[00:00.000 --> 00:05.520] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:05.520 --> 00:10.320] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:10.320 --> 00:16.480] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [00:16.480 --> 00:21.680] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [00:21.680 --> 00:27.680] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [00:27.680 --> 00:34.720] SPAR. It's what fighters do. It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:34.720 --> 00:41.200] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. SPAR with an extra P. S for speech, [00:41.200 --> 00:47.120] P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. Most Americans [00:47.120 --> 00:51.920] are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [00:51.920 --> 00:56.080] But petition for redress is another matter. We have the right to petition the government [00:56.080 --> 01:00.480] for a redress of grievances. It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our [01:00.480 --> 01:04.240] government, we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:04.800 --> 01:09.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:14.640 --> 01:18.960] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. They guarantee [01:18.960 --> 01:23.840] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [01:23.840 --> 01:27.840] Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [01:27.840 --> 01:34.000] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll [01:34.000 --> 01:39.200] never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to [01:39.200 --> 01:45.520] vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:45.520 --> 01:50.160] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [01:50.160 --> 01:57.520] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:59.360 --> 02:04.080] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill of [02:04.080 --> 02:08.960] Rights in a big old bear hug. It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right [02:08.960 --> 02:14.160] to bear arms, arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:14.160 --> 02:20.000] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of [02:20.000 --> 02:25.040] the Second Amendment so well when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one [02:25.040 --> 02:30.000] guarantee against arbitrary government, one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears [02:30.000 --> 02:35.520] remote in America, but which historically has proved to always be possible. I'm Dr. Katherine [02:35.520 --> 02:50.960] Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:05.920 --> 03:06.960] What you gonna do? [03:11.200 --> 03:18.320] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys, [03:18.320 --> 03:24.480] what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? When you were eight and you had bad [03:24.480 --> 03:30.480] traits, you'd go to school and learn the golden rules. So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:30.480 --> 03:36.800] If you get caught then you might get caught. Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna [03:36.800 --> 03:43.040] do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they [03:43.040 --> 03:48.400] come for you? You chuck it on that one...you chuck it on this one...you chuck it on your mother and [03:48.400 --> 03:52.640] you chuck it on your father...you chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sweetheart...you [03:52.640 --> 03:58.800] chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me. Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna [04:28.800 --> 04:33.880] Bad boys! Whatcha gonna do? Oh whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:48.100 --> 04:55.960] Okay, Howdy, Howdy Randy Carlton Brett Fountain Wheel of Loreach radio, and I have just turned on the phone lines [04:55.960 --> 05:02.400] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call, we'll be taking your calls all [05:02.400 --> 05:03.400] night. [05:03.400 --> 05:13.160] Our call-in number, 512-646-1984, and I'm going to start out talking about an epiphany. [05:13.160 --> 05:18.760] Well, why don't you tell about what day it is first, because this is Lawyer Day. [05:18.760 --> 05:22.560] Didn't I say this was April Fool's Day? [05:22.560 --> 05:25.560] Oh, Lawyer Day, absolutely. [05:25.560 --> 05:30.640] You got a point there, this is Lawyer Day. [05:30.640 --> 05:38.080] And I had an epiphany, I've been taking these stem cells, I told my wife and I was going [05:38.080 --> 05:45.760] to go take these stem cells and when I come back, I'm going to look like Robert Redford. [05:45.760 --> 05:48.640] She said, hon, Robert Redford's older than you. [05:48.640 --> 05:54.640] No, no, no, not that Robert Redford, the young one, the young one. [05:54.640 --> 05:59.560] Didn't have a way of just bursting your bubble. [05:59.560 --> 06:03.400] I didn't look like Robert Redford. [06:03.400 --> 06:11.480] Life is filled with little disappointments, but I did have an epiphany, but I took something [06:11.480 --> 06:13.240] for it and it's better now. [06:13.240 --> 06:20.640] Now, the epiphany I had is I filed a lawsuit against the county that I live in for arresting [06:20.640 --> 06:27.520] me and holding me overnight and I started that lawsuit with a petition for declaratory [06:27.520 --> 06:28.520] judgment. [06:28.520 --> 06:33.880] That's the first half of the suit and the second half of the suit are claims for harm [06:33.880 --> 06:36.760] and damages. [06:36.760 --> 06:43.800] So I'm going to file an amended pleading and remove the petition for declaratory judgment [06:43.800 --> 06:47.320] and just sue them for damages. [06:47.320 --> 06:54.400] Then I'm going to take that petition for declaratory judgment and file it in a separate suit naming [06:54.400 --> 06:59.440] the state of Texas as the defendant. [06:59.440 --> 07:09.400] When I named the state of Texas as the defendant, then I'll get the attorney general and the [07:09.400 --> 07:18.760] attorney general will assign two of his newest assistant attorney generals to handle this [07:18.760 --> 07:20.760] because it's a pro se. [07:20.760 --> 07:22.760] Yeah, it's a pro se. [07:22.760 --> 07:28.400] So get a couple of those guys fresh out of law school, they can handle him, right? [07:28.400 --> 07:36.680] I'm going to wipe the floor with them and I'm going to hope I can move this up the chain. [07:36.680 --> 07:44.960] When I start bar grieving those young attorneys and start hammering them for they're careless [07:44.960 --> 07:51.640] and they got a pro se, they don't take too much concern about that and they figure they [07:51.640 --> 07:56.600] can do their standard BS and when they do, when I hammer them pretty good, they'll start [07:56.600 --> 08:05.640] walking up the chain and I'm hoping I can get up pretty close to the top and get the [08:05.640 --> 08:11.320] attorney general to come to the table and make a deal. [08:11.320 --> 08:23.120] I will drop my suit if you will execute an attorney general's opinion that says that [08:23.120 --> 08:30.520] the code of criminal procedure means exactly what it says and when a policeman arrests [08:30.520 --> 08:38.800] someone for a on-site offense, they are to do what 14.06 commands them to do and take [08:38.800 --> 08:46.280] them directly to the nearest magistrate or which they're allowed to do by law, get on [08:46.280 --> 08:52.920] the phone and call the magistrate and hold an electronic examining trial. [08:52.920 --> 09:01.640] Yes, they can fire up FaceTime, it says specifically, video conference, they can do this. [09:01.640 --> 09:03.360] Right now they can already do it. [09:03.360 --> 09:08.240] It's already in law, we don't need to change anything and before they take that person [09:08.240 --> 09:16.160] to jail, they get permission of a magistrate to do that and the magistrate after this examining [09:16.160 --> 09:24.280] trial, both parties are there, the accused is represented electronically and the first [09:24.280 --> 09:32.080] thing that an accused has an opportunity to do in an examining trial before any evidence [09:32.080 --> 09:40.600] is entered against him, he has the right to make a statement in his behalf. [09:40.600 --> 09:53.640] Now that's probably, for the most part, a bad idea and they probably shouldn't do that, [09:53.640 --> 09:54.640] but [09:54.640 --> 09:56.320] Wait, wait, which day? [09:56.320 --> 10:01.120] Are you saying that the accused shouldn't be doing that? [10:01.120 --> 10:08.120] Should do what Eddie Craig tells them to do, shut up, keep shutting up and keep shutting [10:08.120 --> 10:09.120] up. [10:09.120 --> 10:20.040] So they should probably do that, but if they are offered that opportunity, it changes everything. [10:20.040 --> 10:24.600] A lot of you folks call in and we get a lot of people that are really upset and feel like [10:24.600 --> 10:31.480] they've been horribly mistreated and they call into the show and for the most part, [10:31.480 --> 10:36.720] it's been my experience over all of these years that most of these people are not really [10:36.720 --> 10:49.520] calling me looking for remedy, primarily, primarily they just want to be heard, I lost [10:49.520 --> 11:02.960] my phone today, it's raining, I don't know what I did with it, okay, this is annoying, [11:02.960 --> 11:08.080] I've got these hearing aids in that, could you hear my phone ringing? [11:08.080 --> 11:13.000] Is there a ringing in your ears? [11:13.000 --> 11:24.000] Yeah, you guys probably couldn't hear it, Ted, I'm on the air you chump, okay hung up, [11:24.000 --> 11:32.920] that's Ted in Utah, an old truck driver, I don't know where my phone is, I put it [11:32.920 --> 11:39.160] somewhere, oh well, okay, you guys probably couldn't hear that, I could hear it, my new [11:39.160 --> 11:44.600] hearing aids have a Bluetooth in it and it's ringing in my ear and I'm thinking you're [11:44.600 --> 11:52.440] hearing it, okay, enough interruption, but mostly people want to be heard, they want [11:52.440 --> 12:01.420] somebody to listen to them and that's what I'm telling the legislature and the courts [12:01.420 --> 12:07.720] that most of the time when someone's arrested, the policeman has a good reason to do it, [12:07.720 --> 12:12.080] policemen aren't out here trying to persecute people for the most part, they don't have [12:12.080 --> 12:18.440] time, the policeman goes from one call to the next to the next, they don't have time [12:18.440 --> 12:25.240] to select someone out for special persecution, they're busy and when someone gets stopped [12:25.240 --> 12:32.920] by a policeman, they tend to feel selected or from the group, you know, policemen stop [12:32.920 --> 12:38.520] me in a whole group of traffic and you picked me out of the whole group, why would he pick [12:38.520 --> 12:39.520] on me? [12:39.520 --> 12:46.960] Well he wasn't, he was just doing his job, so, but when he stops someone, he don't want [12:46.960 --> 12:53.000] to hear what they have to say, he doesn't care, he's been through this over and over [12:53.000 --> 13:00.680] and over and over and he won't hear it, what they don't understand is if you are to keep [13:00.680 --> 13:12.320] the public trust, you must at least give the symbols of some kind of deference, we are [13:12.320 --> 13:19.760] after all the masters of the servants and we expect our public officials to treat us [13:19.760 --> 13:26.520] with a certain amount of dignity and the police have been trained not to do that and that's [13:26.520 --> 13:31.560] why Brett and I get on the air and suggest that people file bar grievances, judicial [13:31.560 --> 13:39.840] conduct complaints, professional conduct complaints against the police officers, we try to remind [13:39.840 --> 13:46.840] them of who we are, the police spend most of their time dealing with about 6% of the [13:46.840 --> 13:52.760] population, 6% of the population are just professional criminals, they are arrested [13:52.760 --> 13:57.880] over and over and over and over, the policemen arrest these people and for the most part [13:57.880 --> 14:04.920] these people are nuts and they will feed the law officer any kind of line of BS they think [14:04.920 --> 14:12.560] might get the officer to let them go and they get hardened to that, so when they stop someone [14:12.560 --> 14:20.680] who is not part of that 6% they tend to use the same procedures they use with that 6%, [14:20.680 --> 14:26.600] we need to get that fixed, when they stop me they tend to find out very quickly I am [14:26.600 --> 14:32.240] not one of that 6% and when they stop Brett they find out very quickly he is not one of [14:32.240 --> 14:42.520] that 6% but we need more people doing that and the way we can get the whole perspective [14:42.520 --> 14:51.440] changed is force the policemen to call the local magistrate and the magistrate is to [14:51.440 --> 14:57.920] offer the person the opportunity to make a statement if they want to, tell them that [14:57.920 --> 15:03.680] they have a right to counsel and they can delay this particular hearing to give them [15:03.680 --> 15:12.680] time to secure counsel and if they choose to delay then the justice of the peace will [15:12.680 --> 15:19.760] allow the officer to go ahead and make the arrest or release them on bond and then once [15:19.760 --> 15:28.640] they get counsel they can participate in an examining trial but it causes the court to [15:28.640 --> 15:36.600] first look to the accused and ask the accused what he chooses to do, he gets to make a decision [15:36.600 --> 15:45.960] concerning what happens, I suggest that that one thing will change everything. [15:45.960 --> 15:52.720] Yeah and the beautiful part about this is it is not something that you have to convince [15:52.720 --> 15:58.360] anybody why it is a good idea even though you are having to do that but it is not that [15:58.360 --> 16:04.640] they need to convince legislators to do anything, it is there, it is already there. [16:04.640 --> 16:11.520] It is in law already and that is why I want to sue the Attorney General and put him on [16:11.520 --> 16:16.160] the dime, oh I will sue the state but when I sue the state the Attorney General will [16:16.160 --> 16:21.200] come in to represent the state and if I hammer the Attorney General and convince him that [16:21.200 --> 16:29.680] this mass incarceration problem has its roots in this failure to follow the clear dictate [16:29.680 --> 16:36.640] of law, let me actually get this part fixed, hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the [16:36.640 --> 16:43.960] rule of law radio, a call in number 512-646-1984 we will be right back. [16:43.960 --> 16:48.640] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [16:48.640 --> 16:52.800] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [16:52.800 --> 16:57.120] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [16:57.120 --> 16:58.120] can win too. [16:58.120 --> 17:02.520] You will get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using [17:02.520 --> 17:08.280] federal civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, [17:08.280 --> 17:12.120] how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit [17:12.120 --> 17:17.560] report, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:17.560 --> 17:22.360] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:22.360 --> 17:24.800] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:24.800 --> 17:30.320] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:30.320 --> 17:40.920] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com, that's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [17:40.920 --> 17:45.560] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [17:45.560 --> 17:48.320] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [17:48.320 --> 17:51.920] In today's America, we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever [17:51.920 --> 17:56.120] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:56.120 --> 17:59.320] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [17:59.320 --> 18:02.960] in our own private capacity and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:02.960 --> 18:07.200] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:07.200 --> 18:08.640] our rights through due process. [18:08.640 --> 18:12.560] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the [18:12.560 --> 18:16.360] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [18:16.360 --> 18:18.400] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:18.400 --> 18:22.720] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:22.720 --> 18:24.080] ordering your copy today. [18:24.080 --> 18:27.440] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [18:27.440 --> 18:31.840] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [18:31.840 --> 18:34.160] documents and other useful resource material. [18:34.160 --> 18:37.320] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:37.320 --> 18:42.280] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:42.280 --> 18:52.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, www.logosradionetwork.com. [19:42.280 --> 20:10.520] I apologize for not getting to you last night, but we'll give you extra time this morning. [20:10.520 --> 20:13.720] What do you have this morning, this evening? [20:13.720 --> 20:17.120] What do you have for us today? [20:17.120 --> 20:22.160] E.J., hello, E.J. [20:22.160 --> 20:30.440] Brett, tell me I didn't put her to sleep already in the first few minutes. [20:30.440 --> 20:32.040] Boy, you're good. [20:32.040 --> 20:36.040] I'm good. [20:36.040 --> 20:38.080] I'm better than sleep aids. [20:38.080 --> 20:39.080] E.J. [20:39.080 --> 20:40.680] Brett, we can't hear you. [20:40.680 --> 20:45.280] I don't know if you got it muted on your end, but we want to hear what you got to say. [20:45.280 --> 20:50.280] If you can hear us, try hanging up and calling back. [20:50.280 --> 20:55.880] Okay, we're going to go to Tina in California. [20:55.880 --> 20:57.880] Hello, Tina. [20:57.880 --> 21:00.880] Hello, Brett. [21:00.880 --> 21:06.520] Okay, you will notice that I did not make any smart mouth remarks. [21:06.520 --> 21:13.480] I didn't say anything about churlish or any of that kind of stuff, because that's the [21:13.480 --> 21:14.480] kind of guy I am. [21:14.480 --> 21:15.480] Are you feeling ill? [21:15.480 --> 21:16.480] Are you feeling ill? [21:16.480 --> 21:17.480] Now I'm feeling great. [21:17.480 --> 21:22.480] Check my blood pressure a little while ago, it was 117 over 70. [21:22.480 --> 21:23.480] Yes. [21:23.480 --> 21:24.480] Wow, that looks very good. [21:24.480 --> 21:34.480] Well, I have a very quick question for you tonight. [21:34.480 --> 21:38.400] Whenever you go to a doctor's office, so at least here, or physical... [21:38.400 --> 21:41.280] Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, you're kind of muffled. [21:41.280 --> 21:43.280] Are you on a Bluetooth? [21:43.280 --> 21:44.280] No. [21:44.280 --> 21:48.280] Or hands-free or something? [21:48.280 --> 21:52.000] No, no, I'm just on speakerphone. [21:52.000 --> 21:55.080] Ah, take it off that speakerphone. [21:55.080 --> 21:58.320] We're losing all the high tones. [21:58.320 --> 22:01.320] I thought my hearing aids stopped working. [22:01.320 --> 22:04.320] Oh, is this better? [22:04.320 --> 22:05.320] Yes. [22:05.320 --> 22:06.320] That's better. [22:06.320 --> 22:07.320] Okay. [22:07.320 --> 22:17.880] Whenever you go to a medical office here in California, they always want to get your driver's [22:17.880 --> 22:23.440] license and insurance card, and they want to scan the driver's license. [22:23.440 --> 22:28.640] Now for a couple of years, maybe more, I've been saying, no, you can't scan it. [22:28.640 --> 22:32.560] You can look at it to verify it's me, but you can't scan it. [22:32.560 --> 22:39.520] It's just a little pushback because a lot of people, you know, if a system gets hacked, [22:39.520 --> 22:45.520] they get all our information, especially the driver's license, your date of birth and everything. [22:45.520 --> 22:47.800] And I don't see the reason they have to do it. [22:47.800 --> 22:50.440] Now whenever I've asked, they say, well, it's our policy. [22:50.440 --> 22:51.960] We need to be able to identify you. [22:51.960 --> 22:56.840] I said, you can identify me by looking at me and looking at the driver's license, but [22:56.840 --> 22:57.840] you're not scanning it. [22:57.840 --> 23:03.600] And I say it very politely, and then I'll say, well, my attorney said you can't because [23:03.600 --> 23:07.000] I've had fraud on my account. [23:07.000 --> 23:11.880] And then sort of most of them sort of look at me and think, well, I guess, okay, I'm [23:11.880 --> 23:15.840] going to see a new doctor on Tuesday, and I already know I'm going to get some pushback [23:15.840 --> 23:19.240] because their office is not very friendly. [23:19.240 --> 23:26.840] What can I say that's legal, I mean, why are they requiring us to give them our driver's [23:26.840 --> 23:28.480] license so they can scan in? [23:28.480 --> 23:32.520] And it's not just once, it's every time you go in. [23:32.520 --> 23:41.960] You say, do I need to file a complaint with the medical board against the doctor? [23:41.960 --> 23:49.640] If you say that and you listen carefully, you can hear every anal sphincter muscle in [23:49.640 --> 23:52.680] the place tighten up. [23:52.680 --> 23:57.920] I have a friend who's a clinical psychologist. [23:57.920 --> 24:08.040] And he invested with a guy in a silver deal, and the guy screwed him around on it. [24:08.040 --> 24:13.240] And he contacted me, and I helped him take the guy on. [24:13.240 --> 24:16.480] Well, the guy was an associate path. [24:16.480 --> 24:25.080] And he filed a complaint, he claimed that he was a patient of Dr. V, and he never was, [24:25.080 --> 24:28.000] and filed a complaint against him with the medical board. [24:28.000 --> 24:37.200] Dr. V said, you will not believe all of the hoops I had to jump through. [24:37.200 --> 24:48.720] There was absolutely no credence in what he said, but I still had to produce all of my [24:48.720 --> 24:53.320] medical records for the last five years for the board. [24:53.320 --> 24:57.920] When they went over all of the stuff I produced for them, they said there was absolutely nothing [24:57.920 --> 25:04.560] to this complaint, but it took him six months to get this handled. [25:04.560 --> 25:08.000] It was an incredible imposition. [25:08.000 --> 25:16.640] So if you tell them that you're denying me access to medical care for an arbitrary reason, [25:16.640 --> 25:22.280] I'm going to file a complaint with the medical board against the doctor, they're putting [25:22.280 --> 25:27.440] into that nonsense that'll put what they're doing into perspective. [25:27.440 --> 25:34.080] They want to put you to some discomfort. [25:34.080 --> 25:42.080] They want to force you to jump through some hoops for them, turnabouts fair play. [25:42.080 --> 25:43.080] Okay. [25:43.080 --> 25:44.800] What is the reasoning behind it? [25:44.800 --> 25:48.680] Can you think of any good reason behind it, them wanting it? [25:48.680 --> 25:51.520] I have no idea. [25:51.520 --> 25:59.480] If you come to me to buy a car, and you tell me that I want to buy a car, and you hold [25:59.480 --> 26:04.400] out some money for me to buy the car, I don't care who you are. [26:04.400 --> 26:10.560] If you come to me to do any kind of deal, and you're paying for the deal, I just need [26:10.560 --> 26:14.840] to have a way to contact you. [26:14.840 --> 26:18.840] I don't need any special verification. [26:18.840 --> 26:21.280] I don't need your driver's license. [26:21.280 --> 26:24.240] I don't need any of that stuff. [26:24.240 --> 26:25.600] Who cares? [26:25.600 --> 26:34.200] If you give me an insurance card, or insurance going to pay my bill beyond paying my bill, [26:34.200 --> 26:35.200] I don't care. [26:35.200 --> 26:38.480] Why should I care? [26:38.480 --> 26:43.240] So why on earth are they doing this stuff? [26:43.240 --> 26:52.840] You might ask them, is there a compelling reason to get a copy of my driver's license? [26:52.840 --> 26:59.760] What they might tell you is, there is a compelling reason that the insurance company, they want [26:59.760 --> 27:06.000] to make sure they're not covering someone who is not actually on the policy. [27:06.000 --> 27:13.600] There may be a compelling reason, you just don't know what it is. [27:13.600 --> 27:20.560] While I like to take these guys on, doctors are busy and they got a whole lot of stuff [27:20.560 --> 27:27.960] against them, can I give them an opportunity to justify why they're doing this? [27:27.960 --> 27:37.480] Let me have somebody else come in and claim they're Tina, Tina Cherish, and they don't [27:37.480 --> 27:42.200] know that this other person is not Tina Cherish. [27:42.200 --> 27:43.200] So how do I know? [27:43.200 --> 27:44.200] Let them look at it. [27:44.200 --> 27:45.200] They can take it personally. [27:45.200 --> 27:46.200] Exactly. [27:46.200 --> 27:47.200] I'd say that's enough. [27:47.200 --> 27:55.160] But then they're going to have to say, well, I've looked at their driver's license and [27:55.160 --> 28:01.120] the guy on the other side is going to say, well, was the driver's license a real driver's [28:01.120 --> 28:03.960] license or was it a counterfeit? [28:03.960 --> 28:04.960] Was it expired? [28:04.960 --> 28:12.480] Did it have the right number of digits in the driver's license number? [28:12.480 --> 28:15.520] Did the picture look like the person that was there? [28:15.520 --> 28:20.120] We got all these questions they could ask and the doctor would say, here, here's what [28:20.120 --> 28:21.120] it looked like. [28:21.120 --> 28:25.480] You determine if it was valid or not and quit asking me all these stupid questions. [28:25.480 --> 28:30.040] You've seen the point. [28:30.040 --> 28:33.600] I see your point. [28:33.600 --> 28:39.800] They're not demanding that you wear a mask and stand on your head and walk like a chicken. [28:39.800 --> 28:42.400] I object to things that are unnecessary. [28:42.400 --> 28:45.760] Well, I would say that's also unnecessary. [28:45.760 --> 28:46.760] Privacy, no. [28:46.760 --> 28:53.720] If they want to look at it, totally, I'm with Tina on that. [28:53.720 --> 28:54.720] They can look at it. [28:54.720 --> 28:59.080] If they want to, whatever reason they think they can come up with, maybe they'll be able [28:59.080 --> 29:00.080] to convince me otherwise. [29:00.080 --> 29:05.920] But from the starting point, I'd be like, you want to see my policy? [29:05.920 --> 29:08.720] And I pull out a card that has a big old N-O on it. [29:08.720 --> 29:11.520] Then they can figure out what my policy is. [29:11.520 --> 29:12.520] Yeah. [29:12.520 --> 29:13.520] And I agree. [29:13.520 --> 29:22.560] All I'm saying here is let's not make enemies when we don't need to. [29:22.560 --> 29:28.120] You know, I'm having people in New York put together criminal charges against doctors. [29:28.120 --> 29:33.400] So I'm not exactly on their side, but I'm not exactly against them either. [29:33.400 --> 29:37.280] Let's pick our fights real carefully. [29:37.280 --> 29:38.280] It's privacy. [29:38.280 --> 29:39.280] Hang on. [29:39.280 --> 29:46.240] We're about to go to our sponsors, Rachel Kelton, Brett Fountain, who's on radio. [29:46.240 --> 29:49.840] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively [29:49.840 --> 29:50.840] affected our health? [29:50.840 --> 29:55.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how [29:55.000 --> 29:59.320] cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [29:59.320 --> 30:00.920] Privacy is under attack. [30:00.920 --> 30:04.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:04.520 --> 30:09.280] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:09.280 --> 30:14.320] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:14.320 --> 30:17.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:17.040 --> 30:21.320] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:21.320 --> 30:24.880] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:24.880 --> 30:28.680] Start over with StartPage. [30:28.680 --> 30:32.880] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy, it's a fact, but whether it's dangerous to have [30:32.880 --> 30:36.240] a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [30:36.240 --> 30:40.760] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:40.760 --> 30:45.200] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones [30:45.200 --> 30:46.400] affect brain chemistry. [30:46.400 --> 30:51.800] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest [30:51.800 --> 30:55.480] to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [30:55.480 --> 30:59.400] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any [30:59.400 --> 31:00.400] chances. [31:00.400 --> 31:03.840] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:03.840 --> 31:14.200] Look after Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:14.200 --> 31:15.200] I lost my son. [31:15.200 --> 31:16.200] My nephew. [31:16.200 --> 31:17.200] My uncle. [31:17.200 --> 31:18.200] My son. [31:18.200 --> 31:19.200] On September 11th, 2001. [31:19.200 --> 31:22.480] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:22.480 --> 31:26.600] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:26.600 --> 31:32.440] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:32.440 --> 31:36.200] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:36.200 --> 31:39.280] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, and my son. [31:39.280 --> 31:41.560] Go to BuildingWatts.org. [31:41.560 --> 31:45.400] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [31:45.400 --> 31:49.800] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [31:49.800 --> 31:50.800] Word? [31:50.800 --> 31:55.920] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [31:55.920 --> 32:02.320] Talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2nd Timothy 2.15. [32:02.320 --> 32:06.840] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that need is not to be ashamed, rightly [32:06.840 --> 32:09.280] dividing the word of truth. [32:09.280 --> 32:13.240] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse [32:13.240 --> 32:16.560] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [32:16.560 --> 32:21.200] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [32:21.200 --> 32:23.560] and Christian character development. [32:23.560 --> 32:28.120] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:28.120 --> 32:32.480] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [32:32.480 --> 32:34.080] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:34.080 --> 32:41.360] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [32:41.360 --> 32:43.880] motivate your studies of the scriptures. [32:43.880 --> 32:53.880] You're listening to the LogosRadioNetwork at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:13.880 --> 33:30.560] I need a prosecutor to come and help me, prosecute them wicked leaders, you see. [33:30.560 --> 33:35.400] The murderer is a liar, them telling a lie and not tell sweet stories. [33:35.400 --> 33:40.480] You don't believe me, say what them tell with 3% of Americans vote for Bush. [33:40.480 --> 33:43.480] So how the hell he get the presidency? [33:43.480 --> 33:55.680] Well whether you believe me or not. [33:55.680 --> 33:57.680] For good cheney [33:58.680 --> 34:00.680] Citizens arrest [34:00.680 --> 34:02.680] Not a bullshit [34:03.680 --> 34:05.680] One more warrant and time [34:05.680 --> 34:07.680] For good cheney [34:07.680 --> 34:09.680] Well we no forget one spiel [34:09.680 --> 34:11.680] Warrant for him [34:11.680 --> 34:13.680] All the cheney warrants for him [34:13.680 --> 34:15.680] Quite about the citizens in the country [34:15.680 --> 34:17.680] Them getting so mad and them getting angry [34:17.680 --> 34:20.680] We have some warrant we need to solve [34:20.680 --> 34:22.680] Need a prosecutor to come and help me [34:22.680 --> 34:25.680] Prosecutor from any state will do [34:25.680 --> 34:27.680] Come over and let me show them to you [34:27.680 --> 34:29.680] Hear them cheney when me tell you [34:29.680 --> 34:31.680] Three shoes, process cheney true [34:31.680 --> 34:33.680] That is true [34:33.680 --> 34:35.680] There is silver steel to do [34:36.680 --> 34:38.680] Okay we are back [34:38.680 --> 34:40.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Marilla Love Radio [34:40.680 --> 34:42.680] We're talking to a teen in California [34:42.680 --> 34:45.680] And we've only got one quarter tonight [34:46.680 --> 34:48.680] And that's really unusual [34:48.680 --> 34:51.680] Because generally we start out with a full board [34:51.680 --> 34:53.680] Well we had E.J. but we couldn't hear her [34:53.680 --> 34:55.680] She couldn't hear us I don't know [34:55.680 --> 34:57.680] Yeah maybe she'll call back [34:57.680 --> 34:59.680] But if you have a question or comment give us a call [34:59.680 --> 35:01.680] We do have three open lines [35:02.680 --> 35:04.680] And we're talking to Tina Churlish [35:04.680 --> 35:06.680] Oh no no no I wasn't going to say Churlish [35:07.680 --> 35:09.680] We're talking to Tina in California [35:09.680 --> 35:11.680] Tina sweetheart in California [35:13.680 --> 35:17.680] How many times exactly are you going to say that you're not saying Churlish [35:17.680 --> 35:19.680] Oh I don't say Tina Churlish [35:19.680 --> 35:22.680] Tina Churlish is not something that would ever come out of my mouth [35:22.680 --> 35:24.680] Right okay got it [35:24.680 --> 35:27.680] Okay just Tina so you understand [35:27.680 --> 35:29.680] I would never call you Tina Churlish [35:30.680 --> 35:32.680] That's right I know you would yes [35:32.680 --> 35:34.680] Only every other time [35:37.680 --> 35:39.680] Okay and on the break Brett and I [35:39.680 --> 35:42.680] Brett was kind of informing me about the nature [35:42.680 --> 35:46.680] Of privacy or lack thereof on the web [35:46.680 --> 35:51.680] And if you all send us a lot of emails asking for it [35:51.680 --> 35:54.680] And just berate him and beat him up a lot [35:54.680 --> 35:58.680] I would like to get Brett to give us [35:58.680 --> 36:03.680] And do a show on the best we can do [36:04.680 --> 36:07.680] You know I've been saying for a long time [36:07.680 --> 36:10.680] That this thing of privacy [36:11.680 --> 36:14.680] That got out of the bar about 25 years ago [36:14.680 --> 36:20.680] We're out there and I'm going to try to talk Brett into doing a show on [36:20.680 --> 36:25.680] How we can best deal with the situation we have today [36:26.680 --> 36:29.680] Okay with that said let's go back to Tina [36:30.680 --> 36:34.680] And I completely forgot where we were [36:35.680 --> 36:39.680] We were talking about the you know having to [36:39.680 --> 36:41.680] Let them scan your driver's license [36:41.680 --> 36:44.680] Let them scan your driver's license [36:44.680 --> 36:48.680] And it's not just once it's every single time you go in [36:49.680 --> 36:52.680] Every time and so I'm wondering [36:52.680 --> 36:56.680] Did you ask the clerk to see her driver's license? [36:58.680 --> 37:01.680] No I haven't done that part yet but maybe I will [37:04.680 --> 37:08.680] I kind of really know who I'm giving my personal information to [37:08.680 --> 37:10.680] You want to show me your driver's license [37:10.680 --> 37:15.680] I can take a photo of it to make sure I'm talking to the right person [37:15.680 --> 37:18.680] Now that's an excellent idea [37:18.680 --> 37:20.680] I like that [37:20.680 --> 37:25.680] But I'm wondering if they're training us to be little puppets [37:25.680 --> 37:29.680] And just follow instructions and not question [37:29.680 --> 37:34.680] Because on every time they have you know put your social security number [37:34.680 --> 37:37.680] I never put my social security number I just put zeros [37:37.680 --> 37:41.680] And so far I haven't been well I was challenged once [37:41.680 --> 37:45.680] And then I had to come out with no by law we don't have to do it [37:45.680 --> 37:47.680] You're not a credit union [37:47.680 --> 37:50.680] And you know I forgot to carry it with me [37:50.680 --> 37:53.680] But sometimes if they insist I just make a number up and put it in there [37:53.680 --> 37:55.680] That looks like the social security number [37:55.680 --> 37:57.680] But I never give them mine [37:57.680 --> 38:03.680] But it seems like they're training us to do what they say without question [38:03.680 --> 38:07.680] We're not allowed to question because it's policy [38:07.680 --> 38:09.680] Whose policy? [38:09.680 --> 38:12.680] So my policy is not [38:12.680 --> 38:16.680] Okay that's a good point [38:16.680 --> 38:22.680] I study psychology, neurologistic programming [38:22.680 --> 38:34.680] Primarily how to keep my perspective in the face of unstated presuppositions [38:34.680 --> 38:38.680] Well I am the clerk for the doctor [38:38.680 --> 38:42.680] And I need to know who I'm dealing with [38:42.680 --> 38:48.680] So I need to know your name, your date of birth, your mother's name and date of birth [38:48.680 --> 38:52.680] I need to know what kind of underwear you have on, what kind of socks you have on [38:52.680 --> 38:55.680] I need all this information [38:55.680 --> 38:59.680] And for the most part people just give them whatever they want [38:59.680 --> 39:05.680] So how do we elegantly turn the tables on? [39:05.680 --> 39:07.680] Oh yeah you want to see my license [39:07.680 --> 39:12.680] Well before I give out this personal information [39:12.680 --> 39:20.680] Can I see your license? I really need to know who I'm dealing with [39:20.680 --> 39:26.680] I like that, that's a good approach especially if you say it nice and calmly and politely [39:26.680 --> 39:28.680] And then you can say when you start to take a picture of it [39:28.680 --> 39:29.680] Oh you can't take a picture [39:29.680 --> 39:33.680] Well why not? You're scanning mine [39:33.680 --> 39:37.680] That's a picture you're taking [39:37.680 --> 39:39.680] I need to know [39:39.680 --> 39:42.680] But it's so much more than a picture [39:42.680 --> 39:48.680] There's a magnetic stripe on the back that contains a whole bunch of encoded information [39:48.680 --> 39:56.680] When they go and turn around behind your back and they go swipe it in that little scanner [39:56.680 --> 40:01.680] It is magnetically reading a lot of information off of that stripe [40:01.680 --> 40:03.680] But you don't even know what that information is [40:03.680 --> 40:08.680] Let alone feel like you get a chance to decide whether you want to disclose it or not [40:08.680 --> 40:13.680] Yes, this thing called metadata [40:13.680 --> 40:17.680] They want you to give them their license [40:17.680 --> 40:20.680] No, no, no, no, no [40:20.680 --> 40:27.680] My license has this little magnetic stripe on it and it has all sorts of metadata [40:27.680 --> 40:30.680] I don't want to give you all that metadata [40:30.680 --> 40:37.680] You ask me for what information you want and I will tell you [40:37.680 --> 40:38.680] Yeah [40:38.680 --> 40:45.680] As I got older and more experienced in what I'm doing [40:45.680 --> 40:51.680] I tend not to want to create fights that don't make any difference [40:51.680 --> 41:03.680] However, there's another thing that you and I and those of us who are awake need to be able to do [41:03.680 --> 41:12.680] Is that we need to be able to interrupt those people who are just mindless automatons [41:12.680 --> 41:23.680] What happens to a mindless automaton if you enter a variable that's not included in their programming? [41:23.680 --> 41:25.680] Oops [41:25.680 --> 41:34.680] Then if a human being has been converted to a mindless automaton by constant repetition [41:34.680 --> 41:36.680] Same thing over and over [41:36.680 --> 41:39.680] She asks questions, people answer it [41:39.680 --> 41:41.680] She asks other questions, people answer it [41:41.680 --> 41:46.680] And she forgets completely why she's there [41:46.680 --> 41:54.680] So how do we interrupt that mindless automaton to make them less mindless? [41:54.680 --> 41:58.680] Well, we don't want to show them our license [41:58.680 --> 42:04.680] I'm telling you who I am, this is my name and this is my license number [42:04.680 --> 42:07.680] Oh, don't ask me for my social security number [42:07.680 --> 42:12.680] Oh, okay, you can ask me for it but I'm not going to give it to you [42:12.680 --> 42:20.680] And when they say, well, I can't accept you as a client if you don't give me your social security number [42:20.680 --> 42:27.680] Oops, that's a felony in the Fed [42:27.680 --> 42:28.680] Oh [42:28.680 --> 42:34.680] Yeah, you can ask for the social security number but you cannot require it [42:34.680 --> 42:39.680] If you require it, it is a felony [42:39.680 --> 42:45.680] If I give you my social security number and you put it in your system [42:45.680 --> 42:51.680] How do I know that your system is not hackable? [42:51.680 --> 42:58.680] How do I know that someone's not going to break into your system and get my personal data? [42:58.680 --> 43:03.680] It is hackable, that's the thing, there's not an unhackable system [43:03.680 --> 43:07.680] Exactly, that's exactly my point [43:07.680 --> 43:20.680] So you want me to give you information that somebody in Libya or some failed African state can hack [43:20.680 --> 43:23.680] and then wreak havoc on my credit [43:23.680 --> 43:36.680] Are you prepared to take full liability for any leaks that may occur as a consequence of hacks to your system? [43:36.680 --> 43:43.680] Brett, is that an unreasonable question? [43:43.680 --> 43:49.680] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved except in the area of nutrition [43:49.680 --> 43:54.680] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed all that [43:54.680 --> 44:00.680] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition [44:00.680 --> 44:08.680] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need [44:08.680 --> 44:14.680] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject [44:14.680 --> 44:22.680] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others [44:22.680 --> 44:30.680] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio [44:30.680 --> 44:34.680] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us [44:34.680 --> 44:41.680] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family and increase your income [44:41.680 --> 44:43.680] Order now [44:43.680 --> 44:46.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:46.680 --> 44:57.680] 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 [44:57.680 --> 45:01.680] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing [45:01.680 --> 45:05.680] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself [45:05.680 --> 45:10.680] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too [45:10.680 --> 45:17.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience [45:17.680 --> 45:26.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts [45:26.680 --> 45:35.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more [45:35.680 --> 45:44.680] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ [46:05.680 --> 46:33.680] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio and I almost don't believe it [46:33.680 --> 46:38.680] Brett Fountain jumped off the cliff [46:38.680 --> 46:50.680] Now I may have given him a little push, it may appear that I gave him a little push, but that's just a misconception [46:50.680 --> 46:55.680] I learned from the best [46:55.680 --> 47:02.680] Okay, where were you when you were diving off the cliff? We were talking about [47:02.680 --> 47:07.680] You asked me if it is a good idea and I said, yeah, it's great [47:07.680 --> 47:12.680] To ask them if they would be willing to take [47:12.680 --> 47:17.680] You were saying, is it a good idea to ask them to take responsibility? [47:17.680 --> 47:20.680] And I was saying, yeah, I think that's great [47:20.680 --> 47:22.680] I think that perfectly fits [47:22.680 --> 47:25.680] You want my personal information [47:25.680 --> 47:27.680] You want to have it in your system [47:27.680 --> 47:40.680] Are you willing to take responsibility for keeping that information out of the hands of people who will use it against me? [47:40.680 --> 47:43.680] But you'd want to put it in writing [47:43.680 --> 47:52.680] Consider the clerk for the doctor when you ask her that [47:52.680 --> 47:59.680] But you'd ask for them to put it in writing that they will take full responsibility because they might deny they said it [47:59.680 --> 48:11.680] You slide the paper across the table there and it already has it in writing and it's waiting for their signature and their personal information to be filled in [48:11.680 --> 48:12.680] I like that [48:12.680 --> 48:23.680] And of course, we will want a clear image of your license so we can be sure that it's actually you [48:23.680 --> 48:27.680] Yeah, but I'm not going to scan it. I'm just going to check [48:27.680 --> 48:30.680] Just hold it up. I'll take a picture of it [48:30.680 --> 48:39.680] If you don't want me to see it, that's okay. You can go get this thing notarized. I'll just wait [48:39.680 --> 48:42.680] And this is not facetious [48:42.680 --> 48:44.680] No [48:44.680 --> 48:51.680] This is how we help people to wake up [48:51.680 --> 48:59.680] This will come to them as what in neuro-linguistic programming they will call a pattern interruption [48:59.680 --> 49:05.680] Most of these clerks are just running on autopilot [49:05.680 --> 49:13.680] Their brain is somewhere else and they're just going through these motions and we need to wake them up sometime [49:13.680 --> 49:21.680] And for the most part, if we wake them up effectively by waking them up [49:21.680 --> 49:31.680] We will give them the ability to begin to realize how tenuous their personal position is [49:31.680 --> 49:41.680] That, but for the grace of God did there go I, the person who's had his identity stolen [49:41.680 --> 49:47.680] And has different creditors coming after them, their credit's in the toilet [49:47.680 --> 49:57.680] They're being sued all over the place for things they didn't do [49:57.680 --> 50:04.680] So I think it's perfectly credible to do that [50:04.680 --> 50:11.680] Okay, the one thing you can't do, you can't grin at them, you can't laugh in their face [50:11.680 --> 50:18.680] You have to appear composed [50:18.680 --> 50:26.680] They cannot know how much fun you're having [50:26.680 --> 50:31.680] And life is filled with these little difficulties [50:31.680 --> 50:35.680] Well, I have another reason for doing this as well [50:35.680 --> 50:43.680] Because I do believe they're trying to train us to just mindlessly follow instructions without questioning [50:43.680 --> 50:50.680] And I know where that got me, thinking that this was a good country, a fair country [50:50.680 --> 50:57.680] With a fair government and justice system, I believed the government would help during that foreclosure mess [50:57.680 --> 51:01.680] Like they said they would, I believed the banks when they said [51:01.680 --> 51:05.680] Oh yes, you've just got to be three months behind, we're going to help you [51:05.680 --> 51:09.680] Because I was trained to believe and to trust authority [51:09.680 --> 51:13.680] Eight years in the military, a very strict school system [51:13.680 --> 51:20.680] And you're trained to be like a little robot [51:20.680 --> 51:25.680] You follow instructions, don't question, yes sir, no sir, three bags full sir [51:25.680 --> 51:28.680] And look where it got me, I lost my home [51:28.680 --> 51:33.680] Because I trusted people I thought I was able to trust [51:33.680 --> 51:38.680] And I just didn't question enough and I didn't learn enough [51:38.680 --> 51:41.680] So I'm not going to do that again [51:41.680 --> 51:44.680] I'm going to question everything [51:44.680 --> 51:47.680] There's got to be a good reason for you wanting this [51:47.680 --> 51:56.680] And I'm not going to allow myself to be mindlessly trained to do something just because someone says I should [51:56.680 --> 52:00.680] Okay, let me address [52:00.680 --> 52:08.680] How do you stop doing that in a way that is effective? [52:08.680 --> 52:15.680] Where I'm going here is these people doing this, they get resistance all the time [52:15.680 --> 52:23.680] And their focus, their scope, the scope of what they are doing is very narrow [52:23.680 --> 52:31.680] So they tend to get people who are for the most part not very sophisticated [52:31.680 --> 52:38.680] Tina, have you read my rubber ball theory? [52:38.680 --> 52:41.680] Yes I have, three times [52:41.680 --> 52:46.680] Okay, I have a document that I gave to Tina and I'll give it to anybody else who wants to see it [52:46.680 --> 52:48.680] It's called the rubber ball theory [52:48.680 --> 52:57.680] And it goes to a whole different level of dealing with interactions with other people [52:57.680 --> 53:05.680] It demonstrates a way to communicate with people on a level that's outside their conscious awareness [53:05.680 --> 53:16.680] It is perfectly ethical as what you're able to do with it is interrupt these automatic patterns people are running [53:16.680 --> 53:23.680] Someone goes to a doctor's office and gets a job and they put her down in the receptionist area [53:23.680 --> 53:28.680] And she talks to these clients and she says the same thing to them over and over and over [53:28.680 --> 53:39.680] Asks the same questions and when someone objects they have pretty much the injections are all the same within a given range [53:39.680 --> 53:49.680] If we are to change the system we need to get some people who have a level of sophistication [53:49.680 --> 53:59.680] Beyond this automatic statement response thing we have going on [53:59.680 --> 54:13.680] And what the rubber ball theory is about is how to give people responses that will affect them strongly on a level that's outside their conscious awareness [54:13.680 --> 54:22.680] If anybody's interested send me a request to randytrubberballradio.com and I'll send you a copy of the rubber ball theory [54:22.680 --> 54:26.680] It's only about 17 pages [54:26.680 --> 54:32.680] It will change your life [54:32.680 --> 54:46.680] Because it will demonstrate that things are not the way we think they are, it will demonstrate that emotions are not nouns, they're verbs [54:46.680 --> 54:54.680] And once you realize emotions are verbs Holy Mackerel a whole different level of awareness opens up to you [54:54.680 --> 55:09.680] And we can create a group of people who can begin to interrupt standard behaviors that people are going through that leads to bad outcomes [55:09.680 --> 55:15.680] And put them in a position to where they have to find more acceptable behaviors [55:15.680 --> 55:23.680] Like they ask Tina, they want to get her driver's license and make an image of it [55:23.680 --> 55:32.680] Well they do this all day and everybody just gives them the driver's license and they just do whatever they want to do [55:32.680 --> 55:38.680] Tina comes in and introduces what we call a pattern interruption [55:38.680 --> 55:48.680] They're running this same routine over and over and over and over and somebody comes in and interrupts the routine [55:48.680 --> 55:59.680] Now you have to be subtle in how you interrupt these routines because for the most part if someone asks you to do something [55:59.680 --> 56:06.680] They pretty well know what to expect from you as a response [56:06.680 --> 56:20.680] They know how to anticipate the most common response and if you object, generally if you don't do the most common response you'll do a secondary response [56:20.680 --> 56:24.680] And they're real comfortable with that too [56:24.680 --> 56:30.680] If I ask you to do something and you say absolutely sure no problem, I got that [56:30.680 --> 56:36.680] If I ask you to do something and you say heck no I'm not going to do that, well I know how to deal with that too [56:36.680 --> 56:51.680] And what the rebel theory is about is how to step outside the pre-programmed in reactional responses that we have to what people do [56:51.680 --> 56:59.680] We do this little interruption to make things not work the way they expected them to [56:59.680 --> 57:07.680] So it forces the individual to have to go inside their mind and look more closely at what they're doing [57:07.680 --> 57:16.680] For the most part what people do, they just do what they're trained to do, they just do what culture expects them to do [57:16.680 --> 57:25.680] And nobody ever raises questions so people tend to run on automatic all the time and we wind up with a robot society [57:25.680 --> 57:39.680] The rebel theory is intended to disconnect the robot and force the human being to do what robots can't do [57:39.680 --> 57:49.680] When the robot gets a response that's not programmed into its system, it's stuck in its tracks [57:49.680 --> 57:57.680] But a human being, when they get a response that's not programmed into its system, they're initially stuck in their tracks [57:57.680 --> 58:06.680] But there's an inner aspect of the mind that says whoa, wait a minute, this really sucks [58:06.680 --> 58:12.680] I really do not like to be stuck in this position where I don't know how to react and respond [58:12.680 --> 58:22.680] And then they go inside and find more relevant responses and it expands their horizons [58:22.680 --> 58:33.680] What Tina was talking about earlier, the clerk asks her for this information if she objects and then the clerk is just stuck [58:33.680 --> 58:37.680] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:37.680 --> 58:44.680] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help [58:44.680 --> 58:49.680] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today [58:49.680 --> 58:56.680] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life [58:56.680 --> 59:01.680] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:01.680 --> 59:10.680] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation growing in Christ and how to build up the Church [59:10.680 --> 59:16.680] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:16.680 --> 59:23.680] Call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102 [59:23.680 --> 59:32.680] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org [59:32.680 --> 59:38.680] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com [59:45.680 --> 59:49.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution [59:49.680 --> 59:54.680] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect, our liberty depends on it [59:54.680 --> 01:00:00.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights [01:00:00.680 --> 01:00:02.680] Privacy is under attack [01:00:02.680 --> 01:00:05.680] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again [01:00:05.680 --> 01:00:10.680] And once your privacy is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [01:00:10.680 --> 01:00:15.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [01:00:15.680 --> 01:00:18.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [01:00:18.680 --> 01:00:22.680] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com [01:00:22.680 --> 01:00:26.680] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing [01:00:26.680 --> 01:00:29.680] Start over with Startpage [01:00:29.680 --> 01:00:32.680] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed [01:00:32.680 --> 01:00:35.680] They pull back the covers and find a third party there [01:00:35.680 --> 01:00:38.680] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight [01:00:38.680 --> 01:00:44.680] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the third amendment was designed to prevent [01:00:44.680 --> 01:00:50.680] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers [01:00:50.680 --> 01:00:52.680] Third party, third amendment, get it? [01:00:52.680 --> 01:00:56.680] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging [01:00:56.680 --> 01:01:00.680] Tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and re-read the third amendment [01:01:00.680 --> 01:01:15.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [01:01:15.680 --> 01:01:19.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution [01:01:19.680 --> 01:01:22.680] They guarantee a specific freedoms Americans should know and protect [01:01:22.680 --> 01:01:24.680] Our liberty depends on it [01:01:24.680 --> 01:01:30.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights [01:01:30.680 --> 01:01:32.680] Privacy is under attack [01:01:32.680 --> 01:01:35.680] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [01:01:35.680 --> 01:01:40.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [01:01:40.680 --> 01:01:45.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [01:01:45.680 --> 01:01:48.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [01:01:48.680 --> 01:01:51.680] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com [01:01:51.680 --> 01:01:55.680] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing [01:01:55.680 --> 01:01:59.680] Start over with Startpage [01:01:59.680 --> 01:02:05.680] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of x-ray goggles [01:02:05.680 --> 01:02:11.680] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure [01:02:11.680 --> 01:02:14.680] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:14.680 --> 01:02:18.680] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security [01:02:18.680 --> 01:02:23.680] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing [01:02:23.680 --> 01:02:30.680] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells [01:02:30.680 --> 01:02:37.680] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth [01:02:37.680 --> 01:02:49.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [01:03:07.680 --> 01:03:14.680] I won't pay for the war with my body [01:03:14.680 --> 01:03:18.680] Ain't gonna pay for the car with my money [01:03:18.680 --> 01:03:21.680] I won't pay for the fun with my body [01:03:21.680 --> 01:03:25.680] The plans wicked and the logic shoddy [01:03:25.680 --> 01:03:28.680] Ain't gonna pay for the whore with my body [01:03:28.680 --> 01:03:31.680] I won't pay for the boys with my money [01:03:31.680 --> 01:03:35.680] Ain't gonna pay for the kids with my body [01:03:35.680 --> 01:03:39.680] The whole agenda smells funny [01:03:39.680 --> 01:03:42.680] I wanna fight in a war of my own [01:03:42.680 --> 01:03:51.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruth Law Radio, and I'm talking to Tina in California [01:03:51.680 --> 01:04:08.680] And Tina, we've kind of beat this subject to death about private information and not being a comiton and just doing whatever people ask [01:04:08.680 --> 01:04:11.680] Do you have anything else for us? [01:04:11.680 --> 01:04:16.680] Oh, not today. Hopefully you've got some other callers now and you can get to them [01:04:16.680 --> 01:04:26.680] But I just thought it was interesting and I wanted to know if anyone else had this issue and was pushing against it [01:04:26.680 --> 01:04:30.680] It would be a lot of fun [01:04:30.680 --> 01:04:35.680] Taking these clerks that are used to doing the same thing over and over and over [01:04:35.680 --> 01:04:39.680] Going in and jerking them around a little bit and get them to dance [01:04:39.680 --> 01:04:43.680] That can be great fun [01:04:43.680 --> 01:04:55.680] But it also helps to spread more reasonable behavior amongst the public [01:04:55.680 --> 01:05:00.680] Okay, so we're gonna go on. Our call board is filling up [01:05:00.680 --> 01:05:03.680] Good. Talking about reasonable behavior, Randy [01:05:03.680 --> 01:05:10.680] You're supposed to be sending me your complaint against the DA so I can turn it into a generic one [01:05:10.680 --> 01:05:13.680] Anyone else? [01:05:13.680 --> 01:05:14.680] I thought I sent that to you [01:05:14.680 --> 01:05:19.680] Okay, send me another email that reminds me to do that and I'll do it when I get up in the morning [01:05:19.680 --> 01:05:22.680] I get up, the first thing I do is look at my emails [01:05:22.680 --> 01:05:29.680] So send me an email ordering me to get that to you and I will [01:05:29.680 --> 01:05:30.680] Okay, will do [01:05:30.680 --> 01:05:31.680] Talk to you later [01:05:31.680 --> 01:05:32.680] Okay [01:05:32.680 --> 01:05:33.680] Thanks, guys [01:05:33.680 --> 01:05:34.680] Thank you, Tina [01:05:34.680 --> 01:05:36.680] Okay, bye [01:05:36.680 --> 01:05:42.680] Okay, now we're going to EJ in California. You call back [01:05:42.680 --> 01:05:46.680] Okay, there you go. You're unmuted. EJ, are you there? [01:05:46.680 --> 01:05:49.680] Yes, I'm here. Sorry about that [01:05:49.680 --> 01:05:55.680] This new phone just, you know, has the coverage is not as good [01:05:55.680 --> 01:06:00.680] So thank you for taking me after Tina [01:06:00.680 --> 01:06:12.680] I just wanted to do a bar grievance against the shyster who made a pleading [01:06:12.680 --> 01:06:19.680] Wait, stop, stop. Did you say bar grievance against that detective? [01:06:19.680 --> 01:06:22.680] No, against the shyster [01:06:22.680 --> 01:06:35.680] Oh, okay, good. The reason I asked that question, if it is a detective like a private detective, there is a commission that oversees the state agency [01:06:35.680 --> 01:06:49.680] If it's a policeman like a investigator for a prosecuting attorney, there is a agency that oversees them and they're different than the bar [01:06:49.680 --> 01:06:54.680] We need to know what all of those are because we get to beat up each one of them in their turn [01:06:54.680 --> 01:06:57.680] Okay, I'll shut up now [01:06:57.680 --> 01:07:02.680] I'd like to know who the commission is because I need to go in that direction after this [01:07:02.680 --> 01:07:23.680] So it's the same attorney, same, I call them shysters. We all call them shysters. The hospital shysters made a pleading, Orange County versus me, and then the title, it said [01:07:23.680 --> 01:07:41.680] The name of the shyster and I think he was the IT manager for that video, so his name in there saying their declaration saying that they can't [01:07:41.680 --> 01:07:55.680] Wait, you said that video. I really heard pronouns. What does that refer to? [01:07:55.680 --> 01:08:19.680] So the hospital surveillance footage of me in the lobby when I came to visit my family member, so that video of me walking in through the lobby, the ER lobby, and nothing happened [01:08:19.680 --> 01:08:32.680] And this is all a false declaration on the detective, but then they were trying to prevent me [01:08:32.680 --> 01:08:35.680] Wait, wait, wait, wait. Let's do a little practice here [01:08:35.680 --> 01:08:36.680] Okay [01:08:36.680 --> 01:08:38.680] No pronouns [01:08:38.680 --> 01:08:40.680] Okay [01:08:40.680 --> 01:08:46.680] Who are they? [01:08:46.680 --> 01:09:03.680] So they meaning the hospital, the hospital tried to prevent me to subpoena the hospital surveillance footage [01:09:03.680 --> 01:09:17.680] Okay, keep going and try to, anytime you want to use a pronoun, try to give us the proper name. You'll find that your narrative will be far, far more clear and understandable [01:09:17.680 --> 01:09:43.680] Okay, so one is a bar grieve due to them just, you know, conjuring up a feeding, Orange County versus me, in a declaration of one of the shysters and the hospital's IT, IT guy [01:09:43.680 --> 01:10:08.680] So their names are in the title. In order to grieve the shyster and the law firm, I can say that I have no, I don't have a contract with the attorneys, right? They're just making things up to scare me [01:10:08.680 --> 01:10:14.680] If a shyster makes something up in a motion or pleaded [01:10:14.680 --> 01:10:16.680] Yes [01:10:16.680 --> 01:10:36.680] It depends on the nature of what it is. A shyster as a agent for the principle cannot testify. They cannot make a statement of fact or law out of their own mouth [01:10:36.680 --> 01:10:50.680] It must be made out of the mouth of the person who has, what's the term Brett, not first person knowledge, but best evidence [01:10:50.680 --> 01:10:54.680] Yeah, personal first hand knowledge is best evidence [01:10:54.680 --> 01:10:58.680] So the lawyer can't make this statement [01:10:58.680 --> 01:11:03.680] Wow, her name's on there and guess what? [01:11:03.680 --> 01:11:27.680] Lawyers can't testify unless, you know, and when they do that, what you might want to do is object to it and ask the judge that if the lawyer wants to testify, if the lawyer wants to introduce evidence into the court out of his own mouth, then you request that the lawyer be sworn in before the court [01:11:27.680 --> 01:11:30.680] I see, okay [01:11:30.680 --> 01:11:33.680] Go ahead [01:11:33.680 --> 01:11:38.680] This is back in December 2020 [01:11:38.680 --> 01:12:01.680] The reason why I'm bringing this up is because I never bar-greet them. I was going through a lot at that time. I didn't know as much as I did back then, so now I have much knowledge and the confidence to really do a good bar-greet against them [01:12:01.680 --> 01:12:30.680] Wait, wait, wait, this is good. Generally you have one year under the Bar Association rules to raise a grievance, but we don't care about that. If you raise a grievance out of time, generally in law, statute of limitations, statute of limitations is not a bar [01:12:30.680 --> 01:12:44.680] It doesn't block you from taking action. Statute of limitation is an affirmative defense that must be pled [01:12:44.680 --> 01:13:03.680] So if you take a complaint to a justice of the peace and the justice looks at it and says, well, this is out of time, you say, so what? It doesn't make any difference because it's not a bar to prosecution [01:13:03.680 --> 01:13:16.680] And when I say prosecution, I don't necessarily mean prosecuting an individual for a criminal act. I mean prosecuting a case in the courts [01:13:16.680 --> 01:13:32.680] When I'm a plaintiff, I am prosecuting a case. So the statute of limitations is not a bar to that prosecution. I can prosecute it no matter how old it is [01:13:32.680 --> 01:13:46.680] It is an affirmative defense that must be pled. The opposing party must plead statute of limitations or they waive it. Does that make sense? [01:13:46.680 --> 01:13:48.680] Yes [01:13:48.680 --> 01:14:12.680] Okay, so don't let the fact that time has passed stop you from going after them and lawyers who try to make statements to the court out of their own mouth that's not quoted from a verified affidavit of their principle should always be objected to [01:14:12.680 --> 01:14:22.680] If counsel wants to introduce facts and evidence into the court, I move that counsel be sworn in [01:14:22.680 --> 01:14:37.680] And if the judge is treating, I've heard people that say that and then the judge says, oh, I consider she's already sworn. Everything she says, she's an attorney. Everything she says is considered sworn. Well, then I'd like to cross examine the witness [01:14:37.680 --> 01:15:06.680] Yeah, so I'm ready to do the bar grieves that happened in December 2020, you know, longer than a year. But now the students attorneys are now presently the attorneys for the Scheißers are for the hospital now that I have a suit against [01:15:06.680 --> 01:15:32.680] Presently, so they come back. And now they're defendants. Well, no, not the Scheißers, but the hospital is the table has turned. So now I'm going to go push further and beyond the offense and possibly reintroduce the [01:15:32.680 --> 01:15:58.680] Bar grievance against them what they did. They scared me. They frightened me. This is just for just for my defense, you know, this is due process. And I understand there are people there that they can't release it to the public. But it's not like releasing to the public. It's for a criminal matter. [01:15:58.680 --> 01:16:18.680] So I need to research more of the cases where if some California hospital footage was subpoenaed successfully, and I'm sure that there are cases like that. [01:16:18.680 --> 01:16:43.680] Let me make a suggestion on how to find those. Okay, is, you know, we have litigation guys. Most people, they tend to go on one of these litigation certainties these legal search engines, and you put in a term and they find you all kind of cases that go that vaguely [01:16:43.680 --> 01:17:03.680] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuit? Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:03.680 --> 01:17:24.680] What to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons? How to answer letters and phone calls? How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? How to turn your financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:24.680 --> 01:17:43.680] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:43.680 --> 01:18:05.680] I love Logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fix. I'd be lost without Logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help Logos? [01:18:05.680 --> 01:18:26.680] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to logosradio.network.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:26.680 --> 01:18:34.680] Do I pay extra? No. Do I have to do anything different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. [01:18:34.680 --> 01:18:40.680] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:18:40.680 --> 01:19:08.680] We are welcome. Happy holidays, Logos. [01:19:10.680 --> 01:19:34.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Felt and Brett Fountain with Radio and I've been kind of constantly interrupting you, EJ. [01:19:34.680 --> 01:19:47.680] Kind of give us a synopsis of where you're at right now. You have a law firm and what are they doing? Not your law firm, but the law firm on the other side. [01:19:47.680 --> 01:19:57.680] They have answered my complaint seven days late, after 30 days, seven days late. [01:19:57.680 --> 01:20:07.680] Wait, wait, wait, wait. I think you said that wrong. Entered your complaint. Did they enter a response to your complaint? [01:20:07.680 --> 01:20:08.680] Oh, yes. [01:20:08.680 --> 01:20:20.680] Okay. I think in California, it's like Texas, they have until the Monday after the 21st day. [01:20:20.680 --> 01:20:31.680] But if they're over 30 days, they're out of time. If they entered a response out of time, you should move to strike it. [01:20:31.680 --> 01:20:46.680] Okay, that's my next step. I need to write a letter and mail it to the firm and have them meet and confer because we need to do a five-day meeting confer prior to... [01:20:46.680 --> 01:20:58.680] Okay, hold on before you do that. You filed a pleading and you're saying that they filed a response out of time. [01:20:58.680 --> 01:21:00.680] Correct. That is correct. [01:21:00.680 --> 01:21:03.680] You should file a motion for summary judgment. [01:21:03.680 --> 01:21:06.680] I did. I did. [01:21:06.680 --> 01:21:09.680] Okay. What happened on the motion for summary judgment? [01:21:09.680 --> 01:21:16.680] Not until August. August like 10th or something. [01:21:16.680 --> 01:21:26.680] Okay, you should object to anything they're doing until that summary judgment motion is heard. [01:21:26.680 --> 01:21:34.680] So if I got interrogatories and they want to do a deposition and it's all through... [01:21:34.680 --> 01:21:46.680] Absolutely not. They didn't answer the original pleading. They have no standing to do anything. You ask the court to stay all proceedings in the case. [01:21:46.680 --> 01:22:03.680] The old term is you ask for a motion and abatement. You ask the court to abate all proceedings in the case until the issue of summary judgment has been adjudicated. [01:22:03.680 --> 01:22:17.680] It would be unreasonable to ask you to come in and adjudicate this case when the defendant has already defaulted on the case. [01:22:17.680 --> 01:22:19.680] Correct. [01:22:19.680 --> 01:22:30.680] So until that default has been addressed, there should be no more proceedings in the interest of judicial economy. [01:22:30.680 --> 01:22:39.680] If you get a ruling in your favor on their failure to respond timely, it's over. [01:22:39.680 --> 01:22:47.680] You don't have to waste any time having hearings and meetings and filing motions, then pleading is a done deal. [01:22:47.680 --> 01:22:59.680] So you ask for an abatement. Don't let them do anything else. What they're trying to do is distract you, get you to forget that they didn't respond in time. [01:22:59.680 --> 01:23:16.680] So the next step is then should the motion for abatement? I don't know. I have to read up on that. But would that be my next step before prior to motion to strike? [01:23:16.680 --> 01:23:28.680] No, you have a...you filed a petition. The opposing party failed to respond in a timely manner. [01:23:28.680 --> 01:23:29.680] Okay. [01:23:29.680 --> 01:23:41.680] You do have a bit of an issue. When you file your original petition and you serve it on the defendant, you need to count days very carefully. [01:23:41.680 --> 01:23:42.680] Okay. [01:23:41.680 --> 01:23:53.680] When their time to respond runs out, you need to file. If you don't file before they get a response in, you've waived that issue. [01:23:53.680 --> 01:24:03.680] Oh. What issue is this we're talking about? I'm kind of lost. Okay, so... [01:24:03.680 --> 01:24:13.680] Well, so you file a petition. The other side has until the Monday after the 20th day to file a response to that petition. [01:24:13.680 --> 01:24:23.680] If they don't file a timely response, then they agree to everything in the petition. [01:24:23.680 --> 01:24:43.680] The only argument they can have is that if all of the statements in the original petition were taken as true, that even then the defendant would...the plaintiff would not have a viable claim. [01:24:43.680 --> 01:24:58.680] So if you have a viable claim, they must respond within the statutory time limits. If they don't, then you have a right to default judgment. [01:24:58.680 --> 01:25:21.680] But if you don't file for default judgment timely, let's say their time ran out on Monday and you file for default judgment on Friday, but on Thursday they filed a response, then they have usurped your challenge. [01:25:21.680 --> 01:25:35.680] So you have to count the days very carefully. And this is for default judgment. What you do in default judgment is you go to the clerk and you ask the clerk to look in the record. [01:25:35.680 --> 01:25:45.680] You tell the clerk, on this day I filed a complaint against this person and it was served on this particular day. [01:25:45.680 --> 01:25:59.680] The Monday after the 21st day from the time the defendant was served has passed. [01:25:59.680 --> 01:26:12.680] So look in the court record and see if you see a response. If you don't see a response, then you are to grant me default judgment. [01:26:12.680 --> 01:26:17.680] And then file that grant with the court and have the court sign it. [01:26:17.680 --> 01:26:21.680] I see. I missed that chance, Randy. [01:26:21.680 --> 01:26:39.680] Okay. If you don't get your motion for default judgment in before they get an answer, now you have waived that claim. [01:26:39.680 --> 01:26:50.680] Now you can file a motion to strike any pleading as untimely, but the court's not likely to grant you that one. [01:26:50.680 --> 01:26:53.680] I missed that chance. I really did. [01:26:53.680 --> 01:27:11.680] The court says, well, you know, yeah, they didn't get their response within the exact time limit, but we really want both parties to have an opportunity to make their case before the court. [01:27:11.680 --> 01:27:19.680] So the court is real reluctant to give you a summary judgment. And I left a part out. [01:27:19.680 --> 01:27:32.680] If you file a pleading and serve them and they don't respond within the statutory time limit, then you have a right to default judgment. [01:27:32.680 --> 01:27:47.680] But if you don't get your default judgment in quickly and before you get it in, they file a response, even though it's not timely, then you can petition for summary judgment. [01:27:47.680 --> 01:27:49.680] Oh, I see. [01:27:49.680 --> 01:27:55.680] Claiming that their filing was not timely, you lose the right to go for defaults. [01:27:55.680 --> 01:27:57.680] Yeah. [01:27:57.680 --> 01:28:05.680] So then you have to go and say their motion was, their pleading was not timely and asked the court to strike it. [01:28:05.680 --> 01:28:09.680] Well, most of the time the court's not going to strike it. [01:28:09.680 --> 01:28:24.680] But when they don't strike it, now you have a right to petition for an interlocutory appeal, or I'm sorry, for a writ of mandamus. [01:28:24.680 --> 01:28:34.680] And what you do by filing a writ of mandamus is you jerk it out of this judge's court and you send it to a higher court. [01:28:34.680 --> 01:28:36.680] Court, yes. [01:28:36.680 --> 01:28:42.680] And you argue with the higher court that you had a right to a ruling in your favor. [01:28:42.680 --> 01:28:43.680] Wow. [01:28:43.680 --> 01:28:44.680] Okay. [01:28:44.680 --> 01:28:45.680] And the court denies you that right. [01:28:45.680 --> 01:28:51.680] And then you get a higher court to look at it and say yes or no. [01:28:51.680 --> 01:28:57.680] And at the end of the day, it doesn't matter what the court says because you have a lot more steps you can take. [01:28:57.680 --> 01:29:07.680] The point is, is you're giving the defendant a real walk through the legal system. [01:29:07.680 --> 01:29:14.680] And they're going to have to pay their lawyers to answer each one of your pleadings. [01:29:14.680 --> 01:29:19.680] So you raise their cost. [01:29:19.680 --> 01:29:29.680] If your only viable outcome is to win in the trial court, you're most likely going to lose. [01:29:29.680 --> 01:29:35.680] Where you win is by beating them up in the process and getting them to come to you and make a deal. [01:29:35.680 --> 01:29:36.680] Hang on. [01:29:36.680 --> 01:29:40.680] About to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and Ruth of our radio. [01:29:40.680 --> 01:29:45.680] We'll be right back. [01:29:45.680 --> 01:29:49.680] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:29:49.680 --> 01:29:54.680] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:29:54.680 --> 01:30:00.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:00.680 --> 01:30:02.680] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:02.680 --> 01:30:05.680] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:05.680 --> 01:30:10.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:10.680 --> 01:30:15.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:15.680 --> 01:30:18.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:18.680 --> 01:30:25.680] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:25.680 --> 01:30:29.680] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:29.680 --> 01:30:33.680] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:33.680 --> 01:30:34.680] Wrong. [01:30:34.680 --> 01:30:39.680] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:39.680 --> 01:30:46.680] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:30:46.680 --> 01:30:53.680] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:30:53.680 --> 01:30:59.680] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:30:59.680 --> 01:31:07.680] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:07.680 --> 01:31:13.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:13.680 --> 01:31:19.680] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:19.680 --> 01:31:21.680] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:21.680 --> 01:31:26.680] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:26.680 --> 01:31:31.680] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:31.680 --> 01:31:33.680] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:33.680 --> 01:31:34.680] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:34.680 --> 01:31:35.680] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:35.680 --> 01:31:36.680] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:36.680 --> 01:31:38.680] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:38.680 --> 01:31:40.680] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:40.680 --> 01:31:44.680] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:31:44.680 --> 01:31:48.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:31:48.680 --> 01:31:55.680] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:31:55.680 --> 01:32:02.680] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:02.680 --> 01:32:08.680] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:08.680 --> 01:32:18.680] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:18.680 --> 01:32:23.680] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:23.680 --> 01:32:30.680] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:30.680 --> 01:32:33.680] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:33.680 --> 01:32:37.680] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:37.680 --> 01:32:45.680] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:45.680 --> 01:33:00.680] Looking for some truth? You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:15.680 --> 01:33:30.680] The wicked come with temptation They're trying to buy the whole place [01:33:30.680 --> 01:33:41.680] They want to force the nation Because they've fallen from grace [01:33:41.680 --> 01:33:53.680] I will not bring you back home I just can't act that way [01:33:53.680 --> 01:33:58.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain of Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:58.680 --> 01:34:06.680] And over the break, I was asking Brett if my dissertation made any sense. [01:34:06.680 --> 01:34:11.680] And he kind of hemmed and hawed, and that tells me it didn't make any sense. [01:34:11.680 --> 01:34:24.680] What I was trying to get to is how people understand the distinction between default judgment, summary judgment. [01:34:24.680 --> 01:34:34.680] And when you file a petition, the other side has a set number of days to respond to that petition. [01:34:34.680 --> 01:34:41.680] If they don't respond to the petition, or if they do respond to the petition, [01:34:41.680 --> 01:34:48.680] and they don't address every single issue you have in your petition, [01:34:48.680 --> 01:34:56.680] for each issue that they do not address, you have a right to default judgment. [01:34:56.680 --> 01:35:14.680] In Texas, when you file an original petition, the defendant has a time from the point at which they are served with the petition. [01:35:14.680 --> 01:35:20.680] They have until the Monday after the 20th day. [01:35:20.680 --> 01:35:29.680] So what I always want to do is I always want to file my petition on a Friday, [01:35:29.680 --> 01:35:37.680] so that the Monday after the 20th day will land on a Sunday. [01:35:37.680 --> 01:35:44.680] The Monday after the 20th day will be the next day, so it only gives them 21 days. [01:35:44.680 --> 01:35:53.680] If they don't file a response within that time limit, then you have a right to default judgment. [01:35:53.680 --> 01:36:03.680] You go to the clerk, and you give the clerk a motion for default judgment, [01:36:03.680 --> 01:36:11.680] and ask the clerk to look in the record and determine the date on which the pleading was filed. [01:36:11.680 --> 01:36:18.680] Then count the days and look in the record and see if there is a response in there. [01:36:18.680 --> 01:36:28.680] If there's not a response in there by the end of business day on the Monday after the 20th day, [01:36:28.680 --> 01:36:34.680] then you ask the judge to take your order of dismissal. [01:36:34.680 --> 01:36:38.680] If you want an order from the court, you have to make it up. [01:36:38.680 --> 01:36:44.680] So you write up an order of dismissal and ask the clerk to take it to the judge and tell the judge, [01:36:44.680 --> 01:36:49.680] okay, this document was filed on this day. [01:36:49.680 --> 01:36:55.680] Okay, this other day, this is the Monday after the 21st day. [01:36:55.680 --> 01:37:01.680] Well, I looked in my records and I did not find a response. [01:37:01.680 --> 01:37:06.680] And then she asked the judge to sign the default judgment. [01:37:06.680 --> 01:37:10.680] That's technically how it should work. [01:37:10.680 --> 01:37:12.680] But most of the time, that's not how it works. [01:37:12.680 --> 01:37:18.680] Most of the time, they get something in that 21-day period. [01:37:18.680 --> 01:37:31.680] But what they get in there, the opposing party has to address every single issue that you raise. [01:37:31.680 --> 01:37:39.680] If they fail to address an issue and fail to object to the issue, then they've waived it. [01:37:39.680 --> 01:37:46.680] So if they do file a responsive pleading within 21 days, [01:37:46.680 --> 01:37:54.680] you look at that responsive pleading and make sure that they have objected to every issue in your petition. [01:37:54.680 --> 01:38:01.680] If they have not, then you can move for limited default judgment. [01:38:01.680 --> 01:38:03.680] There's limited? [01:38:03.680 --> 01:38:06.680] Limited, yeah. [01:38:06.680 --> 01:38:17.680] They look in their record and the defendant answered item 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6. [01:38:17.680 --> 01:38:19.680] Well, they didn't answer 4. [01:38:19.680 --> 01:38:22.680] So you ask for default judgment on 4. [01:38:22.680 --> 01:38:27.680] If they didn't answer any, then you ask for default judgment on all of them. [01:38:27.680 --> 01:38:32.680] So the clerk will look in her records, count the days. [01:38:32.680 --> 01:38:37.680] I got my records, and in this amount of time, there was no responsive pleading filed. [01:38:37.680 --> 01:38:44.680] Then she can go to the court and ask the court, the judge, to sign the default judgment. [01:38:44.680 --> 01:38:47.680] That's how that's done. [01:38:47.680 --> 01:38:53.680] If there has been a partial answer, and this happens more often, [01:38:53.680 --> 01:39:02.680] where the opposing party answers those issues or addresses those issues, then it believes it can't adjudicate. [01:39:02.680 --> 01:39:09.680] But if they have issues in there they can't adequately adjudicate, they ignore them. [01:39:09.680 --> 01:39:19.680] So look carefully, is there anything in your pleading that the other side failed to address? [01:39:19.680 --> 01:39:25.680] If they did, boom, go for default judgment on those issues. [01:39:25.680 --> 01:39:31.680] Because I hope this is beginning to make sense. [01:39:31.680 --> 01:39:35.680] You watch these time limits. [01:39:35.680 --> 01:39:39.680] If they exceed it, go after them. [01:39:39.680 --> 01:39:43.680] And the judge is likely to rule against you, but you don't care. [01:39:43.680 --> 01:39:47.680] You never care what the trial judge rules. [01:39:47.680 --> 01:39:53.680] You only care that you got the law and the facts on the record. [01:39:53.680 --> 01:39:58.680] Yeah, and any objection that you need to raise. [01:39:58.680 --> 01:40:07.680] And the trick to objection is objection, objection, objection, objection, until the judge gets really annoyed with you. [01:40:07.680 --> 01:40:11.680] And then you say, well, Your Honor, I realize I'm annoying the court. [01:40:11.680 --> 01:40:20.680] If the court will agree to register my objection to all of the issues brought by the defendant, [01:40:20.680 --> 01:40:27.680] I will stop interrupting this court for the purpose of setting the record to my objection. [01:40:27.680 --> 01:40:36.680] And every time I've asked the court to do anything that they said so ordered, the defendant objects to all issues before the court. [01:40:36.680 --> 01:40:46.680] In order to be able to appeal your issue, you have to preserve the error by an objection. [01:40:46.680 --> 01:40:54.680] So you start out being annoying and objecting to everything until the judge says, enough, enough, enough. [01:40:54.680 --> 01:40:56.680] I got it. Did you object to everything? [01:40:56.680 --> 01:41:02.680] So now you're relieved from having to make every little minor objection. [01:41:02.680 --> 01:41:03.680] Okay. [01:41:03.680 --> 01:41:08.680] Because there will be a lot of them that you won't recognize at the time. [01:41:08.680 --> 01:41:09.680] That's right. [01:41:09.680 --> 01:41:12.680] Yeah, you're in the thick of it. [01:41:12.680 --> 01:41:20.680] And you're really focused on what's going on, where somebody standing on the outside will say, wait a minute, wait a minute, they can't do that. [01:41:20.680 --> 01:41:21.680] That's right. [01:41:21.680 --> 01:41:31.680] But you didn't catch it. So if you can get the judge to register or accept your standing objection to everything, [01:41:31.680 --> 01:41:35.680] then you have protected all the issues for appeal. [01:41:35.680 --> 01:41:37.680] Does that make sense? [01:41:37.680 --> 01:41:40.680] Yes, it makes perfect sense. Thank you. [01:41:40.680 --> 01:41:47.680] It is more complicated than it appears on the surface. [01:41:47.680 --> 01:41:52.680] But once you get that everything they do wrong, you have to object to. [01:41:52.680 --> 01:41:53.680] Okay. [01:41:53.680 --> 01:41:56.680] It doesn't matter if the judge likes it or not. [01:41:56.680 --> 01:42:03.680] You do not care because your only purpose is to set the record for appeal. [01:42:03.680 --> 01:42:08.680] You mean we don't really have to try to make sure that the judge is our friend? [01:42:08.680 --> 01:42:11.680] He doesn't have to like us? [01:42:11.680 --> 01:42:21.680] That is a good observation. If the judge had to like us, I would never win anything. [01:42:21.680 --> 01:42:25.680] Absolutely not. You do not care what that judge does. [01:42:25.680 --> 01:42:33.680] And the more you can annoy the judge and the more you can get him to give you stupid rulings, [01:42:33.680 --> 01:42:37.680] the greater your petition in the court of appeals. [01:42:37.680 --> 01:42:40.680] And you're moving toward that. [01:42:40.680 --> 01:42:41.680] Yes. [01:42:41.680 --> 01:42:48.680] Always understand, you do not care what that judge rules. [01:42:48.680 --> 01:42:53.680] No matter how horrendous his rulings are, you don't care. [01:42:53.680 --> 01:42:54.680] Okay. [01:42:54.680 --> 01:43:02.680] Your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [01:43:02.680 --> 01:43:03.680] Okay. [01:43:03.680 --> 01:43:11.680] The appellate court looks at the courts from a whole different perspective than the trial judge does. [01:43:11.680 --> 01:43:15.680] And once you start setting the record for appeal, [01:43:15.680 --> 01:43:20.680] the judge and opposing counsel will recognize what you're doing. [01:43:20.680 --> 01:43:27.680] They will get a lot more careful and they're a lot more likely to come to you and offer to make you a deal [01:43:27.680 --> 01:43:31.680] to get you to go away and quit beating them up. [01:43:31.680 --> 01:43:36.680] Okay. Go into our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:43:36.680 --> 01:43:38.680] We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:43:38.680 --> 01:43:43.680] So hang on. We'll be right back. [01:43:43.680 --> 01:43:49.680] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:43:49.680 --> 01:43:52.680] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:43:52.680 --> 01:43:54.680] And it's time we changed all that. [01:43:54.680 --> 01:44:00.680] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:00.680 --> 01:44:05.680] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:05.680 --> 01:44:08.680] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:08.680 --> 01:44:14.680] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:14.680 --> 01:44:17.680] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [01:44:17.680 --> 01:44:22.680] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. 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[01:46:18.680 --> 01:46:22.680] So shall we read [01:46:22.680 --> 01:46:29.680] So many crucial words get put on hold of me [01:46:29.680 --> 01:46:37.680] Try as we will to make small steps to the giant me [01:46:37.680 --> 01:47:01.680] As before, so shall we read [01:47:01.680 --> 01:47:04.680] One by one my friends tell everybody [01:47:04.680 --> 01:47:07.680] Pass on the words of anarchy [01:47:07.680 --> 01:47:09.680] Bend the helping hand [01:47:09.680 --> 01:47:11.680] They say as you go along [01:47:11.680 --> 01:47:13.680] No lay come on [01:47:13.680 --> 01:47:15.680] They say knock you down, man [01:47:15.680 --> 01:47:17.680] Chair with the barn [01:47:17.680 --> 01:47:19.680] If you don't plant no seed [01:47:19.680 --> 01:47:23.680] My friend, Lord, you better have a good breed [01:47:23.680 --> 01:47:25.680] You better live your life [01:47:25.680 --> 01:47:30.680] Okay, we are back, Randy Kalten, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and E.J. [01:47:30.680 --> 01:47:38.680] I guess I owe you kind of an apology because I used you. [01:47:38.680 --> 01:47:49.680] All this time I really wasn't talking to you because I'm pretty certain you already know all that I was talking about. [01:47:49.680 --> 01:47:56.680] I was talking about talking to all of those people out there who are considering filing illegal action [01:47:56.680 --> 01:48:08.680] and haven't been down this road already and don't really understand how it actually works in the real world as opposed to what you read in the code. [01:48:08.680 --> 01:48:12.680] So I used you as my crash dummy. [01:48:12.680 --> 01:48:29.680] Just one more question before we go. In Telegram, I did bring it up about the default judgment and I amended my complaint. [01:48:29.680 --> 01:48:34.680] I didn't know how to do things. So I amended the complaint. [01:48:34.680 --> 01:48:43.680] So the amended complaint would not be something that I can default, right, because it's not the original complaint. [01:48:43.680 --> 01:48:48.680] Okay. Let me address that for everyone else. [01:48:48.680 --> 01:48:51.680] Be careful with amended complaints. [01:48:51.680 --> 01:49:01.680] If the defendant screws up the original complaint, even if the original complaint is not as good as it could have been, [01:49:01.680 --> 01:49:06.680] consider carefully before you file an amended. [01:49:06.680 --> 01:49:13.680] Because if you file an amended, your original complaint becomes moot. [01:49:13.680 --> 01:49:18.680] It's completely overridden by your amended complaint. [01:49:18.680 --> 01:49:27.680] And it's important you understand that every claim you want to make must be in the amended complaint. [01:49:27.680 --> 01:49:30.680] It's not supplemental. [01:49:30.680 --> 01:49:32.680] Exactly. [01:49:32.680 --> 01:49:45.680] So everything you argued in the original that you want to keep must be argued in the amended plus whatever you wanted to adjust that was different. [01:49:45.680 --> 01:49:54.680] If you don't, if you just file a supplement, then the original complaint goes away and you're screwed. [01:49:54.680 --> 01:49:57.680] And that's kind of a hard and fast rule. [01:49:57.680 --> 01:50:03.680] So what happens with the time frame when you submit an amended? [01:50:03.680 --> 01:50:07.680] Then do they have a whole nother? [01:50:07.680 --> 01:50:09.680] How much time do they have to respond? [01:50:09.680 --> 01:50:11.680] Do you start over? [01:50:11.680 --> 01:50:13.680] That is exactly the right question. [01:50:13.680 --> 01:50:16.680] No, you do not start over. [01:50:16.680 --> 01:50:25.680] The original petition gives you in most states until the Monday after the 20th day. [01:50:25.680 --> 01:50:30.680] If you file an amended, they have the standard 30 days to respond. [01:50:30.680 --> 01:50:32.680] Yes, exactly. [01:50:32.680 --> 01:50:38.680] So that Monday after the 20th day only goes to the original petition. [01:50:38.680 --> 01:50:44.680] So be careful about that and think carefully before you file an amended. [01:50:44.680 --> 01:50:51.680] Because if they have screwed up and defaulted on the amended, then the first thing you want to do. [01:50:51.680 --> 01:50:52.680] You mean the original? [01:50:52.680 --> 01:50:53.680] I'm sorry. [01:50:53.680 --> 01:50:55.680] Yes, exactly. [01:50:55.680 --> 01:51:07.680] If they defaulted on any single aspect of the original, you first want to ask for a judgment on that default. [01:51:07.680 --> 01:51:14.680] Once you have that judgment on the default, even if it's just a minor portion of the original petition, [01:51:14.680 --> 01:51:17.680] then you can come back and file an amended. [01:51:17.680 --> 01:51:21.680] And I think the judgment will stand. [01:51:21.680 --> 01:51:27.680] I'm sure question that I haven't been asked before, I haven't dealt with before. [01:51:27.680 --> 01:51:41.680] If you file an amended, does the original defaulted issues stand if you don't readdress those issues? [01:51:41.680 --> 01:51:46.680] Keep it simple and just go ahead and leave those issues in the amended. [01:51:46.680 --> 01:51:57.680] If you put the issues in the amended, then you give them an opportunity to fix their error from the first filing. [01:51:57.680 --> 01:51:59.680] Even if it's been defaulted? [01:51:59.680 --> 01:52:00.680] Yes. [01:52:00.680 --> 01:52:01.680] Already got a ruling on it? [01:52:01.680 --> 01:52:05.680] That's a question I'm not exactly sure about. [01:52:05.680 --> 01:52:18.680] I would say that I'm not sure if that original default stands when you file the amended if you don't address the original default. [01:52:18.680 --> 01:52:24.680] I really don't know if the original default stands. [01:52:24.680 --> 01:52:29.680] It's an obscure question and it doesn't come up often. [01:52:29.680 --> 01:52:35.680] If you've got a default, you might want to prosecute the default. [01:52:35.680 --> 01:52:41.680] And once you get a ruling on the default, then you can come back and re-legate the others. [01:52:41.680 --> 01:52:46.680] Either way, the good part is you make them crazy. [01:52:46.680 --> 01:52:50.680] That is a very good point. [01:52:50.680 --> 01:52:58.680] When you go into one of these suits, no lawyer expects to win his case in the trial court. [01:52:58.680 --> 01:53:02.680] They all expect to make a deal. [01:53:02.680 --> 01:53:06.680] So they're all playing poker. [01:53:06.680 --> 01:53:20.680] They do not want to get to the end to get before a jury or get before a judge on a final judgment unless they got the judge paid for. [01:53:20.680 --> 01:53:23.680] They want to make a deal. [01:53:23.680 --> 01:53:27.680] So they put their best hand forward to get a deal made. [01:53:27.680 --> 01:53:32.680] And we as pro se litigants should understand that. [01:53:32.680 --> 01:53:39.680] I have people all the time asking me, I wanted to see some pleadings that you won. [01:53:39.680 --> 01:53:44.680] Okay, let's decide what one means. [01:53:44.680 --> 01:53:50.680] Does it mean that you got an absolute final adjudication in the court? [01:53:50.680 --> 01:54:00.680] Or does it mean that the opposing party made you a deal you could not pass up? [01:54:00.680 --> 01:54:05.680] We need to have both of those in mind. [01:54:05.680 --> 01:54:10.680] What is your ultimate intended outcome? [01:54:10.680 --> 01:54:15.680] At the end of the day, what would be a win for you? [01:54:15.680 --> 01:54:20.680] What would be the smallest win you could have? [01:54:20.680 --> 01:54:26.680] And then what other wins would you like to have to make it better? [01:54:26.680 --> 01:54:32.680] Once you know what those are, then you have focus. [01:54:32.680 --> 01:54:40.680] Then when you hammer the courts and the prosecutors and soften them up the way we suggest you to, [01:54:40.680 --> 01:54:47.680] and increase their litigation costs, then you go to them and say, guys, let's make a deal. [01:54:47.680 --> 01:54:52.680] You go to the court and ask the court to order mediation. [01:54:52.680 --> 01:54:53.680] Okay. [01:54:53.680 --> 01:55:02.680] Come to the table, write me a check that I can't pass up, and I'll go away and leave you alone. [01:55:02.680 --> 01:55:06.680] That's how you win in these courts. [01:55:06.680 --> 01:55:13.680] Sometimes, extremely rare occasion, a pro se can get a ruling in his favor, [01:55:13.680 --> 01:55:20.680] and we have someone from Pennsylvania who did just exactly that. [01:55:20.680 --> 01:55:25.680] But that is very rare. [01:55:25.680 --> 01:55:35.680] Better to know what you would take, what would be the least acceptable outcome that you could have. [01:55:35.680 --> 01:55:36.680] Okay. [01:55:36.680 --> 01:55:37.680] Go for that. [01:55:37.680 --> 01:55:39.680] Ask for a lot more. [01:55:39.680 --> 01:55:43.680] But now you know where you're working from. [01:55:43.680 --> 01:55:50.680] The real way that you and I as pro se litigants can win these civil cases is by making a deal. [01:55:50.680 --> 01:55:51.680] Okay. [01:55:51.680 --> 01:55:52.680] Go ahead. [01:55:52.680 --> 01:55:58.680] I can't be interrupting you. [01:55:58.680 --> 01:56:09.680] I think that was a question, so move to strike, and the other one is abatement. [01:56:09.680 --> 01:56:13.680] Would that be a motion to abate that I need to start researching? [01:56:13.680 --> 01:56:17.680] Abatement is actually an old term. [01:56:17.680 --> 01:56:22.680] Sometimes lawyers will gripe about it, but they want other wording, [01:56:22.680 --> 01:56:25.680] but you don't care what the lawyers gripe about. [01:56:25.680 --> 01:56:30.680] Ask the court to abate all proceedings in the case. [01:56:30.680 --> 01:56:31.680] Okay. [01:56:31.680 --> 01:56:34.680] You just ask him to stop. [01:56:34.680 --> 01:56:36.680] Okay. [01:56:36.680 --> 01:56:46.680] Stop right here and don't do anything until we get this other issue addressed as anything you would do, [01:56:46.680 --> 01:56:55.680] and if I get a positive ruling in my favor, then all of the stuff you would do is moot and is irrelevant. [01:56:55.680 --> 01:57:01.680] So why put the parties to the expense of addressing these issues [01:57:01.680 --> 01:57:06.680] that my petition would possibly make go away altogether? [01:57:06.680 --> 01:57:09.680] That goes to judicial economy. [01:57:09.680 --> 01:57:11.680] Does it make sense to you? [01:57:11.680 --> 01:57:12.680] Yes. [01:57:12.680 --> 01:57:14.680] Yes. [01:57:14.680 --> 01:57:17.680] Move to proceeding. [01:57:17.680 --> 01:57:22.680] So the title would be Proceedings to Abate. [01:57:22.680 --> 01:57:27.680] I'll research it and ask you. [01:57:27.680 --> 01:57:33.680] At the end of the day, the courts really are well structured, [01:57:33.680 --> 01:57:43.680] and if you don't come to the courts angry and frustrated with the preconceived notions that they will screw you around, [01:57:43.680 --> 01:57:52.680] then you will be able to pay more attention to the practices and procedures that are in place, [01:57:52.680 --> 01:57:57.680] and you'll begin to better understand how they work in everybody's favor. [01:57:57.680 --> 01:57:58.680] Okay. [01:57:58.680 --> 01:58:07.680] And it will make it easier for you to go through this so you don't always feel like you're being abused. [01:58:07.680 --> 01:58:08.680] Okay. [01:58:08.680 --> 01:58:12.680] Call us back next week and let us know how things are going. [01:58:12.680 --> 01:58:14.680] Thank you so much. [01:58:14.680 --> 01:58:15.680] Okay. [01:58:15.680 --> 01:58:17.680] Thank you, E.J. [01:58:17.680 --> 01:58:22.680] Now it looks like we have two first-time callers, but we're about to go to our sponsors, [01:58:22.680 --> 01:58:26.680] so we'll pick those up on the other side. [01:58:26.680 --> 01:58:32.680] We have Terry and 425 Area Code and Cora and 650 Area Code. [01:58:32.680 --> 01:58:33.680] We'll be right back. [01:58:33.680 --> 01:58:37.680] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:58:37.680 --> 01:58:41.680] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:41.680 --> 01:58:45.680] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:58:45.680 --> 01:58:50.680] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. 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