720] It was some printed photos, and it was clearly from upon my property. [56:31.720 --> 56:33.720] Even that. [56:33.720 --> 56:46.720] I accused him of all the Alfons, Fagiolo stuff, trespassing and mail fraud and all that other stuff. [56:46.720 --> 56:49.720] I just wanted to pick your brain on it, but I can send you an email. [56:49.720 --> 56:59.720] You say that's subject matter jurisdiction challenge, Randy? [56:59.720 --> 57:02.720] Randy? [57:02.720 --> 57:06.720] He may be having a little trouble with the mute button, but yes, that's what he was talking about. [57:06.720 --> 57:10.720] It's challenging the subject matter jurisdiction. [57:10.720 --> 57:12.720] Okay. [57:12.720 --> 57:22.720] It's based on the fact that this ordinance that they're trying to apply to you, [57:22.720 --> 57:25.720] they don't have the basis to apply it to you, [57:25.720 --> 57:32.720] because you're not part of any contractual privities, what he was talking about. [57:32.720 --> 57:41.720] I sent an email to the zoning commission asking for proof that I've signed an agreement [57:41.720 --> 57:44.720] or I have some type of bondage there, and they quickly... [57:44.720 --> 57:46.720] There you go. [57:46.720 --> 57:51.720] ...passed the football to the prosecutor, and the prosecutor sent me an email, [57:51.720 --> 57:56.720] and he said I was ambiguous in my request, and I... [57:56.720 --> 58:02.720] Well, give him a bar grievance or two and see if he wants to think if that was ambiguous. [58:02.720 --> 58:08.720] That and send me an email, I will send you this subject matter jurisdiction challenge, [58:08.720 --> 58:12.720] and that is not ambiguous. [58:12.720 --> 58:16.720] That'll give him something to do. [58:16.720 --> 58:22.720] Yet one big time in Fort Worth in Texas courts. [58:22.720 --> 58:31.720] 12% of the mandamus is requested or picked up, 2% are ruled in favor of the filer. [58:31.720 --> 58:41.720] We did it pro se, and they dismissed the case in order to avoid the constitutional challenge. [58:41.720 --> 58:45.720] This will be a constitutional challenge, they'll make them nuts, they won't want to go there. [58:45.720 --> 58:49.720] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [58:49.720 --> 58:53.720] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [58:53.720 --> 58:57.720] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.720 --> 59:01.720] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.720 --> 59:05.720] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:05.720 --> 59:08.720] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.720 --> 59:12.720] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:12.720 --> 59:17.720] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.720 --> 59:21.720] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:21.720 --> 59:27.720] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.720 --> 59:32.720] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.720 --> 59:43.720] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.720 --> 59:47.720] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.720 --> 59:52.720] That's freestudybible.com. [59:52.720 --> 01:00:02.720] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.720 --> 01:00:06.720] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:06.720 --> 01:00:09.720] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.720 --> 01:00:11.720] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.720 --> 01:00:14.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:14.720 --> 01:00:17.720] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:45.720 --> 01:00:48.720] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.720 --> 01:00:51.720] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.720 --> 01:00:54.720] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.720 --> 01:00:57.720] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed [01:00:57.720 --> 01:01:00.720] reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.720 --> 01:01:03.720] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.720 --> 01:01:06.720] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.720 --> 01:01:09.720] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.720 --> 01:01:12.720] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.720 --> 01:01:17.720] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.720 --> 01:01:22.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.720 --> 01:01:35.720] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.720 --> 01:01:38.720] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.720 --> 01:01:40.720] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.720 --> 01:01:43.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.720 --> 01:02:11.720] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:02:14.720 --> 01:02:18.720] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, [01:02:18.720 --> 01:02:21.720] a magnifying glass or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.720 --> 01:02:25.720] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.720 --> 01:02:27.720] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.720 --> 01:02:30.720] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.720 --> 01:02:33.720] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:33.720 --> 01:02:35.720] in the name of security. [01:02:35.720 --> 01:02:39.720] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.720 --> 01:02:42.720] When government employees demand a peep at your privates [01:02:42.720 --> 01:02:46.720] without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.720 --> 01:02:50.720] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:50.720 --> 01:02:53.720] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.720 --> 01:03:16.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:16.720 --> 01:03:18.720] All right, we are back. [01:03:18.720 --> 01:03:23.720] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [01:03:23.720 --> 01:03:28.720] And this is the 20th of January, 2022. [01:03:28.720 --> 01:03:33.720] And we've got, if you've got a question, we've got room on the caller board. [01:03:33.720 --> 01:03:44.720] If you want to call in, it's 512-646-1984, 512-646-1984. [01:03:44.720 --> 01:03:48.720] And right now, we're speaking with Chris in Ohio. [01:03:48.720 --> 01:03:52.720] All right, Chris, so we're back. [01:03:52.720 --> 01:03:56.720] And you've got these people sending you things in the mail saying, [01:03:56.720 --> 01:03:58.720] you've got 30 days to do this. [01:03:58.720 --> 01:04:04.720] Are they saying that if you don't get this commercial vehicle off of your property, [01:04:04.720 --> 01:04:09.720] then something bad will happen? [01:04:09.720 --> 01:04:14.720] Yeah, that's exactly what they're saying. [01:04:14.720 --> 01:04:21.720] They're saying if I don't move it, then they're going to make a quasi-case, [01:04:21.720 --> 01:04:31.720] which is, I would presume, a court case and then levy a $500 fine for every day it's in violation. [01:04:31.720 --> 01:04:35.720] Mm-hmm. Well, I'm sure they'd like to do that. [01:04:35.720 --> 01:04:43.720] I know a friend who had that hassle for, they stacked it up into the millions. [01:04:43.720 --> 01:04:47.720] But yeah, they ended up having to get rid of the whole thing. [01:04:47.720 --> 01:04:49.720] They threw it out. [01:04:49.720 --> 01:04:53.720] They ended up actually getting the town. [01:04:53.720 --> 01:04:59.720] The townspeople were just in an uproar about that, and the lawyers were all in trouble. [01:04:59.720 --> 01:05:01.720] It was a big ordeal. [01:05:01.720 --> 01:05:06.720] But yeah, so for you, you've got this ordinance that they're trying to enforce on you [01:05:06.720 --> 01:05:11.720] that you don't have any part of and don't have any what they call nexus. [01:05:11.720 --> 01:05:15.720] There is no connection between this ordinance and you. [01:05:15.720 --> 01:05:24.720] They're just trying to fake it and hope that you'll do whatever they say. [01:05:24.720 --> 01:05:30.720] But they don't have the basis to rope you into their rules. [01:05:30.720 --> 01:05:35.720] So that's one part of it is challenging their jurisdiction. [01:05:35.720 --> 01:05:41.720] Are you familiar with how that works, the challenge? [01:05:41.720 --> 01:05:43.720] No, not exactly. [01:05:43.720 --> 01:05:47.720] I mean, I did buy the jurisdictionary program. [01:05:47.720 --> 01:05:50.720] I'm about a third of the way through it. [01:05:50.720 --> 01:05:52.720] Oh, yeah, that's excellent. [01:05:52.720 --> 01:05:57.720] That really helped you get your head on straight, how to interact with the court. [01:05:57.720 --> 01:05:58.720] Yes. [01:05:58.720 --> 01:06:05.720] The jurisdictional challenge is addressing one reason or another, [01:06:05.720 --> 01:06:11.720] sometimes multiple reasons, why the court has not acquired jurisdiction yet. [01:06:11.720 --> 01:06:17.720] Courts don't just magically have jurisdiction to deal with you. [01:06:17.720 --> 01:06:22.720] So what they like to say is, oh, yeah, of course we've got jurisdiction. [01:06:22.720 --> 01:06:25.720] This is what our court hears. [01:06:25.720 --> 01:06:30.720] This is the kind of case, and so they're speaking in generalities. [01:06:30.720 --> 01:06:36.720] In general, this is the kind of case that is assigned to this courtroom. [01:06:36.720 --> 01:06:43.720] However, for them to speak to you specifically, [01:06:43.720 --> 01:06:47.720] they've got to show that there's a connection. [01:06:47.720 --> 01:06:50.720] They have to get you into it somehow. [01:06:50.720 --> 01:06:55.720] So in your particular case... [01:06:55.720 --> 01:07:01.720] Is that not what the letters are for, those certified letters that come in the mailbox? [01:07:01.720 --> 01:07:06.720] I mean, is that not what that is, is them attempting to acquire jurisdiction [01:07:06.720 --> 01:07:08.720] or personal jurisdiction through those letters? [01:07:08.720 --> 01:07:10.720] Do I have that right? [01:07:10.720 --> 01:07:11.720] Right. [01:07:11.720 --> 01:07:12.720] Yes, you're right. [01:07:12.720 --> 01:07:18.720] If they can get you to consent and skip the idea of, hey, wait a minute, who are you? [01:07:18.720 --> 01:07:21.720] Why are you talking to me about my property? [01:07:21.720 --> 01:07:27.720] If they can get you to skip that part and just jump right over into their fake world of, [01:07:27.720 --> 01:07:31.720] we already have jurisdiction, then effectively they have it. [01:07:31.720 --> 01:07:34.720] They've never acquired it, but you're consenting to it. [01:07:34.720 --> 01:07:42.720] So if you're going to consent to it, then it's just like they have it. [01:07:42.720 --> 01:07:43.720] Does that make sense? [01:07:43.720 --> 01:07:45.720] Yeah. [01:07:45.720 --> 01:07:57.720] So my response was, I responded with Alphonse's, Alfa-David's, Alfa-David of status, [01:07:57.720 --> 01:08:04.720] Alfa-David of fact, and a notice of deficiency and irregularities pointing out everything on that document [01:08:04.720 --> 01:08:09.720] that I think is fraud, inaccurate, and luring or traversing. [01:08:09.720 --> 01:08:14.720] Oh, I know they love that. [01:08:14.720 --> 01:08:19.720] I'm pretty sure I'm on the right track, but I just wanted to call in and talk about it [01:08:19.720 --> 01:08:21.720] because I really don't have anybody to talk to. [01:08:21.720 --> 01:08:29.720] I mean, I listen to people speaking videos, and I belong to a telegram chat. [01:08:29.720 --> 01:08:36.720] You know, it can be very high volume at times, and sometimes the questions don't get answered, [01:08:36.720 --> 01:08:41.720] but I think I've got the just of it. [01:08:41.720 --> 01:08:44.720] Yeah, sounds great. [01:08:44.720 --> 01:08:53.720] And if they ever do start into a court case, then we'll have a different tack that you can take. [01:08:53.720 --> 01:09:02.720] But these affidavits that you've already sent to them will carry weight. [01:09:02.720 --> 01:09:04.720] So that would be great. [01:09:04.720 --> 01:09:11.720] I would not use the, like I've already sent the email to Randy, but would I use? [01:09:11.720 --> 01:09:22.720] I know that's a, was that, did I hear him correctly when he said that was a writ of mandamus? [01:09:22.720 --> 01:09:29.720] A writ of mandamus would be for a higher court to command a lower court to follow the law, [01:09:29.720 --> 01:09:35.720] to do something that the lower court is required to do and they're not doing, or vice versa. [01:09:35.720 --> 01:09:38.720] They're prohibited from doing something and they're trying to do it anyway. [01:09:38.720 --> 01:09:42.720] So you're getting the higher court, you're petitioning the higher court saying, [01:09:42.720 --> 01:09:45.720] hey, will you get these guys in line? [01:09:45.720 --> 01:09:48.720] And the higher court issues a writ. [01:09:48.720 --> 01:09:51.720] Well, in this situation, it sounds like you're not even in a court. [01:09:51.720 --> 01:09:54.720] There's no court talking to you yet. [01:09:54.720 --> 01:10:01.720] Now, they're probably planning to and that's why they're hoping you'll bite and talk to the prosecutor [01:10:01.720 --> 01:10:03.720] and get yourself hooked in with them. [01:10:03.720 --> 01:10:07.720] But there's nothing officially from any court. [01:10:07.720 --> 01:10:16.720] So it's just sort of a threat that says if you don't this in 30 days, then work into that. [01:10:16.720 --> 01:10:20.720] And you don't even know who they are. [01:10:20.720 --> 01:10:24.720] It's not an official court proceeding of any kind, [01:10:24.720 --> 01:10:30.720] like a summons or a warrant that drags you into their system. [01:10:30.720 --> 01:10:31.720] Right? [01:10:31.720 --> 01:10:38.720] Well, that's why I called in because I wanted to, my fear is they're going to try that tactic next [01:10:38.720 --> 01:10:41.720] because they're going to try and steamroll it. [01:10:41.720 --> 01:10:47.720] So I wanted to be prepared for when that was to occur, [01:10:47.720 --> 01:10:51.720] you know, what my next steps from there was going to be. [01:10:51.720 --> 01:10:52.720] And that's why I was. [01:10:52.720 --> 01:10:53.720] Yeah. [01:10:53.720 --> 01:10:59.720] Well, if I'm in your shoes, I'm going to be jumping on them really hard right now [01:10:59.720 --> 01:11:04.720] before they get into making that decision. [01:11:04.720 --> 01:11:09.720] I'm going to want them to decide, whoa, I don't want anything to do with this fellow. [01:11:09.720 --> 01:11:11.720] He's hurting me. [01:11:11.720 --> 01:11:13.720] I'm going to leave him alone. [01:11:13.720 --> 01:11:16.720] So that's you report their crimes. [01:11:16.720 --> 01:11:17.720] It's a lot of work. [01:11:17.720 --> 01:11:21.720] It's a pain that you just stay up late at night and punch through these [01:11:21.720 --> 01:11:25.720] and get some criminal complaints out, get some bar grievances out. [01:11:25.720 --> 01:11:29.720] Bar grievance, that lawyer who, the prosecutor who's trying to pretend [01:11:29.720 --> 01:11:34.720] like he has something going on with you, hit him hard. [01:11:34.720 --> 01:11:37.720] Get some criminal complaints and bar grievances going. [01:11:37.720 --> 01:11:41.720] You don't have anything, no judicial misconduct complaint to put in yet [01:11:41.720 --> 01:11:43.720] because there's no judge. [01:11:43.720 --> 01:11:51.720] But you can go ahead and report him for baritry and for... [01:11:51.720 --> 01:11:58.720] Probably you will, as you look over the list of the rules of professional conduct for Ohio, [01:11:58.720 --> 01:12:01.720] you'll probably see several things just stand out to you. [01:12:01.720 --> 01:12:04.720] Hey, this lawyer said this. [01:12:04.720 --> 01:12:05.720] Oh, he triggered that one. [01:12:05.720 --> 01:12:07.720] He violated that rule too. [01:12:07.720 --> 01:12:10.720] So you just put one rule. [01:12:10.720 --> 01:12:11.720] Go ahead. [01:12:11.720 --> 01:12:13.720] He hasn't really said anything. [01:12:13.720 --> 01:12:17.720] He's just, we've corresponded through email. [01:12:17.720 --> 01:12:20.720] He just is not emailing me back. [01:12:20.720 --> 01:12:23.720] So he's not answering. [01:12:23.720 --> 01:12:29.720] He will not answer the question, and that was looking for promulgated documents [01:12:29.720 --> 01:12:38.720] that would prove that the county has a right to administer my property without right. [01:12:38.720 --> 01:12:39.720] Got you. [01:12:39.720 --> 01:12:42.720] Yeah, that's a question he can't answer. [01:12:42.720 --> 01:12:45.720] I didn't think he could, but is that a bar grievable offense [01:12:45.720 --> 01:12:49.720] if he denies to answer a records request? [01:12:49.720 --> 01:12:52.720] Because that's what I did was a records request. [01:12:52.720 --> 01:12:56.720] Well, yes and no. [01:12:56.720 --> 01:13:01.720] So he is not somebody who has a duty to respond to a records request, [01:13:01.720 --> 01:13:09.720] even though the person with the duty may have hired him to help out. [01:13:09.720 --> 01:13:14.720] So the person who has a duty to respond to you is an elected official. [01:13:14.720 --> 01:13:16.720] It's the top dog. [01:13:16.720 --> 01:13:22.720] It's this elected official, appointed official, or the head of a whole department. [01:13:22.720 --> 01:13:29.720] Those are the ones who must, by law, respond to your records request. [01:13:29.720 --> 01:13:33.720] It's unlikely they've hired somebody or maybe a team of people [01:13:33.720 --> 01:13:39.720] to help out with records requests, but you don't deal with them. [01:13:39.720 --> 01:13:46.720] They might send you something, but your eyes are always on the one who has a duty. [01:13:46.720 --> 01:13:48.720] Does that make sense? [01:13:48.720 --> 01:13:50.720] Yes. [01:13:50.720 --> 01:13:55.720] So if this guy, this lawyer is trying to get in the middle of it [01:13:55.720 --> 01:14:01.720] and acting like he's going to handle this, you could just tell him, [01:14:01.720 --> 01:14:04.720] I don't want to talk to you, go away. [01:14:04.720 --> 01:14:08.720] And he's going to feel offended and indignant [01:14:08.720 --> 01:14:12.720] and probably come back and try to explain how important he is and all that. [01:14:12.720 --> 01:14:16.720] But you just need to deal with whoever it is that has that responsibility. [01:14:16.720 --> 01:14:24.720] So you make your records request of whoever it is that you think will have the records you want. [01:14:24.720 --> 01:14:29.720] In your case, you're looking for maybe, [01:14:29.720 --> 01:14:38.720] do you have an elected position in the county there for the county tax assessor collector? [01:14:38.720 --> 01:14:42.720] Well, they reside in the commissioner, so the commissioners are elected. [01:14:42.720 --> 01:14:48.720] So that's the zoning derived from that power. [01:14:48.720 --> 01:14:51.720] So I did look that up. [01:14:51.720 --> 01:14:56.720] Okay, so that might be who you would want to send your records request to. [01:14:56.720 --> 01:14:59.720] And you ask for records that, just like you said, [01:14:59.720 --> 01:15:05.720] records that show that you've got the authority to tell me what to do with my property. [01:15:05.720 --> 01:15:08.720] You're going to administer it for me, and where's your authority to do that? [01:15:08.720 --> 01:15:09.720] Show it to me. [01:15:09.720 --> 01:15:13.720] I want to see all the records that show that. [01:15:13.720 --> 01:15:17.720] And just make sure that when you're asking for records, [01:15:17.720 --> 01:15:26.720] you word it in a way that the person responding can't say, [01:15:26.720 --> 01:15:29.720] oh, you're asking for me to give you legal advice. [01:15:29.720 --> 01:15:32.720] No, I'm asking you for certain records. [01:15:32.720 --> 01:15:38.720] And you describe those records, records that will show the legal authority to do this and that. [01:15:38.720 --> 01:15:42.720] So they've got to have records, certain documents. [01:15:42.720 --> 01:15:45.720] That's what you're asking them for. [01:15:45.720 --> 01:15:47.720] As opposed to explain yourself. [01:15:47.720 --> 01:15:49.720] They don't have to respond to that. [01:15:49.720 --> 01:15:51.720] There's no duty. [01:15:51.720 --> 01:15:53.720] Does that make sense? [01:15:53.720 --> 01:15:55.720] Yes. [01:15:55.720 --> 01:16:05.720] So now I addressed my Alpha Davids to the actual inspector. [01:16:05.720 --> 01:16:11.720] That's fine. [01:16:11.720 --> 01:16:17.720] If I was to do the criminal complaints, would those be towards the inspector [01:16:17.720 --> 01:16:22.720] or would those be both towards the inspector and the county? [01:16:22.720 --> 01:16:30.720] When I look at the inspector, I'm thinking he's trespassing. [01:16:30.720 --> 01:16:36.720] And then you've also got the fact that he's an agent for somebody else. [01:16:36.720 --> 01:16:38.720] So there's a principal and an agent. [01:16:38.720 --> 01:16:41.720] And you can name both of those people. [01:16:41.720 --> 01:16:43.720] You don't put them in the same criminal complaint. [01:16:43.720 --> 01:16:46.720] You can make two of them that are almost identical [01:16:46.720 --> 01:16:52.720] and have one person's name on one document and the other person's name on the other. [01:16:52.720 --> 01:16:54.720] And they're both guilty. [01:16:54.720 --> 01:16:56.720] Did somebody send him out there to do that [01:16:56.720 --> 01:17:00.720] or fail to give him the proper training of where is the boundary? [01:17:00.720 --> 01:17:06.720] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:06.720 --> 01:17:12.720] Tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk [01:17:12.720 --> 01:17:17.720] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.720 --> 01:17:22.720] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [01:17:22.720 --> 01:17:24.720] rightly dividing the word of truth. [01:17:24.720 --> 01:17:28.720] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark [01:17:28.720 --> 01:17:32.720] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:32.720 --> 01:17:37.720] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:17:37.720 --> 01:17:39.720] and Christian character development. [01:17:39.720 --> 01:17:44.720] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:44.720 --> 01:17:47.720] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [01:17:47.720 --> 01:17:50.720] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:50.720 --> 01:17:54.720] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:17:54.720 --> 01:18:00.720] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [01:18:00.720 --> 01:18:05.720] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.720 --> 01:18:09.720] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:18:09.720 --> 01:18:13.720] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors [01:18:13.720 --> 01:18:15.720] and now you can win too. [01:18:15.720 --> 01:18:17.720] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [01:18:17.720 --> 01:18:21.720] on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:18:21.720 --> 01:18:24.720] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, [01:18:24.720 --> 01:18:26.720] how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:18:26.720 --> 01:18:29.720] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:18:29.720 --> 01:18:34.720] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:34.720 --> 01:18:38.720] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.720 --> 01:18:41.720] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.720 --> 01:18:44.720] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:18:44.720 --> 01:18:49.720] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.720 --> 01:18:57.720] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:18:57.720 --> 01:19:00.720] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:27.720 --> 01:19:29.720] Okay, we are back. [01:19:29.720 --> 01:19:31.720] Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:19:31.720 --> 01:19:35.720] I'm Brett Fountain, and we're speaking with Chris in Ohio [01:19:35.720 --> 01:19:41.720] about the commercial vehicle that's supposedly on his property [01:19:41.720 --> 01:19:45.720] and he has 30 days to do something about it. [01:19:45.720 --> 01:19:51.720] Well, Chris, so you've got this guy, the inspector guy, [01:19:51.720 --> 01:19:55.720] and he was trespassing himself, [01:19:55.720 --> 01:19:59.720] and you've got the person who sent him out to do that. [01:19:59.720 --> 01:20:04.720] Both of those people are in trouble with you now. [01:20:04.720 --> 01:20:06.720] So I was looking over the break here. [01:20:06.720 --> 01:20:08.720] I was looking at Ohio revised code. [01:20:08.720 --> 01:20:11.720] I see you've probably looked this up already. [01:20:11.720 --> 01:20:17.720] Section 2911.21, criminal trespass. [01:20:17.720 --> 01:20:23.720] And it looks like this subsection, A subsection 1. [01:20:23.720 --> 01:20:29.720] So 2911.21, A1. [01:20:29.720 --> 01:20:32.720] It says no person without privilege to do so [01:20:32.720 --> 01:20:34.720] shall do any of the following. [01:20:34.720 --> 01:20:38.720] And number 1 says knowingly enter or remain on [01:20:38.720 --> 01:20:41.720] the land or premises of another. [01:20:41.720 --> 01:20:45.720] Well, that's all you need. [01:20:45.720 --> 01:20:50.720] So he knowingly entered and he knowingly remained on [01:20:50.720 --> 01:20:55.720] the land or premises of another. [01:20:55.720 --> 01:20:57.720] Bam. [01:20:57.720 --> 01:21:01.720] So you can charge him with that crime, [01:21:01.720 --> 01:21:05.720] and you can figure out who's his superior. [01:21:05.720 --> 01:21:07.720] If you want to go all the way up the chain [01:21:07.720 --> 01:21:11.720] and pop everybody all the way up, then you could do that as well. [01:21:11.720 --> 01:21:17.720] But the fact that somebody has committed a crime [01:21:17.720 --> 01:21:18.720] puts you in a position. [01:21:18.720 --> 01:21:21.720] Once you start reporting that crime, [01:21:21.720 --> 01:21:24.720] you become a protected class. [01:21:24.720 --> 01:21:28.720] You become somebody that if they mess with you [01:21:28.720 --> 01:21:36.720] or even frown at you, you now can consider that to be retaliation, [01:21:36.720 --> 01:21:44.720] witness tampering, because you are somebody who could potentially [01:21:44.720 --> 01:21:50.720] be called up on the witness stand to testify against their crimes. [01:21:50.720 --> 01:21:54.720] When they're having to stand and answer the charges, [01:21:54.720 --> 01:22:02.720] you could be called up as a witness, right? [01:22:02.720 --> 01:22:08.720] If you've got other callers, I understand. [01:22:08.720 --> 01:22:09.720] Go ahead. [01:22:09.720 --> 01:22:11.720] I wanted to ask another question. [01:22:11.720 --> 01:22:15.720] What recourse would I have if I called the sheriff [01:22:15.720 --> 01:22:21.720] or went to the sheriff's office and asked them to do something [01:22:21.720 --> 01:22:25.720] about this trespassing complaint? [01:22:25.720 --> 01:22:27.720] Because I did just that, and the sheriff said, [01:22:27.720 --> 01:22:29.720] well, you're in violation of the code. [01:22:29.720 --> 01:22:31.720] That's why they're there. [01:22:31.720 --> 01:22:36.720] And I said, but I think it constitutes a trespass. [01:22:36.720 --> 01:22:39.720] So the sheriff is playing cover-up. [01:22:39.720 --> 01:22:42.720] Yeah, while you're talking with him on the phone, [01:22:42.720 --> 01:22:47.720] he doesn't have his duty invoked. [01:22:47.720 --> 01:22:54.720] He doesn't have any lawfully imposed duty to convert [01:22:54.720 --> 01:22:59.720] a phone conversation into some certain action. [01:22:59.720 --> 01:23:03.720] But if you put a sworn criminal complaint in his hands [01:23:03.720 --> 01:23:06.720] or in the hands of a magistrate, even better, [01:23:06.720 --> 01:23:10.720] when you have triggered a duty that the law imposed [01:23:10.720 --> 01:23:12.720] on that public official, [01:23:12.720 --> 01:23:14.720] and now they can't just kind of weasel out of it with, [01:23:14.720 --> 01:23:18.720] well, I think he probably has the right to be there. [01:23:18.720 --> 01:23:19.720] I'm back. [01:23:19.720 --> 01:23:21.720] Let me make a little comment here. [01:23:21.720 --> 01:23:27.720] This is something I am specifically taking on in Texas. [01:23:27.720 --> 01:23:33.720] Look at your criminal procedure code under duties of officers. [01:23:33.720 --> 01:23:38.720] In Texas, we have a statute that says that when a peace officer [01:23:38.720 --> 01:23:42.720] has it made known to him that a crime has been committed, [01:23:42.720 --> 01:23:48.720] he shall give notice to some magistrate. [01:23:48.720 --> 01:23:55.720] I can assure you, you have something similar in Ohio. [01:23:55.720 --> 01:24:00.720] There has to be something that directs a peace officer [01:24:00.720 --> 01:24:03.720] to take an action when he has knowledge [01:24:03.720 --> 01:24:05.720] that a crime has been committed. [01:24:05.720 --> 01:24:07.720] Myth in there. [01:24:07.720 --> 01:24:12.720] So in Texas, it's 2.13 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:24:12.720 --> 01:24:15.720] I went to a justice of the peace and filed criminal charges, [01:24:15.720 --> 01:24:19.720] and the justice refused to take the complaints. [01:24:19.720 --> 01:24:23.720] So I went to the chief of police and filed criminal charges [01:24:23.720 --> 01:24:26.720] against the justice of the peace. [01:24:26.720 --> 01:24:32.720] I gave him a verified criminal affidavit and asked him to give me notice [01:24:32.720 --> 01:24:37.720] of the magistrate to whom he gave notice of this crime [01:24:37.720 --> 01:24:41.720] in accordance with Article 2.13 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:24:41.720 --> 01:24:44.720] Well, he didn't do that. [01:24:44.720 --> 01:24:48.720] So now I'm filing criminal charges against him, [01:24:48.720 --> 01:24:54.720] accusing him of felony shielding from prosecution [01:24:54.720 --> 01:24:58.720] for not giving notice to some magistrate [01:24:58.720 --> 01:25:03.720] that this other magistrate didn't do his job. [01:25:03.720 --> 01:25:07.720] You see how that works? [01:25:07.720 --> 01:25:12.720] Every step they make or every misstep they make [01:25:12.720 --> 01:25:17.720] when you invoke their duty by statute, [01:25:17.720 --> 01:25:21.720] every step they make makes it deeper for them. [01:25:21.720 --> 01:25:26.720] I'm charging this chief of police who didn't want to take criminal complaints [01:25:26.720 --> 01:25:29.720] against his local justice of the peace, [01:25:29.720 --> 01:25:34.720] I'm charging him with felony shielding. [01:25:34.720 --> 01:25:36.720] This is how you set him up. [01:25:36.720 --> 01:25:42.720] In your case, Randy, you had handed this guy a sworn criminal complaint. [01:25:42.720 --> 01:25:47.720] So he didn't have any wiggle room, [01:25:47.720 --> 01:25:51.720] because it says where the officer has good reason to believe [01:25:51.720 --> 01:25:53.720] that there's been a violation of the penal law. [01:25:53.720 --> 01:25:59.720] Well, that gives him a little bit of wiggle room if it's a phone chat, [01:25:59.720 --> 01:26:02.720] but what you did was different. [01:26:02.720 --> 01:26:05.720] You put a sworn criminal complaint in his hand. [01:26:05.720 --> 01:26:11.720] Yes, we are citizens in a republic. [01:26:11.720 --> 01:26:14.720] And when I went to the justice of the peace, [01:26:14.720 --> 01:26:17.720] I gave him two criminal complaints and he refused to take them [01:26:17.720 --> 01:26:19.720] because I wasn't a lawyer. [01:26:19.720 --> 01:26:22.720] So I called the police and asked them to arrest the JP. [01:26:22.720 --> 01:26:28.720] And the policeman says, well, I need to talk to JP to see if a crime has been committed. [01:26:28.720 --> 01:26:30.720] I said, no, you don't. [01:26:30.720 --> 01:26:32.720] I'm a citizen in this republic. [01:26:32.720 --> 01:26:35.720] You are a servant of this republic. [01:26:35.720 --> 01:26:39.720] I have given you notice that a crime has been committed. [01:26:39.720 --> 01:26:45.720] You have no power to usurp my determination. [01:26:45.720 --> 01:26:50.720] You have a duty to give notice to some magistrate. [01:26:50.720 --> 01:26:52.720] Does that make sense? [01:26:52.720 --> 01:26:56.720] You are the most powerful guy in the republic. [01:26:56.720 --> 01:27:03.720] This public servant would propose to usurp your determination? [01:27:03.720 --> 01:27:08.720] Who the hell does he think he is? [01:27:08.720 --> 01:27:10.720] I'm the master and you're the servant. [01:27:10.720 --> 01:27:13.720] Act like it. [01:27:13.720 --> 01:27:15.720] Well, I'm trying to. [01:27:15.720 --> 01:27:16.720] This is my first go-around. [01:27:16.720 --> 01:27:19.720] I think I'm doing pretty good at it. [01:27:19.720 --> 01:27:20.720] Yes, you are. [01:27:20.720 --> 01:27:26.720] You will find, okay, there is one problem that we have to keep warning people about. [01:27:26.720 --> 01:27:32.720] Once you figure out how to do this and once you realize who you are [01:27:32.720 --> 01:27:43.720] and the power you have in a republic, this can get to be way too much fun. [01:27:43.720 --> 01:27:48.720] When you see that policeman shifting from one foot to the other, [01:27:48.720 --> 01:27:55.720] well, Mr. Kelton, we call that that little chicken dance. [01:27:55.720 --> 01:28:00.720] It gets to really be fun. [01:28:00.720 --> 01:28:10.720] You, in order to invoke the officer's duty, you put in his hand a verified criminal affidavit. [01:28:10.720 --> 01:28:16.720] Do you know what a verified criminal affidavit looks like in Ohio? [01:28:16.720 --> 01:28:17.720] I do not. [01:28:17.720 --> 01:28:19.720] I've been looking for one and I can't find one. [01:28:19.720 --> 01:28:32.720] Just go to any criminal case and ask the clerk to show you any criminal case, any ticket. [01:28:32.720 --> 01:28:43.720] Go to the county court is the best and ask the clerk to see the last five cases filed in this court. [01:28:43.720 --> 01:28:45.720] In the criminal court. [01:28:45.720 --> 01:28:49.720] They're going to want to ask some questions. [01:28:49.720 --> 01:28:52.720] You say, oh, I'm just doing some research for my son who's in high school [01:28:52.720 --> 01:28:56.720] and he's writing a report on how to file criminal charges. [01:28:56.720 --> 01:28:59.720] We just want to look at some of the documents. [01:28:59.720 --> 01:29:01.720] It just moves them. [01:29:01.720 --> 01:29:07.720] Then look in there for a document that's labeled information. [01:29:07.720 --> 01:29:17.720] An information is what a lawyer, a prosecutor produces when he receives a criminal complaint from a citizen. [01:29:17.720 --> 01:29:22.720] A citizen is not expected to be a legal professional. [01:29:22.720 --> 01:29:27.720] So a complaint from a citizen does not have to be in a perfect form. [01:29:27.720 --> 01:29:33.720] The prosecutor, when he gets one, he's to convert the complaint into an information. [01:29:33.720 --> 01:29:37.720] That is a criminal complaint in proper form. [01:29:37.720 --> 01:29:44.720] So get the criminal complaint and look at the form, change information to complaint and you've got one. [01:29:44.720 --> 01:29:46.720] Does that make sense? [01:29:46.720 --> 01:29:48.720] Yeah, it does. [01:29:48.720 --> 01:29:55.720] And then when you give that to the officer, now you have just put him up on a legal dime. [01:29:55.720 --> 01:30:00.720] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Fountain Group, Love Radio, you'll be right. [01:30:00.720 --> 01:30:09.720] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.720 --> 01:30:13.720] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.720 --> 01:30:16.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.720 --> 01:30:18.720] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.720 --> 01:30:22.720] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.720 --> 01:30:27.720] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.720 --> 01:30:32.720] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.720 --> 01:30:35.720] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.720 --> 01:30:38.720] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.720 --> 01:30:42.720] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:42.720 --> 01:30:45.720] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.720 --> 01:30:49.720] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:49.720 --> 01:30:52.720] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.720 --> 01:30:56.720] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.720 --> 01:31:00.720] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.720 --> 01:31:04.720] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.720 --> 01:31:10.720] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.720 --> 01:31:16.720] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.720 --> 01:31:18.720] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.720 --> 01:31:21.720] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.720 --> 01:31:24.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, [01:31:24.720 --> 01:31:31.720] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.720 --> 01:31:36.720] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.720 --> 01:31:38.720] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.720 --> 01:31:43.720] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.720 --> 01:31:46.720] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.720 --> 01:31:49.720] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.720 --> 01:31:50.720] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.720 --> 01:31:51.720] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.720 --> 01:31:53.720] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.720 --> 01:31:54.720] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.720 --> 01:31:55.720] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.720 --> 01:31:58.720] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.720 --> 01:32:02.720] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.720 --> 01:32:05.720] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.720 --> 01:32:08.720] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:08.720 --> 01:32:10.720] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.720 --> 01:32:13.720] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.720 --> 01:32:16.720] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.720 --> 01:32:17.720] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:17.720 --> 01:32:20.720] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.720 --> 01:32:23.720] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:32:23.720 --> 01:32:26.720] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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[01:32:51.720 --> 01:32:53.720] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:53.720 --> 01:32:55.720] from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.720 --> 01:33:02.720] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.720 --> 01:33:13.720] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:13.720 --> 01:33:18.720] Yeah, and who you want to chip? Who you take me for? Free Tony? [01:33:18.720 --> 01:33:21.720] Who you want to chip? I'm not free Tony. You can't chip me. [01:33:21.720 --> 01:33:25.720] All of them chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, [01:33:25.720 --> 01:33:29.720] put a chip in your body, and then when you go computer reading, [01:33:29.720 --> 01:33:31.720] you can't hide me from nobody. [01:33:31.720 --> 01:33:34.720] When you say chip in your mom, chip in your daddy, [01:33:34.720 --> 01:33:39.720] chip in your grandpa and your granny, chip in me, chip in your baby, [01:33:39.720 --> 01:33:42.720] chip in your family, whole family, chip in your dad, [01:33:42.720 --> 01:33:46.720] and the kids around me, chip in the beef, and you still go eat it, [01:33:46.720 --> 01:33:49.720] chip in the fish, them all in the sea, chip in the shark, [01:33:49.720 --> 01:33:53.720] and the whale around me, you can't see mankind, you can't chip crazy, [01:33:53.720 --> 01:33:55.720] take the cleanest thing, man, they want to read it, [01:33:55.720 --> 01:33:59.720] social security, they can't tell me, number with them, give me, [01:33:59.720 --> 01:34:03.720] then rip it up, you see, I'm chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, [01:34:03.720 --> 01:34:07.720] chip you all the time, experiment on mankind, [01:34:07.720 --> 01:34:11.720] but man, you know, say them right, well, we don't want no chip, [01:34:11.720 --> 01:34:15.720] man, you have your body, freedom or something, man, you fight for it, [01:34:15.720 --> 01:34:20.720] you should tell them, if you read it, Constitution set us free, [01:34:20.720 --> 01:34:24.720] granted them put no chip in your body, put no chip in you, dog, I can't you see, [01:34:24.720 --> 01:34:29.720] no, put no chip in your cow and go eat it, no, put no chip in the fish and go eat it, [01:34:29.720 --> 01:34:32.720] all in the whale and the shark in the sea. [01:34:32.720 --> 01:34:37.720] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we love radio, [01:34:37.720 --> 01:34:40.720] and Brett told me to tell the date and the phone number, [01:34:40.720 --> 01:34:47.720] but he forgot to remind me what it is, and I'm old and in my dotage. [01:34:47.720 --> 01:34:59.720] Okay, the 20th day of January, 2022, a call in number, 512-646-1984, [01:34:59.720 --> 01:35:03.720] we do have some room on the board, and we've got a couple more segments left, [01:35:03.720 --> 01:35:06.720] so if you have a question or comment, give us a call, [01:35:06.720 --> 01:35:15.720] and on the break, Brett found some more code that would work, some Ohio code. [01:35:15.720 --> 01:35:17.720] Go ahead, Brett. [01:35:17.720 --> 01:35:22.720] Well, it looks a little bit different from Texas, but I think this would be appropriate here. [01:35:22.720 --> 01:35:33.720] I see where Ohio has Section 2935.09, person having knowledge of offense to file affidavit, [01:35:33.720 --> 01:35:37.720] official review before complaint filed. [01:35:37.720 --> 01:35:42.720] So it looks like Ohio, just from reading through a couple of pages here, [01:35:42.720 --> 01:35:50.720] it looks like Ohio is set up where the affidavit is not itself a criminal complaint, [01:35:50.720 --> 01:35:55.720] but it's the affidavit is something that gets reviewed, [01:35:55.720 --> 01:35:59.720] and then the criminal complaint is drawn up by attorneys. [01:35:59.720 --> 01:36:09.720] Does it say to whom an affidavit, a criminal affidavit, is directed? [01:36:09.720 --> 01:36:16.720] It looks like, okay, so in subsection B here, [01:36:16.720 --> 01:36:22.720] in order to cause the arrest or prosecution of a person charged with committing an offense in this state, [01:36:22.720 --> 01:36:31.720] a peace officer or a private citizen having knowledge of the facts shall comply with this section. [01:36:31.720 --> 01:36:40.720] And so I see in A, it references a magistrate, but not in exactly the same way I'm used to seeing it. [01:36:40.720 --> 01:36:55.720] They've got an attorney here where it says in D, file an affidavit with a reviewing official. [01:36:55.720 --> 01:37:00.720] Now, that might be a magistrate. It doesn't say here exactly. [01:37:00.720 --> 01:37:06.720] It says a judge of a court of record, the prosecuting attorney or attorney charged by law [01:37:06.720 --> 01:37:13.720] with the prosecution of offenses in a court before a magistrate or a magistrate. [01:37:13.720 --> 01:37:22.720] So it looks like it includes magistrates, but it also includes a prosecuting attorney. [01:37:22.720 --> 01:37:32.720] Anyway, that is the person who is supposed to receive the affidavit charging the offense. [01:37:32.720 --> 01:37:39.720] I'm looking for reviewing official, Ohio. [01:37:39.720 --> 01:37:45.720] Yeah, it's 2935-09A. [01:37:45.720 --> 01:37:57.720] Reviewing official means a judge of a court of record, the prosecuting attorney or attorney charged by law. [01:37:57.720 --> 01:38:06.720] I'll have to open it up to the rest of it. Okay, so it does include a magistrate. [01:38:06.720 --> 01:38:07.720] Yes. [01:38:07.720 --> 01:38:15.720] So you could take it directly to a magistrate, because taking it to a reviewing attorney, that's going to be a problem. [01:38:15.720 --> 01:38:22.720] Yeah, I wouldn't go to the attorney. [01:38:22.720 --> 01:38:30.720] But it does look like you can, and it looks like that the officer, if the officer has knowledge of the facts over in subsection B, [01:38:30.720 --> 01:38:36.720] if a peace officer has knowledge of the facts, then it says he shall comply with this section. [01:38:36.720 --> 01:38:49.720] So the officer, when you give him knowledge of the facts, then he has a duty to go and talk to one of these reviewing officials. [01:38:49.720 --> 01:39:03.720] Well, my goal for my endgame was to give the complaint to the sheriff and make him do his damn job, is what I wanted to do. [01:39:03.720 --> 01:39:05.720] It looks like that'll work. [01:39:05.720 --> 01:39:11.720] Maybe the sheriff can, that will get you into more fights. [01:39:11.720 --> 01:39:12.720] Right. [01:39:12.720 --> 01:39:24.720] If you take it to a magistrate directly, you bypass the sheriff and the prosecutor, and you put the magistrate on the time. [01:39:24.720 --> 01:39:35.720] But what would be our remedy if the magistrate doesn't want to do his job? [01:39:35.720 --> 01:39:38.720] Oh, my goodness, Randy. [01:39:38.720 --> 01:39:41.720] You think that might ever happen? [01:39:41.720 --> 01:39:47.720] Good chance. [01:39:47.720 --> 01:39:52.720] Do you have a judicial complaint? [01:39:52.720 --> 01:39:57.720] No, I'm thinking judicial is kind of extra. [01:39:57.720 --> 01:40:02.720] I'm looking at how do we hold them to rule of law? [01:40:02.720 --> 01:40:24.720] Can a magistrate, prosecutor or sheriff allow someone for whom there is evidence that a crime has been committed to circumvent prosecution? [01:40:24.720 --> 01:40:28.720] Now, this is the kind of thing that happens all the time, so it has to be addressed. [01:40:28.720 --> 01:40:33.720] Laws are written for bad guys. [01:40:33.720 --> 01:40:39.720] The bad guys write the laws to protect them from other bad guys. [01:40:39.720 --> 01:40:52.720] So there has to be something in here for this purpose, because if you're a bad guy and you've got another bad guy over here that you want hammered, [01:40:52.720 --> 01:41:01.720] then you don't want the police and the magistrate or the prosecutor to be able to shield that guy from prosecution. [01:41:01.720 --> 01:41:08.720] There has to be a way to get him hammered. [01:41:08.720 --> 01:41:23.720] Let's see, a peace officer who seeks to cause an arrest or prosecution under this section may file with a reviewing official or the clerk of a court of record an affidavit charging the offense committed. [01:41:23.720 --> 01:41:51.720] A private citizen having knowledge of the facts who seek to cause an arrest or prosecution under this section may file an affidavit charging the offense committed with a reviewing official for the purpose of review to determine if a complaint should be filed by the prosecuting attorney or attorney charged by law with the prosecution of offenses in the court or before the magistrate. [01:41:51.720 --> 01:42:09.720] A private citizen may file an affidavit charging the offense committed with the clerk of a court of record before or after normal business hours of the reviewing officials if the clerk's office is open at those times. [01:42:09.720 --> 01:42:26.720] A clerk who receives an affidavit before or after normal business hours of the reviewing official shall forward it to the reviewing official when the reviewing official's normal business hours resume. [01:42:26.720 --> 01:42:35.720] So a clerk you could file it with doesn't have any power not to accept it. [01:42:35.720 --> 01:42:43.720] They would have to give it to the reviewing official but they could give it to a prosecutor and that's always a problem. [01:42:43.720 --> 01:42:50.720] Yeah, you don't want to give them that flexibility. [01:42:50.720 --> 01:42:52.720] This is how we do it. [01:42:52.720 --> 01:42:54.720] We study the laws. [01:42:54.720 --> 01:42:59.720] There aren't that many that affect the particular issue. [01:42:59.720 --> 01:43:09.720] Go back and look into these codes and study them for a way to put all these officials on the dime. [01:43:09.720 --> 01:43:22.720] When it comes to filing criminal complaints against public officials, they're all going to want to slither up behind that thin blue line and you need to find a way to pry them out from behind it. [01:43:22.720 --> 01:43:29.720] If you give an affidavit to a judge of a court of record, you've done it. [01:43:29.720 --> 01:43:35.720] That's enough right there. [01:43:35.720 --> 01:43:41.720] The court of record being an Article III court? [01:43:41.720 --> 01:43:42.720] No. [01:43:42.720 --> 01:43:44.720] District or county court. [01:43:44.720 --> 01:43:54.720] Generally, justice of the peace courts and municipal courts, these are courts that can be presided over by someone who's not an attorney. [01:43:54.720 --> 01:44:00.720] And those are generally construed as inferior courts. [01:44:00.720 --> 01:44:01.720] Dang, cookies. [01:44:01.720 --> 01:44:03.720] Cookies? Me love cookies. [01:44:03.720 --> 01:44:06.720] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:06.720 --> 01:44:09.720] Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:44:09.720 --> 01:44:12.720] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:44:12.720 --> 01:44:13.720] No, can't eat it? [01:44:13.720 --> 01:44:16.720] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:16.720 --> 01:44:17.720] These have apples. [01:44:17.720 --> 01:44:20.720] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.720 --> 01:44:22.720] Yummy apple. [01:44:22.720 --> 01:44:26.720] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.720 --> 01:44:32.720] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:32.720 --> 01:44:34.720] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.720 --> 01:44:47.720] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:47.720 --> 01:44:49.720] New cookies? For me? [01:44:49.720 --> 01:44:51.720] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:51.720 --> 01:44:57.720] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:44:57.720 --> 01:44:58.720] B is for cookie. [01:44:58.720 --> 01:45:00.720] B is for classified. [01:45:00.720 --> 01:45:04.720] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.720 --> 01:45:15.720] 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. [01:45:15.720 --> 01:45:19.720] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.720 --> 01:45:23.720] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.720 --> 01:45:28.720] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:28.720 --> 01:45:34.720] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.720 --> 01:45:43.720] 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. [01:45:43.720 --> 01:45:52.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.720 --> 01:46:01.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.720 --> 01:46:20.720] Hello. Oh, man, in jail. You got a birthday, man? Oh, man, I'm rolling, man. [01:46:20.720 --> 01:46:25.720] Okay, we are back, Randy Coulson, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:46:25.720 --> 01:46:33.720] On this, the 20th day of January 2022. This is our last segment. [01:46:33.720 --> 01:46:38.720] And we're talking to, oh, what was your first name? [01:46:38.720 --> 01:46:39.720] It was Chris and Ohio. [01:46:39.720 --> 01:46:44.720] Chris, Chris. Okay. [01:46:44.720 --> 01:46:52.720] What we do is more than just the raw codes. [01:46:52.720 --> 01:46:58.720] How do you bring the greatest pressure on these guys? [01:46:58.720 --> 01:47:05.720] How do you get them to take a step that you can then hammer them with? [01:47:05.720 --> 01:47:14.720] In my case, I went to Victoria County, and I went into this JP's office and put some complaints down on the desk, [01:47:14.720 --> 01:47:17.720] and they called the JP out, and he looked at me and said, are you an attorney? [01:47:17.720 --> 01:47:19.720] Oh, no, no, no, no. [01:47:19.720 --> 01:47:22.720] I'm going to sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. Thank you very much. [01:47:22.720 --> 01:47:26.720] He said, did you talk to an attorney about these? [01:47:26.720 --> 01:47:28.720] I said, well, no, I didn't. [01:47:28.720 --> 01:47:36.720] And he dropped them and said that I'm not going to accept these, and he stormed out. [01:47:36.720 --> 01:47:43.720] Oh, yeah, that'll work. I take out my cell phone, I dial 911. [01:47:43.720 --> 01:47:49.720] The clerks heard me, and they ran back and tattled to the judge. [01:47:49.720 --> 01:47:55.720] So while I'm waiting for the 911 officer to show up so I can file criminal charges against the JP, [01:47:55.720 --> 01:47:59.720] he came out and he said, well, Mr. Kelton, did you talk to an attorney? [01:47:59.720 --> 01:48:01.720] Oh, wait, wait, wait. [01:48:01.720 --> 01:48:04.720] We can't have any further conversation, you and I. [01:48:04.720 --> 01:48:08.720] I have an officer coming to take my criminal complaint against you, [01:48:08.720 --> 01:48:15.720] but since I'm filing against you, it would be inappropriate for us to have any further communications. [01:48:15.720 --> 01:48:19.720] So, Chris, you think I got his attention? [01:48:19.720 --> 01:48:21.720] Yeah, I'm pretty sure you did. [01:48:21.720 --> 01:48:23.720] This is what we're trying to do. [01:48:23.720 --> 01:48:26.720] Look at those codes real careful. [01:48:26.720 --> 01:48:36.720] And a JP, say you have JP's in Ohio, Justices of Peace? [01:48:36.720 --> 01:48:40.720] I'm not sure what they call them here. I have never looked. [01:48:40.720 --> 01:48:45.720] Okay, well, you'll have municipal court judges. [01:48:45.720 --> 01:48:48.720] They're going to be a reviewing official. [01:48:48.720 --> 01:48:53.720] So you go to that municipal court judge and you give him these complaints. [01:48:53.720 --> 01:48:55.720] And he is not going to want to act on them. [01:48:55.720 --> 01:49:01.720] He's going to tell you, oh, well, you need to take these to the police department. [01:49:01.720 --> 01:49:04.720] I love it when they do that. [01:49:04.720 --> 01:49:06.720] Because then I go to the police department [01:49:06.720 --> 01:49:14.720] and I file criminal charges against JP for not taking them in the first place. [01:49:14.720 --> 01:49:19.720] I presume there's a code on that for the JP if he doesn't take them. [01:49:19.720 --> 01:49:26.720] Well, yeah, you've got this code that says that you can give your complaint to a reviewing officer. [01:49:26.720 --> 01:49:28.720] Well, he's a reviewing officer. [01:49:28.720 --> 01:49:38.720] So if he refuses to take your reviewing complaint, then you have to have a statute on official misconduct. [01:49:38.720 --> 01:49:41.720] Read your penal code. [01:49:41.720 --> 01:49:42.720] Just read it. [01:49:42.720 --> 01:49:43.720] Don't try to understand it. [01:49:43.720 --> 01:49:45.720] Just quickly read through it. [01:49:45.720 --> 01:49:52.720] And generally just the first half because the second half you get into really obscure stuff you don't care about. [01:49:52.720 --> 01:49:58.720] In the first half you will have all the primary major crimes that can go on. [01:49:58.720 --> 01:50:00.720] So just read through it. [01:50:00.720 --> 01:50:02.720] And then go back and read it again. [01:50:02.720 --> 01:50:06.720] It's not near as big as it appears because it's outlined. [01:50:06.720 --> 01:50:09.720] There's a lot of white space. [01:50:09.720 --> 01:50:13.720] But it's put together out of order. [01:50:13.720 --> 01:50:16.720] They pass laws as they come to them. [01:50:16.720 --> 01:50:25.720] And then they hire these publishers to go in the public laws and organize these into a set of codes. [01:50:25.720 --> 01:50:39.720] Like in Texas where you read the criminal procedure code the first time, you'll read about Chapter 2, Section 210. [01:50:39.720 --> 01:50:47.720] When a magistrate sits for the purpose of examining into a criminal accusation, that is an examining court. [01:50:47.720 --> 01:50:50.720] Well, that won't make much sense when you read it. [01:50:50.720 --> 01:50:59.720] The second time you read it, you'll say, oh, that's referring to Chapter 16. [01:50:59.720 --> 01:51:10.720] And when Chapter 16 refers to sealing all the documents ahead in a hearing and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction, that refers to Chapter 17.30. [01:51:10.720 --> 01:51:15.720] You'll start stitching these pieces together. [01:51:15.720 --> 01:51:17.720] It is a mosaic. [01:51:17.720 --> 01:51:22.720] And it takes a second read and you'll start stitching all these pieces together. [01:51:22.720 --> 01:51:28.720] Once you've read that twice, you'll know it better than the prosecutor does. [01:51:28.720 --> 01:51:37.720] And then you go in and ask the magistrate or the judge to do something they are absolutely not going to want to do. [01:51:37.720 --> 01:51:39.720] See, we have this rule. [01:51:39.720 --> 01:51:45.720] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:51:45.720 --> 01:51:53.720] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him to do. [01:51:53.720 --> 01:51:56.720] Then, boom, you get to hammer him. [01:51:56.720 --> 01:52:05.720] But you can't do that effectively until you've read the criminal procedure code and the penal code twice. [01:52:05.720 --> 01:52:08.720] And it's just the first half of both of them. [01:52:08.720 --> 01:52:14.720] Once you've read them twice, you may not remember all these laws. [01:52:14.720 --> 01:52:20.720] But when you start walking through the process, those laws will start jumping right out at you. [01:52:20.720 --> 01:52:25.720] And these guys will not believe what you do to them. [01:52:25.720 --> 01:52:30.720] So you might want to take a look at, in this Ohio revised code, [01:52:30.720 --> 01:52:41.720] you might want to take a look at the Section 2931.01 and look at Subsection A. [01:52:41.720 --> 01:52:47.720] It tells you that the magistrate includes county court judges, police justices. [01:52:47.720 --> 01:52:48.720] I don't know. [01:52:48.720 --> 01:52:52.720] We don't have police justices in Texas, so I'm not sure what that is. [01:52:52.720 --> 01:52:56.720] Mayors of municipal corporation. [01:52:56.720 --> 01:52:59.720] I'd love to have our mayors. [01:52:59.720 --> 01:53:00.720] Yeah. [01:53:00.720 --> 01:53:04.720] And judges of other courts inferior to the Court of Common Pleas. [01:53:04.720 --> 01:53:12.720] So the inferior is what he was talking about earlier, these municipal judges, any of the small judges. [01:53:12.720 --> 01:53:15.720] So that gives you a variety there. [01:53:15.720 --> 01:53:22.720] Section 2931.01A. [01:53:22.720 --> 01:53:33.720] It looks like in Ohio revised code, Title 29 is all about a criminal procedure, Title 29. [01:53:33.720 --> 01:53:40.720] And Chris, I can assure you, when you start reading this, it will read like a comic book. [01:53:40.720 --> 01:53:48.720] You'll read these codes that you get to beat them up with and you'll get tickled and be chuckling the whole time you're reading it. [01:53:48.720 --> 01:53:56.720] It is a great read. [01:53:56.720 --> 01:53:57.720] Okay. [01:53:57.720 --> 01:53:58.720] Does that make sense to you? [01:53:58.720 --> 01:53:59.720] It does. [01:53:59.720 --> 01:54:01.720] I appreciate it, Randy. [01:54:01.720 --> 01:54:08.720] And read through it and then call us back next week and we will have a whole different conversation. [01:54:08.720 --> 01:54:12.720] I don't want to call back in until I have a little input back from the county. [01:54:12.720 --> 01:54:13.720] So I'll do that. [01:54:13.720 --> 01:54:15.720] I'll make you that promise that I will call back in. [01:54:15.720 --> 01:54:17.720] Wonderful. [01:54:17.720 --> 01:54:18.720] Okay. [01:54:18.720 --> 01:54:23.720] We've got four minutes and one more caller. [01:54:23.720 --> 01:54:24.720] Thanks, guys. [01:54:24.720 --> 01:54:25.720] Thanks, Chris. [01:54:25.720 --> 01:54:36.720] Now we're going to go to Stephen Somewhere, 570 Area Code. [01:54:36.720 --> 01:54:42.720] Hello, Stephen. [01:54:42.720 --> 01:54:44.720] Hello, Stephen. [01:54:44.720 --> 01:54:48.720] If you are in the 570, give us a call. [01:54:48.720 --> 01:54:52.720] Give us a shout. [01:54:52.720 --> 01:54:53.720] Okay. [01:54:53.720 --> 01:54:54.720] Are you there? [01:54:54.720 --> 01:55:00.720] If you can hear us and we can't hear you, hang up and call right back. [01:55:00.720 --> 01:55:01.720] Can you hear me now? [01:55:01.720 --> 01:55:02.720] Now I can hear you. [01:55:02.720 --> 01:55:04.720] Yes. [01:55:04.720 --> 01:55:06.720] Are you a first-time caller? [01:55:06.720 --> 01:55:08.720] I am, but I know you guys. [01:55:08.720 --> 01:55:11.720] I'm in your telegram group and I've talked to... [01:55:11.720 --> 01:55:16.720] No, I'm asking that because if you are, then we'll put you in our database. [01:55:16.720 --> 01:55:20.720] Yeah, with whatever first name you want and a state. [01:55:20.720 --> 01:55:21.720] Okay, yeah. [01:55:21.720 --> 01:55:22.720] I'm Stephen. [01:55:22.720 --> 01:55:24.720] I'm in Ohio also. [01:55:24.720 --> 01:55:26.720] All right. [01:55:26.720 --> 01:55:36.720] Okay, what do you have for us today? [01:55:36.720 --> 01:55:42.720] Did we lose you, Steve? [01:55:42.720 --> 01:55:44.720] Okay, Steve, this is dead air. [01:55:44.720 --> 01:55:48.720] We can't have dead air on the radio. [01:55:48.720 --> 01:55:51.720] Make sure you're not muted. [01:55:51.720 --> 01:55:53.720] And no sign language. [01:55:53.720 --> 01:55:55.720] No, no sign language. [01:55:55.720 --> 01:55:58.720] We don't do sign language. [01:55:58.720 --> 01:56:02.720] Maybe he's talking in Braille. [01:56:02.720 --> 01:56:03.720] Okay. [01:56:03.720 --> 01:56:06.720] Oh, man, we just lost him. [01:56:06.720 --> 01:56:07.720] What does that mean? [01:56:07.720 --> 01:56:08.720] He knows he's calling back. [01:56:08.720 --> 01:56:09.720] I hope so. [01:56:09.720 --> 01:56:11.720] Good, good. [01:56:11.720 --> 01:56:16.720] That's the part about the question yet. [01:56:16.720 --> 01:56:26.720] I just did the show with Tom Kiley and it appears as though the Democrats are [01:56:26.720 --> 01:56:36.720] beginning to reap their whirlwinds, that they see the writing on the wall with [01:56:36.720 --> 01:56:43.720] the Brits eliminating all the mask requirements. [01:56:43.720 --> 01:56:49.720] Making it official for the rest of them instead of just the special ones. [01:56:49.720 --> 01:56:52.720] They actually did this on the floor. [01:56:52.720 --> 01:57:01.720] Said that they would trust the wisdom of the British people. [01:57:01.720 --> 01:57:05.720] Almost couldn't believe I heard that. [01:57:05.720 --> 01:57:07.720] That was absolutely incredible. [01:57:07.720 --> 01:57:13.720] And that told me that they see problems coming for them. [01:57:13.720 --> 01:57:19.720] That the public is not buying all of this COVID crapola. [01:57:19.720 --> 01:57:27.720] And the next set of elections here and in other countries is going to start [01:57:27.720 --> 01:57:31.720] flushing a lot of these officials out of office. [01:57:31.720 --> 01:57:35.720] And then we will get that pendulum swinging back where it should have been. [01:57:35.720 --> 01:57:41.720] My only concern is that so many people have been vaccinated. [01:57:41.720 --> 01:57:49.720] My son, my daughter-in-law, my brother, his son is a doctor and I'm terrified [01:57:49.720 --> 01:57:52.720] for him of what this stuff will do. [01:57:52.720 --> 01:57:57.720] I'm hoping that it's not as bad as what I've been hearing. [01:57:57.720 --> 01:58:04.720] And the human body is incredibly resilient so it may well be that it's not. [01:58:04.720 --> 01:58:10.720] But in any case, the political pendulum seems to be swinging back. [01:58:10.720 --> 01:58:19.720] And I have a meeting in Austin next Monday with a woman whose mother was murdered [01:58:19.720 --> 01:58:28.720] by a doctor because he was using the, he had her on a lung machine [01:58:28.720 --> 01:58:33.720] and wouldn't use an alternative methodology. [01:58:33.720 --> 01:58:37.720] And allowed her to die. [01:58:37.720 --> 01:58:45.720] And I'm calling that, what's it, iatogenic murder, death by doctor. [01:58:45.720 --> 01:58:47.720] Okay, we're out of time. [01:58:47.720 --> 01:58:48.720] We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:58:48.720 --> 01:58:50.720] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:50.720 --> 01:58:55.720] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible [01:58:55.720 --> 01:58:58.720] called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.720 --> 01:59:02.720] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain [01:59:02.720 --> 01:59:06.720] what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God [01:59:06.720 --> 01:59:08.720] and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.720 --> 01:59:11.720] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.720 --> 01:59:20.720] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.720 --> 01:59:26.720] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:26.720 --> 01:59:30.720] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.720 --> 01:59:33.720] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:33.720 --> 01:59:36.720] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, [01:59:36.720 --> 01:59:41.720] call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.720 --> 01:59:52.720] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:52.720 --> 02:00:00.720] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.