[00:00.000 --> 00:05.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.800 --> 00:09.460] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.460 --> 00:10.880] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.880 --> 00:14.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.860 --> 00:16.900] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.900 --> 00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.500 --> 00:22.100] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.100 --> 00:26.860] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.860 --> 00:31.920] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:31.920 --> 00:34.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.640 --> 00:38.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:38.920 --> 00:42.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.440 --> 00:44.440] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.440 --> 00:47.740] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.740 --> 00:50.800] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.800 --> 00:54.480] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.480 --> 01:01.520] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.520 --> 01:03.040] and R for religion. [01:03.040 --> 01:07.000] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.000 --> 01:10.400] assembly, and religion, but petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.400 --> 01:14.520] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.520 --> 01:18.040] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.040 --> 01:20.800] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.800 --> 01:31.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.160 --> 01:34.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.800 --> 01:38.240] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.240 --> 01:39.680] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.680 --> 01:43.620] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.620 --> 01:46.760] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.760 --> 01:48.360] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.360 --> 01:51.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.960 --> 01:56.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.760 --> 02:01.880] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.880 --> 02:04.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.520 --> 02:08.800] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.800 --> 02:12.360] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.360 --> 02:15.920] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.920 --> 02:20.280] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.280 --> 02:22.360] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.360 --> 02:26.880] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.880 --> 02:30.680] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.680 --> 02:31.680] Get it? [02:31.680 --> 02:34.000] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.000 --> 02:37.600] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.600 --> 02:43.360] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.360 --> 02:47.920] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:47.920 --> 02:50.560] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.560 --> 02:52.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.520 --> 03:16.120] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:22.520 --> 03:50.320] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, [03:50.320 --> 04:08.160] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [04:08.160 --> 04:34.720] is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which [04:34.720 --> 04:54.200] now appears remote in America, but which is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, [04:54.200 --> 05:14.040] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [05:14.040 --> 05:42.040] is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which [05:42.040 --> 05:43.040] now appears remote in America. [05:43.040 --> 05:44.040] Technique Dr. Mac") [05:44.040 --> 05:45.040] Sure. [05:45.040 --> 05:46.040] I'm Tim Horton and I'm sitting here joining Sean as he discusses Matthew Horton and the [05:46.040 --> 05:47.060] middle practices I was taught there of the first chief just a few years ago, the Principles [05:47.060 --> 05:55.420] of Command that three ideas that I had working as a teacher, a [05:55.420 --> 06:01.940] group leader, Jimasant High School teacher, I've been patients of the 17th Army, both [06:01.940 --> 06:03.800] were white male and female. [06:03.800 --> 06:07.800] I'm going to start out talking about the LegalEarth project. [06:07.800 --> 06:12.280] I've talked about this for a long time and then for a while I stopped talking about it [06:13.480 --> 06:20.040] because I went on to a couple of other things. I went on to a project I'd been working on for [06:20.040 --> 06:28.120] 25 years with my son. Because of the COVID issue, his particular product was [06:28.120 --> 06:38.920] uniquely suited but I missed the window. So I have the piece of equipment finished but I missed my [06:38.920 --> 06:47.240] window to promote it. And then something else come along. I was having a lot of physical issues. I [06:47.240 --> 06:55.800] could literally feel myself circling down the drain. And I came across this stem cell project [06:55.800 --> 07:03.480] and I jumped into it and it got me back on track. It kind of, for the most part, got my brains back. [07:04.520 --> 07:12.200] Now I'm going back to the LegalEarth project. On the Telegram site I posted my white paper [07:13.320 --> 07:20.360] and I'm hoping that all of the listeners who also use the Telegram channels will look on [07:20.360 --> 07:30.680] the the Law Society Randy Kelton channel. And Brett, can I change that name? Can you change [07:30.680 --> 07:38.840] the channel name after you have it up and working? Yeah. I want to take my name off the back of it. [07:38.840 --> 07:49.800] Yeah. I want to do that. Just to Law Society. But anyway, I posted a link to my [07:51.160 --> 07:58.040] white paper on there and I did the white paper in a unique format and I wanted to get some feedback [07:58.040 --> 08:06.760] on how intuitive that format was for people. I built the white paper in a mind map [08:06.760 --> 08:13.240] and I did that because that's the technology I'm using in this [08:14.680 --> 08:23.000] tool I have to capture the expertise of an expert. I spent 15 years working with this particular, [08:23.880 --> 08:30.920] I went through every mind map I could find and I settled down on this one because it has most of the [08:30.920 --> 08:40.760] most of the technology that I need in it. But I'm able to export from this particular [08:43.800 --> 08:52.840] software into an HTML format, a clickable HTML, and when it comes up it gives you a static mind map. [08:52.840 --> 09:00.760] It's static because you can't open and close some of the fields. They're all open all the time, [09:00.760 --> 09:07.960] but if you click on one of them, it will drop down. It has the mind map on the top and below it, [09:07.960 --> 09:20.760] it has everything laid out like a table of contents style presentation. So when you click on one of the [09:20.760 --> 09:30.920] nodes, it will drop you down to the content so you can read what is the explanation behind each one [09:30.920 --> 09:36.440] of the nodes on there. I wanted people to look at it. It is real intuitive for me, but then I've [09:36.440 --> 09:46.280] been working with mind maps for 15 years. So I'm very familiar with mind maps and I wanted to see [09:46.280 --> 09:53.480] how intuitive it was for someone who's never worked with these before. Does that make sense, Brett? [09:56.120 --> 10:02.680] You're trying to see how intuitive it is? Yes, see if people look at it and without... [10:02.680 --> 10:08.520] Makes sense to put it out there for testing? Yeah, I have a little bit of explanation. I did [10:08.520 --> 10:18.040] as little explanation as I could because I wanted to see how intuitive this was. So that, you know, [10:18.040 --> 10:24.040] I just, the only instructions are for every place there is a node in the mind map, if you'll click [10:24.040 --> 10:29.880] on it, it'll take you to the content. And then if you hit escape, it'll bring you back up to the map. [10:29.880 --> 10:38.440] So I want to see if people are able to use it. What I'm hoping it does is that it will bring you [10:38.440 --> 10:48.280] back to the map itself. All you see is it's like a table of contents, but it's a table of contents [10:48.280 --> 10:57.320] that's not aligned vertically. It's aligned horizontally. Human beings tend not to see up [10:57.320 --> 11:06.920] and down. We have peripheral vision. We see side to side. We can see almost, see right at 170 degrees. [11:06.920 --> 11:12.200] So when we look out at our environment, we don't look out at it up and down. [11:13.240 --> 11:21.880] You look out at what's in front of you and what's in front of you as a panorama. You don't just see [11:21.880 --> 11:29.160] what's exactly in front of you. You can see what's to each side of you, but we tend not to have [11:29.160 --> 11:39.720] 180 degrees of vertical peripheral vision. We have it, but we never pay attention to it much. [11:39.720 --> 11:46.120] If we want to look at the sky, we don't just see the sky in our peripheral vision. We look up at [11:46.120 --> 11:53.000] the sky. We look down below us. We tend to focus on what's in front of us. And so I laid out this [11:53.000 --> 12:01.720] complex information in a way that a person can look at it and see the whole thing at once [12:03.080 --> 12:09.800] and see it in a way that shows how everything is connected to everything else. [12:12.200 --> 12:17.000] Now for me, that's really intuitive and I want to find out how intuitive it is for everybody else. [12:17.000 --> 12:24.920] This is a massive project. And just to say it's a massive project, that's kind of an understatement. [12:26.600 --> 12:31.400] It is, you know, I've got 15 years of building this thing. It's absolutely huge, [12:32.280 --> 12:39.880] but it will eliminate the profession of lawyer and get lawyers to pay us to do it. [12:39.880 --> 12:49.800] Once I get all these pieces put together, then anyone can go online, answer a few questions, [12:50.920 --> 12:57.480] and it will give them a complete analysis of their legal situation. Now when I say that, [12:57.480 --> 13:04.440] that sounds rather grandiose, but it's not as difficult as it sounds. [13:04.440 --> 13:11.400] Once you look over this map, you'll see that all of these pieces fit together. [13:12.920 --> 13:21.080] We start with a questionnaire and that questionnaire grows into a research repository, [13:21.080 --> 13:27.320] and we add to the research repository a legal lexicon, and [13:27.320 --> 13:35.720] we will have the law so that it's available to anybody. You don't have to know all of the law. [13:35.720 --> 13:46.840] If you have a case, you do not have to be a PhD jurisprudence. You don't have to have a [13:46.840 --> 13:57.080] juris doctorate. You don't need the law that goes to your issue, and that's been a problem. [13:57.880 --> 14:04.120] Some time, a long time ago, I really don't even know when, somebody came up with this [14:04.120 --> 14:13.240] great idea about how to organize law and how to organize the law, and that's been a problem. [14:13.240 --> 14:22.840] Idea about how to organize law so that we could find all of these cases and statutes, and [14:24.520 --> 14:30.600] law is huge and complex. We needed a way to be able to wade through it and find what we need. [14:31.160 --> 14:37.560] So they came up with this idea. We'll build an encyclopedia of law. [14:37.560 --> 14:44.920] Does that sound like a good idea, Brad? Do you mean to build the encyclopedia? [14:44.920 --> 14:51.320] You're reluctant because you know that's a loaded question. It was a horrible idea. [14:52.280 --> 15:02.200] They build this encyclopedia of law, and they organize all of the legal issues by giving them [15:02.200 --> 15:08.520] a name to name the legal issues, and then they organize the legal issues in alphabetical order. [15:09.560 --> 15:16.040] Well, that's a stupid way of doing things. Law, legal issues are not, [15:17.400 --> 15:26.520] they don't sort themselves in alphabetical order. They sort themselves by fact sets. [15:26.520 --> 15:33.320] So they made up this encyclopedia, and every time they had a case on an issue, they gave it a name [15:34.440 --> 15:43.480] and used that name of that issue as a keyword, and then they sorted them by the names of the cases, [15:43.480 --> 15:49.960] and then you could search for those cases by putting in these keywords. [15:49.960 --> 15:58.760] For those cases by putting in these keywords, and it had a glossary of all the keywords. [16:00.440 --> 16:05.320] Well, that's really cool, but what if you've got a first blush issue that hasn't been named [16:05.320 --> 16:11.320] and hasn't been given a keyword? How do you find it? And you've got all the case law [16:11.320 --> 16:20.280] sorted in alphabetical order. It's not sorted by references to other cases or its position [16:20.280 --> 16:25.720] in the overall legal scheme of things. It's sorted in alphabetical order. That's a stupid way of [16:25.720 --> 16:31.720] doing things, but we've been doing it that way for generations. Well, the Lillie Lair's Project [16:32.440 --> 16:37.720] takes a whole different approach, and we're about to go to our sponsors. When we come back on the [16:37.720 --> 16:45.320] other side, I'll explain this whole different paradigm, and this paradigm has nothing to do [16:45.320 --> 16:52.360] with technology. We could have done this 200 years ago, 400 years ago. There's nobody thought of [16:52.360 --> 17:08.360] it. Hang on. We'll be right back. [17:22.360 --> 17:27.560] Phone, mail, or court summons. How to answer letters and phone calls. How to get debt collectors [17:27.560 --> 17:32.680] out of your credit report. How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you [17:32.680 --> 17:38.520] to go away. The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.520 --> 17:44.280] Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:44.280 --> 17:49.720] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's [17:49.720 --> 17:59.320] ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-m at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [17:59.320 --> 18:05.720] now. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. In today's America, [18:05.720 --> 18:09.480] we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.480 --> 18:13.640] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [18:13.640 --> 18:17.640] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [18:17.640 --> 18:22.040] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [18:22.040 --> 18:26.760] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, [18:26.760 --> 18:30.360] in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool [18:30.360 --> 18:34.520] available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of [18:34.520 --> 18:39.080] law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:39.080 --> 18:42.760] ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas [18:42.760 --> 18:47.720] Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds [18:47.720 --> 18:51.640] of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights with [18:51.640 --> 18:56.360] the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today, and together we can have [18:56.360 --> 19:16.680] the free society we all want and deserve. You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [19:26.360 --> 19:54.440] and I'm talking about the Legal Earth Project. The basic underlying premise [19:54.440 --> 20:05.400] is that case law research, the way it's been done for generations, is just simply wrong-headed. [20:06.760 --> 20:16.920] It was a bad idea. What they could have done is outlined all of the legal cases [20:16.920 --> 20:29.000] by the facts that are presented in the case. Every legal issue will have a fact set that is [20:29.000 --> 20:38.280] required in order for you to get to that legal issue. Were you arrested? Yes. Here we put all [20:38.280 --> 20:47.880] of our case law that goes to an arrest. Were you arrested on an existing warrant? Yes. We go into [20:47.880 --> 20:54.520] that case law, and all of the case law that goes to somebody arrested on a warrant goes into the [20:54.520 --> 21:01.400] yes side. If they say no, were you arrested on for an on-site offense? Yes. We take all the on-site [21:01.400 --> 21:10.680] offense case law and link it there, and keep breaking this down. Who hasn't heard of 20 [21:10.680 --> 21:22.280] questions? 20 questions is called 20 questions because you can get to almost any fact in 20 [21:22.280 --> 21:33.320] questions. It's algorithmic. The first question cuts all the possibilities in half. The second [21:33.320 --> 21:40.440] question cuts those remaining possibilities in half, and in half, and in half, and in half. [21:40.440 --> 21:50.920] The time you've done that 20 times, you are pretty focused. We start with facts. Were you arrested? [21:50.920 --> 22:00.040] Yes. That's the first fact. If you weren't arrested, were you sued? Yes. All the sued stuff, [22:00.040 --> 22:05.240] you get sued going there, so you separated criminal from civil. One question, two questions. [22:07.640 --> 22:18.040] We've developed a methodology. It's not straightforward how you can get to everything. [22:18.040 --> 22:27.960] The idea of 20 questions has been around a long time, but it took 15 years to work out a technology [22:27.960 --> 22:38.840] to make this work. Now I have one. I have a method for saving all the case law by the fact set. [22:38.840 --> 22:46.840] If you're going to sue someone for false imprisonment, you have to have been arrested. [22:46.840 --> 22:58.840] You have to have been imprisoned. There are things that must happen to make that imprisonment legal. [22:58.840 --> 23:12.840] For instance, you must be arrested based on facts that either the officer received from someone else [23:12.840 --> 23:22.840] accusing you of a felony, or if it's not a felony, you must be arrested on a warrant. [23:22.840 --> 23:32.840] If you have a warrant, then the warrant must state a violation of some law. If you're arrested without a warrant, [23:32.840 --> 23:38.840] the officer must have personally seen or heard the offense being committed, unless it was a felony. [23:38.840 --> 23:48.840] If it was a felony, someone else must have filed a complaint or an affidavit stating that they had [23:48.840 --> 23:58.840] to believe that this person committed a crime. In every legal situation, there are a set of facts like that [23:58.840 --> 24:10.840] that must be there. Now there can be all kinds of variations on those facts. There can be differences in how [24:10.840 --> 24:20.840] you get to these elemental facts, but for every legal issue, there is a specific set of elemental facts. [24:20.840 --> 24:32.840] So when we get to a legal issue, no matter how we get to that issue, once we get to the legal issue, [24:32.840 --> 24:44.840] it's always argued the same way. This was a revelation that came out of the process of developing this. [24:44.840 --> 24:56.840] False arrest has probably been argued 10,000 different ways, at least. False arrest should be argued one way. [24:56.840 --> 25:08.840] There are a specific set of facts, elemental facts that must be in place. Once you have those facts [25:08.840 --> 25:16.840] in place, how you got to all those facts doesn't matter. You argue false imprisonment the same way [25:16.840 --> 25:30.840] every time. We have created a tool that accumulates a fact set. The user, whoever uses the questionnaire, [25:30.840 --> 25:38.840] can start answering questions. There is a massive database behind him. In my database for due process, [25:38.840 --> 25:48.840] I have over a million and a half questions. But the user won't see but about 15 or 20 of them. [25:48.840 --> 25:54.840] In some cases, they are more complicated. Maybe he'll see more. But he goes back to 20 questions. [25:54.840 --> 26:05.840] In this huge database, each question cuts the database in half. First question, you cut it to 750,000. [26:05.840 --> 26:16.840] Then to 325,000. And then to 112,000. Or 117,000 to a hundred and something. [26:16.840 --> 26:25.840] Each one cuts it in half. All of these other possibilities are out there, but you can't see them. [26:25.840 --> 26:34.840] Because you don't need to see them. It draws a straight line through all that complexity to your specific issue. [26:34.840 --> 26:49.840] You only see those issues that go directly to those laws and those... What word am I missing, Brett? [26:49.840 --> 26:50.840] You only see... [26:50.840 --> 26:52.840] Permutations. [26:52.840 --> 27:01.840] Yeah, permutations that go directly to your issue. So it's a straight line. It's not very complicated at all. [27:01.840 --> 27:09.840] It's really easy to say that, but creating something that would do that was somewhat complex. [27:09.840 --> 27:17.840] But I don't have all of the questions in place, but I do have the technology in place. [27:17.840 --> 27:22.840] And I started, because I was dealing mostly in criminal law, I started with criminal law. [27:22.840 --> 27:29.840] It turned out that that was probably the worst place to start. [27:29.840 --> 27:36.840] Because I have a million and a half questions in it, and I don't have it done yet. [27:36.840 --> 27:46.840] But once it's finished, anybody can go to a computer screen, click on the questionnaire. [27:46.840 --> 27:57.840] And the questionnaire will walk you through all those possibilities and take you to the issues that go specifically to your particular case. [27:57.840 --> 28:03.840] And for lawyers, the biggest fear a lawyer has is missing something. [28:03.840 --> 28:11.840] The beauty of this questionnaire is if we build it and it's got something missing, somebody's going to trip over that. [28:11.840 --> 28:18.840] And they're going to say, hey, wait a minute, guys, you missed this. [28:18.840 --> 28:25.840] What got me to do this was, were you arrested? Yes. Were you arrested on an existing warrant? Yes. [28:25.840 --> 28:28.840] Somebody asked me what a Frank's hearing was. [28:28.840 --> 28:36.840] A Frank's hearing is a hearing for the purpose of determining the veracity of a police officer who testified for magistrates to hear a warrant. [28:36.840 --> 28:39.840] Were you arrested? Yes. Were you arrested on a warrant? Yes. [28:39.840 --> 28:43.840] We crack the questionnaire apart and add a question. [28:43.840 --> 28:49.840] Do you have reason to believe that the officer who testified to get that warrant lied to the magistrate? [28:49.840 --> 28:58.840] If you say yes, that implicates a Frank's hearing. We veer off, ask all the questions we need for a Frank's hearing, come back and keep going. [28:58.840 --> 29:04.840] I have never had a lawyer who knew what a Frank's hearing was. [29:04.840 --> 29:10.840] The worst thing that can happen to a lawyer is he missed something. [29:10.840 --> 29:24.840] Once I put it in this questionnaire, if you were arrested and you were arrested on an existing warrant, the system will never, ever forget to ask that question. [29:24.840 --> 29:30.840] And there are 10,000 other issues out there just like that. [29:30.840 --> 29:38.840] No lawyer knows them all. No lawyer can know them all. Just too many of them. [29:38.840 --> 29:41.840] Some lawyer knows them. [29:41.840 --> 29:48.840] And so we go to the legal profession, get them to put their knowledge in the questionnaire, and then we give it to the pro se that he's got everything. [29:48.840 --> 30:01.840] Hang on. That's enough on this. I'll go to a college when we come back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. We'll be right back. [30:01.840 --> 30:07.840] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively affected our health? [30:07.840 --> 30:14.840] Hi, Dr. Catherine Albrecht. We'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:14.840 --> 30:20.840] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.840 --> 30:25.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.840 --> 30:30.840] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.840 --> 30:40.840] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.840 --> 30:43.840] Start over with Startpage. [30:43.840 --> 30:52.840] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. It's a fact. But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [30:52.840 --> 30:56.840] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:56.840 --> 31:02.840] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [31:02.840 --> 31:11.840] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.840 --> 31:20.840] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any chances. I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:20.840 --> 31:29.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:29.840 --> 31:34.840] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [31:34.840 --> 31:38.840] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.840 --> 31:42.840] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.840 --> 31:51.840] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:51.840 --> 32:00.840] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.840 --> 32:06.840] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.840 --> 32:17.840] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:17.840 --> 32:24.840] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [32:24.840 --> 32:32.840] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.840 --> 32:39.840] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [32:39.840 --> 32:44.840] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.840 --> 32:50.840] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.840 --> 33:03.840] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:03.840 --> 33:14.840] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:14.840 --> 33:24.840] Yeah, I got a warrant and I'm gonna solve them to the head government them, prosecute them. [33:24.840 --> 33:28.840] Okay. [33:28.840 --> 33:31.840] Who's that? [33:31.840 --> 33:36.840] The person's a risk for Mr. Bush. [33:36.840 --> 33:40.840] The person's a risk for the team. [33:40.840 --> 33:45.840] Well, I know he's a prosecutor to come and help me prosecute them wicked leader. [33:45.840 --> 33:47.840] Yeah, you see, the mama ready a liar. [33:47.840 --> 33:51.840] Them tell me, them a liar not tell sweet stories. [33:51.840 --> 33:52.840] You don't believe me? [33:52.840 --> 33:53.840] Say what them tell me? [33:53.840 --> 33:56.840] 3% of America vote for Bush. [33:56.840 --> 33:58.840] So how the hell he get the presidency? [33:58.840 --> 34:01.840] That's why we have a warrant for him. [34:01.840 --> 34:03.840] Everybody listen carefully. [34:03.840 --> 34:04.840] Listen to the words. [34:04.840 --> 34:10.840] Okay, we are back. [34:10.840 --> 34:12.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root Live Radio. [34:12.840 --> 34:13.840] We're gonna go to our callers. [34:13.840 --> 34:16.840] We're gonna start with Chris in Colorado. [34:16.840 --> 34:17.840] Hello, Chris. [34:17.840 --> 34:21.840] What do you have for us today? [34:21.840 --> 34:22.840] I have a request. [34:22.840 --> 34:27.840] Can you skip me and go to someone else and come back to me in a little bit? [34:27.840 --> 34:28.840] Hold on. [34:28.840 --> 34:30.840] Say that again? [34:30.840 --> 34:34.840] Can you skip me and come back to me a little bit later? [34:34.840 --> 34:35.840] I'm sorry. [34:35.840 --> 34:37.840] I didn't expect you to take me as first caller. [34:37.840 --> 34:38.840] Oh, okay. [34:38.840 --> 34:40.840] I can do that. [34:40.840 --> 34:41.840] Okay. [34:41.840 --> 34:44.840] Now we're going to Jason in Florida. [34:44.840 --> 34:47.840] Florida, Jason. [34:47.840 --> 34:48.840] Jason, Florida. [34:48.840 --> 34:51.840] What do you have for us today? [34:51.840 --> 34:52.840] Hey, Randy. [34:52.840 --> 34:59.840] How you doing? [34:59.840 --> 35:04.840] Okay, that's your cue to keep talking. [35:04.840 --> 35:06.840] We hear you, Jason. [35:06.840 --> 35:07.840] What's on your mind? [35:07.840 --> 35:09.840] All right, all right. [35:09.840 --> 35:18.840] So we had a conversation yesterday about the whole situation that I was going through [35:18.840 --> 35:24.840] with regards to the probate and the child support issues. [35:24.840 --> 35:36.840] They went ahead and pushed through an order today to finalize the probate after I had [35:36.840 --> 35:41.840] filed that declaratory judgment and submitted it into the probate court. [35:41.840 --> 35:51.840] Now, the interesting thing was that whenever I file into those courts, the clerk automatically [35:51.840 --> 35:58.840] puts those filings through, but this time it never went through. [35:58.840 --> 36:09.840] And they went ahead and pushed forward the alleged final judgment for the settlement [36:09.840 --> 36:11.840] of the probate. [36:11.840 --> 36:16.840] And of course, I can file a motion to strike or a motion vacate that judge. [36:16.840 --> 36:18.840] Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait a minute. [36:18.840 --> 36:19.840] This is a final judgment? [36:19.840 --> 36:30.840] Is it a final judgment in the probate itself or is it just a final judgment on some aspect? [36:30.840 --> 36:40.840] No, it's an order to approve final discharge of the estate. [36:40.840 --> 36:49.840] Okay, so now you have spent your time setting the record for appeal. [36:49.840 --> 36:53.840] Now's when you get to the good part. [36:53.840 --> 36:58.840] And the more that they've done wrong, the better for you. [36:58.840 --> 37:03.840] Well, and that's the thing is that everything that I file, they block. [37:03.840 --> 37:06.840] Like it doesn't go onto the record. [37:06.840 --> 37:14.840] Even though it goes, because I have a registered user access to submit documents [37:14.840 --> 37:18.840] into the case directly, as if when they're 30. [37:18.840 --> 37:25.840] But this particular time, they block my objections and they block my notice to the court [37:25.840 --> 37:28.840] about that declaratory judgment. [37:28.840 --> 37:37.840] Okay, then you need to file a motion for reconsideration and a motion for rehearing. [37:37.840 --> 37:38.840] Okay. [37:38.840 --> 37:48.840] If they deny that, then you file a notice of appeal, you file a request for findings [37:48.840 --> 37:54.840] and fact and conclusions at law and you file a notice of appeal [37:54.840 --> 38:05.840] and you file criminal charges against the judge for blocking your objections. [38:05.840 --> 38:06.840] Okay. [38:06.840 --> 38:10.840] And a judicial conduct complaint against him. [38:10.840 --> 38:16.840] Well, that was my project for the weekend was to start preparing all that [38:16.840 --> 38:23.840] because I really thought that nothing has gone through. [38:23.840 --> 38:26.840] Since 6-15 today, they filed that order. [38:26.840 --> 38:28.840] When you look at the order, it's ridiculous. [38:28.840 --> 38:30.840] It's not even signed by a judge. [38:30.840 --> 38:32.840] There's no search signature. [38:32.840 --> 38:35.840] It's just ridiculous. [38:35.840 --> 38:40.840] But I'm getting overwhelmed. [38:40.840 --> 38:41.840] I'm getting exhausted. [38:41.840 --> 38:43.840] This is like... [38:43.840 --> 38:48.840] Okay, you're done with the hard part. [38:48.840 --> 38:51.840] The trial court is the hard part. [38:51.840 --> 38:57.840] It is exhausting when they rule against you out of hand at every turn. [38:57.840 --> 39:00.840] And it feels so discouraging too. [39:00.840 --> 39:03.840] Yeah, it's tough. [39:03.840 --> 39:04.840] But you've been through that part. [39:04.840 --> 39:07.840] They've done the worst they can. [39:07.840 --> 39:08.840] Now we go to appeal. [39:08.840 --> 39:14.840] Now you get to go back after them for all the garbage they pulled on you. [39:14.840 --> 39:25.840] I keep saying your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [39:25.840 --> 39:28.840] You don't care what that judge rules. [39:28.840 --> 39:34.840] The worse his rulings are, the better for you. [39:34.840 --> 39:40.840] Because you can expect the court of appeals to overturn his bad rulings [39:40.840 --> 39:46.840] and send it back to him to redo with the proper ruling in place. [39:46.840 --> 39:48.840] Which embarrasses him. [39:48.840 --> 39:49.840] Oh, yes. [39:49.840 --> 39:53.840] And this gets a lot more fun now. [39:53.840 --> 39:54.840] You've hung in there. [39:54.840 --> 39:56.840] You've done the hard part. [39:56.840 --> 40:00.840] Now you get to go back after them. [40:00.840 --> 40:07.840] So based on your experience and what you've seen from other people... [40:07.840 --> 40:10.840] As an honest judge as me, ask any lawyer. [40:10.840 --> 40:13.840] I didn't come up with this, your only purpose in the trial courts, [40:13.840 --> 40:15.840] to set the record for appeal. [40:15.840 --> 40:17.840] That's not from me. [40:17.840 --> 40:20.840] That's from Dr. Graves. [40:20.840 --> 40:25.840] Dr. Graves is a 20-year lawyer, and that's what he says. [40:25.840 --> 40:28.840] Don't worry about what the judge rules. [40:28.840 --> 40:31.840] You're just there to set the record. [40:31.840 --> 40:35.840] If you worry about what the judge rules, it makes you nuts. [40:35.840 --> 40:42.840] You feel betrayed and you feel absolutely exhausted. [40:42.840 --> 40:46.840] And they count on that, especially probate. [40:46.840 --> 40:53.840] Probate is always about the lawyers stealing as much of the estate [40:53.840 --> 41:00.840] as they possibly can by turning the case and generating as much attorney fees [41:00.840 --> 41:04.840] as possible so they can swallow as much of the estate as possible. [41:04.840 --> 41:07.840] That's what it's all about. [41:07.840 --> 41:10.840] So hammer those lawyers. [41:10.840 --> 41:13.840] If you have a lawyer, hammer him. [41:13.840 --> 41:19.840] Bargain him, sue him for malpractice, even while the case is going on. [41:19.840 --> 41:21.840] And he'll jump up and down and say, [41:21.840 --> 41:23.840] you can sue me for malpractice as well. [41:23.840 --> 41:25.840] File it with the court, see what the court says. [41:25.840 --> 41:27.840] And when the court says it can't, then I'll appeal that, [41:27.840 --> 41:29.840] and you'll have to answer the appeal. [41:29.840 --> 41:31.840] I'll keep you in court until you get older, [41:31.840 --> 41:34.840] and I'll bankrupt you in the process, [41:34.840 --> 41:37.840] and I'll bargrieve you every time you move. [41:37.840 --> 41:41.840] And I don't like what you do, and I think it's a little bit scandalous, [41:41.840 --> 41:45.840] I'll file criminal charges against you. [41:45.840 --> 41:52.840] Let you explain to a grand jury, stop being a don't be a nice guy. [41:52.840 --> 41:56.840] No, and that's my project for the weekend is to write up all the criminal [41:56.840 --> 41:58.840] complaints and do all that. [41:58.840 --> 42:02.840] As we discussed yesterday, I had the declaratory judgment with the [42:02.840 --> 42:05.840] funky judge and all the craziness. [42:05.840 --> 42:12.840] I had a motion in that declaratory judgment for a TRO, an emergency TRO, [42:12.840 --> 42:20.840] and nothing was, no TRO went through, not even an order, [42:20.840 --> 42:24.840] not even a denied order, nothing. [42:24.840 --> 42:25.840] Okay, okay, great. [42:25.840 --> 42:30.840] Then file an interlocutory appeal, not an interlocutory, I'm sorry, [42:30.840 --> 42:35.840] file a petition for writ of mandamus with the court of appeals, [42:35.840 --> 42:41.840] asking the court of appeals to order the judge to rule on your motion. [42:41.840 --> 42:48.840] Not ruling on your motion is not within the scope of the judge. [42:48.840 --> 42:51.840] And make sure you file a judicial conduct complaint against the judge [42:51.840 --> 42:57.840] and a criminal complaint against the judge for denial of procedural due process. [42:57.840 --> 43:03.840] Let him explain to a grand jury why he ignored your motion. [43:03.840 --> 43:06.840] Good luck with that, Bubba. [43:06.840 --> 43:10.840] What if this judge has got to consider, what if that grand jury has got [43:10.840 --> 43:16.840] someone on it who was screwed over by another judge? [43:16.840 --> 43:20.840] Well, if someone's on that grand jury who's been before another judge, [43:20.840 --> 43:23.840] they probably felt like they'd been screwed over. [43:23.840 --> 43:27.840] So good luck, judge. [43:27.840 --> 43:29.840] You get their attention. [43:29.840 --> 43:33.840] Hang on, about to go to our sponsors, [43:33.840 --> 43:35.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [43:35.840 --> 43:38.840] I'm not going to give out the call-in number yet [43:38.840 --> 43:40.840] because we have a full board of callers, [43:40.840 --> 43:42.840] but we do have a four-hour show tonight. [43:42.840 --> 43:49.840] So when someone drops off the line, whoever is on the line and they drop off, [43:49.840 --> 43:53.840] hang up right away so we open a line for somebody else. [43:53.840 --> 43:56.840] Hang on, going to our sponsors. [43:56.840 --> 44:00.840] We'll be right back. [44:00.840 --> 44:04.840] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:04.840 --> 44:06.840] except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.840 --> 44:09.840] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [44:09.840 --> 44:11.840] and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.840 --> 44:15.840] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment [44:15.840 --> 44:17.840] is good nutrition. [44:17.840 --> 44:20.840] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, [44:20.840 --> 44:25.840] and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.840 --> 44:29.840] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [44:29.840 --> 44:31.840] most of which we reject. [44:31.840 --> 44:35.840] We have come to trust young Jevity so much we became a marketing distributor [44:35.840 --> 44:39.840] along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.840 --> 44:42.840] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [44:42.840 --> 44:47.840] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.840 --> 44:51.840] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.840 --> 44:54.840] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:54.840 --> 44:58.840] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.840 --> 45:00.840] Order now. [45:00.840 --> 45:03.840] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.840 --> 45:07.840] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:07.840 --> 45:10.840] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course [45:10.840 --> 45:14.840] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.840 --> 45:18.840] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.840 --> 45:22.840] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.840 --> 45:27.840] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.840 --> 45:30.840] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:30.840 --> 45:33.840] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.840 --> 45:38.840] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.840 --> 45:42.840] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.840 --> 45:46.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:46.840 --> 45:51.840] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.840 --> 45:55.840] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, [45:55.840 --> 46:14.840] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.840 --> 46:29.840] Whoa, whoa, yeah, always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:29.840 --> 46:34.840] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:34.840 --> 46:40.840] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:40.840 --> 46:46.840] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [46:46.840 --> 46:52.840] I give my message out to anyone in the shot and distance. [46:52.840 --> 46:56.840] I'm both for bravery and against slavery. [46:56.840 --> 46:58.840] Okay, we are back. [46:58.840 --> 47:04.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Jason in Florida. [47:04.840 --> 47:10.840] And Jason, you're in a unique position. [47:10.840 --> 47:14.840] Do you have a lawyer? [47:14.840 --> 47:15.840] No. [47:15.840 --> 47:24.840] I mean, I have hired lawyers in the past and never a good thing. [47:24.840 --> 47:29.840] Well, in this case, have you had any lawyers? [47:29.840 --> 47:35.840] The only lawyer is, okay, so I'm the sole beneficiary, [47:35.840 --> 47:39.840] the principal who appointed the personal representative. [47:39.840 --> 47:43.840] The personal representative then hired an attorney to represent the estate. [47:43.840 --> 47:48.840] I fired them two years ago, and they always just keep on pushing through [47:48.840 --> 47:51.840] and proclaiming as if I don't exist. [47:51.840 --> 47:57.840] Have you bargrieved them, and have you sued them personally? [47:57.840 --> 48:03.840] So the declaratory judgment sued everybody yesterday. [48:03.840 --> 48:04.840] That went through. [48:04.840 --> 48:06.840] That went into the case. [48:06.840 --> 48:11.840] But they ignored it, and they just kept pushing through. [48:11.840 --> 48:12.840] Wait, wait. [48:12.840 --> 48:13.840] Okay, hold on, hold on. [48:13.840 --> 48:16.840] They ignored it. [48:16.840 --> 48:18.840] Yes. [48:18.840 --> 48:22.840] Did you file for a temporary restraining order? [48:22.840 --> 48:23.840] Yes, sir. [48:23.840 --> 48:24.840] Yep. [48:24.840 --> 48:28.840] Okay, now you need to file either in a locatory appeal [48:28.840 --> 48:31.840] or a petition for writ of mandamus [48:31.840 --> 48:42.840] and ask the appellate court to issue an abatement in the proceedings [48:42.840 --> 48:47.840] until the declaratory judgment issue is adjudicated. [48:47.840 --> 48:58.840] Would the declaratory judgment issue change the litigation? [48:58.840 --> 49:02.840] Yeah, absolutely. [49:02.840 --> 49:06.840] That is grounds for an abatement. [49:06.840 --> 49:09.840] So don't ask this corrupt judge, [49:09.840 --> 49:14.840] because he's in bed with the lawyers who are trying to steal everything they can. [49:14.840 --> 49:17.840] Go to the appellate court. [49:17.840 --> 49:21.840] We did that in a municipality here in Texas, [49:21.840 --> 49:26.840] and man, the appellate court really hammered them big time. [49:26.840 --> 49:32.840] Okay, so I file the interlocutory appeal in the probate, [49:32.840 --> 49:35.840] take it to the appellate court, [49:35.840 --> 49:45.840] but I file that appeal in the probate, not in the declaratory judgment case. [49:45.840 --> 49:46.840] Right. [49:46.840 --> 49:51.840] You want to stay the probate case, [49:51.840 --> 49:56.840] so you file the appeal based, the ruling. [49:56.840 --> 50:02.840] You didn't get a, okay, it takes a question. [50:02.840 --> 50:07.840] Did you file the, you file the declaratory judgment suit, [50:07.840 --> 50:11.840] it's separate from the probate case? [50:11.840 --> 50:12.840] Correct, yes. [50:12.840 --> 50:17.840] Okay, then you file the appeal in the declaratory judgment suit [50:17.840 --> 50:26.840] and ask the court to stay the proceedings in the probate case. [50:26.840 --> 50:27.840] Gotcha. [50:27.840 --> 50:37.840] And in the probate case, the probate case, they issued the order this evening at 615, [50:37.840 --> 50:46.840] basically saying I didn't show up to the hearing and I didn't yada, yada, yada. [50:46.840 --> 50:49.840] Even though I filed my objections, [50:49.840 --> 50:55.840] and when you file your objections you have 90 days instead of hearing for those objections, [50:55.840 --> 51:02.840] they completely ignored it and from the e-filing system it never went through. [51:02.840 --> 51:08.840] It just sat there and... [51:08.840 --> 51:12.840] Then that should get a motion for reconsideration. [51:12.840 --> 51:13.840] Yeah. [51:13.840 --> 51:19.840] Because apparently your motion was not before the court and it should have been. [51:19.840 --> 51:24.840] How did it sit in the e-file system and not get to the court? [51:24.840 --> 51:25.840] Right. [51:25.840 --> 51:27.840] I'm curious about that too. [51:27.840 --> 51:38.840] Well, and not only that, but once you e-file, you select all the recipients in the e-mail list. [51:38.840 --> 51:46.840] In Florida you have an e-filing system where there's a recipient list. [51:46.840 --> 51:52.840] As soon as you hit submit, everybody gets a copy instantly, [51:52.840 --> 52:00.840] regardless of whether or not the court clerk accepts it, everybody gets a copy of it. [52:00.840 --> 52:01.840] Wait, wait, wait. [52:01.840 --> 52:06.840] How does a court clerk not accept it? [52:06.840 --> 52:11.840] When it goes into the e-filing system, the court clerk... [52:11.840 --> 52:15.840] Well, the system acknowledges that it was submitted, [52:15.840 --> 52:22.840] but then it has to be approved by a clerk, a court clerk, and then they say, you know, [52:22.840 --> 52:29.840] final approval and then it goes into the actual docket or the actual court record. [52:29.840 --> 52:36.840] So is that the part where it was sitting, waiting for a court clerk to mark it as approved? [52:36.840 --> 52:37.840] Correct. [52:37.840 --> 52:40.840] And it never went through. [52:40.840 --> 52:41.840] Okay, wait, wait, wait. [52:41.840 --> 52:42.840] Hold on. [52:42.840 --> 52:43.840] Let's not get past this. [52:43.840 --> 52:46.840] It never went through. [52:46.840 --> 52:53.840] Did the clerk issue a determination one way or another? [52:53.840 --> 52:59.840] Did she approve it or show cause as to why she didn't approve it? [52:59.840 --> 53:00.840] Or did she do nothing? [53:00.840 --> 53:09.840] No, it literally just sat in what they call or what is considered the pending approval queue. [53:09.840 --> 53:19.840] Okay, that gets a criminal complaint against the clerk and potentially a refiling, [53:19.840 --> 53:23.840] a amended pleading naming the clerk as a litigant. [53:23.840 --> 53:32.840] If the clerk doesn't do her job, you don't get harmed by the clerk not doing her job. [53:32.840 --> 53:40.840] You don't care why the clerk didn't get to your pleading. [53:40.840 --> 53:52.840] If your pleading got to court, the court can't proceed if you have a pending pleading. [53:52.840 --> 53:56.840] It denies you access to the court. [53:56.840 --> 54:02.840] Constitutional, that's even federal constitutional, denies you and your right to petition the [54:02.840 --> 54:06.840] court for redress of grievance. [54:06.840 --> 54:11.840] The e-file system is still filled with flaws. [54:11.840 --> 54:15.840] You need to help fix those flaws. [54:15.840 --> 54:19.840] They also have some rules about that though, so you might take a look at their rules [54:19.840 --> 54:22.840] because it sounds like she violated it. [54:22.840 --> 54:34.840] Well, not only that, but almost two years ago, I filed a notice to clerk basically citing [54:34.840 --> 54:43.840] all of the laws that say if you deny this filing, regardless of form or format, [54:43.840 --> 54:45.840] I can hold you liable. [54:45.840 --> 54:50.840] And from that point on, I never had a problem submitting my documents, [54:50.840 --> 54:59.840] whether they're just obscure notices or they are motions or whatever. [54:59.840 --> 55:04.840] You know, they used to play games with me before. [55:04.840 --> 55:12.840] And then when I filed this attachment to my filing, basically saying notice clerk, [55:12.840 --> 55:16.840] you know, here are the statutory laws, here are the constitutional laws, [55:16.840 --> 55:22.840] that if you deny the filing of this particular document, you will be held liable. [55:22.840 --> 55:23.840] Well, they never... [55:23.840 --> 55:24.840] Wow, Randy. [55:24.840 --> 55:26.840] That was really nice of him, right? [55:26.840 --> 55:28.840] To give fair warning like that. [55:28.840 --> 55:29.840] Fair warning, yeah. [55:29.840 --> 55:30.840] I was going to say... [55:30.840 --> 55:31.840] That was really nice. [55:31.840 --> 55:33.840] You should have filed against her. [55:33.840 --> 55:41.840] And you are lucky and fortunate that this person that received that kind of cover letter [55:41.840 --> 55:46.840] didn't take it as a threat and start causing trouble, [55:46.840 --> 55:48.840] because sometimes they'll do it that way. [55:48.840 --> 55:51.840] Oh, I construed that he was menacing. [55:51.840 --> 55:53.840] Threatening me or whatever, yeah. [55:53.840 --> 55:58.840] Right, yeah. [55:58.840 --> 56:02.840] It doesn't work well to be Mr. Nice Guy. [56:02.840 --> 56:07.840] They will take advantage of you every single time. [56:07.840 --> 56:10.840] And, you know, I have this rule. [56:10.840 --> 56:17.840] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do, [56:17.840 --> 56:22.840] because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [56:22.840 --> 56:26.840] So when they don't do it, you get to land on them like a ton of bricks. [56:26.840 --> 56:35.840] In Wise County, the word is, if that no-good Kelton SOB comes into your office, look out. [56:35.840 --> 56:41.840] He's trying to get you to do something so he can call 911 and try to get you arrested. [56:41.840 --> 56:44.840] And that's what I am. [56:44.840 --> 56:46.840] So don't screw with me. [56:46.840 --> 56:50.840] That's what you want them to think. [56:50.840 --> 56:53.840] Give this clerk an opportunity to screw something up, [56:53.840 --> 57:01.840] and she's going to want to say, oh, well, we're busy and it just fell through the cracks. [57:01.840 --> 57:02.840] No, no, no. [57:02.840 --> 57:08.840] I do not fall through cracks. [57:08.840 --> 57:13.840] And that's all there is to that. [57:13.840 --> 57:15.840] Land on her. [57:15.840 --> 57:21.840] The best way is to set her up and then land on her. [57:21.840 --> 57:24.840] So she knows you set her up. [57:24.840 --> 57:27.840] I got to ask you guys a question, okay? [57:27.840 --> 57:45.840] And this is a question that really lies in how I'm going to pursue the future of my life. [57:45.840 --> 57:52.840] So I'm a pretty intelligent, successful entrepreneur. [57:52.840 --> 57:54.840] I've been building companies my whole life. [57:54.840 --> 58:02.840] Up until the child support issue and the death of my mother, [58:02.840 --> 58:07.840] I was in a very successful world enjoying my life. [58:07.840 --> 58:11.840] But then I had to transition out of that successful world [58:11.840 --> 58:17.840] and focus on basically teaching myself how to be a lawyer and fighting these people. [58:17.840 --> 58:20.840] And now we're seven years into the battle. [58:20.840 --> 58:27.840] And do I cut my losses or do I fight like hell? [58:27.840 --> 58:30.840] And I know we're... [58:30.840 --> 58:32.840] Okay, hang on. [58:32.840 --> 58:36.840] In short, fight like hell. [58:36.840 --> 58:41.840] They kick this soapbox up under your feet. [58:41.840 --> 58:43.840] They don't get to whine if you stand squarely on it. [58:43.840 --> 58:45.840] Hang on, Randy Kelton. [58:45.840 --> 58:50.840] We'll be right back. [59:15.840 --> 59:20.840] We'll be right back. [59:45.840 --> 59:50.840] Visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.840 --> 01:00:01.840] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:01.840 --> 01:00:05.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.840 --> 01:00:08.840] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.840 --> 01:00:10.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.840 --> 01:00:13.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:13.840 --> 01:00:16.840] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.840 --> 01:00:18.840] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.840 --> 01:00:21.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:21.840 --> 01:00:26.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:26.840 --> 01:00:28.840] So protect your rights. [01:00:28.840 --> 01:00:31.840] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:31.840 --> 01:00:34.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:34.840 --> 01:00:37.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:00:37.840 --> 01:00:41.840] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:00:41.840 --> 01:00:45.840] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.840 --> 01:00:48.840] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.840 --> 01:00:51.840] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.840 --> 01:00:54.840] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.840 --> 01:00:57.840] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me [01:00:57.840 --> 01:01:00.840] what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.840 --> 01:01:03.840] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.840 --> 01:01:06.840] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.840 --> 01:01:08.840] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:08.840 --> 01:01:12.840] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.840 --> 01:01:16.840] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:16.840 --> 01:01:21.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.840 --> 01:01:34.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:34.840 --> 01:01:38.840] They guarantee you the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.840 --> 01:01:40.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.840 --> 01:01:43.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.840 --> 01:01:46.840] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.840 --> 01:01:48.840] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.840 --> 01:01:51.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:51.840 --> 01:01:56.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.840 --> 01:02:01.840] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:01.840 --> 01:02:04.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.840 --> 01:02:07.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:07.840 --> 01:02:11.840] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:11.840 --> 01:02:15.840] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.840 --> 01:02:19.840] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:19.840 --> 01:02:21.840] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.840 --> 01:02:25.840] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.840 --> 01:02:27.840] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.840 --> 01:02:30.840] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:30.840 --> 01:02:33.840] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:33.840 --> 01:02:34.840] in the name of security. [01:02:34.840 --> 01:02:39.840] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.840 --> 01:02:43.840] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.840 --> 01:02:46.840] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.840 --> 01:02:49.840] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.840 --> 01:02:53.840] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.840 --> 01:03:00.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:00.840 --> 01:03:24.840] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. I read His book and it says, [01:03:24.840 --> 01:03:30.840] I won't pay for the war with my body. [01:03:30.840 --> 01:03:34.840] Ain't gonna pay for the car with my money. [01:03:34.840 --> 01:03:37.840] I won't pay for the fun with my body. [01:03:37.840 --> 01:03:40.840] The plans wicked and the logic shoddy. [01:03:40.840 --> 01:03:42.840] Ain't gonna pay for the war with my body. [01:03:42.840 --> 01:03:44.840] Okay, we are back. [01:03:44.840 --> 01:03:51.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Lula La Radio on this Friday, the 10th of June, 2022. [01:03:51.840 --> 01:03:53.840] And we're talking to Jason in Florida. [01:03:53.840 --> 01:03:58.840] And when I went out, I was being very self-indulgent. [01:03:58.840 --> 01:04:05.840] It's my position, what I generally do when I'm in one of these circumstances, [01:04:05.840 --> 01:04:10.840] is I'm the meanest, no-good, rotten scoundrel that I can possibly be. [01:04:10.840 --> 01:04:13.840] But I'm only the meanest, no-good, rotten scoundrel I can possibly be [01:04:13.840 --> 01:04:18.840] because I want to bring these guys to the table. [01:04:18.840 --> 01:04:22.840] They've earned it. It's right. [01:04:22.840 --> 01:04:27.840] I've always already sat down and said to myself, [01:04:27.840 --> 01:04:31.840] what is my goal here? [01:04:31.840 --> 01:04:34.840] What do I want to achieve? [01:04:34.840 --> 01:04:40.840] If I haven't done that, I'll never know when I have achieved that. [01:04:40.840 --> 01:04:45.840] Once I achieve what to me is an acceptable outcome, [01:04:45.840 --> 01:04:53.840] now I can walk away and clean my hands of this and go on to my life. [01:04:53.840 --> 01:04:58.840] So Jason, what do you want? [01:04:58.840 --> 01:05:05.840] Why are you doing this? What are you trying to achieve? [01:05:05.840 --> 01:05:15.840] I question that every day, to be honest, because prior to all of this going down, [01:05:15.840 --> 01:05:22.840] I mean, it all started with a crazy ex stealing my children [01:05:22.840 --> 01:05:27.840] or forcing me away from my children. [01:05:27.840 --> 01:05:33.840] And then she used that to manipulate my mother and father. [01:05:33.840 --> 01:05:37.840] And then they died. [01:05:37.840 --> 01:05:43.840] And then all of the other insanity ensued. [01:05:43.840 --> 01:05:52.840] So what do I want? I want to, number one... [01:05:52.840 --> 01:05:56.840] No, wait, wait, wait. Don't say that again. [01:05:56.840 --> 01:05:59.840] Think about it. [01:05:59.840 --> 01:06:02.840] Sit down, spend some time. [01:06:02.840 --> 01:06:07.840] What, at the end of the day, do you want to accomplish? [01:06:07.840 --> 01:06:13.840] If this particular litigation will not lead you to where you want to be, [01:06:13.840 --> 01:06:19.840] say, next month, next year, two, three, five years from now, [01:06:19.840 --> 01:06:25.840] drop this damn thing like a hot rock. [01:06:25.840 --> 01:06:30.840] You don't have any moral need to fight this issue, [01:06:30.840 --> 01:06:35.840] even if they're lying and they're cheating and they're stealing. [01:06:35.840 --> 01:06:40.840] At the end of the day, you've got to do what's right for you. [01:06:40.840 --> 01:06:43.840] Yeah, but then that's the thing. [01:06:43.840 --> 01:06:46.840] I can't go to my grave knowing that I was robbed. [01:06:46.840 --> 01:06:48.840] My whole family was robbed. [01:06:48.840 --> 01:06:53.840] My successful, loving father and everything that he worked for, [01:06:53.840 --> 01:07:01.840] they robbed me from that inheritance. [01:07:01.840 --> 01:07:04.840] Think about that. [01:07:04.840 --> 01:07:08.840] If they rob all this, can you replace it? [01:07:08.840 --> 01:07:14.840] If you spend your time being a good entrepreneur, [01:07:14.840 --> 01:07:18.840] can you replace it instead of fighting them? [01:07:18.840 --> 01:07:28.840] If I walk up and I push you, do you have to push back? [01:07:28.840 --> 01:07:37.840] Well, I consider myself the type of man that never backs down from anybody [01:07:37.840 --> 01:07:40.840] and an alpha-type person. [01:07:40.840 --> 01:07:42.840] Yeah, you've got to fix that. [01:07:42.840 --> 01:07:44.840] I'm an alpha-type person. [01:07:44.840 --> 01:07:48.840] Three dislocated ribs, two broken collarbones, broken elbow and tooth [01:07:48.840 --> 01:07:54.840] knocked out, my face smashed into the concrete, arrested more times than I [01:07:54.840 --> 01:07:56.840] remember. [01:07:56.840 --> 01:07:57.840] Yeah, that's great. [01:07:57.840 --> 01:07:59.840] I'm an alpha male. [01:07:59.840 --> 01:08:02.840] Screw that crap. [01:08:02.840 --> 01:08:08.840] Exactly, and that's the thing is the attitude that I would have had at 25 [01:08:08.840 --> 01:08:15.840] years old versus now when I'm 43, if I had spent the past five to seven years [01:08:15.840 --> 01:08:22.840] instead of battling these idiots and just focusing on building my companies, [01:08:22.840 --> 01:08:29.840] I've lost half a million dollars from these people with my inheritance. [01:08:29.840 --> 01:08:34.840] But I could have made that if I spent the past seven years building my [01:08:34.840 --> 01:08:35.840] companies. [01:08:35.840 --> 01:08:37.840] I could have built two or three companies. [01:08:37.840 --> 01:08:41.840] I've already sold one of my companies to a tobacco company. [01:08:41.840 --> 01:08:43.840] I know how to build companies. [01:08:43.840 --> 01:08:45.840] I know how to make money. [01:08:45.840 --> 01:08:51.840] If my brain was focused on building my companies again instead of fighting [01:08:51.840 --> 01:08:58.840] these legal battles, which I enjoy it just like you enjoy it, I do enjoy it. [01:08:58.840 --> 01:09:00.840] I do enjoy the research. [01:09:00.840 --> 01:09:12.840] I do enjoy learning, but it's to the point where it's like so draining because [01:09:12.840 --> 01:09:14.840] you're fighting evil. [01:09:14.840 --> 01:09:19.840] You're fighting negativity where as an entrepreneur in the companies that I [01:09:19.840 --> 01:09:26.840] build, I do things that help the environment or help the community and do [01:09:26.840 --> 01:09:27.840] things like that. [01:09:27.840 --> 01:09:33.840] I keep remembering this black female poet laureate several years ago. [01:09:33.840 --> 01:09:34.840] I forget her name. [01:09:34.840 --> 01:09:36.840] She was absolutely wonderful. [01:09:36.840 --> 01:09:38.840] And she spoke to the black community. [01:09:38.840 --> 01:09:49.840] And she said, the best response to prejudice is massive success. [01:09:49.840 --> 01:09:50.840] Yeah. [01:09:50.840 --> 01:09:55.840] The best response to these thieves is they're trying to steal pennies from [01:09:55.840 --> 01:10:01.840] you, go out and make dollars, and don't worry about it. [01:10:01.840 --> 01:10:05.840] My point is you don't owe the legal community. [01:10:05.840 --> 01:10:06.840] You don't owe us. [01:10:06.840 --> 01:10:09.840] You don't owe anybody anything. [01:10:09.840 --> 01:10:17.840] You have to do what is right for you first. [01:10:17.840 --> 01:10:21.840] Figure out what that is. [01:10:21.840 --> 01:10:27.840] Make your decision and do not feel like you're letting anyone down. [01:10:27.840 --> 01:10:31.840] I feel certain that if your parents are looking down on you, they're going to [01:10:31.840 --> 01:10:34.840] tell you the same thing. [01:10:34.840 --> 01:10:36.840] Don't try to defend my honor. [01:10:36.840 --> 01:10:37.840] I'm dead. [01:10:37.840 --> 01:10:38.840] I don't care about that anymore. [01:10:38.840 --> 01:10:43.840] Do what's right for you. [01:10:43.840 --> 01:10:47.840] And that's my story, and I'm sticking to it. [01:10:47.840 --> 01:10:48.840] I agree. [01:10:48.840 --> 01:10:59.840] But, Randy, in your experience, when people come at you, when you're not the [01:10:59.840 --> 01:11:06.840] type of man that's going to step down and let them beat you up, and if you [01:11:06.840 --> 01:11:14.840] allow them to do that, you're not going to be able to live with yourself. [01:11:14.840 --> 01:11:16.840] Yeah, I can. [01:11:16.840 --> 01:11:19.840] You know, I went through that list. [01:11:19.840 --> 01:11:22.840] One of the things was a broken elbow. [01:11:22.840 --> 01:11:25.840] I was at the courthouse to file criminal charges against the district [01:11:25.840 --> 01:11:34.840] attorney, and the bailiff filed against him with the grand jury. [01:11:34.840 --> 01:11:36.840] And the bailiff dragged me down the stairs, shoved me out the door, knocked [01:11:36.840 --> 01:11:42.840] me down, broke my elbow to keep me from getting to the grand jury. [01:11:42.840 --> 01:11:47.840] And after that happened, he didn't mean to knock me down, but when I stepped [01:11:47.840 --> 01:11:54.840] out the door at my foot, I stepped down a step and my foot hit a carpet they [01:11:54.840 --> 01:11:58.840] had put there to clean your feet on because you're in the winter. [01:11:58.840 --> 01:12:03.840] Just as my foot touched that, he gave me a push, and it caused that carpet to [01:12:03.840 --> 01:12:08.840] scoot out from under me, and I fell backwards and landed on the elbow on a [01:12:08.840 --> 01:12:16.840] granite step, crushed my elbow through my shirt and through my suit jacket. [01:12:16.840 --> 01:12:20.840] That really hurt. [01:12:20.840 --> 01:12:26.840] So I sat down and looked at that and said to myself, how can going after [01:12:26.840 --> 01:12:35.840] this bailiff for doing that lead me toward my intended ultimate outcome? [01:12:35.840 --> 01:12:42.840] I could not find a way to frame that in a way that would lead me toward my [01:12:42.840 --> 01:12:46.840] intended outcome of putting every judge in the country in a position such [01:12:46.840 --> 01:12:49.840] that when they step up behind the bench and look out across the bar at the [01:12:49.840 --> 01:12:53.840] gallery, I want them wondering which one, which one of those scoundrels out [01:12:53.840 --> 01:12:57.840] there are waiting for me to render a ruling so he can run down to the grand [01:12:57.840 --> 01:13:00.840] jury and try to get me indicted. [01:13:00.840 --> 01:13:04.840] I couldn't find a way that that would move me toward my intended outcome. [01:13:04.840 --> 01:13:11.840] I really wanted to pay him back because breaking an elbow really, really hurts. [01:13:11.840 --> 01:13:13.840] But I didn't go after him. [01:13:13.840 --> 01:13:17.840] It was a matter of discipline. [01:13:17.840 --> 01:13:19.840] Decide what's important to you. [01:13:19.840 --> 01:13:27.840] Decide what your goals are, and do not let anyone steal your goals from you. [01:13:27.840 --> 01:13:29.840] You're an alpha male. [01:13:29.840 --> 01:13:31.840] I know how to handle alpha males. [01:13:31.840 --> 01:13:33.840] They're easy. [01:13:33.840 --> 01:13:36.840] Give them a little push. [01:13:36.840 --> 01:13:39.840] I tell the bailiff going into the courthouse, I need you to go get this [01:13:39.840 --> 01:13:42.840] clerk for me and have her come down here because I'm not going up there [01:13:42.840 --> 01:13:44.840] without a mask. [01:13:44.840 --> 01:13:49.840] He looked up at me and he said, was that an order? [01:13:49.840 --> 01:13:55.840] Oh, I have myself a little alpha here trying to show how tough he is. [01:13:55.840 --> 01:14:00.840] I thought about it a second and said, well, yes, matter of fact, it is. [01:14:00.840 --> 01:14:03.840] Oh, how's that worked out for you so far? [01:14:03.840 --> 01:14:04.840] Pretty good. [01:14:04.840 --> 01:14:06.840] Want to test it? [01:14:06.840 --> 01:14:07.840] Yes, I do. [01:14:07.840 --> 01:14:08.840] Okay. [01:14:08.840 --> 01:14:09.840] Wait right there. [01:14:09.840 --> 01:14:11.840] Don't go anywhere. [01:14:11.840 --> 01:14:13.840] Somebody's going to want to talk to you. [01:14:13.840 --> 01:14:16.840] I took out my cell phone, dial 9-1-1. [01:14:16.840 --> 01:14:22.840] That was so much fun. [01:14:22.840 --> 01:14:25.840] But it was unnecessary. [01:14:25.840 --> 01:14:27.840] Led me nowhere. [01:14:27.840 --> 01:14:32.840] Went to nothing, just be playing. [01:14:32.840 --> 01:14:35.840] Do this right. [01:14:35.840 --> 01:14:41.840] I've got boatloads of evidence and everything that I will ever need from [01:14:41.840 --> 01:14:46.840] affidavit to everything that I would ever need to sue these people from a [01:14:46.840 --> 01:14:49.840] tort claims standpoint. [01:14:49.840 --> 01:14:52.840] But if I file a tort claim. [01:14:52.840 --> 01:14:56.840] Hire a lawyer. [01:14:56.840 --> 01:15:02.840] Then all you have to do is kick your lawyers behind. [01:15:02.840 --> 01:15:05.840] I've never had a good experience with lawyers. [01:15:05.840 --> 01:15:08.840] Oh, I can show you how to fix that. [01:15:08.840 --> 01:15:11.840] Have you ever bar-greed your own lawyer? [01:15:11.840 --> 01:15:15.840] I'm about to, actually, to be honest. [01:15:15.840 --> 01:15:17.840] That's how you handle lawyers. [01:15:17.840 --> 01:15:19.840] Lawyers are low-hanging fruit. [01:15:19.840 --> 01:15:25.840] Once you get the lawyer to take your retainer check, you got that puppy. [01:15:25.840 --> 01:15:29.840] You got him by the testicles. [01:15:29.840 --> 01:15:34.840] Then you tell him what he's to do and when he doesn't do it, you bar-grieve him. [01:15:34.840 --> 01:15:38.840] And when you bar-grieve him, he's going to run to the judge with a motion to [01:15:38.840 --> 01:15:39.840] withdraw. [01:15:39.840 --> 01:15:44.840] You go to the judge and you tell the judge, you don't dare let him withdraw. [01:15:44.840 --> 01:15:48.840] He's in a private contract with me and you are forbidden to interfere with a [01:15:48.840 --> 01:15:50.840] private contract. [01:15:50.840 --> 01:15:53.840] You do that, I'll sue you personally. [01:15:53.840 --> 01:16:01.840] We have never had a judge allow a lawyer to withdraw when the opposing, when [01:16:01.840 --> 01:16:04.840] the lawyer's client objected. [01:16:04.840 --> 01:16:09.840] That's because the Sixth Amendment, the federal Constitution, says that the [01:16:09.840 --> 01:16:19.840] state shall not, what's the terms, not the obligations of contracts. [01:16:19.840 --> 01:16:21.840] To impair. [01:16:21.840 --> 01:16:26.840] To impair the obligation of contracts. [01:16:26.840 --> 01:16:28.840] The judge knows that. [01:16:28.840 --> 01:16:31.840] He does that, you get to sue him personally. [01:16:31.840 --> 01:16:35.840] And they've always said, counselor, you're going to have to handle this with [01:16:35.840 --> 01:16:36.840] your client. [01:16:36.840 --> 01:16:42.840] My last one was in Hays County and the lawyer wanted to withdraw and the [01:16:42.840 --> 01:16:47.840] client said, hey, I paid him $5,000 and he hadn't done anything. [01:16:47.840 --> 01:16:50.840] I wanted to fulfill his contract. [01:16:50.840 --> 01:16:59.840] So counselor, hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:16:59.840 --> 01:17:03.840] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or [01:17:03.840 --> 01:17:04.840] even lawsuits? [01:17:04.840 --> 01:17:08.840] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:17:08.840 --> 01:17:12.840] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors [01:17:12.840 --> 01:17:14.840] and now you can win too. [01:17:14.840 --> 01:17:18.840] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court [01:17:18.840 --> 01:17:22.840] the federal civil rights statute, what to do when contacted by phone, mail [01:17:22.840 --> 01:17:26.840] or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt [01:17:26.840 --> 01:17:30.840] collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on [01:17:30.840 --> 01:17:33.840] them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.840 --> 01:17:37.840] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt [01:17:37.840 --> 01:17:38.840] collectors. [01:17:38.840 --> 01:17:40.840] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.840 --> 01:17:44.840] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the [01:17:44.840 --> 01:17:48.840] blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:48.840 --> 01:17:56.840] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to [01:17:56.840 --> 01:17:59.840] learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.840 --> 01:18:00.840] I love logos. [01:18:00.840 --> 01:18:03.840] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:03.840 --> 01:18:06.840] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:06.840 --> 01:18:07.840] I need my truth pick. [01:18:07.840 --> 01:18:09.840] I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:09.840 --> 01:18:12.840] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.840 --> 01:18:15.840] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:15.840 --> 01:18:18.840] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on [01:18:18.840 --> 01:18:19.840] supplements. [01:18:19.840 --> 01:18:21.840] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.840 --> 01:18:23.840] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.840 --> 01:18:26.840] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.840 --> 01:18:28.840] You can order new supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:28.840 --> 01:18:30.840] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:30.840 --> 01:18:33.840] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:18:33.840 --> 01:18:36.840] Pick on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:36.840 --> 01:18:40.840] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos [01:18:40.840 --> 01:18:42.840] gets a few pesos. [01:18:42.840 --> 01:18:43.840] Do I pay extra? [01:18:43.840 --> 01:18:44.840] No. [01:18:44.840 --> 01:18:46.840] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:46.840 --> 01:18:47.840] No. [01:18:47.840 --> 01:18:48.840] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:48.840 --> 01:18:49.840] No. [01:18:49.840 --> 01:18:50.840] I mean, yes. [01:18:50.840 --> 01:18:51.840] Wow. [01:18:51.840 --> 01:18:53.840] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:53.840 --> 01:18:54.840] This is perfect. [01:18:54.840 --> 01:18:55.840] Thank you so much. [01:18:55.840 --> 01:18:57.840] We are welcome. [01:18:57.840 --> 01:19:10.840] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:10.840 --> 01:19:35.840] Thank you. [01:19:35.840 --> 01:19:45.840] Okay. [01:19:45.840 --> 01:19:46.840] We are back. [01:19:46.840 --> 01:19:47.840] Brenda Felton, Brett Felton. [01:19:47.840 --> 01:19:50.840] We were on radio, and we're talking to Jason in Florida. [01:19:50.840 --> 01:19:53.840] And Jason, there's another way to do this. [01:19:53.840 --> 01:20:01.840] You can, you know, if this is taking away from your life, come back to your life. [01:20:01.840 --> 01:20:07.840] Hire a lawyer, and when the lawyer does his standard lawyer crap, [01:20:07.840 --> 01:20:11.840] then he's going to ask you for a retainer. [01:20:11.840 --> 01:20:15.840] And he's not going to do anything to earn that retainer. [01:20:15.840 --> 01:20:19.840] And then down the road a little ways, he's going to ask you for more money, [01:20:19.840 --> 01:20:22.840] probably twice the amount of the retainer. [01:20:22.840 --> 01:20:24.840] He really doesn't want you to pay that. [01:20:24.840 --> 01:20:29.840] He wants you to say absolutely not and then let him withdraw. [01:20:29.840 --> 01:20:31.840] That's how they make their money. [01:20:31.840 --> 01:20:34.840] They make their money getting retainers. [01:20:34.840 --> 01:20:38.840] So, okay, let's have him out. [01:20:38.840 --> 01:20:40.840] Let's tell him, you want more money? [01:20:40.840 --> 01:20:45.840] That's what happened to Dan in San Marcos. [01:20:45.840 --> 01:20:50.840] The lawyer didn't do anything in his case after charging him $5,000 [01:20:50.840 --> 01:20:55.840] and then came back and wanted $7,500 more. [01:20:55.840 --> 01:20:56.840] And he said, heck no. [01:20:56.840 --> 01:20:58.840] He said, well, then I'll withdraw. [01:20:58.840 --> 01:21:00.840] And I told him, Dan, don't let him withdraw. [01:21:00.840 --> 01:21:01.840] So he tried to withdraw. [01:21:01.840 --> 01:21:02.840] Dan objected. [01:21:02.840 --> 01:21:05.840] The judge didn't let him. [01:21:05.840 --> 01:21:08.840] Now I'm going to have him bar-grieve the lawyer. [01:21:08.840 --> 01:21:12.840] You're to file these motions and you're to argue these motions. [01:21:12.840 --> 01:21:14.840] He did that and the lawyer said he wasn't going to argue them. [01:21:14.840 --> 01:21:15.840] It's okay. [01:21:15.840 --> 01:21:17.840] We'll bar-grieve you if you don't. [01:21:17.840 --> 01:21:21.840] And then we'll sue you for ineffective assistance to counsel. [01:21:21.840 --> 01:21:25.840] And he's went to the judge twice to try to be removed from the case. [01:21:25.840 --> 01:21:30.840] And the judge turned him down both times. [01:21:30.840 --> 01:21:34.840] Dan has him by the testicles. [01:21:34.840 --> 01:21:35.840] He can't get away. [01:21:35.840 --> 01:21:37.840] He won't pay him any more money. [01:21:37.840 --> 01:21:40.840] And he's going to sue him if he doesn't do his job. [01:21:40.840 --> 01:21:47.840] Now the lawyer can go to the judge and say, look, judge, you've got to help me out here. [01:21:47.840 --> 01:21:57.840] Have you ever heard my metaphor about the foresighted chessboard? [01:21:57.840 --> 01:21:58.840] Yeah. [01:21:58.840 --> 01:22:04.840] You've got the state attorney, the judge, and your representative. [01:22:04.840 --> 01:22:08.840] They all work for the same team and you're sitting there by yourself. [01:22:08.840 --> 01:22:09.840] Exactly. [01:22:09.840 --> 01:22:12.840] So you have to get inside those relationships. [01:22:12.840 --> 01:22:15.840] For everybody else, anybody who hasn't heard this, [01:22:15.840 --> 01:22:17.840] you sit down at the table in the courtroom. [01:22:17.840 --> 01:22:22.840] You've got your lawyer to your right, opposing counsel to your left, [01:22:22.840 --> 01:22:24.840] and the judge across from you. [01:22:24.840 --> 01:22:27.840] You have a relationship with your lawyer. [01:22:27.840 --> 01:22:32.840] But your lawyer has a professional relationship with opposing counsel, [01:22:32.840 --> 01:22:35.840] and both of you have a relationship with the judge. [01:22:35.840 --> 01:22:40.840] If you can't get in those relationships, you're going to get screwed. [01:22:40.840 --> 01:22:47.840] So the way you get into relationships is you give your lawyer plausible deniability. [01:22:47.840 --> 01:22:53.840] You pick your lawyer right in his professional pants. [01:22:53.840 --> 01:23:00.840] And when he tries to jump and run by filing a motion to withdraw, you object to it. [01:23:00.840 --> 01:23:03.840] They're not used to that happening. [01:23:03.840 --> 01:23:05.840] And now the lawyer is stuck. [01:23:05.840 --> 01:23:07.840] He can't get away from you. [01:23:07.840 --> 01:23:10.840] Now you tell him what he's to do. [01:23:10.840 --> 01:23:13.840] And when he doesn't, you bargain him. [01:23:13.840 --> 01:23:17.840] And then you give him a notice of intent to sue, and he's going to try to withdraw again. [01:23:17.840 --> 01:23:20.840] He's absolutely not. [01:23:20.840 --> 01:23:24.840] You're under contract and haven't fulfilled your contract. [01:23:24.840 --> 01:23:27.840] The judge won't let him withdraw. He's stuck. [01:23:27.840 --> 01:23:32.840] Then he goes to the court and says, look, guys, you've got to help me out here. [01:23:32.840 --> 01:23:35.840] I have an unmanageable client. [01:23:35.840 --> 01:23:42.840] If you help me out on this one, I'll pay you back by helping you screw my next client. [01:23:42.840 --> 01:23:48.840] That might not be nice, but that's how it works in the world we live in. [01:23:48.840 --> 01:23:49.840] But... [01:23:49.840 --> 01:23:59.840] And I understand that on the criminal side, but from the civil side in filing courts... [01:23:59.840 --> 01:24:01.840] Same thing. [01:24:01.840 --> 01:24:05.840] The lawyer's concern is no different. [01:24:05.840 --> 01:24:10.840] He's to get in there and adjudicate in your favor. [01:24:10.840 --> 01:24:14.840] He's not just there to collect a retainer. [01:24:14.840 --> 01:24:18.840] They collect your retainer, and then they have these standard motions. [01:24:18.840 --> 01:24:20.840] They send back and forth. [01:24:20.840 --> 01:24:24.840] Every area of practice has this same thing. [01:24:24.840 --> 01:24:27.840] And once they've used up your retainer, they want to get rid of you, [01:24:27.840 --> 01:24:31.840] because they don't want to actually do the real work. [01:24:31.840 --> 01:24:35.840] So you've got to make sure they can't get away from you. [01:24:35.840 --> 01:24:39.840] Lawyers don't understand. They're low-hanging fruit. [01:24:39.840 --> 01:24:41.840] They're real easy to capture. [01:24:41.840 --> 01:24:46.840] And then they use their relationship with opposing counsel and the judge [01:24:46.840 --> 01:24:52.840] to get you something to make you happy so you don't sue this lawyer. [01:24:52.840 --> 01:24:57.840] And then he tells the other lawyer, I'll pay you back. I'll owe you one. [01:24:57.840 --> 01:25:02.840] They've all got their snouts in the same trough. [01:25:02.840 --> 01:25:07.840] Use it. Or walk away. [01:25:07.840 --> 01:25:20.840] If you have a better life, and this is not some purpose that's exceed your life, walk away. [01:25:20.840 --> 01:25:24.840] I can't walk away because I have a debt to pay. [01:25:24.840 --> 01:25:27.840] But you don't have that debt. [01:25:27.840 --> 01:25:31.840] And you don't owe it to me, you don't owe it to Brett, you don't owe it to anybody [01:25:31.840 --> 01:25:36.840] to screw up your life over an ideal that you may or may not believe in. [01:25:36.840 --> 01:25:40.840] You've got to do what's right for you. [01:25:40.840 --> 01:25:44.840] Well, and that's the thing is I do believe in it. [01:25:44.840 --> 01:25:51.840] And up until 6 15 this evening when I saw that order coming through the court, [01:25:51.840 --> 01:25:57.840] my whole plan for this weekend was to start up writing criminal complaints, [01:25:57.840 --> 01:26:04.840] bar grievances, and everything against everybody and judge judicial complaints [01:26:04.840 --> 01:26:11.840] because there's at least three judges that I can file legitimate criminal complaints [01:26:11.840 --> 01:26:15.840] or judicial complaints against. [01:26:15.840 --> 01:26:22.840] Definitely there's at least probably six to ten lawyers that I can bar grief [01:26:22.840 --> 01:26:28.840] over and above the ones that I've already bar grief. [01:26:28.840 --> 01:26:36.840] It's just the energy that it is taking from me is overwhelming, [01:26:36.840 --> 01:26:44.840] and the caveat to that or to the flip side of that is at some point [01:26:44.840 --> 01:26:51.840] there has to be a breaking point where if I mess with these people enough [01:26:51.840 --> 01:26:57.840] through bar grievances, criminal complaints, judicial complaints, [01:26:57.840 --> 01:27:00.840] are they going to break? [01:27:00.840 --> 01:27:08.840] Let me ask, how many bar grievances and judicial complaints have you filed so far? [01:27:08.840 --> 01:27:15.840] One criminal complaint against my ex's attorney and my ex and a bar grievance [01:27:15.840 --> 01:27:22.840] against him when they tried to claim a false lien on my homestead property [01:27:22.840 --> 01:27:26.840] the day before we were supposed to close our condo on the property. [01:27:26.840 --> 01:27:33.840] Only one? You're missing the most fun. [01:27:33.840 --> 01:27:40.840] There's something very therapeutic about sticking your boot up their professional behinds, [01:27:40.840 --> 01:27:43.840] and then you get to hear them whining and crying, [01:27:43.840 --> 01:27:48.840] and about the third time you bar grieve your opponent's lawyer, [01:27:48.840 --> 01:27:52.840] he's going to disappear and they're going to get a new lawyer. [01:27:52.840 --> 01:27:57.840] And then you started on him. This is the fun part. [01:27:57.840 --> 01:28:08.840] Well, and I have started to feel that excitement because I've been getting reactions, [01:28:08.840 --> 01:28:19.840] not reactions where they actually respond, but reactions in how they move the cases. [01:28:19.840 --> 01:28:30.840] Now, that order to close out the probate that went in today is, it's not, [01:28:30.840 --> 01:28:36.840] I mean, in their world, the game is over, right? [01:28:36.840 --> 01:28:41.840] Because they filed a petition to close, to finalize the probate petition [01:28:41.840 --> 01:28:44.840] for final discharge of the probate. [01:28:44.840 --> 01:28:51.840] The judge filed and signed and granted the order. [01:28:51.840 --> 01:28:53.840] They think it's over. [01:28:53.840 --> 01:28:58.840] But in my eyes, I'm at a precipice where I'm saying, [01:28:58.840 --> 01:29:03.840] okay, well, okay, boys, you want to play around? [01:29:03.840 --> 01:29:10.840] No, I got you. And we can go to war. [01:29:10.840 --> 01:29:15.840] They're hoping against hope that you're going to just leave it right there [01:29:15.840 --> 01:29:20.840] and that all the damage that you've done to them already is all you're going to do. [01:29:20.840 --> 01:29:25.840] They're just quietly watching the clock tick and they're hoping. [01:29:25.840 --> 01:29:29.840] You're just getting to the good part. [01:29:29.840 --> 01:29:36.840] Once the judge has ruled, now you come after them. That's the fun part. [01:29:36.840 --> 01:29:40.840] Hang on. Go into our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:29:40.840 --> 01:29:44.840] We love a lot of radio. [01:29:44.840 --> 01:29:50.840] We'll finish up with Jason here pretty soon and start going to other callers. [01:29:50.840 --> 01:30:01.840] Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:30:01.840 --> 01:30:05.840] Sorry, soft drink lovers. Even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.840 --> 01:30:10.840] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:10.840 --> 01:30:16.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.840 --> 01:30:18.840] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.840 --> 01:30:21.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.840 --> 01:30:26.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.840 --> 01:30:31.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.840 --> 01:30:34.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.840 --> 01:30:38.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.840 --> 01:30:42.840] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.840 --> 01:30:45.840] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.840 --> 01:30:50.840] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? Wrong. [01:30:50.840 --> 01:30:55.840] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:55.840 --> 01:31:02.840] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:02.840 --> 01:31:05.840] Studies authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:31:05.840 --> 01:31:09.840] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.840 --> 01:31:15.840] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:15.840 --> 01:31:18.840] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:31:18.840 --> 01:31:23.840] and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:23.840 --> 01:31:29.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.840 --> 01:31:35.840] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.840 --> 01:31:37.840] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.840 --> 01:31:42.840] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.840 --> 01:31:45.840] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.840 --> 01:31:47.840] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:47.840 --> 01:31:49.840] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.840 --> 01:31:50.840] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.840 --> 01:31:51.840] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:51.840 --> 01:31:52.840] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:52.840 --> 01:31:54.840] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.840 --> 01:31:56.840] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:56.840 --> 01:32:00.840] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:26.840 --> 01:32:27.840] I'm Craig. [01:32:27.840 --> 01:32:30.840] In conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:30.840 --> 01:32:34.840] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:34.840 --> 01:32:38.840] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:32:38.840 --> 01:32:40.840] and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.840 --> 01:32:43.840] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:43.840 --> 01:32:47.840] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:47.840 --> 01:32:50.840] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.840 --> 01:32:54.840] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleOfLawRadio.com. [01:32:54.840 --> 01:32:58.840] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:24.840 --> 01:33:52.840] Okay, we are back. [01:33:52.840 --> 01:33:55.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:55.840 --> 01:34:02.840] And Jason, I've spent time on this because I think it's real important. [01:34:02.840 --> 01:34:06.840] Nobody owes us anything. [01:34:06.840 --> 01:34:11.840] You owe it to yourself to do what's right for you. [01:34:11.840 --> 01:34:18.840] I fight these guys because I have a special reason, and I'm a grandpa. [01:34:18.840 --> 01:34:20.840] My house is paid for. [01:34:20.840 --> 01:34:22.840] My car is paid for. [01:34:22.840 --> 01:34:26.840] I don't owe anybody anything. [01:34:26.840 --> 01:34:28.840] My kids are grown. [01:34:28.840 --> 01:34:30.840] I fulfill my contract with life. [01:34:30.840 --> 01:34:33.840] I can get out here and fight with these guys all I want to. [01:34:33.840 --> 01:34:37.840] If you have other issues, if you have other goals in your life, [01:34:37.840 --> 01:34:39.840] you have to be true to yourself first. [01:34:39.840 --> 01:34:47.840] You don't owe it to me or the Patriot community to do something just because we think you need to. [01:34:47.840 --> 01:34:50.840] You only need to do what's right for you. [01:34:50.840 --> 01:35:00.840] I agree, but the biggest challenge that I have is, so when my father got sick 20 years ago, [01:35:00.840 --> 01:35:09.840] he had a heart attack, was paralyzed, completely bedridden for the last 15 years of his life. [01:35:09.840 --> 01:35:14.840] And I saw a lot of regret in his life. [01:35:14.840 --> 01:35:24.840] I also would see a lot of regret on my deathbed if I allowed these people to eat me. [01:35:24.840 --> 01:35:26.840] Yes. [01:35:26.840 --> 01:35:32.840] Brett mentioned something earlier where he said, [01:35:32.840 --> 01:35:45.840] you're at the place where you're kind of transitioning from the place of weakness and defense to now a place of strength [01:35:45.840 --> 01:35:50.840] because you've got them dead right. [01:35:50.840 --> 01:35:57.840] And it is new to me to flip the script, obviously, [01:35:57.840 --> 01:36:07.840] to go from being on the defensive for the past 20 years to now taking it to them with the strength [01:36:07.840 --> 01:36:18.840] and with the tools that you guys have provided, being everybody else on Telegram and all the rest of the crew. [01:36:18.840 --> 01:36:23.840] The question, or not the question, but the challenge that I have is that I know that, yes, [01:36:23.840 --> 01:36:29.840] I am now in the place of strength and I can now push forward, [01:36:29.840 --> 01:36:36.840] but if it takes 20 years to get to this place, is it going to take another 20 years [01:36:36.840 --> 01:36:43.840] or does it kind of streamline once you really figure everything out? [01:36:43.840 --> 01:36:47.840] It streamlines. You've started businesses. [01:36:47.840 --> 01:36:49.840] You know how it is. [01:36:49.840 --> 01:36:56.840] You start out, you put your money into it, you put your time into it, you work your butt off, [01:36:56.840 --> 01:37:02.840] and about the time you think it's never going to go anywhere, all of a sudden it takes hold [01:37:02.840 --> 01:37:07.840] and you can step back and watch it work. [01:37:07.840 --> 01:37:09.840] This is the same way. [01:37:09.840 --> 01:37:13.840] You've ground through the hard part. [01:37:13.840 --> 01:37:15.840] Now you're getting to the good part. [01:37:15.840 --> 01:37:22.840] Now you're getting to where you actually should have been taking them on more all along would make this easier. [01:37:22.840 --> 01:37:23.840] I agree. [01:37:23.840 --> 01:37:28.840] I should have put them into this a long time ago, but I didn't know what I know now. [01:37:28.840 --> 01:37:35.840] It only took me 30 years to figure this out. [01:37:35.840 --> 01:37:37.840] That's all. [01:37:37.840 --> 01:37:50.840] Join the club. It takes a while to figure it out, but right now I wouldn't take anything for all that I've been through. [01:37:50.840 --> 01:37:57.840] I was convicted a year in jail once for filing criminal charges with a grand jury against a district judge. [01:37:57.840 --> 01:38:01.840] It was outrageously illegal. [01:38:01.840 --> 01:38:05.840] I wouldn't trade that for anything. [01:38:05.840 --> 01:38:12.840] I stood in jail after 27 days in solitary confinement, looked in a little stainless steel mirror, [01:38:12.840 --> 01:38:16.840] and I said to myself, self, you're running your mouth through the jury, [01:38:16.840 --> 01:38:23.840] and you told them at the end of the day it didn't matter what they did because you'd still be here when it was over. [01:38:23.840 --> 01:38:25.840] Did you mean it? [01:38:25.840 --> 01:38:35.840] I'm standing in jail after almost 30 days solitary and convicted to a year in prison. [01:38:35.840 --> 01:38:44.840] I thought about it, and I said to myself, yes, as a matter of fact, it was worth it. [01:38:44.840 --> 01:38:50.840] I have a friend who is a clinical psychologist who treats people in old folks' homes, [01:38:50.840 --> 01:38:57.840] and he says getting old is about learning to deal with regret. [01:38:57.840 --> 01:39:06.840] We look back in on our lives, and we seldom pay much attention to the victories that we have. [01:39:06.840 --> 01:39:18.840] Mostly we pay attention to our failures, and we end our lives weighed down with regret. [01:39:18.840 --> 01:39:22.840] I took that to heart. [01:39:22.840 --> 01:39:27.840] What will I look back on with regret? [01:39:27.840 --> 01:39:33.840] I've had about three really good cases I could have pursued, [01:39:33.840 --> 01:39:38.840] but I wound up spending my time helping other people instead of going after mine. [01:39:38.840 --> 01:39:46.840] If I'd have went after mine, I could have got some pretty decent settlements, and I'd have got money in my hand. [01:39:46.840 --> 01:39:56.840] But would I feel better about it when I'm on my deathbed and look back? [01:39:56.840 --> 01:39:58.840] Did I do the right thing? [01:39:58.840 --> 01:40:04.840] And I'd look back and say, yes, I helped people who couldn't help themselves. [01:40:04.840 --> 01:40:12.840] The money would have been nice, but it's not as important as my integrity. [01:40:12.840 --> 01:40:22.840] I have things I will regret, but not as many as I would have had I not known Dr. Veath. [01:40:22.840 --> 01:40:28.840] He gave me those warnings, and I took those warnings to heart. [01:40:28.840 --> 01:40:39.840] Will you regret the fact that you did not pursue your business and create a lot of money for your children and grandchildren? [01:40:39.840 --> 01:40:49.840] Or will you regret the fact that you let these people steal from you, which would be worse? [01:40:49.840 --> 01:40:53.840] Well, I think the latter would definitely be worse. [01:40:53.840 --> 01:40:56.840] Now, let me ask you this. [01:40:56.840 --> 01:41:07.840] If I was to file a huge tort claim tomorrow and go through the process and probably wind up settling, [01:41:07.840 --> 01:41:12.840] what length of time am I looking at? [01:41:12.840 --> 01:41:13.840] Two years? [01:41:13.840 --> 01:41:18.840] I mean, obviously, you don't know the details and how much strength I have in my cases or whatnot. [01:41:18.840 --> 01:41:29.840] But if I was to sue all these people and really put their feet to the fire, criminal complaints, judicial complaints, bar grievances, [01:41:29.840 --> 01:41:34.840] and I've got a boatload of it, am I looking at a year? [01:41:34.840 --> 01:41:36.840] Am I looking at five years? [01:41:36.840 --> 01:41:40.840] Is it just a matter of how bold they would have been? [01:41:40.840 --> 01:41:45.840] If your purpose is to win a judgment in your favor, look at five years. [01:41:45.840 --> 01:41:54.840] If your purpose is to bring them to the table to make a deal, six months to two years. [01:41:54.840 --> 01:42:06.840] Okay. But literally, all I inherited was my mother and father's condo and basically $500,000 in my father's investment account. [01:42:06.840 --> 01:42:12.840] And the lawyers, of course, just whittled that away. [01:42:12.840 --> 01:42:16.840] Well, it's not gone. [01:42:16.840 --> 01:42:19.840] It's not gone. [01:42:19.840 --> 01:42:25.840] Well, and that's exactly the point. I could sue them for $50 million. [01:42:25.840 --> 01:42:35.840] And legitimately, those numbers would work based on all the harm and all the bullshit that they've done to me over these years. [01:42:35.840 --> 01:42:42.840] If I just came to the table and said to them, listen, just give me what you fucking stole from me, excuse my language. [01:42:42.840 --> 01:42:44.840] Just give me what you stole from me. [01:42:44.840 --> 01:42:50.840] Give me the $500,000 and let's be done with it and move on and leave me alone, people. [01:42:50.840 --> 01:42:53.840] That's really all I want. [01:42:53.840 --> 01:42:57.840] Then sue them for 10 times that amount. [01:42:57.840 --> 01:43:04.840] Beat them up and then ask the judge to order mediation. [01:43:04.840 --> 01:43:11.840] When the judge orders mediation, then the lawyers don't lose face sitting down at the table to negotiate. [01:43:11.840 --> 01:43:14.840] Yeah, but beat them up really good first. [01:43:14.840 --> 01:43:15.840] Launch into them. [01:43:15.840 --> 01:43:16.840] Beat them up real good. [01:43:16.840 --> 01:43:20.840] Take it to the private and let them settle out of the public. [01:43:20.840 --> 01:43:22.840] Exactly. [01:43:22.840 --> 01:43:23.840] All right. [01:43:23.840 --> 01:43:26.840] Well, gentlemen, thank you again for all of your time. [01:43:26.840 --> 01:43:29.840] I'm looking at the telegram chat and people are waiting. [01:43:29.840 --> 01:43:32.840] So I'm going to get off the phone. [01:43:32.840 --> 01:43:34.840] But again, thank you guys so much. [01:43:34.840 --> 01:43:36.840] I really appreciate all your help. [01:43:36.840 --> 01:43:38.840] Okay. Thank you for calling. [01:43:38.840 --> 01:43:41.840] Okay. Now we're going to go to Chris in Colorado. [01:43:41.840 --> 01:43:43.840] Hello, Chris. [01:43:43.840 --> 01:43:45.840] Are you ready yet? [01:43:45.840 --> 01:43:46.840] I am. [01:43:46.840 --> 01:43:49.840] Should I save you from the quip this time? [01:43:49.840 --> 01:43:52.840] Wait, say that again? [01:43:52.840 --> 01:43:54.840] Should I save us from the quip? [01:43:54.840 --> 01:43:56.840] Yes. [01:43:56.840 --> 01:43:57.840] Okay. [01:43:57.840 --> 01:43:59.840] We'll be right back. [01:43:59.840 --> 01:44:05.840] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:05.840 --> 01:44:10.840] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:10.840 --> 01:44:16.840] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:16.840 --> 01:44:21.840] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:21.840 --> 01:44:24.840] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:24.840 --> 01:44:30.840] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:30.840 --> 01:44:33.840] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [01:44:33.840 --> 01:44:39.840] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. 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[01:45:22.840 --> 01:45:27.840] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.840 --> 01:45:33.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.840 --> 01:45:38.840] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.840 --> 01:45:42.840] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.840 --> 01:45:48.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:48.840 --> 01:45:51.840] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.840 --> 01:45:55.840] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner [01:45:55.840 --> 01:46:00.840] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.840 --> 01:46:54.840] Okay, we are back. [01:46:54.840 --> 01:46:59.840] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to Chris in Colorado. [01:46:59.840 --> 01:47:03.840] Chris, what do you have for us today? [01:47:03.840 --> 01:47:07.840] Hey, guys, hopefully just a couple quick procedural things. [01:47:07.840 --> 01:47:13.840] You know, you mentioned something when Jason was talking about whether to fight back or not, [01:47:13.840 --> 01:47:16.840] about somebody kicking a soapbox underneath your feet. [01:47:16.840 --> 01:47:20.840] Well, it happened a lot, it seems, so I was curious about a case I found [01:47:20.840 --> 01:47:25.840] that was brought against me 25 years ago that I knew nothing about. [01:47:25.840 --> 01:47:29.840] Can I reopen it and actually participate in it [01:47:29.840 --> 01:47:33.840] and ask the judge to reopen it and actually participate in it [01:47:33.840 --> 01:47:36.840] and put my motions in to actually have something done? [01:47:36.840 --> 01:47:39.840] Were you never noticed of the case? [01:47:39.840 --> 01:47:41.840] Never noticed. [01:47:41.840 --> 01:47:47.840] How was the case adjudicated? Did they get a claim against you? [01:47:47.840 --> 01:47:51.840] They tried to get a claim. They even brought it to, I mean, it's craziness. [01:47:51.840 --> 01:47:54.840] I don't want to go into full drama, but they ended up dismissing it, [01:47:54.840 --> 01:47:56.840] but they didn't fully dismiss it. [01:47:56.840 --> 01:47:59.840] It left a mark on me, which I just found out about last week. [01:47:59.840 --> 01:48:07.840] So it's now in a new judge's hand because the old judge is probably retired or even dead. [01:48:07.840 --> 01:48:11.840] And I talked to the clerk and they said, well, write a letter [01:48:11.840 --> 01:48:14.840] and ask the judge what you want done and see what he says. [01:48:14.840 --> 01:48:19.840] Oh, okay. Okay, this should not be too hard. [01:48:19.840 --> 01:48:26.840] If they fail to give you proper notice, then you file a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [01:48:26.840 --> 01:48:29.840] And a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction can be filed at any time, [01:48:29.840 --> 01:48:32.840] no matter how remote in history. [01:48:32.840 --> 01:48:36.840] You get it dismissed for lack of proper notice, [01:48:36.840 --> 01:48:46.840] and then they can't come back because the time of the clock has ran out. [01:48:46.840 --> 01:48:50.840] Okay. Well, I wanted to, they dismissed it. [01:48:50.840 --> 01:48:54.840] I mean, they dismissed all the charges that somebody tried to trump up, [01:48:54.840 --> 01:48:59.840] but well, no, they didn't, did they? That's true. You're right. [01:48:59.840 --> 01:49:05.840] So file for a subject matter jurisdiction because they didn't give me proper notification [01:49:05.840 --> 01:49:11.840] and they obviously could have, and then move the court to dismiss all charges? [01:49:11.840 --> 01:49:12.840] Yes. [01:49:12.840 --> 01:49:14.840] Whatever? Okay. [01:49:14.840 --> 01:49:23.840] Once you challenge subject matter jurisdiction, then there can be no adjudication. [01:49:23.840 --> 01:49:28.840] They ask the court to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. [01:49:28.840 --> 01:49:30.840] Okay. Okay. [01:49:30.840 --> 01:49:37.840] And then once it's dismissed, they can't come back because the time limitations ran out. [01:49:37.840 --> 01:49:42.840] Yes. It's too late for them to start over and do it right. [01:49:42.840 --> 01:49:44.840] Well, some people aren't going to do old. [01:49:44.840 --> 01:49:47.840] They walked away from it for themselves, [01:49:47.840 --> 01:49:50.840] but they don't realize that they left a mark on my history, on my life. [01:49:50.840 --> 01:49:54.840] And, you know, it's not that big of a deal, but it is, it may cause some issue. [01:49:54.840 --> 01:49:58.840] But it's just amazing, 25 years later, I found myself. [01:49:58.840 --> 01:50:03.840] So, you know, it brings me to the other point. [01:50:03.840 --> 01:50:08.840] When somebody does something to you, you know, Jason was talking about whether to move forward or not, [01:50:08.840 --> 01:50:12.840] I'm not sure how to answer for him, but I'm thinking about for me personally, [01:50:12.840 --> 01:50:21.840] if somebody puts something on a court record that is not in alignment with the truth of what happened in reality here, right? [01:50:21.840 --> 01:50:26.840] I don't know how we should feel about that, but personally, the way I feel about it right now is no, [01:50:26.840 --> 01:50:32.840] that's a permanent record that's going to, you know, that's going to permeate throughout history. [01:50:32.840 --> 01:50:35.840] And nobody's going to care, but it is in there. [01:50:35.840 --> 01:50:39.840] And, you know, should we care about things like that? [01:50:39.840 --> 01:50:46.840] When somebody lies on a record that's going to go up throughout history, you know? [01:50:46.840 --> 01:50:50.840] Should we set the record straight if we have the chance to? [01:50:50.840 --> 01:50:54.840] The truth matters. What's right matters. [01:50:54.840 --> 01:50:56.840] Yeah, so that's where I'm with it right now. [01:50:56.840 --> 01:51:01.840] I mean, I know in the big scope of this, this is a needle that nobody will ever find, but it does have an effect. [01:51:01.840 --> 01:51:03.840] You know, it's like it does have an energy to it. [01:51:03.840 --> 01:51:10.840] And I'm tired of people making mistruths and then putting it on record and making that into law at some point. [01:51:10.840 --> 01:51:15.840] You know, this is a personal social politics and family politics, [01:51:15.840 --> 01:51:18.840] but it doesn't matter when somebody lies on a court document. [01:51:18.840 --> 01:51:24.840] I think that's an okay position to have. That's sort of one I'm taking right now. [01:51:24.840 --> 01:51:33.840] So, okay. With that said, unless you guys have any objection to that, [01:51:33.840 --> 01:51:38.840] that sounds like Brett, you're on board with that one. [01:51:38.840 --> 01:51:44.840] I was called in with Randy last week and Brett and I chatted about some stuff going on with my case. [01:51:44.840 --> 01:51:53.840] And I asked about if some of my stuff gets dismissed, can I bring it up in the lower court [01:51:53.840 --> 01:51:57.840] with my statute of limitations is out on my original claims. [01:51:57.840 --> 01:51:59.840] And I think I found an answer to this. [01:51:59.840 --> 01:52:02.840] I just wanted to make sure that if you guys ever heard of this. [01:52:02.840 --> 01:52:12.840] So in Illinois, they have this thing called the saving statutes. [01:52:12.840 --> 01:52:14.840] The what? [01:52:14.840 --> 01:52:18.840] It's called the Illinois Saving Statute. [01:52:18.840 --> 01:52:20.840] Saving? [01:52:20.840 --> 01:52:23.840] Saving, yeah. [01:52:23.840 --> 01:52:26.840] That's familiar. There's more to it. [01:52:26.840 --> 01:52:30.840] It's not just savings. There's something else to it. I remember that. [01:52:30.840 --> 01:52:34.840] What it means is that when the, let's say you're in federal court [01:52:34.840 --> 01:52:38.840] and the judge dismisses it for lack of jurisdiction or he just kicks out the claims, [01:52:38.840 --> 01:52:44.840] et cetera, et cetera, you have one year to refile. [01:52:44.840 --> 01:52:46.840] And it doesn't say in any court. [01:52:46.840 --> 01:52:55.840] It just says refile or the remaining time of your surviving statute of limitations. [01:52:55.840 --> 01:52:59.840] So if your statute of limitations have already expired, you have one year to refile. [01:52:59.840 --> 01:53:07.840] And it sounds like I can bring this up in the state court if the federal court gives me too much hassle. [01:53:07.840 --> 01:53:15.840] And then I can refile a much better pleading at that level and then maybe learn some federal claims. [01:53:15.840 --> 01:53:17.840] I just learned this about towing in Illinois. [01:53:17.840 --> 01:53:22.840] I haven't had time to read it, but the ICC there, the Illinois Commerce Commission, [01:53:22.840 --> 01:53:30.840] says that towing in Illinois is federally regulated. [01:53:30.840 --> 01:53:38.840] So I guess I'm asking this to kind of get a game plan to make this drawn out as long as possible [01:53:38.840 --> 01:53:43.840] so the opposing side realizes it's going to cost them a lot of money. [01:53:43.840 --> 01:53:46.840] And have you ever heard of something like that in other states, [01:53:46.840 --> 01:53:55.840] this statute that allows you to refile even though your suit has passed its statute of limitations? [01:53:55.840 --> 01:54:05.840] I never have. It sounds really interesting there that you have an extra year at that point. [01:54:05.840 --> 01:54:09.840] Do you have any case law on that issue? [01:54:09.840 --> 01:54:20.840] Well, it's an actual statute. It's Chapter 8324A. It's from 1973, apparently. [01:54:20.840 --> 01:54:24.840] Wait a minute. That can't be a federal statute. [01:54:24.840 --> 01:54:33.840] No, it's a state statute. It's a state law. [01:54:33.840 --> 01:54:43.840] Yeah, see where they've got some case law that talks about it, Section 2-619. [01:54:43.840 --> 01:54:47.840] Interesting. Saving statute. [01:54:47.840 --> 01:54:51.840] Yeah, it almost sounds like Illinois is so corrupt that they've actually kicked themselves in the foot [01:54:51.840 --> 01:55:01.840] because when people start finding things like this, then holy moly. [01:55:01.840 --> 01:55:05.840] So with that strategy, that's where I'm trying to get some room to breathe [01:55:05.840 --> 01:55:10.840] because I'm having a hard time keeping up just because the judge is making super particulars right now. [01:55:10.840 --> 01:55:15.840] But that's my goal is if I can get this, hopefully to move forward in this court, [01:55:15.840 --> 01:55:21.840] but some of the claims are not going to survive. But the other question I want to ask, [01:55:21.840 --> 01:55:29.840] I spoke to one of the federal attorneys, and this woman said some things about appeal. [01:55:29.840 --> 01:55:36.840] She said, I do not have to make a motion for reconsideration or anything. [01:55:36.840 --> 01:55:39.840] It's just that when the case is over, anything I want to appeal, I can appeal. [01:55:39.840 --> 01:55:44.840] I don't even have to make a point of objection. I don't know if I fully agree with that, [01:55:44.840 --> 01:55:48.840] but I know Dr. Graves talks about always get it on the record that you object [01:55:48.840 --> 01:55:53.840] or a notice of exception and things like that. [01:55:53.840 --> 01:56:03.840] Okay. In the Texas law, the court of appeals have said that in order to preserve your objection, [01:56:03.840 --> 01:56:13.840] your right to appeal, you must request findings of fact and conclusions at law. [01:56:13.840 --> 01:56:18.840] But if you don't have those, then you have nothing to appeal. [01:56:18.840 --> 01:56:25.840] They have said that, but I have not seen that they've enforced that. [01:56:25.840 --> 01:56:32.840] If you simply bring the objections and show that the objections are on the record [01:56:32.840 --> 01:56:40.840] to the rulings when they occurred, you don't have to have findings of fact and conclusions at law. [01:56:40.840 --> 01:56:46.840] I'm not sure how Illinois would treat that kind of thing. [01:56:46.840 --> 01:56:48.840] Okay. [01:56:48.840 --> 01:56:56.840] There are a lot of variations. Like the Fed, an order is not an order [01:56:56.840 --> 01:57:02.840] unless there is a judgment included with the order. [01:57:02.840 --> 01:57:06.840] There are two different documents, but it takes both of them to make an order, [01:57:06.840 --> 01:57:11.840] and the judgment is findings of fact and conclusions at law. [01:57:11.840 --> 01:57:17.840] Does it work similar in Illinois? [01:57:17.840 --> 01:57:21.840] If it did, there would be no need for findings of fact. [01:57:21.840 --> 01:57:27.840] I should already have it. [01:57:27.840 --> 01:57:30.840] I think they're both kind of weaved into one. [01:57:30.840 --> 01:57:35.840] The judgment was pretty particular about the case law and the reason they picked it. [01:57:35.840 --> 01:57:38.840] I think I can use it. I'm going to go ahead and put a record on anyway, [01:57:38.840 --> 01:57:44.840] but here's what she also said about doing a motion for reconsideration. [01:57:44.840 --> 01:57:53.840] I've listened in jurisdiction, or you have to file a motion for a hearing, [01:57:53.840 --> 01:57:55.840] and then you present your motion for reconsideration. [01:57:55.840 --> 01:58:01.840] What she said to do was file my amended complaint, [01:58:01.840 --> 01:58:05.840] and then the points that I'm not allowed to amend [01:58:05.840 --> 01:58:09.840] put those into a motion for reconsideration [01:58:09.840 --> 01:58:12.840] as if they would have been in the complaint, [01:58:12.840 --> 01:58:14.840] and then ask the judge for me to put them in another amended complaint [01:58:14.840 --> 01:58:17.840] if he grants my motion for reconsideration. [01:58:17.840 --> 01:58:22.840] In that way, I'm on record for kind of an objection as well, [01:58:22.840 --> 01:58:27.840] and then I don't have to schedule another hearing. [01:58:27.840 --> 01:58:36.840] Let's just go to the next status hearing, and we deal with it all then. [01:58:36.840 --> 01:58:40.840] Does that sound about right? Sound okay? Did you get that, Randy? [01:58:40.840 --> 01:58:49.840] Yes, that sounds right to me. Everything ultimately is reasonable. [01:58:49.840 --> 01:58:53.840] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:58:53.840 --> 01:58:57.840] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:57.840 --> 01:59:01.840] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:01.840 --> 01:59:06.840] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:06.840 --> 01:59:08.840] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:08.840 --> 01:59:12.840] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:12.840 --> 01:59:17.840] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. 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