[00:00.000 --> 00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.500 --> 00:09.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.500 --> 00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.000 --> 00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [00:16.500 --> 00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.500 --> 00:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.000 --> 00:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.500 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.500 --> 00:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [00:38.000 --> 00:42.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.000 --> 00:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [00:45.500 --> 00:47.500] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.500 --> 00:51.000] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.000 --> 00:54.000] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.000 --> 00:56.500] Spar with an extra P. [00:56.500 --> 01:03.000] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:03.000 --> 01:08.500] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [01:08.500 --> 01:10.500] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.500 --> 01:14.500] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.500 --> 01:17.500] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, [01:17.500 --> 01:21.000] we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.000 --> 01:30.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:30.500 --> 01:34.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.500 --> 01:38.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.000 --> 01:39.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.500 --> 01:43.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:43.000 --> 01:46.000] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.000 --> 01:48.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.000 --> 01:51.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.500 --> 01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.500 --> 01:58.000] So protect your rights. [01:58.000 --> 02:01.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.500 --> 02:04.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.000 --> 02:08.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [02:08.000 --> 02:12.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.000 --> 02:15.500] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.500 --> 02:19.500] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms [02:19.500 --> 02:22.000] around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.000 --> 02:26.000] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [02:26.000 --> 02:30.000] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.000 --> 02:33.500] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.500 --> 02:37.500] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.500 --> 02:38.500] when he said, [02:38.500 --> 02:43.500] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.500 --> 02:47.500] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, [02:47.500 --> 02:51.000] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:51.000 --> 03:17.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:17.000 --> 03:21.000] Well, I received my remedy today. [03:21.000 --> 03:24.500] It came in a box just like they say. [03:24.500 --> 03:28.000] I accept it for value right away. [03:28.000 --> 03:32.000] It's not sooner, not later. [03:32.000 --> 03:39.500] We are originators and the pathway seems to get straighter every day. [03:39.500 --> 03:46.500] And I can take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use. [03:46.500 --> 03:51.000] Okay. Howdy, howdy. [03:51.000 --> 04:01.500] Randy Carlson, Brett Fountain with our radio on this Friday, the 13th day of May, 2022. [04:01.500 --> 04:07.000] And, oh, we were talking to Chris. [04:07.000 --> 04:09.000] I thought we were just getting to Chris. [04:09.000 --> 04:12.500] Okay. Go ahead, Chris. [04:12.500 --> 04:17.500] That's all right. I'll ask the court if there's a way to go back. [04:17.500 --> 04:21.500] Maybe they'll give me some leniency, but if not, I'll take it. [04:21.500 --> 04:23.500] It's only a couple hundred bucks. [04:23.500 --> 04:25.500] I just wanted to hit him hard. [04:25.500 --> 04:32.500] I'm trying to figure out how to hunt his stuff down because he's going to obviously hide all his assets over $600. [04:32.500 --> 04:36.500] He's just that sad. [04:36.500 --> 04:42.500] Did you check the DMV to see if he has a vehicle? [04:42.500 --> 04:44.500] I know where he lives. [04:44.500 --> 04:47.500] I've driven by and there's a couple of vehicles there that might be his. [04:47.500 --> 04:52.500] So I do have the plates, but can I just ask the DMV if he has vehicles or? [04:52.500 --> 05:02.500] Yeah, find a cop and tell him that some guy cuts you off in traffic and gave you the finger and blah, blah, blah. [05:02.500 --> 05:04.500] You want to write a ticket against him. [05:04.500 --> 05:09.500] Find out who this guy is or do you know a policeman who might do a search for you? [05:09.500 --> 05:11.500] No, I'm not friendly like that. [05:11.500 --> 05:21.500] Just go to a generally a private investigator will identify someone like that for about 25 bucks. [05:21.500 --> 05:24.500] Oh, yeah. Okay. [05:24.500 --> 05:28.500] And he might be able to tell you how to collect this debt from him. [05:28.500 --> 05:31.500] Okay. Okay. [05:31.500 --> 05:39.500] All right. I was going to start getting clever with banks too because I know you can walk in with a judgment to the bank and they can garnish. [05:39.500 --> 05:40.500] I just don't know what bank. [05:40.500 --> 05:43.500] So I was thinking about maybe doing five. [05:43.500 --> 05:47.500] The private investigator will tell you all that stuff. [05:47.500 --> 05:49.500] Really? Okay. All right. [05:49.500 --> 05:52.500] Yeah, they can get access to computers we don't have. [05:52.500 --> 06:04.500] The only thing that you need a private investigator's license for is to access these computers that we don't have. [06:04.500 --> 06:08.500] Okay. All right. Yeah. Perfect. [06:08.500 --> 06:11.500] Okay. Well, thanks for that. [06:11.500 --> 06:13.500] Okay. Appreciate it. [06:13.500 --> 06:17.500] Okay. Now we're going to go to Ted in California. [06:17.500 --> 06:20.500] Hello, Ted. [06:20.500 --> 06:26.500] I listened to that video of you reading the Riot Act on the prosecutor. [06:26.500 --> 06:28.500] I hope it didn't come after that. [06:28.500 --> 06:34.500] What I was really doing, Randy, is you have only two minutes to speak. [06:34.500 --> 06:41.500] This was the Public Safety and Justice Committee of the County of Santa Clara. [06:41.500 --> 06:44.500] Two Board of Supervisors sit on the committee. [06:44.500 --> 06:55.500] The presiding judge is there, the district attorney is supposed to attend, but it turned out this day he sent his second banana. [06:55.500 --> 07:00.500] And I'm pretty excited right now, guys, because I've been listening. [07:00.500 --> 07:04.500] I called in earlier today and then I called back about 20 minutes ago. [07:04.500 --> 07:12.500] And what you were talking with, with the lady on the phone, that's a situation in my case. [07:12.500 --> 07:16.500] They wouldn't prosecute the guy that removed all the contents of my home. [07:16.500 --> 07:31.500] And I'm yelling at the phone while I'm listening to you guys because it is the DA's job and an oath that he took to protect both sides of the law. [07:31.500 --> 07:42.500] Right now in California, you know, we have this famous attack that just happened to Dave Chappelle down in Los Angeles while he was on stage doing his comedy act. [07:42.500 --> 07:45.500] And Gascon is the DA. [07:45.500 --> 07:48.500] He is formerly the DA of San Francisco. [07:48.500 --> 07:56.500] He got run off from San Francisco for being too liberal, and Los Angeles gave him the job. [07:56.500 --> 08:15.500] They are in the process of recalling him, but DA Gascon of Los Angeles has declined to prosecute the guy that jumped up on stage with a look-alike firearm that actually had a knife that flipped out on the end of it. [08:15.500 --> 08:22.500] He got a hold of Dave Chappelle, and Gascon, the DA, is declining to prosecute. [08:22.500 --> 08:29.500] So it counters with what you kind of said there. [08:29.500 --> 08:32.500] And then I want to move on to Chris. [08:32.500 --> 08:42.500] When you get in California, when you get a judgment in the small claims court, it is informed. [08:42.500 --> 08:54.500] It fills out the amount you are awarded, and it's right there on there the calculated interest that is accruing from the date of judgment. [08:54.500 --> 09:00.500] And you can haul that guy back into court on an order of examination. [09:00.500 --> 09:10.500] The beauty of it is if you serve this guy for an order of examination, he has to appear in court and answer all your questions, all financial questions, everything. [09:10.500 --> 09:21.500] And the beauty of it is if you can show that you properly served him to appear without hearing, and he doesn't show up, it's a bench warrant. [09:21.500 --> 09:26.500] So Chris can have a little fun here. [09:26.500 --> 09:29.500] Sounds pretty cool. [09:29.500 --> 09:36.500] Yeah. And you know, it's funny, a lot of lawyers know how to get judgments, but they don't know how to collect them. [09:36.500 --> 09:44.500] Chris has had a little wee bit more experience than probably most lawyers in actually collecting judgments. [09:44.500 --> 10:00.500] And you did give correct information, but also on DMV in California, you can go down to DMV for $5 with someone's name or a license plate, and you submit the form. [10:00.500 --> 10:08.500] They send notice to the person that they're going to be giving the requester the information to. [10:08.500 --> 10:23.500] So they'll say they send a notice to the person that's being looked at telling them that they're going to be providing to the requester the information. [10:23.500 --> 10:32.500] But any person in California can go down to DMV, fill out the form, and they will give you whatever you want. [10:32.500 --> 10:40.500] You know, you give them a license plate number, they're going to tell you who the registered owner of the vehicle is and the address. [10:40.500 --> 10:50.500] There may be a few exclusions such as judges and things, which they changed the law a few years ago about, but everything else is wide open. [10:50.500 --> 11:04.500] But yes, absolute great suggestion to just get a private eye who has a terminal with the access, and you can get a lot of valuable information when you're trying to track down a deadbeat. [11:04.500 --> 11:17.500] So yes, my two minutes of speaking in this committee meeting, the county is still doing everything virtually via Zoom. [11:17.500 --> 11:24.500] The city has started having the city meetings back in person now. [11:24.500 --> 11:31.500] But the county is continuing this nonsense, which basically blocks access to our government. [11:31.500 --> 11:41.500] You know, we can't participate unless, you know, unless you have a high-speed Internet connection and everything else, which – and they acknowledge a third of – believe it or not, [11:41.500 --> 11:55.500] the high-tech capital of the world, Silicon Valley, they acknowledge one-third of the people that live here have substandard or no Internet access. [11:55.500 --> 12:03.500] So they know that people cannot participate in the government the way they're operating it now via the Internet. [12:03.500 --> 12:09.500] But the whole purpose of me speaking is there's an election going on now. [12:09.500 --> 12:16.500] District Attorney Jeffrey Francis Rosen has two people running against him. [12:16.500 --> 12:23.500] One of them is a formerly – well, he's a deputy DA prosecutor. [12:23.500 --> 12:26.500] So he works for Rosen. [12:26.500 --> 12:28.500] What did Rosen do to him? [12:28.500 --> 12:45.500] He assigned him to this crappy assignment, and then the man happened to write an op-ed criticizing District Attorney Rosen, and Rosen put him on suspension and then fired him. [12:45.500 --> 13:03.500] The public defender, deputy public defender who's running against Rosen, he wrote something criticizing Rosen, and Rosen unfurled, filed some kind of whistleblower complaint or whatever, [13:03.500 --> 13:08.500] and in it alleged that he was threatened, he felt threatened. [13:08.500 --> 13:17.500] He's – Rosen is claiming that whatever this guy said constituted a physical threat, clear and present danger, blah, blah, blah. [13:17.500 --> 13:29.500] And then Rosen, when he finally got hold of himself, he withdrew the complaint. [13:29.500 --> 13:47.500] Now, so in this two-minute speech, I got quite a lot in, including that Rosen should be disqualified from running in this election because he has interfered with the campaign of his two opponents. [13:47.500 --> 14:07.500] And what's key, and at the top of the mountain of all of this, this is a continual pattern of District Attorney Jeffrey Francis Rosen, who goes and attacks and abuses the power of his office with anybody that's not aligned with him. [14:07.500 --> 14:09.500] See? [14:09.500 --> 14:29.500] It's pretty bad, and it's telling that here you have professional people that he won't – even a professional public defender, he will go so far as to claim threatened by the person. [14:29.500 --> 14:46.500] And it's just off the chart. So I was telling these supervisors, and then I went in and I said that my case has gone on for seven and a half years, 148 hearings. [14:46.500 --> 14:48.500] So I put in, you know, Randy, you had the – [14:48.500 --> 14:50.500] Just unbelievable. [14:50.500 --> 15:02.500] Yeah. And you know what? Not even so much as a blink from any of these people, but this is just my first volley. [15:02.500 --> 15:19.500] And now I'm going to continue on. I'm trying – I'm waiting for you guys to get caught up with the past shows, posting them, because about three weeks ago I called in and Randy laid out the steps I need to start taking. [15:19.500 --> 15:39.500] Okay. Now, I've also been uprooted for the past month and unable to do anything. I'm now back. I have a computer and a desk, and I can start up this stuff, and I need to go full board now. [15:39.500 --> 15:57.500] Amazing, the things we take for granted sometimes, huh? Well, if you're on Telegram, you can get on Telegram with your computer, with your phone and your computer, and there's a – you can listen to some of the recent recordings. [15:57.500 --> 16:06.500] Just – they've got links. People have posted the MP3 files out there, so you can just grab it and scroll through it yourself. [16:06.500 --> 16:27.500] All right, I'll try to find that. But I need to go to the Fed, like Randy has said, and it's just having – you know, look, I've had health challenges as well at times, and like Randy, I've had to crawl from the bed to the computer. [16:27.500 --> 16:44.500] I've had days where I – and look, it's a balancing act. Sometimes you get – you're making yourself sick when you're working on it. And I have to stop because I don't want to stroke out or have another heart attack. So, on the other side of the way – [16:44.500 --> 16:50.500] Yeah, pace yourself. Take it easy. Enjoy some fresh air and sunshine. [16:50.500 --> 16:52.500] And jump right off the cliff. [16:52.500 --> 16:54.500] Yeah, that too. [16:54.500 --> 16:59.500] Randy Calhoun, Red Fountain. We'll be right back. [17:24.500 --> 17:26.500] How to answer letters and phone calls. [17:26.500 --> 17:28.500] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [17:28.500 --> 17:33.500] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.500 --> 17:38.500] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.500 --> 17:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.500 --> 17:46.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner. [17:46.500 --> 17:49.500] Or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.500 --> 17:57.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com. Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [17:57.500 --> 18:01.500] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:01.500 --> 18:04.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [18:04.500 --> 18:07.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [18:07.500 --> 18:09.500] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.500 --> 18:12.500] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.500 --> 18:15.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:15.500 --> 18:17.500] the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:17.500 --> 18:19.500] and the right to due process of law. [18:19.500 --> 18:21.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [18:21.500 --> 18:24.500] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:24.500 --> 18:27.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:27.500 --> 18:30.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:30.500 --> 18:32.500] that will help you understand what due process is [18:32.500 --> 18:34.500] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.500 --> 18:36.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [18:36.500 --> 18:39.500] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:39.500 --> 18:41.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [18:41.500 --> 18:44.500] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:44.500 --> 18:47.500] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [18:47.500 --> 18:50.500] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.500 --> 18:52.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [18:52.500 --> 18:54.500] from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.500 --> 18:55.500] Order your copy today, [18:55.500 --> 18:59.500] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:59.500 --> 19:14.500] Well, don't let nothing get to you. [19:14.500 --> 19:17.500] Only the father can deliver you. [19:17.500 --> 19:20.500] Don't let bad mind people hurt you. [19:20.500 --> 19:23.500] Until they can get behind you. [19:23.500 --> 19:36.500] You know what I mean, my friend? [19:36.500 --> 19:57.500] Okay, we are back. [19:57.500 --> 19:59.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fount, ruleoflawradio, [19:59.500 --> 20:02.500] and we're talking to Ted in California. [20:02.500 --> 20:05.500] Ted, where were we? [20:05.500 --> 20:10.500] Well, I pretty much brought you up to speed where I'm at. [20:10.500 --> 20:12.500] And then, you know, again, [20:12.500 --> 20:17.500] I got excited when I called in the night and was listening to the other callers [20:17.500 --> 20:21.500] and the things that were being discussed [20:21.500 --> 20:24.500] and realizing that I can do some of these things. [20:24.500 --> 20:27.500] I've never made a complaint against Rosen [20:27.500 --> 20:33.500] for not taking my complaint regarding the belongings of my home being stolen. [20:33.500 --> 20:38.500] And in fact, they turned around [20:38.500 --> 20:43.500] and threatened me for trying to file a complaint [20:43.500 --> 20:48.500] and told me they would add more charges. [20:48.500 --> 20:53.500] So that's obstruction and witness tampering. [20:53.500 --> 20:54.500] Right. [20:54.500 --> 20:56.500] I'm having a little throat issue. [20:56.500 --> 20:59.500] Yeah, obstruction of justice and witness tampering. [20:59.500 --> 21:02.500] He should definitely get charges for that. [21:02.500 --> 21:06.500] You ought to file those for defense. [21:06.500 --> 21:07.500] Right. [21:07.500 --> 21:10.500] And this goes all the way back to years ago. [21:10.500 --> 21:17.500] And then remember, they put in writing that they would basically drop the charges, [21:17.500 --> 21:23.500] the charge, I should say, if I would drop the civil lawsuit for my home [21:23.500 --> 21:28.500] and agree never to sue this guy that was taking possession of my home. [21:28.500 --> 21:30.500] They specifically named him. [21:30.500 --> 21:34.500] And they had it backward. [21:34.500 --> 21:38.500] I was being sued by this person for quiet title. [21:38.500 --> 21:44.500] They were trying to say that I was the plaintiff in suing and all that. [21:44.500 --> 21:46.500] You know, that's the thing. [21:46.500 --> 21:51.500] I think they got this whole thing backward. [21:51.500 --> 21:57.500] And they jumped and then they realized I wasn't going to roll over [21:57.500 --> 22:01.500] and 99% of the people do. [22:01.500 --> 22:04.500] And then they had a problem. [22:04.500 --> 22:10.500] And like I told the supervisors Tuesday, [22:10.500 --> 22:14.500] and this now, by the way, becomes public record, [22:14.500 --> 22:18.500] that video will be out there forever, and there's also a transcript. [22:18.500 --> 22:22.500] So that is why I was very clear with my speaking. [22:22.500 --> 22:26.500] Every word, I wanted it all down. [22:26.500 --> 22:29.500] The supervisors, as far as I'm concerned, they're involved. [22:29.500 --> 22:36.500] Remember, the supervisors preside over the judges being paid [22:36.500 --> 22:41.500] additional monies beyond their state compensation. [22:41.500 --> 22:45.500] The county is paying additional monies to them. [22:45.500 --> 22:49.500] And here's another thing that, Kelly, [22:49.500 --> 22:56.500] why does the county supervisors have a Public Safety and Justice Commission [22:56.500 --> 23:00.500] and the presiding judge comes to it and everything else? [23:00.500 --> 23:06.500] Look, there's a bigger connection between the county and the county court [23:06.500 --> 23:15.500] than I think has really been dug up. [23:15.500 --> 23:20.500] And so although the judge is a state employee, [23:20.500 --> 23:24.500] I think what goes on in these courts, the county is ultimately responsible. [23:24.500 --> 23:31.500] And I think that the person who runs this county for, [23:31.500 --> 23:37.500] at the pleasure of the county board of supervisors, is the county executive. [23:37.500 --> 23:46.500] And ultimately, the county executive is the one I should probably sue and demand the bond. [23:46.500 --> 23:54.500] And he is the one that is responsible for the wholesale bribery of the judges [23:54.500 --> 24:01.500] because he runs everything in this county. [24:01.500 --> 24:06.500] It's his responsibility to know everything going on in this county. [24:06.500 --> 24:12.500] And then you have the county council under him. [24:12.500 --> 24:13.500] Okay. [24:13.500 --> 24:20.500] And I'm trying to, the purpose also of speaking is I don't want any of these county supervisors [24:20.500 --> 24:25.500] at a later date to be able to say that they did not know. [24:25.500 --> 24:29.500] They all know. [24:29.500 --> 24:31.500] Good. And keep them knowing. [24:31.500 --> 24:35.500] You're saying the county executive. [24:35.500 --> 24:38.500] I'm trying to wrap my head around what that is. [24:38.500 --> 24:42.500] In most states, we have county commissioners. [24:42.500 --> 24:51.500] Is the executive similar to what we would call the judge and the commissioner's court? [24:51.500 --> 24:52.500] No. [24:52.500 --> 24:55.500] They're the ones that do the financing. [24:55.500 --> 25:00.500] Well, Randy, how we're structured here, like I said, [25:00.500 --> 25:07.500] you have five people who are elected as county board of supervisors. [25:07.500 --> 25:14.500] And we have the Santa Clara County and it's diced up into five sections. [25:14.500 --> 25:17.500] And each of these supervisors represent a section. [25:17.500 --> 25:27.500] But the supervisors hire a county executive who runs the county. [25:27.500 --> 25:28.500] Oh, okay. [25:28.500 --> 25:30.500] So that makes sense. [25:30.500 --> 25:34.500] In Texas, we have a county commissioner. [25:34.500 --> 25:38.500] We have a number of county commissioners, one for each precinct. [25:38.500 --> 25:42.500] And then we have a county judge and all of these guys are elected. [25:42.500 --> 25:49.500] And this is the group that essentially does what the ones you're talking about does. [25:49.500 --> 25:51.500] They manage the finances of the county. [25:51.500 --> 25:52.500] Okay. [25:52.500 --> 25:54.500] Now I'm kind of understanding it. [25:54.500 --> 25:58.500] Yeah, and it's interesting that you're structured in Texas [25:58.500 --> 26:03.500] that a judge is in that position because the county board of supervisors... [26:03.500 --> 26:09.500] They call him judge, but he really has no judicial power. [26:09.500 --> 26:10.500] Okay. [26:10.500 --> 26:19.500] Well, the county executive here can be fired at any time by the board of supervisors. [26:19.500 --> 26:22.500] Well, this one does in Texas there. [26:22.500 --> 26:24.500] He's essentially in the same position. [26:24.500 --> 26:32.500] He chairs all the meetings and essentially organizes the finances for the county, [26:32.500 --> 26:35.500] but he's also elected. [26:35.500 --> 26:41.500] So if this executive is hired, he should be politically sensitive. [26:41.500 --> 26:51.500] What are his duties when it comes to public officials? [26:51.500 --> 26:57.500] It's an interesting thing because just like you take a school board, [26:57.500 --> 27:03.500] a school board members hire the superintendent of the school district. [27:03.500 --> 27:08.500] And at any time the school board members can fire the superintendent. [27:08.500 --> 27:11.500] That's the same in Texas. [27:11.500 --> 27:12.500] Okay. [27:12.500 --> 27:20.500] So take that and that's what I just described is how our counties are organized in California. [27:20.500 --> 27:23.500] It's identical to how your school board is. [27:23.500 --> 27:31.500] But what I'm saying is the county executive is responsible for all of this. [27:31.500 --> 27:38.500] And then you have the CEO of the court, which is the court clerk. [27:38.500 --> 27:39.500] Same thing. [27:39.500 --> 27:47.500] The CEO of the court is all powerful over the court. [27:47.500 --> 27:54.500] And we hit him just his, oh, it is Jeff Smith, [27:54.500 --> 28:01.500] and he is both a medical doctor and a JD lawyer. [28:01.500 --> 28:06.500] So he knows better. [28:06.500 --> 28:12.500] He knows, and believe me, he knows the situation with me. [28:12.500 --> 28:17.500] And he knows better than what's going on here. [28:17.500 --> 28:19.500] And he's a shy kind of person. [28:19.500 --> 28:21.500] He doesn't really like the limelight. [28:21.500 --> 28:24.500] He doesn't speak very much. [28:24.500 --> 28:30.500] And as a result, he comes off super intelligent, and he may very well be. [28:30.500 --> 28:38.500] I mean, anybody that's both a medical doctor and a lawyer, you know, that's pretty impressive. [28:38.500 --> 28:45.500] But that's the guy. [28:45.500 --> 28:48.500] See, you know, here's another thing. [28:48.500 --> 28:57.500] They can all claim immunity as long as they follow the guidance of the county council. [28:57.500 --> 29:02.500] And that's the game they play. [29:02.500 --> 29:08.500] But then you get into a situation, what I'll be coming forward with is, hey, [29:08.500 --> 29:11.500] your own common sense should have told you otherwise. [29:11.500 --> 29:15.500] Well, what duties do they have in this regard? [29:15.500 --> 29:17.500] This is a criminal case. [29:17.500 --> 29:25.500] What duty do these officials have to intervene, or what power or duty do they have? [29:25.500 --> 29:37.500] That's a very good question because, as you know, the sheriff here, Lori Smith, is on the rope. [29:37.500 --> 29:42.500] And partially because of the Board of Supervisors giving her a vote of no confidence. [29:42.500 --> 29:44.500] And we can do more. [29:44.500 --> 29:48.500] I don't want to wrap up the clip here. [29:48.500 --> 29:49.500] Okay. [29:49.500 --> 29:50.500] Hang on. [29:50.500 --> 29:53.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio. [29:53.500 --> 29:57.500] A call in number 512-646-1984. [29:57.500 --> 30:00.500] We'll be right back. [30:00.500 --> 30:03.500] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, [30:03.500 --> 30:08.500] but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:08.500 --> 30:14.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:14.500 --> 30:16.500] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.500 --> 30:19.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:19.500 --> 30:24.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:24.500 --> 30:29.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:29.500 --> 30:32.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.500 --> 30:35.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:35.500 --> 30:39.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:39.500 --> 30:43.500] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.500 --> 30:47.500] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.500 --> 30:53.500] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster [30:53.500 --> 30:55.500] live longer than expected. [30:55.500 --> 30:59.500] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [30:59.500 --> 31:04.500] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy [31:04.500 --> 31:06.500] as more traditional statistical measures. [31:06.500 --> 31:09.500] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:09.500 --> 31:12.500] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [31:12.500 --> 31:15.500] It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:15.500 --> 31:20.500] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:20.500 --> 31:29.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:29.500 --> 31:30.500] I lost my son. [31:30.500 --> 31:31.500] My nephew. [31:31.500 --> 31:32.500] My uncle. [31:32.500 --> 31:33.500] My son. [31:33.500 --> 31:34.500] On September 11, 2001. [31:34.500 --> 31:38.500] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.500 --> 31:42.500] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.500 --> 31:46.500] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.500 --> 31:50.500] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.500 --> 31:52.500] and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.500 --> 31:55.500] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.500 --> 31:57.500] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:57.500 --> 32:01.500] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.500 --> 32:06.500] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.500 --> 32:12.500] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.500 --> 32:17.500] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:17.500 --> 32:22.500] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [32:22.500 --> 32:24.500] rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [32:24.500 --> 32:28.500] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.500 --> 32:32.500] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.500 --> 32:37.500] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [32:37.500 --> 32:39.500] and Christian character development. [32:39.500 --> 32:44.500] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.500 --> 32:47.500] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [32:47.500 --> 32:50.500] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.500 --> 32:54.500] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:54.500 --> 33:03.500] on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:24.500 --> 33:26.500] Okay, we are back. [33:26.500 --> 33:29.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue of La Radio. [33:29.500 --> 33:31.500] And we're talking to Ted in California. [33:31.500 --> 33:41.500] Okay, Ted, what is the point of these county officials as related to your case? [33:41.500 --> 33:46.500] Well, because they have bond. [33:46.500 --> 33:51.500] And another interesting thing, at one point in my case, [33:51.500 --> 33:54.500] I filed a motion in the case, [33:54.500 --> 34:00.500] and I am one of very few people who've gotten the bonding information, [34:00.500 --> 34:07.500] and I served the motion on the insurance company. [34:07.500 --> 34:14.500] Well, how are these public officials, how are they liable? [34:14.500 --> 34:20.500] What duty do they have that they have not performed? [34:20.500 --> 34:24.500] Well, they're bribing the judges. [34:24.500 --> 34:27.500] Basically, the DA is the county. [34:27.500 --> 34:30.500] The county is basically prosecuting me. [34:30.500 --> 34:35.500] Even though this is like a state law, it's the county that's doing this. [34:35.500 --> 34:42.500] And even though Rosen is an elected official, here's the problem, Randy. [34:42.500 --> 34:49.500] The fact that the county is giving the judges money, it brings them in. [34:49.500 --> 34:52.500] And the judges, these are district judges, [34:52.500 --> 34:56.500] so they're state officials and not county officials. [34:56.500 --> 34:58.500] Correct, they're state officials. [34:58.500 --> 35:00.500] I'll agree with that all day long. [35:00.500 --> 35:06.500] But the problem that they've created by these counties paying judges [35:06.500 --> 35:13.500] additional monies of $30,000 to $60,000 a year that buys them favor [35:13.500 --> 35:17.500] and gets rulings in their favor? [35:17.500 --> 35:24.500] What is the purpose of justification for these payments? [35:24.500 --> 35:27.500] That's the joke. [35:27.500 --> 35:34.500] We can't get good judges unless we give additional incentives. [35:34.500 --> 35:39.500] Like the power of being a judge is not enough for these people. [35:39.500 --> 35:42.500] Please. [35:42.500 --> 35:48.500] Wait, are you saying their justification is so that we can get good judges? [35:48.500 --> 35:50.500] Yeah. [35:50.500 --> 35:52.500] Wow. [35:52.500 --> 35:55.500] Well, I don't know about you, but that translates to me is [35:55.500 --> 36:01.500] so that we can get the judges that we want paid like we want. [36:01.500 --> 36:03.500] Oh, and here's the thing. [36:03.500 --> 36:08.500] The amount each judge gets, they're not all getting the same amount. [36:08.500 --> 36:13.500] And it turns out the more corrupt the judge is and the more judgment [36:13.500 --> 36:17.500] that the judge has gone with the county, the higher the pay. [36:17.500 --> 36:20.500] That's why soccer companies are maneuvering. [36:20.500 --> 36:22.500] The point system, of course. [36:22.500 --> 36:25.500] How committed are you to our corruption? [36:25.500 --> 36:30.500] Oh, well, we're not sure if we can really trust you, so that's what we do. [36:30.500 --> 36:37.500] We pay to make sure we get really good rulings for us, I mean good judges. [36:37.500 --> 36:39.500] Yeah. [36:39.500 --> 36:42.500] Okay, so what are you going to sue them? [36:42.500 --> 36:46.500] They are tied in by conspiracy. [36:46.500 --> 36:56.500] And I'm saying that the county executive is ultimately responsible because he... [36:56.500 --> 37:00.500] Randy, why don't you tell him to take them to the Fed? [37:00.500 --> 37:04.500] That's clearly what this needs to do. [37:04.500 --> 37:05.500] No, hold on, hold on. [37:05.500 --> 37:09.500] The first thing in my headset, are you getting... [37:09.500 --> 37:11.500] Do I sound kind of hollow with my sound? [37:11.500 --> 37:17.500] Yeah, just kind of add a little echo or reverb to it. [37:17.500 --> 37:19.500] Okay, let me turn that headset down. [37:19.500 --> 37:21.500] Is that any better? [37:21.500 --> 37:24.500] Testing one, two, three. [37:24.500 --> 37:25.500] No, that's the same. [37:25.500 --> 37:29.500] It's still got the echo, the reverb. [37:29.500 --> 37:31.500] Okay, we have to go back to the other headset. [37:31.500 --> 37:32.500] Okay, go ahead. [37:32.500 --> 37:34.500] I'm sorry. [37:34.500 --> 37:40.500] Okay, Brett, the first thing you need to tell Randy to tell me is to take my phone, [37:40.500 --> 37:48.500] pick it up, and start beating myself upside the head for not going to the Fed years ago. [37:48.500 --> 37:53.500] I forgot that part. [37:53.500 --> 38:07.500] Now, so very important, the insurance company answered and gave this BS stuff that they always... [38:07.500 --> 38:14.500] The stuff that they go and point the finger and call people sovereign citizens and all this nonsense, [38:14.500 --> 38:17.500] that's how they're pleading red. [38:17.500 --> 38:23.500] We're especially appearing, we're not admitting that we've been served, [38:23.500 --> 38:35.500] but out of abundance of caution, we're filing this paper and on and on. [38:35.500 --> 38:38.500] So the sheriff... [38:38.500 --> 38:42.500] So back to the sheriff, the sheriff's in trouble politically. [38:42.500 --> 38:47.500] It's a political BS because the sheriff stands up for constitutional rights, [38:47.500 --> 38:53.500] and so she's not one of the corrupt people. [38:53.500 --> 39:02.500] So Rosen went about trying to trump up accusations and charges against her. [39:02.500 --> 39:07.500] It's basically gone to a civil grand jury that came back, [39:07.500 --> 39:15.500] so once the civil grand jury came back making the claims, they're pseudo-criminal. [39:15.500 --> 39:19.500] So it's actually being prosecuted in the civil court, [39:19.500 --> 39:25.500] and now because it's been transferred over to the next county. [39:25.500 --> 39:34.500] So what I'm saying is the same can be done to Rosen by the board of supervisors. [39:34.500 --> 39:41.500] Even though these are elected officials and they're basically autonomous, [39:41.500 --> 39:45.500] and one official can't blow out another one, [39:45.500 --> 39:52.500] but there was also a board of supervisor who got caught using the county credit card [39:52.500 --> 39:57.500] for gambling and some other things, and they did move on him, [39:57.500 --> 40:01.500] and they did get criminal charges on him, and he went to jail. [40:01.500 --> 40:03.500] Oh, is that bad? [40:03.500 --> 40:06.500] Excuse me? [40:06.500 --> 40:11.500] Not supposed to use the credit card for gambling? [40:11.500 --> 40:14.500] Well, the gambling wasn't so bad. [40:14.500 --> 40:17.500] I mean, it's in California and everything, right? [40:17.500 --> 40:22.500] Yeah, I think it was the girls and the alcohol. [40:22.500 --> 40:25.500] Ted, we need to move on. [40:25.500 --> 40:27.500] We've got a full board of callers. [40:27.500 --> 40:30.500] Okay, okay. I'm done. [40:30.500 --> 40:33.500] Okay. Thank you, Ted. [40:33.500 --> 40:38.500] Now we're going to go to Jack in Texas. [40:38.500 --> 40:41.500] Hello, Jack. [40:41.500 --> 40:42.500] Hello, Randy and Brett. [40:42.500 --> 40:48.500] I've got a couple of quick questions. [40:48.500 --> 40:50.500] I got the material you sent me. [40:50.500 --> 40:53.500] Thank you. [40:53.500 --> 41:04.500] I'm looking at one that says criminal affidavit, and in it there's a section. [41:04.500 --> 41:12.500] This person was stopped by, just like me, stopped by the police, given a ticket, [41:12.500 --> 41:21.500] and it says here that the officer initiated a traffic stop [41:21.500 --> 41:24.500] by turning on the officer's emergency lights. [41:24.500 --> 41:29.500] Complainant pulled over and the officer did not pull around complainant. [41:29.500 --> 41:34.500] Therefore, the only authority the officer could be acting under [41:34.500 --> 41:43.500] in the state of Texas is Texas Transportation Code 545.421A. [41:43.500 --> 41:49.500] Yes, the point of did not pull around is the officer didn't turn on his lights [41:49.500 --> 41:54.500] so that he would get out of his way so he could get to some emergency. [41:54.500 --> 41:59.500] He turned on the lights in order to get the person to pull over, [41:59.500 --> 42:04.500] and the only authority for that is in the transportation code. [42:04.500 --> 42:07.500] Okay. I see what you mean. [42:07.500 --> 42:14.500] Okay. I couldn't even find that in the section that's quoted. [42:14.500 --> 42:21.500] 545.421A is about attempting to elude police officer. [42:21.500 --> 42:27.500] Is that the same thing? [42:27.500 --> 42:28.500] I don't remember. [42:28.500 --> 42:30.500] It's been too long since I wrote it. [42:30.500 --> 42:32.500] I'll have to look it back up again. [42:32.500 --> 42:38.500] Let's see, transportation code, what was the statute I gave? [42:38.500 --> 42:54.500] 545.421A. [42:54.500 --> 43:01.500] A signal under this section that is given by police officer to the vehicle [43:01.500 --> 43:09.500] may be by hand, voice, emergency light, or siren. [43:09.500 --> 43:10.500] B is the one I'm going to. [43:10.500 --> 43:13.500] Oh, B is the more relevant one. [43:13.500 --> 43:14.500] Is that right? [43:14.500 --> 43:17.500] It should convince the offense if the person operates a motor vehicle [43:17.500 --> 43:21.500] and willfully fails or refuses to bring the vehicle to a stop [43:21.500 --> 43:25.500] or flees or attempts to elude a pursuing police vehicle [43:25.500 --> 43:31.500] when given a visual or audible signal to bring the vehicle to a stop. [43:31.500 --> 43:35.500] A signal under this section that is given by police officer [43:35.500 --> 43:41.500] to the vehicle may be by hand, voice, or emergency light or siren. [43:41.500 --> 43:42.500] Emergency light. [43:42.500 --> 43:52.500] This is the only place in Texas law that emergency light is a signal to pull over. [43:52.500 --> 43:54.500] Nowhere else. [43:54.500 --> 43:59.500] Now, you do have to pull over. [43:59.500 --> 44:03.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:03.500 --> 44:05.500] except in the area of nutrition. [44:05.500 --> 44:08.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [44:08.500 --> 44:10.500] and it's time we changed all that. [44:10.500 --> 44:15.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment [44:15.500 --> 44:17.500] is good nutrition. [44:17.500 --> 44:20.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, [44:20.500 --> 44:25.500] and mutilated, Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.500 --> 44:29.500] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [44:29.500 --> 44:31.500] most of which we reject. [44:31.500 --> 44:33.500] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, [44:33.500 --> 44:38.500] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, [44:38.500 --> 44:39.500] and many others. [44:39.500 --> 44:42.500] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [44:42.500 --> 44:47.500] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.500 --> 44:49.500] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, [44:49.500 --> 44:51.500] you may want to join us. [44:51.500 --> 44:54.500] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:54.500 --> 44:58.500] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.500 --> 45:00.500] Order now. [45:00.500 --> 45:03.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.500 --> 45:06.500] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:06.500 --> 45:10.500] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course [45:10.500 --> 45:14.500] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.500 --> 45:18.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.500 --> 45:22.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.500 --> 45:27.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.500 --> 45:30.500] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:30.500 --> 45:33.500] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.500 --> 45:35.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [45:35.500 --> 45:38.500] you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.500 --> 45:42.500] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.500 --> 45:47.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:47.500 --> 45:52.500] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.500 --> 45:56.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.500 --> 46:01.500] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:01.500 --> 46:24.500] MUSIC [46:24.500 --> 46:29.500] Always I must be careful what I'm wishing for [46:29.500 --> 46:34.500] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for [46:34.500 --> 46:40.500] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton [46:40.500 --> 46:46.500] I'm just here making my living, pushing buttons [46:46.500 --> 46:52.500] I give my message out to anyone who's shouting distance [46:52.500 --> 46:57.500] I'm both for bravery and against slavery, showing resistance [46:57.500 --> 47:02.500] First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting [47:02.500 --> 47:08.500] I'm just so glad to make my living, pushing buttons [47:08.500 --> 47:10.500] Okay, we are back. [47:10.500 --> 47:13.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, [47:13.500 --> 47:16.500] and we're talking to Jack in Texas. [47:16.500 --> 47:19.500] Also, Jack, did that make sense? [47:19.500 --> 47:24.500] Yeah, it just didn't make sense when you explained it, [47:24.500 --> 47:28.500] but it didn't make sense when I read it. [47:28.500 --> 47:31.500] So the whole point is that the only authorization to stop [47:31.500 --> 47:35.500] from flashing light is in the transportation code, [47:35.500 --> 47:39.500] and so that's what they're using to stop you. [47:39.500 --> 47:44.500] Yeah, there's a code that requires you to move over [47:44.500 --> 47:47.500] when there's an emergency vehicle, [47:47.500 --> 47:50.500] but it doesn't require you to stop. [47:50.500 --> 47:56.500] Well, it says move over one lane to the left or slow down [47:56.500 --> 48:00.500] I think it's either 20 or 25 miles an hour. [48:00.500 --> 48:03.500] But it's not the same thing as pulling over. [48:03.500 --> 48:09.500] And that's why I put in there he didn't pull around me, [48:09.500 --> 48:12.500] because if he had just wanted you to move over out of his way, [48:12.500 --> 48:17.500] then he's declaring an emergency, and he would have kept going. [48:17.500 --> 48:22.500] But since he didn't keep going, he was ordering you to pull over [48:22.500 --> 48:24.500] to the side of the road, and this is the only place [48:24.500 --> 48:27.500] they have authority to do that. [48:27.500 --> 48:32.500] That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. [48:32.500 --> 48:33.500] This wasn't even on a highway. [48:33.500 --> 48:38.500] This was just on a street in town. [48:38.500 --> 48:40.500] Same thing. [48:40.500 --> 48:42.500] Doesn't matter? OK. [48:42.500 --> 48:51.500] Yeah, there's nothing in town that requires you to pull over, [48:51.500 --> 48:54.500] except transportation code, no matter where you're at. [48:54.500 --> 48:59.500] So because he expected you to pull over, he didn't pull around you. [48:59.500 --> 49:04.500] And you knew if you didn't pull over, there's a good chance he'd shoot you. [49:04.500 --> 49:07.500] They would do whatever it takes to stop you. [49:07.500 --> 49:10.500] So you felt threatened. [49:10.500 --> 49:13.500] That's simple assault, 2202. [49:13.500 --> 49:15.500] I'm sorry, 2201. [49:15.500 --> 49:20.500] And you had very good reason to believe that he was prominently displaying [49:20.500 --> 49:22.500] a deadly weapon at the time. [49:22.500 --> 49:26.500] That's 2202, aggravated assault. [49:26.500 --> 49:27.500] Right. [49:27.500 --> 49:29.500] But since he was a municipal police officer [49:29.500 --> 49:34.500] and did not have authority to enforce the transportation code, [49:34.500 --> 49:41.500] he was acting under the color of an official capacity he didn't have [49:41.500 --> 49:47.500] while committing simple assault, while prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [49:47.500 --> 49:56.500] Under 2202B2A Texas penal code, that is a first-degree felony. [49:56.500 --> 50:00.500] And I keep telling them, guys, I didn't make it up. [50:00.500 --> 50:03.500] I just read it. [50:03.500 --> 50:06.500] Okay. [50:06.500 --> 50:08.500] Okay, I got that. [50:08.500 --> 50:10.500] Thank you for that explanation. [50:10.500 --> 50:16.500] Now, I've got some, like, administrative stuff. [50:16.500 --> 50:24.500] So at the end of these filings, right, sometimes there's a prayer, [50:24.500 --> 50:28.500] and then sometimes there's an order. [50:28.500 --> 50:31.500] Is that where the court replies? [50:31.500 --> 50:36.500] The judges don't want to make up orders. [50:36.500 --> 50:38.500] It annoys them. [50:38.500 --> 50:42.500] So if you want the judge to issue an order, [50:42.500 --> 50:45.500] they expect you to make that order up for them. [50:45.500 --> 50:47.500] They're busy. [50:47.500 --> 50:52.500] They have work to do and they have golf to get to, [50:52.500 --> 50:55.500] cigars to check out, all sorts of things. [50:55.500 --> 51:01.500] And that's the reason it's in there, because sometimes they ask for it. [51:01.500 --> 51:02.500] I see. [51:02.500 --> 51:03.500] Okay. [51:03.500 --> 51:04.500] So you're doing the job for them, kind of. [51:04.500 --> 51:05.500] Yes. [51:05.500 --> 51:07.500] Hopefully that's all. [51:07.500 --> 51:08.500] Now, what about an acknowledgment? [51:08.500 --> 51:11.500] What is an acknowledgment? [51:11.500 --> 51:14.500] An acknowledgment is a notary. [51:14.500 --> 51:16.500] Or it's the same as an anotary. [51:16.500 --> 51:18.500] An notary is an acknowledgment. [51:18.500 --> 51:23.500] It's not a verification. [51:23.500 --> 51:33.500] A notary or an acknowledgment is a third party is acknowledging [51:33.500 --> 51:38.500] that you are the person who signed this document. [51:38.500 --> 51:42.500] They don't need to look and care about what's in the document, [51:42.500 --> 51:50.500] but either the notary or the person that's authorized to acknowledge your signature, [51:50.500 --> 51:54.500] they're going to just look at some kind of an ID or they might know you and say, [51:54.500 --> 51:58.500] yep, that's him. [51:58.500 --> 52:05.500] Now, verification, no, I'm speaking to Jurat. [52:05.500 --> 52:09.500] Verification is the same as an acknowledgment. [52:09.500 --> 52:16.500] Verification just verifies that the person who signed this name is actually that person. [52:16.500 --> 52:20.500] Now, a jurat. [52:20.500 --> 52:24.500] Yeah, that's for when it's sworn. [52:24.500 --> 52:28.500] Makes it a sworn statement. [52:28.500 --> 52:33.500] And that's where you're swearing under oath, before an notary, [52:33.500 --> 52:40.500] that everything in here is true and accurate to the best of your knowledge. [52:40.500 --> 52:46.500] Okay. [52:46.500 --> 52:53.500] As an example, the criminal complaint will have a jurat on it. [52:53.500 --> 53:02.500] All the rest of them, anytime you file a motion that contains fact, [53:02.500 --> 53:04.500] it must be notarized. [53:04.500 --> 53:07.500] It must have a jurat. [53:07.500 --> 53:12.500] Make sure that the facts are true and accurate to the best of your knowledge. [53:12.500 --> 53:22.500] Anything that doesn't state facts doesn't have to be notarized. [53:22.500 --> 53:29.500] As a general rule, I noticed that Texas has rule 12 in the civil procedure. [53:29.500 --> 53:38.500] If you want to kick a lawyer who you don't believe that he has authority to be bringing this case, [53:38.500 --> 53:46.500] which is pretty often, well, then rule 12 says that you can throw a flag on the field. [53:46.500 --> 53:50.500] Hey, I don't believe this lawyer has standing here. [53:50.500 --> 53:54.500] And you put in a motion for him to show authority. [53:54.500 --> 53:58.500] And that motion has to be sworn, which is kind of unusual. [53:58.500 --> 54:04.500] Most of the motions that are not, like Randy said, bringing some fact [54:04.500 --> 54:09.500] and you're supposed to be standing on that fact and using that as grounds for your motion. [54:09.500 --> 54:12.500] So they usually don't need to be sworn with a jurat. [54:12.500 --> 54:17.500] It would only need an acknowledgment of this is the person who signed it. [54:17.500 --> 54:22.500] So that might be one exception is that rule 12 there. [54:22.500 --> 54:24.500] Okay. [54:24.500 --> 54:29.500] Is that clear as mud, Jack? [54:29.500 --> 54:30.500] Pardon me? [54:30.500 --> 54:31.500] Just kidding. [54:31.500 --> 54:35.500] I was asking if that was clear as mud. [54:35.500 --> 54:37.500] Did I say that in a confusing way? [54:37.500 --> 54:40.500] Did we try to rephrase that? [54:40.500 --> 54:47.500] No, it's clear that that is an exception. [54:47.500 --> 54:52.500] There may be others that we don't know about. [54:52.500 --> 54:54.500] So a criminal affidavit. [54:54.500 --> 54:57.500] Is this the same thing as a criminal complaint? [54:57.500 --> 54:59.500] Yes. [54:59.500 --> 55:01.500] Okay. [55:01.500 --> 55:05.500] A criminal complaint must always be in affidavit form. [55:05.500 --> 55:09.500] So it's just another name for it. [55:09.500 --> 55:15.500] And in affidavit form, it must be sworn to. [55:15.500 --> 55:19.500] Do you have to have the jurat part? [55:19.500 --> 55:23.500] I mean, I couldn't hear that. [55:23.500 --> 55:25.500] He said it has to have a jurat. [55:25.500 --> 55:26.500] The answer is yes. [55:26.500 --> 55:28.500] Okay. [55:28.500 --> 55:29.500] Okay. [55:29.500 --> 55:30.500] All right. [55:30.500 --> 55:37.500] So there seems to be a lot of stuff. [55:37.500 --> 55:44.500] So I've gone through all of it, getting some of it because it's a lot of technical stuff. [55:44.500 --> 55:52.500] But do I need to file every one of these items? [55:52.500 --> 55:53.500] Wait. [55:53.500 --> 55:54.500] You were breaking up. [55:54.500 --> 55:57.500] I couldn't hear that. [55:57.500 --> 56:01.500] Do I need to file every one of these items? [56:01.500 --> 56:15.500] I think there was one with a counterclaim, but it seems to be very similar to the criminal affidavit. [56:15.500 --> 56:20.500] And the motion to eliminate. [56:20.500 --> 56:23.500] Should I file all of these? [56:23.500 --> 56:28.500] Brett, can you understand if he's breaking up on my end? [56:28.500 --> 56:35.500] I'm hearing him breaking up as well, but I think he's asking you if he needs to file the motion and limiting. [56:35.500 --> 56:40.500] And I think overall he's trying to figure out does he need to file all of the documents? [56:40.500 --> 56:42.500] Yeah, just file all, right? [56:42.500 --> 56:43.500] Yeah. [56:43.500 --> 56:47.500] The whole purpose of those documents is annoyance. [56:47.500 --> 56:48.500] Okay. [56:48.500 --> 56:49.500] All right. [56:49.500 --> 56:56.500] You want him to get annoyed at all this stuff and then just ignore all of it. [56:56.500 --> 56:59.500] Let me go after him for that. [56:59.500 --> 57:00.500] Okay, I get it. [57:00.500 --> 57:08.500] Every motion that the judge didn't rule on, you file criminally against him. [57:08.500 --> 57:09.500] Okay. [57:09.500 --> 57:14.500] And it's time to complain and just beat him up good. [57:14.500 --> 57:27.500] Now, how do I file electronically, but I know you made it very important. [57:27.500 --> 57:28.500] I couldn't understand it, Brett. [57:28.500 --> 57:32.500] Could you understand it? [57:32.500 --> 57:35.500] No, I couldn't make out that part. [57:35.500 --> 57:36.500] You said that again, Jack. [57:36.500 --> 57:37.500] You're breaking up. [57:37.500 --> 57:44.500] It's kind of a vibrating like breakup and I'm having a hard time understanding you. [57:44.500 --> 57:45.500] Yeah, I'm sorry. [57:45.500 --> 57:48.500] I have a terrible, I've gotten a boondock. [57:48.500 --> 57:51.500] I have terrible internet service. [57:51.500 --> 57:56.500] I'll speak very slowly. [57:56.500 --> 57:59.500] You said it's better to file electronically. [57:59.500 --> 58:02.500] How does one go about doing that? [58:02.500 --> 58:04.500] Did you hear me? [58:04.500 --> 58:11.500] He's saying, he's wondering if it's better to file electronically and if so, how? [58:11.500 --> 58:13.500] I don't file electronically. [58:13.500 --> 58:15.500] Randy does. [58:15.500 --> 58:22.500] There are pros and cons to filing electronically, but it's very simple. [58:22.500 --> 58:31.500] As for how, you need to have a good internet connection and you need to sign up with one of the providers. [58:31.500 --> 58:34.500] It's an e-file Texas, they've got providers for that. [58:34.500 --> 58:44.500] It's kind of like they all share the same database, but they're different doors to get there. [58:44.500 --> 58:49.500] So you sign up with one of the providers, you're going to pay every time that you... [58:49.500 --> 58:53.500] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.500 --> 59:00.500] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.500 --> 59:05.500] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.500 --> 59:12.500] 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. [59:12.500 --> 59:17.500] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.500 --> 59:23.500] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.500 --> 59:27.500] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.500 --> 59:33.500] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.500 --> 59:40.500] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.500 --> 59:49.500] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.500 --> 59:59.500] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.500 --> 01:00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.500 --> 01:00:10.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.500 --> 01:00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.500 --> 01:00:22.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.500 --> 01:00:27.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.500 --> 01:00:32.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.500 --> 01:00:38.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.500 --> 01:00:45.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:00:45.500 --> 01:00:51.500] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.500 --> 01:00:54.500] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.500 --> 01:01:00.500] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.500 --> 01:01:06.500] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.500 --> 01:01:09.500] Third party? Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.500 --> 01:01:12.500] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.500 --> 01:01:17.500] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.500 --> 01:01:21.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.500 --> 01:01:35.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.500 --> 01:01:40.500] They guarantee you the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.500 --> 01:01:46.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.500 --> 01:01:52.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.500 --> 01:01:57.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.500 --> 01:02:02.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.500 --> 01:02:04.500] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.500 --> 01:02:12.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:15.500] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.500 --> 01:02:21.500] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.500 --> 01:02:27.500] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.500 --> 01:02:30.500] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.500 --> 01:02:34.500] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.500 --> 01:02:39.500] Keys in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.500 --> 01:02:46.500] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.500 --> 01:02:53.500] 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. [01:02:53.500 --> 01:03:00.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.500 --> 01:03:29.500] I will fight my father's arms until he returns. [01:03:29.500 --> 01:03:34.500] I will fight my father's arms until he returns. [01:03:34.500 --> 01:03:38.500] He has me with his strength and wisdom. [01:03:38.500 --> 01:03:51.500] Hey, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Little Low Radio on this Friday the 13th, the 13th day of May, 2022. [01:03:51.500 --> 01:03:54.500] And we're talking to Jack in Texas. [01:03:54.500 --> 01:03:59.500] OK, Jack. Yeah, basically, I put all those documents together. They're all valid documents. [01:03:59.500 --> 01:04:07.500] They are essentially the documents you would file in any criminal case. [01:04:07.500 --> 01:04:10.500] These people don't do it in traffic. [01:04:10.500 --> 01:04:16.500] And you mentioned the motion in Lemony. That's one of my favorite motions. [01:04:16.500 --> 01:04:30.500] That one is so annoying to judges. It goes to all the questions you're asking the court to order the other side not to ask. [01:04:30.500 --> 01:04:34.500] And it's really just to load them up. [01:04:34.500 --> 01:04:40.500] So when you go to court, the judge will just deny all of them out of hand. [01:04:40.500 --> 01:04:44.500] And I have Walker V. Packer. [01:04:44.500 --> 01:04:52.500] Walker V. Packer says when a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [01:04:52.500 --> 01:05:05.500] So if you have law and facts that go to a legal issue and the judge doesn't apply them, then that's an act of official misconduct. [01:05:05.500 --> 01:05:08.500] They say if you don't like my ruling, you can appeal. [01:05:08.500 --> 01:05:13.500] Yeah. What they don't realize is I have two sources of appeal. [01:05:13.500 --> 01:05:27.500] I can appeal to an appellate court to overturn the ruling, and I can also appeal to a grand jury to indict him for failing to properly apply the law to the facts, [01:05:27.500 --> 01:05:42.500] failing to perform a duty he is required to perform, and in the process denying me the full free access to enjoy my right to the due course of the laws. [01:05:42.500 --> 01:05:45.500] 39.03. [01:05:45.500 --> 01:05:49.500] 39.03. So we're setting them up. [01:05:49.500 --> 01:05:56.500] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:05:56.500 --> 01:05:59.500] I'm starting to catch on. [01:05:59.500 --> 01:06:02.500] All right, gentlemen, I sure appreciate it. [01:06:02.500 --> 01:06:04.500] That's all for me for now. [01:06:04.500 --> 01:06:06.500] I sure appreciate all your help. [01:06:06.500 --> 01:06:08.500] Okay. Thank you, Jack. [01:06:08.500 --> 01:06:13.500] Now we're going to go back to Jerry in Pennsylvania. Hello, Jerry. [01:06:13.500 --> 01:06:16.500] Yeah, Randy, can you hear me now? [01:06:16.500 --> 01:06:19.500] Hey, much better. [01:06:19.500 --> 01:06:23.500] But it still sounds like you got a bucket over your head. [01:06:23.500 --> 01:06:28.500] Oh, well, I got out of the toilet. It's probably because I turned in the barrel. [01:06:28.500 --> 01:06:43.500] Listen, what they did here was they passed an act, and they passed an act so that you could create an administration. [01:06:43.500 --> 01:06:47.500] So it's called the local health administration law. [01:06:47.500 --> 01:06:59.500] What they did is the county commissioners, they all got together and created this thing. [01:06:59.500 --> 01:07:10.500] And they put down what the administration does, you know, legal findings, definitions, [01:07:10.500 --> 01:07:14.500] put that decision down on what they do and all this stuff. [01:07:14.500 --> 01:07:31.500] So when we got to the public health nuisance, 3.1, it said in there that everything to do with sewers, [01:07:31.500 --> 01:07:36.500] like your sewer pipe, how the pipes hook up to the house, how it's supposed to go. [01:07:36.500 --> 01:07:45.500] What the problem was is when they wrote the citation, the address is for a vacant lot. [01:07:45.500 --> 01:07:54.500] So what I did was I put this all together, and I put the citation in, and I put it into... [01:07:54.500 --> 01:07:56.500] Excuse me. [01:07:56.500 --> 01:07:57.500] Brett, can you... [01:07:57.500 --> 01:08:05.500] Well, I'm understanding most of it, but it also sounds like he's rearranging his toolbox. [01:08:05.500 --> 01:08:09.500] He has a lot of background noise there, Jerry. [01:08:09.500 --> 01:08:11.500] Oh. [01:08:11.500 --> 01:08:12.500] All right. [01:08:12.500 --> 01:08:14.500] Well, do you want me to continue? [01:08:14.500 --> 01:08:15.500] Yes. [01:08:15.500 --> 01:08:16.500] Yes, please. [01:08:16.500 --> 01:08:18.500] Oh, okay. [01:08:18.500 --> 01:08:25.500] Well, what it is is, you know, when you get them tickets from the third graphic citation, [01:08:25.500 --> 01:08:31.500] non-graphic citation, well, there are two boxes there that they check. [01:08:31.500 --> 01:08:33.500] That's nothing to do with it. [01:08:33.500 --> 01:08:45.500] So what I did is I wrote it up for the U.S. court and sent it in the brief and sent it in, [01:08:45.500 --> 01:08:54.500] and I charged him with, you know, false documents and all this stuff. [01:08:54.500 --> 01:09:15.500] So then it came on the affidavit telling them that there was 1341 mail fraud, [01:09:15.500 --> 01:09:19.500] because they sent it right to the mail. [01:09:19.500 --> 01:09:24.500] You know, like it had a fictitious address on it. [01:09:24.500 --> 01:09:25.500] It wasn't the right address. [01:09:25.500 --> 01:09:27.500] It was a different one. [01:09:27.500 --> 01:09:34.500] What they described, what the lawyer described in his memorandum that he sent to me. [01:09:34.500 --> 01:09:41.500] So I sent that all in in a lawsuit. [01:09:41.500 --> 01:09:51.500] So do you think that was a good idea to find a suit of opposing lawyer in this? [01:09:51.500 --> 01:09:56.500] Or what? [01:09:56.500 --> 01:09:57.500] Brett, you don't have to respond to him. [01:09:57.500 --> 01:09:59.500] I can't understand it. [01:09:59.500 --> 01:10:02.500] Oh, man, I was hoping you could have heard him. [01:10:02.500 --> 01:10:05.500] I couldn't make that out. [01:10:05.500 --> 01:10:07.500] Jerry, we're still having a terrible time understanding you. [01:10:07.500 --> 01:10:13.500] How far away from the microphone are you? [01:10:13.500 --> 01:10:21.500] Is there anybody building something in between you and the mic? [01:10:21.500 --> 01:10:22.500] No. [01:10:22.500 --> 01:10:23.500] I set this up the last time. [01:10:23.500 --> 01:10:26.500] Bill was trying to set it up, and now I forgot. [01:10:26.500 --> 01:10:31.500] I went into it again, and I set it back to mic, [01:10:31.500 --> 01:10:37.500] and it's supposed to be doing its thing, but I guess it's not. [01:10:37.500 --> 01:10:40.500] It sounds like you're far away from the mic. [01:10:40.500 --> 01:10:43.500] That gives it a hollow sound. [01:10:43.500 --> 01:10:45.500] What's that? [01:10:45.500 --> 01:10:47.500] It sounds like you're far away from the mic. [01:10:47.500 --> 01:10:53.500] And when you get far away, you get a hollow sound, almost an echo. [01:10:53.500 --> 01:10:55.500] And we're losing all of your bass. [01:10:55.500 --> 01:10:56.500] Yeah. [01:10:56.500 --> 01:10:58.500] Yeah, I know. [01:10:58.500 --> 01:11:01.500] Sorry, we're losing all your treble. [01:11:01.500 --> 01:11:03.500] We're just getting bass. [01:11:03.500 --> 01:11:04.500] Yeah, I know. [01:11:04.500 --> 01:11:06.500] That's what happened to it last time. [01:11:06.500 --> 01:11:09.500] But somehow it moved in the computer, [01:11:09.500 --> 01:11:13.500] and I kind of sit here and figure out what's wrong with it. [01:11:13.500 --> 01:11:18.500] You might look in the computer and see if you have some kind of mixer [01:11:18.500 --> 01:11:20.500] inside the computer. [01:11:20.500 --> 01:11:25.500] I'm working off a good mixer, but I can only treat my outgoing sound. [01:11:25.500 --> 01:11:28.500] It's been coming. [01:11:28.500 --> 01:11:36.500] Oh, well, what I didn't, it says mix, so I cut the mix off and just left [01:11:36.500 --> 01:11:39.500] the microphone on. [01:11:39.500 --> 01:11:42.500] I found that one. [01:11:42.500 --> 01:11:49.500] Okay, well, whatever it is, we really need to understand you. [01:11:49.500 --> 01:11:52.500] All right, well, I'll see if I can work on it. [01:11:52.500 --> 01:11:54.500] I'll call you next week. [01:11:54.500 --> 01:11:58.500] I'm sorry about that, because we really wanted to hear what you were up to. [01:11:58.500 --> 01:11:59.500] Yeah. [01:11:59.500 --> 01:12:02.500] Okay, I'll see if I can fix it. [01:12:02.500 --> 01:12:03.500] Thank you. [01:12:03.500 --> 01:12:04.500] Good night. [01:12:04.500 --> 01:12:06.500] Okay, thank you, Jerry. [01:12:06.500 --> 01:12:13.500] Okay, now we're going to Elise in Arizona. [01:12:13.500 --> 01:12:15.500] Hello, Elise. [01:12:15.500 --> 01:12:18.500] Hi, guys. [01:12:18.500 --> 01:12:26.500] I don't have a law question, so I'm not sure if that's allowed. [01:12:26.500 --> 01:12:29.500] Okay. [01:12:29.500 --> 01:12:32.500] Randy, I think she called in just to say nice things about you. [01:12:32.500 --> 01:12:33.500] Oh, you can do that. [01:12:33.500 --> 01:12:34.500] You can do that. [01:12:34.500 --> 01:12:38.500] You can take the rest of the show and say nice things about us. [01:12:38.500 --> 01:12:43.500] Well, so I was pondering, can you guys hear me okay? [01:12:43.500 --> 01:12:45.500] Yes, we hear you just fine. [01:12:45.500 --> 01:12:47.500] Okay. [01:12:47.500 --> 01:12:58.500] I was pondering the idea of setting them up, right, intentionally, the cops, the lawyers, everyone. [01:12:58.500 --> 01:13:04.500] And instead of trying to articulate my issues with that, Randy, [01:13:04.500 --> 01:13:07.500] I was wondering if I could ask you a few questions. [01:13:07.500 --> 01:13:10.500] Okay. [01:13:10.500 --> 01:13:19.500] I'm wondering on your journey of many years doing this, when did you decide [01:13:19.500 --> 01:13:24.500] and why did you decide to intentionally set them up? [01:13:24.500 --> 01:13:37.500] And have you ever set up someone in your life that's personal to you, your wife or your kids or your friends? [01:13:37.500 --> 01:13:39.500] No. [01:13:39.500 --> 01:13:47.500] And yeah, so I guess the first question is the most important one. [01:13:47.500 --> 01:13:48.500] Okay. [01:13:48.500 --> 01:13:55.500] I set up public officials only because they set themselves up for it. [01:13:55.500 --> 01:14:02.500] And I don't ever do anything intentionally malicious. [01:14:02.500 --> 01:14:10.500] I only give people back what they, you know, give back to them what they hand out. [01:14:10.500 --> 01:14:18.500] When I get a public official that conducts themselves professionally, I treat them with high regard. [01:14:18.500 --> 01:14:27.500] The city manager in the town I live in, he was a policeman for 20 years, and I knew him this whole time. [01:14:27.500 --> 01:14:34.500] He has never once heard a crossword from me, not one time. [01:14:34.500 --> 01:14:41.500] Because I've never got one from him, he's always treated me with dignity and respect, and he got it back. [01:14:41.500 --> 01:14:48.500] I don't mess with public officials unless they open the door for it. [01:14:48.500 --> 01:15:00.500] But in trying to get public officials to follow law, what I do is just a methodology that I worked out that gets good results. [01:15:00.500 --> 01:15:06.500] I don't do this just to aggravate or annoy them. [01:15:06.500 --> 01:15:10.500] I always have purpose. [01:15:10.500 --> 01:15:20.500] And I suggest you never deal with public officials unless you know precisely what your intended outcome is. [01:15:20.500 --> 01:15:31.500] If you don't know what you're trying to achieve, if you don't know where you're going, there's a very good chance you'll wind up somewhere else. [01:15:31.500 --> 01:15:40.500] And if you don't have a clear purpose in mind, you will get led down one rabbit hole after another. [01:15:40.500 --> 01:15:49.500] You know, I tell the story about a bailiff dragging me down the stairs in the courthouse, shoving me out the door, knocked me down, broke my elbow. [01:15:49.500 --> 01:15:53.500] I did not go after that bailiff. [01:15:53.500 --> 01:15:56.500] First off, he didn't mean to knock me down. [01:15:56.500 --> 01:16:01.500] Second, I had kind of put him over the edge anyway. [01:16:01.500 --> 01:16:15.500] But third and most important, I could not frame going after that bailiff in a way that would lead me toward my intended outcome. [01:16:15.500 --> 01:16:19.500] That's the discipline that I operate from. [01:16:19.500 --> 01:16:26.500] If I don't have a good reason for doing something, I'm not going to do something. [01:16:26.500 --> 01:16:34.500] I'm not going to do something just because you annoyed me or injured me or provoked me in some way. [01:16:34.500 --> 01:16:38.500] I'm going to do something because I have purpose. [01:16:38.500 --> 01:16:45.500] And once they've dealt with you a little while when you're operating strictly from purpose, they tend to get it. [01:16:45.500 --> 01:16:47.500] They figure it out. [01:16:47.500 --> 01:16:49.500] I won't be manipulated. [01:16:49.500 --> 01:16:51.500] I won't be pushed around. [01:16:51.500 --> 01:16:55.500] I'll go right for what I'm after, and you're not going to distract me. [01:16:55.500 --> 01:16:57.500] But I am getting distracted by having to go to work. [01:16:57.500 --> 01:16:59.500] Hang on. [01:16:59.500 --> 01:17:05.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.500 --> 01:17:08.500] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:17:08.500 --> 01:17:14.500] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. 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[01:18:00.500 --> 01:18:04.500] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.500 --> 01:18:07.500] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.500 --> 01:18:08.500] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.500 --> 01:18:13.500] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.500 --> 01:18:16.500] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.500 --> 01:18:20.500] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.500 --> 01:18:22.500] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.500 --> 01:18:24.500] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.500 --> 01:18:27.500] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.500 --> 01:18:29.500] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.500 --> 01:18:31.500] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.500 --> 01:18:34.500] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:18:34.500 --> 01:18:37.500] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.500 --> 01:18:43.500] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.500 --> 01:18:44.500] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.500 --> 01:18:45.500] No. [01:18:45.500 --> 01:18:47.500] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.500 --> 01:18:48.500] No. [01:18:48.500 --> 01:18:49.500] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.500 --> 01:18:50.500] No. [01:18:50.500 --> 01:18:51.500] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.500 --> 01:18:52.500] Wow. [01:18:52.500 --> 01:18:54.500] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.500 --> 01:18:55.500] This is perfect. [01:18:55.500 --> 01:18:56.500] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.500 --> 01:18:58.500] We are welcome. [01:18:58.500 --> 01:19:00.500] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.500 --> 01:19:10.500] This is the Logos Radio Net. [01:19:30.500 --> 01:19:31.500] Okay. [01:19:31.500 --> 01:19:32.500] We are back. [01:19:32.500 --> 01:19:33.500] Randy Kelp. [01:19:33.500 --> 01:19:34.500] Now, we're talking to Elise in Arizona. [01:19:34.500 --> 01:19:35.500] And Elise, that is over the break. [01:19:35.500 --> 01:19:36.500] I had time to think a little more about the question you asked me. [01:19:36.500 --> 01:19:37.500] I just want to say one thing. [01:19:37.500 --> 01:19:38.500] Can you let me just say one thing, Randy? [01:19:38.500 --> 01:19:39.500] If you don't mind. [01:19:39.500 --> 01:20:02.500] Wait. [01:20:02.500 --> 01:20:03.500] Say that again. [01:20:03.500 --> 01:20:09.500] May I just quickly say one thing? [01:20:09.500 --> 01:20:10.500] Okay. [01:20:10.500 --> 01:20:11.500] I am coming from a space. [01:20:11.500 --> 01:20:15.500] I have high reverence for you. [01:20:15.500 --> 01:20:21.500] Only reverence. [01:20:21.500 --> 01:20:28.500] And the way that you lead your life, you are, and what I've learned from you. [01:20:28.500 --> 01:20:43.500] This came about today because I emailed this hotshot lawyer a final request for my discovery items. [01:20:43.500 --> 01:20:50.500] And I copied the defendant on the email intentionally, not maliciously, right? [01:20:50.500 --> 01:20:52.500] But intentionally, consciously, right? [01:20:52.500 --> 01:20:58.500] I was very awake to it, to my actions, to my behavior. [01:20:58.500 --> 01:21:03.500] And I did it for the purpose and the hopes. [01:21:03.500 --> 01:21:12.500] I mean, this is so difficult for me, but I did it in the hopes of them telling me not to contact the defendant so I could bar-grieve them. [01:21:12.500 --> 01:21:25.500] And I was oscillating between this decision probably because of indoctrination and conditioning that that's just not the right thing to do. [01:21:25.500 --> 01:21:27.500] And here I am asking you. [01:21:27.500 --> 01:21:29.500] So this is how it all came about. [01:21:29.500 --> 01:21:30.500] Okay. [01:21:30.500 --> 01:21:38.500] That is probably the best question I've been asked since I've been doing this program. [01:21:38.500 --> 01:21:42.500] I get to talk about what I'm actually doing. [01:21:42.500 --> 01:21:55.500] I don't go here often, but everything I do, I try to make sure that what I'm doing is deliberate. [01:21:55.500 --> 01:22:00.500] Have you ever read my rubber ball theory? [01:22:00.500 --> 01:22:05.500] Not yet because every time I try to upload it, my phone won't let me. [01:22:05.500 --> 01:22:07.500] So I've heard of it though. [01:22:07.500 --> 01:22:11.500] If you'll send me an email, I'll email it to you. [01:22:11.500 --> 01:22:15.500] You should read that twice. [01:22:15.500 --> 01:22:19.500] After you've read that twice, then watch what I do. [01:22:19.500 --> 01:22:27.500] You will notice some very consistent patterns in what I do. [01:22:27.500 --> 01:22:36.500] The rubber ball theory, that is what Gordon would call a therapeutic metaphor. [01:22:36.500 --> 01:22:43.500] That is designed to install an internal mental pattern, [01:22:43.500 --> 01:22:54.500] a pattern that allows you to interrupt someone else on a level that's outside their conscious awareness. [01:22:54.500 --> 01:23:00.500] The smallest portion of our communications is conscious. [01:23:00.500 --> 01:23:03.500] Most of what goes on is not subconscious. [01:23:03.500 --> 01:23:08.500] I don't like that term, so I don't think it has any real meaning. [01:23:08.500 --> 01:23:12.500] Any meaning that you try to give to it is always distorted. [01:23:12.500 --> 01:23:17.500] We have a lot of things going on that we know what we're doing, [01:23:17.500 --> 01:23:23.500] but they're not represented in the conscious aspect of our behavior. [01:23:23.500 --> 01:23:39.500] We tend to only pay direct conscious attention to those things that need to be directly manipulated by our conscious awareness. [01:23:39.500 --> 01:23:44.500] Context is something we seldom ever pay conscious attention to. [01:23:44.500 --> 01:23:48.500] We can be in a conversation and someone will say something, [01:23:48.500 --> 01:23:57.500] and the inner mind will change the context of our speech patterns without us consciously knowing they're doing it. [01:23:57.500 --> 01:24:03.500] I don't think I'm explaining this well. [01:24:03.500 --> 01:24:12.500] I've spoken before about always knowing what you're after, always having a purpose, a goal. [01:24:12.500 --> 01:24:24.500] A goal for focus is not only the conscious aspect, but also these other aspects that control your behavior that aren't necessarily subconscious, [01:24:24.500 --> 01:24:32.500] but they're aspects you tend not to pay attention to or you don't pay conscious attention to. [01:24:32.500 --> 01:24:45.500] The rubber ball theory is about how to listen to someone with your ears, with your mind, and with your insides. [01:24:45.500 --> 01:24:55.500] Yes, some of the most important skills were never taught in school, right, or by caregivers, and listening is one of them for sure. [01:24:55.500 --> 01:24:58.500] No, I've never heard this taught anywhere. [01:24:58.500 --> 01:25:03.500] I dug this out of neuro-linguistic programming. [01:25:03.500 --> 01:25:06.500] This is actually part of its original. [01:25:06.500 --> 01:25:16.500] The therapeutic metaphor is not original, but the fact that emotions are not nouns, they're verbs. [01:25:16.500 --> 01:25:22.500] That's something that grew out of 30 years of research in psychology. [01:25:22.500 --> 01:25:31.500] I studied most of the popular psychologies back in the 70s, and it was clear they were all a mess. [01:25:31.500 --> 01:25:33.500] They didn't know what they were talking about. [01:25:33.500 --> 01:25:36.500] I got out of the military, and I was pretty screwed up. [01:25:36.500 --> 01:25:38.500] I did something really bad one day. [01:25:38.500 --> 01:25:43.500] I jerked a guy up like a rag doll and beat him up something awful. [01:25:43.500 --> 01:25:47.500] His wife hit me across the back of the head with a two-by-four and broke it. [01:25:47.500 --> 01:25:50.500] Broke the two-by-four, not my head. [01:25:50.500 --> 01:25:52.500] It was a really crappy two-by-four. [01:25:52.500 --> 01:25:54.500] If it hadn't been, she'd have probably killed me. [01:25:54.500 --> 01:26:00.500] But when I looked up at her, she had this look of mortal terror on her face. [01:26:00.500 --> 01:26:04.500] I had just snatched her husband up like a rag doll and was working him over. [01:26:04.500 --> 01:26:08.500] She hit me with a two-by-four, and it seemingly had no effect. [01:26:08.500 --> 01:26:11.500] And when I looked up at her, she was terrified. [01:26:11.500 --> 01:26:20.500] And when I saw that look in her face, I thought, my father would roll over in his grave, [01:26:20.500 --> 01:26:26.500] that I put a woman in a position that she feared for her life from me. [01:26:26.500 --> 01:26:28.500] So I went to my brother-in-law. [01:26:28.500 --> 01:26:31.500] We grew up best friends and then married sisters. [01:26:31.500 --> 01:26:35.500] And we sat across the table from him, and I said, Gary, you know I was crazy. [01:26:35.500 --> 01:26:37.500] You see, I knew. [01:26:37.500 --> 01:26:38.500] Well, damn it. [01:26:38.500 --> 01:26:40.500] Why didn't you tell me? [01:26:40.500 --> 01:26:48.500] He leaned across the table, looked me right in the eye, and he said, I did, asshole. [01:26:48.500 --> 01:26:52.500] And that was intriguing. [01:26:52.500 --> 01:26:56.500] Here I was, a fully functioning adult in my native culture. [01:26:56.500 --> 01:26:58.500] I spoke the language. [01:26:58.500 --> 01:27:01.500] What was the problem? [01:27:01.500 --> 01:27:05.500] I was crazy, but it wasn't crazy in my conscious awareness. [01:27:05.500 --> 01:27:08.500] I was crazy somewhere else. [01:27:08.500 --> 01:27:18.500] And neither he nor anyone else around me knew how to talk to me on the level of where my crazy was. [01:27:18.500 --> 01:27:25.500] The rubber ball theory is about how to talk to people where their crazy is. [01:27:25.500 --> 01:27:28.500] Where do you think your crazy was? [01:27:28.500 --> 01:27:30.500] Say that again? [01:27:30.500 --> 01:27:37.500] Where do you think your crazy was at that time, looking back? [01:27:37.500 --> 01:27:39.500] I still, I couldn't understand that. [01:27:39.500 --> 01:27:40.500] Could you understand? [01:27:40.500 --> 01:27:41.500] I'm having a little trouble with fidelity. [01:27:41.500 --> 01:27:42.500] Yes. [01:27:42.500 --> 01:27:46.500] She's asking you, where did you think your crazy was at that time? [01:27:46.500 --> 01:27:49.500] Looking back, where do you think it was? [01:27:49.500 --> 01:27:54.500] I was, when I came back from Vietnam, I was broken. [01:27:54.500 --> 01:27:58.500] Most everybody that comes back from combat is broken. [01:27:58.500 --> 01:28:02.500] I was addicted to adrenaline. [01:28:02.500 --> 01:28:05.500] I missed it. [01:28:05.500 --> 01:28:14.500] I tell about being shot off a Jeep, spotting incoming, and I dared them to shoot me off that Jeep. [01:28:14.500 --> 01:28:16.500] And they accommodated me. [01:28:16.500 --> 01:28:21.500] Pieces of Jeep hit me in the butt and drove me head first into a revetment wall. [01:28:21.500 --> 01:28:23.500] And I fell down behind the Jeep. [01:28:23.500 --> 01:28:25.500] And these guys were tearing up that Jeep. [01:28:25.500 --> 01:28:32.500] We backed the Jeep into our revetment wall so if we took fire, we could get behind it and the block would tend to protect us. [01:28:32.500 --> 01:28:39.500] But while I was laying there, and there had to be two snipers out there because they were pouring rounds in on us, [01:28:39.500 --> 01:28:43.500] I was terrified and I was in horrible pain. [01:28:43.500 --> 01:28:50.500] But that was the most exciting moment of my life. [01:28:50.500 --> 01:28:54.500] I never felt more alive than in that moment. [01:28:54.500 --> 01:28:59.500] We were shot down three times in the C-130 Hertz. [01:28:59.500 --> 01:29:06.500] It's about 10 seconds of high drama than an hour or so of terror wondering if you're going to die or not. [01:29:06.500 --> 01:29:11.500] But those were the most exciting things that ever happened. [01:29:11.500 --> 01:29:13.500] It was wild. It was crazy. [01:29:13.500 --> 01:29:17.500] I came back and all of it was gone. [01:29:17.500 --> 01:29:24.500] And I looked around and all the people were the same and the places were the same. [01:29:24.500 --> 01:29:30.500] But something in the back of my mind said something is horribly wrong. [01:29:30.500 --> 01:29:33.500] One day I went into work. I was in Chicago at the time. [01:29:33.500 --> 01:29:39.500] Packed up my tools, went home, threw some clothes in the car, and headed south. [01:29:39.500 --> 01:29:44.500] When I got to Key West, I was frustrated that I had ran out of road. [01:29:44.500 --> 01:29:48.500] I didn't feel like I was far enough away. [01:29:48.500 --> 01:29:53.500] And I didn't ever go home until 40 years later when I went back to take care of my mom. [01:29:53.500 --> 01:29:56.500] Hang on. I'm about to go to our sponsors. [01:29:56.500 --> 01:30:00.500] I've got a point here. We'll be right back. [01:30:00.500 --> 01:30:04.500] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:04.500 --> 01:30:11.500] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.500 --> 01:30:15.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.500 --> 01:30:17.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.500 --> 01:30:21.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.500 --> 01:30:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.500 --> 01:30:31.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.500 --> 01:30:34.500] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.500 --> 01:30:37.500] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.500 --> 01:30:41.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.500 --> 01:30:45.500] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.500 --> 01:30:49.500] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power [01:30:49.500 --> 01:30:52.500] by going into your home, too, with a smart grid. [01:30:52.500 --> 01:30:55.500] So they're installing a national network of smart meters [01:30:55.500 --> 01:30:59.500] to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.500 --> 01:31:03.500] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast. [01:31:03.500 --> 01:31:06.500] If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:06.500 --> 01:31:08.500] hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.500 --> 01:31:12.500] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [01:31:12.500 --> 01:31:15.500] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:15.500 --> 01:31:18.500] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.500 --> 01:31:21.500] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? [01:31:21.500 --> 01:31:23.500] There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.500 --> 01:31:26.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, [01:31:26.500 --> 01:31:30.500] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.500 --> 01:31:36.500] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.500 --> 01:31:38.500] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.500 --> 01:31:43.500] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.500 --> 01:31:46.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives [01:31:46.500 --> 01:31:49.500] and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.500 --> 01:31:50.500] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.500 --> 01:31:51.500] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.500 --> 01:31:52.500] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.500 --> 01:31:53.500] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.500 --> 01:31:55.500] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.500 --> 01:31:58.500] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.500 --> 01:32:02.500] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.500 --> 01:32:05.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.500 --> 01:32:08.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:08.500 --> 01:32:10.500] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.500 --> 01:32:13.500] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.500 --> 01:32:15.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place. [01:32:15.500 --> 01:32:17.500] The right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:17.500 --> 01:32:20.500] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.500 --> 01:32:22.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:32:22.500 --> 01:32:25.500] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:25.500 --> 01:32:28.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:28.500 --> 01:32:31.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.500 --> 01:32:33.500] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:33.500 --> 01:32:35.500] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.500 --> 01:32:37.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:37.500 --> 01:32:41.500] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.500 --> 01:32:43.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.500 --> 01:32:45.500] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.500 --> 01:32:48.500] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.500 --> 01:32:51.500] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.500 --> 01:32:53.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:53.500 --> 01:32:56.500] from ruleoflawradio.com, order your copy today, [01:32:56.500 --> 01:33:02.500] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.500 --> 01:33:05.500] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [01:33:05.500 --> 01:33:13.500] logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:35.500 --> 01:33:42.500] Okay, we are back. [01:33:42.500 --> 01:33:45.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [01:33:45.500 --> 01:33:49.500] and we're talking to Elise in Arizona. [01:33:49.500 --> 01:33:53.500] Elise, everything I do is deliberate. [01:33:53.500 --> 01:33:57.500] I don't have the luxury of doing what I want to. [01:33:57.500 --> 01:34:02.500] When I'm dealing with public officials, I'm always very careful. [01:34:02.500 --> 01:34:07.500] I know exactly what I'm doing, and that keeps me out of trouble. [01:34:07.500 --> 01:34:10.500] It keeps me from being led down rabbit holes, [01:34:10.500 --> 01:34:15.500] and it keeps me from responding inappropriately. [01:34:15.500 --> 01:34:19.500] When I deal with these public officials, I give them opportunity [01:34:19.500 --> 01:34:24.500] to screw things up, and when they screw things up, [01:34:24.500 --> 01:34:31.500] I try to give them a response or a reaction that they don't anticipate. [01:34:31.500 --> 01:34:39.500] For the purpose of taking internal mental response systems that we have [01:34:39.500 --> 01:34:44.500] that tend to lead to negative outcomes. [01:34:44.500 --> 01:34:49.500] I mean, who here hasn't found themselves reacting [01:34:49.500 --> 01:34:54.500] and responding in a way that leads to bad outcomes [01:34:54.500 --> 01:35:00.500] and finding themselves in those situations over and over and over? [01:35:00.500 --> 01:35:05.500] You get into one of those situations, and if someone were to be able [01:35:05.500 --> 01:35:08.500] to hit a stop button and ask you to look at it, [01:35:08.500 --> 01:35:14.500] you could pretty well predict exactly where this is going [01:35:14.500 --> 01:35:18.500] and know exactly how it's going to end. [01:35:18.500 --> 01:35:21.500] Mama's had a great day at the office. [01:35:21.500 --> 01:35:23.500] I'm sorry, I'm getting this all backwards. [01:35:23.500 --> 01:35:25.500] She's had a great day. She's cooked a great meal. [01:35:25.500 --> 01:35:27.500] Papa's had a hard day at the office. [01:35:27.500 --> 01:35:29.500] He's tired. He's miserably grumpy. [01:35:29.500 --> 01:35:31.500] Mama meets him at the door, gives him a big hug, [01:35:31.500 --> 01:35:35.500] and he just grunts and drops down at the table [01:35:35.500 --> 01:35:39.500] and flops some potatoes on his plate and says, [01:35:39.500 --> 01:35:43.500] Pass the damn gravy. [01:35:43.500 --> 01:35:46.500] Well, come on. [01:35:46.500 --> 01:35:52.500] What's Mama going to feel like doing with that gravy in this country, [01:35:52.500 --> 01:35:55.500] in this culture? [01:35:55.500 --> 01:36:01.500] You can pretty well predict what Mama's going to feel like doing with that gravy. [01:36:01.500 --> 01:36:05.500] And what happens if she bounces the gravy boat off his head? [01:36:05.500 --> 01:36:09.500] He says this. She says that. He says this. [01:36:09.500 --> 01:36:11.500] She winds up in her bedroom crying. [01:36:11.500 --> 01:36:14.500] He winds up in the den sulking. [01:36:14.500 --> 01:36:17.500] Been there, done that, over and over. [01:36:17.500 --> 01:36:22.500] But somehow we get caught in these negative routines [01:36:22.500 --> 01:36:28.500] and just don't have a way out. [01:36:28.500 --> 01:36:32.500] The rubber ball theory is a way out. [01:36:32.500 --> 01:36:36.500] So let's say in this case he says pass the damn gravy, [01:36:36.500 --> 01:36:39.500] and Mama's in an especially good mood. [01:36:39.500 --> 01:36:43.500] And she realizes, if I bounce the gravy boat off his head, [01:36:43.500 --> 01:36:45.500] we're going to have this argument. [01:36:45.500 --> 01:36:48.500] We're both going to wind up miserable. [01:36:48.500 --> 01:36:50.500] So instead of throwing the big gravy boat at him, [01:36:50.500 --> 01:36:53.500] she pretends like he asked her real nice, [01:36:53.500 --> 01:36:56.500] will you please pass some of that delicious gravy, [01:36:56.500 --> 01:37:00.500] and responds to that instead. [01:37:00.500 --> 01:37:03.500] Well, that's a much nicer response, [01:37:03.500 --> 01:37:07.500] but Papa's sitting over here thinking, [01:37:07.500 --> 01:37:10.500] something is wrong with that. [01:37:10.500 --> 01:37:14.500] I'm not sure exactly what it is. [01:37:14.500 --> 01:37:17.500] She just got his attention. [01:37:17.500 --> 01:37:22.500] She got his attention on a level that's outside his conscious awareness. [01:37:22.500 --> 01:37:23.500] She did it. [01:37:23.500 --> 01:37:26.500] He's just not sure how she did it. [01:37:26.500 --> 01:37:32.500] So what's he likely to do next? [01:37:32.500 --> 01:37:35.500] What the hell is wrong with this gravy? [01:37:35.500 --> 01:37:42.500] He's going to try to elicit the comfortable response that he knows how to deal with. [01:37:42.500 --> 01:37:45.500] He's going to try harder. [01:37:45.500 --> 01:37:47.500] That's what people do. [01:37:47.500 --> 01:37:59.500] The rubber ball theory is about how to recognize internal responses before they happen. [01:37:59.500 --> 01:38:01.500] When I get in front of these public officials, [01:38:01.500 --> 01:38:06.500] primarily what I'm doing is giving them responses they don't expect. [01:38:06.500 --> 01:38:11.500] I try to make their expectations come false. [01:38:11.500 --> 01:38:15.500] I tell stories about doing it where it's really obvious. [01:38:15.500 --> 01:38:21.500] Have you heard my hearing aid story? [01:38:21.500 --> 01:38:25.500] I heard it last night. [01:38:25.500 --> 01:38:30.500] I've got another one where I told a prosecuting attorney, [01:38:30.500 --> 01:38:36.500] if you'll just bend over, I'll pull that wild hair out of your go behind for you. [01:38:36.500 --> 01:38:40.500] So we can treat one another like mature and responsible adults. [01:38:40.500 --> 01:38:44.500] Now, I was not just screwing with him. [01:38:44.500 --> 01:38:50.500] Now, it was fun and I did enjoy doing it, but I was doing something very specific. [01:38:50.500 --> 01:38:57.500] And once you've read the rubber ball theory twice, you will know exactly what I was doing. [01:38:57.500 --> 01:39:02.500] And then when I start telling these stories of what I do to public officials, [01:39:02.500 --> 01:39:08.500] you will recognize that there's something very, very specific going on there. [01:39:08.500 --> 01:39:18.500] And all of my reactions and responses to them are designed to interrupt their internal expectations, [01:39:18.500 --> 01:39:22.500] force their expectations to come false. [01:39:22.500 --> 01:39:26.500] Have you ever had something happen and you were just flabbergasted, [01:39:26.500 --> 01:39:35.500] you're just stopped in your tracks, had no idea what to do, you're just stunned? [01:39:35.500 --> 01:39:43.500] That's a tool I use that's designed to do that to people on a very subtle level. [01:39:43.500 --> 01:39:47.500] If they catch me doing it, it won't work as well. [01:39:47.500 --> 01:39:52.500] It's not manipulation, not directly. [01:39:52.500 --> 01:39:57.500] I don't manipulate people into doing one thing or another. [01:39:57.500 --> 01:40:01.500] I give them responses they don't see coming. [01:40:01.500 --> 01:40:05.500] So their inner mind pulls up this automatic pattern. [01:40:05.500 --> 01:40:09.500] A policeman pulls somebody over, he's pulled over a thousand people, [01:40:09.500 --> 01:40:13.500] he goes through the same routines all the time. [01:40:13.500 --> 01:40:18.500] The policeman pulls me over and he looks and sees I don't have a registration on my window. [01:40:18.500 --> 01:40:21.500] I said, Mr. Kelton, you don't have a registration on your window. [01:40:21.500 --> 01:40:23.500] I said, no, I don't. [01:40:23.500 --> 01:40:26.500] He said, is your car, is your automobile registered? [01:40:26.500 --> 01:40:28.500] Oh yeah, that's your register. [01:40:28.500 --> 01:40:31.500] Would you have a registration? [01:40:31.500 --> 01:40:33.500] We asked right here in the glove compartment. [01:40:33.500 --> 01:40:35.500] Why didn't you put it on the window? [01:40:35.500 --> 01:40:37.500] I didn't want to. [01:40:37.500 --> 01:40:38.500] Well, will you show it to me? [01:40:38.500 --> 01:40:40.500] No. [01:40:40.500 --> 01:40:42.500] Well, if you don't show it to me, I'll have to write you a ticket. [01:40:42.500 --> 01:40:44.500] Oh, okay, okay, go ahead, that'll work. [01:40:44.500 --> 01:40:46.500] Go ahead, write me a ticket. [01:40:46.500 --> 01:40:50.500] You know, he's standing there thinking, what the hell is going on here? [01:40:50.500 --> 01:40:54.500] Nothing here is going the way I expect it to. [01:40:54.500 --> 01:40:58.500] I'm not manipulating, not directly. [01:40:58.500 --> 01:41:02.500] All I'm doing is interrupting his internal expectations. [01:41:02.500 --> 01:41:06.500] And when one of your internal expectations get interrupted, [01:41:06.500 --> 01:41:13.500] whatever automatic pattern your mind triggered, it gets broken. [01:41:13.500 --> 01:41:18.500] It takes it from an automatic pattern and pushes it up into the conscious awareness. [01:41:18.500 --> 01:41:24.500] And the conscious part says, whoa, wait a minute, that did not work. [01:41:24.500 --> 01:41:28.500] You need to look at this and see what happened and what went wrong [01:41:28.500 --> 01:41:32.500] and fix it so that don't happen to you again. [01:41:32.500 --> 01:41:36.500] Everything up, pattern interruption. [01:41:36.500 --> 01:41:44.500] A bar grievous against a lawyer is only really effective when they don't see it coming. [01:41:44.500 --> 01:41:50.500] Or when they do see it coming and realize that there's not anything they can do about it. [01:41:50.500 --> 01:41:55.500] It forces them to go inside and find different behaviors, [01:41:55.500 --> 01:42:00.500] find ways of making that not happen. [01:42:00.500 --> 01:42:04.500] Tina, yeah, she's still on. [01:42:04.500 --> 01:42:12.500] Tina, tell Elise about how you manipulated a judge to make the judge like you [01:42:12.500 --> 01:42:15.500] and a clerk, when the clerk was giving you a lot of trouble, [01:42:15.500 --> 01:42:19.500] you filed a professional conduct complaint against her. [01:42:19.500 --> 01:42:27.500] Tell her how you got her to treat you nice. [01:42:27.500 --> 01:42:30.500] Are you there, Tina? [01:42:30.500 --> 01:42:31.500] Yes. [01:42:31.500 --> 01:42:32.500] Okay, maybe I'll put it. [01:42:32.500 --> 01:42:33.500] Yes, I'm here. [01:42:33.500 --> 01:42:40.500] No, I keep it on mute when I'm not on so you don't get background noise. [01:42:40.500 --> 01:42:48.500] Yes, I filed a professional conduct complaint against the clerk when she was really rude [01:42:48.500 --> 01:42:56.500] and tried to stop me from filing a motion, you know, against this firm. [01:42:56.500 --> 01:43:00.500] And she said, well, you know, it was three weeks after I sent it in. [01:43:00.500 --> 01:43:02.500] And she said, well, it's the wrong venue. [01:43:02.500 --> 01:43:09.500] And I said, I think that if it's the wrong venue, they have the opportunity to remove it. [01:43:09.500 --> 01:43:12.500] Well, you know, you'd have to pay a second time. [01:43:12.500 --> 01:43:14.500] And they said, no, I want this file. [01:43:14.500 --> 01:43:21.500] So I filed this professional conduct complaint on Randy's suggestion. [01:43:21.500 --> 01:43:28.500] And the next time I called in, I got very good service, which is amazing. [01:43:28.500 --> 01:43:29.500] Pardon? [01:43:29.500 --> 01:43:31.500] Are you on that Bluetooth? [01:43:31.500 --> 01:43:32.500] Oh, yes. [01:43:32.500 --> 01:43:33.500] Hold on. [01:43:33.500 --> 01:43:34.500] Let me try that. [01:43:34.500 --> 01:43:36.500] Hold on one second. [01:43:36.500 --> 01:43:39.500] You know, you hate that Bluetooth. [01:43:39.500 --> 01:43:47.500] So then the next time she got great service, so I filed a professional conduct compliment. [01:43:47.500 --> 01:43:50.500] And Randy's running me off the cliff. [01:43:50.500 --> 01:43:51.500] Yes. [01:43:51.500 --> 01:43:53.500] I figured you had just enough time. [01:43:53.500 --> 01:43:54.500] But hang on. [01:43:54.500 --> 01:43:56.500] We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:43:56.500 --> 01:44:00.500] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.500 --> 01:44:04.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved [01:44:04.500 --> 01:44:06.500] except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.500 --> 01:44:09.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:09.500 --> 01:44:11.500] And it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.500 --> 01:44:17.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. 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[01:44:59.500 --> 01:45:06.500] Now, are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:06.500 --> 01:45:09.500] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:09.500 --> 01:45:17.500] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:17.500 --> 01:45:21.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:21.500 --> 01:45:25.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:25.500 --> 01:45:30.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:30.500 --> 01:45:36.500] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:36.500 --> 01:45:41.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:41.500 --> 01:45:45.500] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.500 --> 01:45:51.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:51.500 --> 01:45:58.500] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, [01:45:58.500 --> 01:46:22.500] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:28.500 --> 01:46:44.500] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [01:46:44.500 --> 01:46:48.500] and we're talking to Elise and Tina in California. [01:46:48.500 --> 01:46:53.500] Elise, I'm sorry, Tina, go ahead with the clerk story. [01:46:53.500 --> 01:46:59.500] Yes, so after I filed a professional conduct complaint, [01:46:59.500 --> 01:47:08.500] and I spelled it out very carefully about the day I came and deposited the motion in the courtroom [01:47:08.500 --> 01:47:15.500] and my follow-up calls that got me nowhere, so just listed it and said this is unacceptable, [01:47:15.500 --> 01:47:19.500] and got the greatest service after that with this lady, [01:47:19.500 --> 01:47:23.500] and she was absolutely beyond helpful. [01:47:23.500 --> 01:47:28.500] I mean, it was night and day, so I filed a professional conduct compliment [01:47:28.500 --> 01:47:33.500] and asked them to put it in her file, and I said this is the way, you know, [01:47:33.500 --> 01:47:40.500] the public expects the courtroom clerks to act towards them. [01:47:40.500 --> 01:47:46.500] And from then on, it was just even more over-the-top helpful. [01:47:46.500 --> 01:47:52.500] Whenever I call in and ask for her, she's crazy, you know, what can I do for you, everything. [01:47:52.500 --> 01:47:56.500] I mean, it was amazing. [01:47:56.500 --> 01:48:00.500] And you also said to a judge something similar. [01:48:00.500 --> 01:48:10.500] Well, I did that to actually the judge in one of Brett's cases where he was helping someone, [01:48:10.500 --> 01:48:16.500] and Brett said he was bragging about, you know, the letter he got, [01:48:16.500 --> 01:48:23.500] because he did treat this, you know, Brett's friend with Miss Patty, I think it was, yes. [01:48:23.500 --> 01:48:25.500] He treated her with respect. [01:48:25.500 --> 01:48:27.500] He was kind to her. [01:48:27.500 --> 01:48:30.500] He, you know, he adhered to the judicial canons of ethics. [01:48:30.500 --> 01:48:37.500] Now, he didn't eventually rule for her, but he was incredibly respectful to her, [01:48:37.500 --> 01:48:44.500] and he told the attorney off, so I wrote a compliment to him, and, you know, [01:48:44.500 --> 01:48:51.500] it was very well received, and I did the same thing to an attorney that had helped me, [01:48:51.500 --> 01:48:56.500] helped the group of us get a lot of money back, and she was just incredible, [01:48:56.500 --> 01:49:04.500] and I sent a letter of compliment to her bosses, and they were all thrilled. [01:49:04.500 --> 01:49:07.500] So I will complain when complaint is due. [01:49:07.500 --> 01:49:14.500] I will complain, and I will file law grievances and judicial complaints. [01:49:14.500 --> 01:49:20.500] But we should also be just as quick to file a complimentary letter. [01:49:20.500 --> 01:49:28.500] This is all about giving public officials reason to conduct themselves in ways [01:49:28.500 --> 01:49:31.500] that are more professional and honest and even. [01:49:31.500 --> 01:49:33.500] We're not trying to curry favor. [01:49:33.500 --> 01:49:37.500] And I'm actually not trying to change people. [01:49:37.500 --> 01:49:43.500] I'm trying to give people an opportunity to change themselves. [01:49:43.500 --> 01:49:49.500] Yes, it's, you're offering them a gift. [01:49:49.500 --> 01:49:51.500] Exactly. [01:49:51.500 --> 01:49:54.500] If somebody, you know, I had a bailiff drag me down the stairs, [01:49:54.500 --> 01:49:57.500] knock me down, break my elbow. [01:49:57.500 --> 01:50:00.500] That really hurt. [01:50:00.500 --> 01:50:05.500] But he didn't mean to knock me down, break my elbow. [01:50:05.500 --> 01:50:08.500] He shouldn't have pushed me when he shoved me out the door, [01:50:08.500 --> 01:50:12.500] but I had kind of put him over the edge. [01:50:12.500 --> 01:50:15.500] I looked at how can I, you know, I could sue the bailiff, [01:50:15.500 --> 01:50:23.500] and I would have won that case easily, but I ruined his 20-year career. [01:50:23.500 --> 01:50:28.500] I am not going to try to ruin someone's career. [01:50:28.500 --> 01:50:34.500] That's not, I don't care how mean and nasty they are. [01:50:34.500 --> 01:50:38.500] I couldn't frame that in a way that would lead me toward my intended outcome, [01:50:38.500 --> 01:50:42.500] which was to place every judge in a country in a position such that [01:50:42.500 --> 01:50:46.500] when they step up behind the bench, look out across the bar at the gallery, [01:50:46.500 --> 01:50:50.500] I want them wondering which one, which one of those scoundrels sitting out there [01:50:50.500 --> 01:50:53.500] waiting for me to render a ruling they don't like [01:50:53.500 --> 01:50:57.500] so he can run down the grand jury and try to get me indicted. [01:50:57.500 --> 01:51:00.500] That's my purpose. [01:51:00.500 --> 01:51:04.500] Thomas Jefferson said when the people fear the government, there is tyranny, [01:51:04.500 --> 01:51:08.500] and the government fears the people, there is liberty. [01:51:08.500 --> 01:51:11.500] And that's my purpose. [01:51:11.500 --> 01:51:15.500] Going after this bailiff would not lead me toward that ultimate outcome, [01:51:15.500 --> 01:51:17.500] so I didn't do it. [01:51:17.500 --> 01:51:22.500] Turned out to be the most powerful thing I did in Wise County. [01:51:22.500 --> 01:51:25.500] A lot of respect. [01:51:25.500 --> 01:51:28.500] And then they realized I was the real deal. [01:51:28.500 --> 01:51:33.500] And after that, everybody was very careful with me. [01:51:33.500 --> 01:51:36.500] That's what I want. [01:51:36.500 --> 01:51:38.500] Be careful of the word he is in Wise County. [01:51:38.500 --> 01:51:41.500] In fact, Kelton SOB comes in your office, watch out. [01:51:41.500 --> 01:51:43.500] He's just trying to get you to do something, [01:51:43.500 --> 01:51:45.500] so he can call the police to try to get you arrested. [01:51:45.500 --> 01:51:48.500] That's right, I am. [01:51:48.500 --> 01:51:51.500] So don't screw with me. [01:51:51.500 --> 01:51:58.500] And when I go into public offices in Wise County, I get treated very well. [01:51:58.500 --> 01:52:01.500] I know that those public officials know how to treat people with dignity [01:52:01.500 --> 01:52:06.500] and respect because I put them in a position to where they have to. [01:52:06.500 --> 01:52:08.500] And when they treat me with dignity and respect, [01:52:08.500 --> 01:52:17.500] they won't find anyone that's nicer and more appreciative than me. [01:52:17.500 --> 01:52:20.500] Does that make sense, Elise? [01:52:20.500 --> 01:52:22.500] It all makes sense. [01:52:22.500 --> 01:52:24.500] And I adore you. [01:52:24.500 --> 01:52:26.500] And I'm grateful for you. [01:52:26.500 --> 01:52:30.500] And anyway, I adore you. [01:52:30.500 --> 01:52:35.500] And thank you for going inward and looking in the mirror [01:52:35.500 --> 01:52:41.500] and shifting yourself and growing and maturing and evolving. [01:52:41.500 --> 01:52:43.500] I thank you for that. [01:52:43.500 --> 01:52:45.500] It is our job. [01:52:45.500 --> 01:52:48.500] I'm an old guy. [01:52:48.500 --> 01:52:55.500] It's my job to bring wisdom to my children. [01:52:55.500 --> 01:52:57.500] It's all of our jobs to keep growing. [01:52:57.500 --> 01:53:08.500] And when you're doing the right things for the right reason, it just feels good. [01:53:08.500 --> 01:53:13.500] Now I've taken my lumps, three dislocated ribs, two broken collar bones, [01:53:13.500 --> 01:53:21.500] a broken elbow and a tooth knocked out, and various other contusions and lacerations. [01:53:21.500 --> 01:53:28.500] But in doing all of that, I've learned better ways of dealing with public officials. [01:53:28.500 --> 01:53:36.500] And those ways are what I try to demonstrate on the show I do and on the telegram site. [01:53:36.500 --> 01:53:44.500] And the first rule is if someone really pisses you off, stop. [01:53:44.500 --> 01:53:46.500] Don't do anything. [01:53:46.500 --> 01:53:47.500] Get the heck out of there. [01:53:47.500 --> 01:53:49.500] Shut your mouth. [01:53:49.500 --> 01:53:51.500] Don't do anything. [01:53:51.500 --> 01:53:52.500] Give it a couple days. [01:53:52.500 --> 01:53:55.500] Come back. [01:53:55.500 --> 01:54:06.500] Never, ever allow yourself to do anything out of anger or avarice. [01:54:06.500 --> 01:54:08.500] Back up. [01:54:08.500 --> 01:54:14.500] Figure out what can I do that this person will not expect [01:54:14.500 --> 01:54:19.500] and that will give them reason to behave in a different way the next time. [01:54:19.500 --> 01:54:26.500] I'm in the courthouse in Austin, and I asked to tell this beta, [01:54:26.500 --> 01:54:29.500] go up and get this clerk and bring her down so I can talk to her [01:54:29.500 --> 01:54:31.500] because I'm not going up there without a mask. [01:54:31.500 --> 01:54:38.500] And this beta looked up at me and he said, is that an order? [01:54:38.500 --> 01:54:40.500] I thought a minute. [01:54:40.500 --> 01:54:44.500] Then I said, well, yeah, as a matter of fact, it is. [01:54:44.500 --> 01:54:45.500] Short guy. [01:54:45.500 --> 01:54:51.500] He looked up and he said, well, how's that worked out for you so far? [01:54:51.500 --> 01:54:52.500] Pretty good. [01:54:52.500 --> 01:54:54.500] You want to test it? [01:54:54.500 --> 01:54:56.500] He said, yes. [01:54:56.500 --> 01:54:57.500] Wait right there. [01:54:57.500 --> 01:54:59.500] Don't go anywhere. [01:54:59.500 --> 01:55:01.500] Somebody's going to want to talk to you. [01:55:01.500 --> 01:55:07.500] And I took out my cell phone,.911, asked for an officer to be sent out [01:55:07.500 --> 01:55:12.500] to arrest this guy for official oppression. [01:55:12.500 --> 01:55:18.500] That was so much fun. [01:55:18.500 --> 01:55:20.500] But I could hear you. [01:55:20.500 --> 01:55:23.500] He's not going to do that stuff again. [01:55:23.500 --> 01:55:28.500] And he did not see that coming. [01:55:28.500 --> 01:55:32.500] He first told me you can't use a cell phone in this courthouse. [01:55:32.500 --> 01:55:37.500] I said, are you going to interfere with a 9-1-1 call? [01:55:37.500 --> 01:55:42.500] And you could see his atom apple go up and down. [01:55:42.500 --> 01:55:48.500] And then a couple other days come and got him and got him away from me. [01:55:48.500 --> 01:55:49.500] They knew who I was. [01:55:49.500 --> 01:55:51.500] He didn't. [01:55:51.500 --> 01:55:57.500] But I can guarantee you he will remember that experience in his conscious [01:55:57.500 --> 01:56:02.500] awareness till the day he dies. [01:56:02.500 --> 01:56:06.500] He got himself a pattern interruption. [01:56:06.500 --> 01:56:11.500] He got a response from me that he did not expect and did not know how to [01:56:11.500 --> 01:56:14.500] deal with. [01:56:14.500 --> 01:56:17.500] Mostly that's what I do. [01:56:17.500 --> 01:56:21.500] If someone's acting inappropriately, I want to give them a response that [01:56:21.500 --> 01:56:22.500] they don't expect. [01:56:22.500 --> 01:56:30.500] And all of the techniques I talk about on the radio are about how to do [01:56:30.500 --> 01:56:37.500] that without having to understand all the deep-seated psychological basis [01:56:37.500 --> 01:56:39.500] of it. [01:56:39.500 --> 01:56:43.500] Try to develop some tools like never ask a public official to do anything [01:56:43.500 --> 01:56:46.500] you're actually wanting to do. [01:56:46.500 --> 01:56:51.500] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not [01:56:51.500 --> 01:56:54.500] compel them to do. [01:56:54.500 --> 01:56:59.500] That way when you don't do it, boom, you get hammered. [01:56:59.500 --> 01:57:06.500] All these stories I tell are carefully crafted to install seemingly minor [01:57:06.500 --> 01:57:14.500] behaviors that will turn out to be powerful tools you can use to not just [01:57:14.500 --> 01:57:22.500] keep from being manipulated yourself, but to train your public officials. [01:57:22.500 --> 01:57:27.500] The last thing, the worst thing to happen is to have somebody do something [01:57:27.500 --> 01:57:31.500] you don't see coming and you don't have any way of dealing with. [01:57:31.500 --> 01:57:37.500] That forces you to go inside and carefully examine your behavior. [01:57:37.500 --> 01:57:47.500] And when you do that carefully, people will make remarkable changes. [01:57:47.500 --> 01:57:51.500] They, for the most part, will have no idea you had anything to do with it, [01:57:51.500 --> 01:57:59.500] so the change they make can be theirs and be congruent to them. [01:57:59.500 --> 01:58:03.500] Never do anything malicious and mean-spirited. [01:58:03.500 --> 01:58:05.500] Catch you every time. [01:58:05.500 --> 01:58:08.500] People will catch you if you try to manipulate people. [01:58:08.500 --> 01:58:11.500] All you do is interrupt them and give them an opportunity to find new [01:58:11.500 --> 01:58:12.500] behaviors. [01:58:12.500 --> 01:58:14.500] That's what I do. [01:58:14.500 --> 01:58:17.500] That's the main thing I'm trying to teach. [01:58:17.500 --> 01:58:24.500] And you will find that doing this, you know, I never file against a lawyer [01:58:24.500 --> 01:58:25.500] because I'm mad at him. [01:58:25.500 --> 01:58:30.500] If I'm mad at a lawyer, I'm not filing against him. [01:58:30.500 --> 01:58:33.500] I only file against him to help him change his behavior. [01:58:33.500 --> 01:58:36.500] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:58:36.500 --> 01:58:38.500] We are out of time. [01:58:38.500 --> 01:58:43.500] Sorry, Tina, we didn't get back to you, but we'll be back next week. [01:58:43.500 --> 01:58:45.500] Same time, same station. [01:58:45.500 --> 01:58:47.500] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:47.500 --> 01:59:16.500] Good night. [01:59:17.500 --> 01:59:19.500] We'll see you next week. [01:59:47.500 --> 01:59:49.500] We'll see you next week.