[00:00.000 --> 00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.500 --> 00:09.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.500 --> 00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.000 --> 00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [00:16.500 --> 00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.500 --> 00:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.000 --> 00:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.500 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.500] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.500 --> 00:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [00:38.000 --> 00:42.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and VIN. [00:42.000 --> 00:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [00:45.500 --> 00:47.500] Spar. It's what fighters do. [00:47.500 --> 00:51.000] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.000 --> 00:54.000] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.000 --> 00:56.500] Spar with an extra P. [00:56.500 --> 01:03.000] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:03.000 --> 01:08.500] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [01:08.500 --> 01:10.500] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.500 --> 01:14.500] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.500 --> 01:17.500] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, [01:17.500 --> 01:21.000] we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.000 --> 01:30.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:30.500 --> 01:34.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.500 --> 01:38.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.000 --> 01:39.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.500 --> 01:43.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:43.000 --> 01:46.000] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.000 --> 01:48.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.000 --> 01:51.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.500 --> 01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.500 --> 01:58.000] So protect your rights. [01:58.000 --> 02:01.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.500 --> 02:04.000] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [02:04.000 --> 02:08.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [02:08.000 --> 02:12.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.000 --> 02:15.500] Start over with Startpage. [02:15.500 --> 02:19.500] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms [02:19.500 --> 02:22.000] around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.000 --> 02:26.000] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [02:26.000 --> 02:30.000] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.000 --> 02:33.500] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.500 --> 02:37.500] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.500 --> 02:38.500] when he said, [02:38.500 --> 02:43.500] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.500 --> 02:47.500] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, [02:47.500 --> 02:51.000] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:51.000 --> 03:17.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:17.000 --> 03:43.000] All right. [03:43.000 --> 03:49.000] We are back. Rule of Law Radio. Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [03:49.000 --> 03:55.000] And this is the Friday, the 22nd of July, 2022. [03:55.000 --> 03:59.000] All right. We are talking with Chris in Colorado. [03:59.000 --> 04:03.000] Are you sure it's not August? [04:03.000 --> 04:08.000] Yeah, we might have to have a little debate about that. [04:08.000 --> 04:16.000] I'm still hearing some music here. Let's see, did that go down? Looks like it did not. [04:16.000 --> 04:19.000] Okay. [04:19.000 --> 04:22.000] All right. So we're talking with Chris in Colorado. [04:22.000 --> 04:28.000] And so Chris, I think you've got a bead on what you want to do with that lawsuit, [04:28.000 --> 04:34.000] break it up into individual pieces for the individual actors. [04:34.000 --> 04:39.000] Well, yeah. I mean, just an insurance claim, [04:39.000 --> 04:45.000] and then eventually I'm going to do all the other parties for their contribution in the separate lawsuits. [04:45.000 --> 04:49.000] Yeah, that sounds just a lot more solid. [04:49.000 --> 04:51.000] Because you can't really prove. [04:51.000 --> 04:56.000] I know we feel like when somebody does something wrong that puts us in a position [04:56.000 --> 05:00.000] that just sends our life off in a different direction, and we know it, we feel it, [05:00.000 --> 05:04.000] we can tell, but can we prove that in court? Not really. [05:04.000 --> 05:07.000] But if this person just wouldn't have done that, then this wouldn't have happened. [05:07.000 --> 05:10.000] We couldn't really say for sure. [05:10.000 --> 05:20.000] I mean, that's like blaming my mother for everything that's happened till today, right? [05:20.000 --> 05:23.000] As guilty as she may be. [05:23.000 --> 05:28.000] I'll just play the Jimmy Buffett song in court, and then we'll just, you know, that's my defense. [05:28.000 --> 05:35.000] That's my argument. [05:35.000 --> 05:40.000] I do need to call in when I settle down from what happened this week, [05:40.000 --> 05:47.000] but I got another one yet, and it's just been saying the storage place I was storing at [05:47.000 --> 05:53.000] and the security there and all the break-in attempts I'm finding out, and it's just an absolute mess. [05:53.000 --> 05:55.000] And I'm getting some reports from the police. [05:55.000 --> 05:58.000] I'm trying to get a record of all the calls, and apparently there's a lot, [05:58.000 --> 06:01.000] and they weren't closing and all that kind of stuff. [06:01.000 --> 06:04.000] But I just lost like years' worth of my effort. [06:04.000 --> 06:08.000] I mean, luckily I have some insurance to cover it, but a lot of personal stuff. [06:08.000 --> 06:13.000] So when I calm down and the adrenaline's gone, I'll share the story and see what you got. [06:13.000 --> 06:16.000] Man, I'm sorry. That's rough. [06:16.000 --> 06:20.000] Yeah, I've heard you got robbed, and I'm sure they took some personal stuff. [06:20.000 --> 06:28.000] It's kind of weird. It's like losing a wife almost. You know, it's really weird. [06:28.000 --> 06:31.000] I hope I never find out about that. [06:31.000 --> 06:36.000] Well, I mean, I met like a girlfriend or something, like, you know, somebody people leaving. [06:36.000 --> 06:41.000] I see people in his face. They get ripped apart, you know, and anyway, it's an effort. [06:41.000 --> 06:47.000] So when you lose personal belongings, we get over it because it's just stuff, but it's still rough. [06:47.000 --> 06:50.000] But I don't know how to approach this one. [06:50.000 --> 06:55.000] I mean, I'm losing my ability to grip and wrap and keep doing all this mentally [06:55.000 --> 06:59.000] because they're getting super complex, and there's a lot of big corporations hiding behind stuff. [06:59.000 --> 07:07.000] So I'll call in later. But I really do need a decent attorney for the hospital thing, I think. [07:07.000 --> 07:14.000] Maybe I can handle it on my own, but it's a federal issue. It's amazing. [07:14.000 --> 07:19.000] And I figured lawyers would jump over it. So I think when I made my comment about being lack of creativity, [07:19.000 --> 07:23.000] I was actually hinting at a tail between their legs. [07:23.000 --> 07:28.000] They really don't have the courage to do what or the creativity to learn. [07:28.000 --> 07:34.000] These are complex issues, and they know it's a big payout, but they want the simple payout. [07:34.000 --> 07:38.000] Sad. There's so many of them like that. [07:38.000 --> 07:48.000] We've been doing something for so long in one way that I can see that. [07:48.000 --> 07:58.000] In so many ways, if we could really get the leverage like lawyers have, we would be just unstoppable. [07:58.000 --> 08:06.000] I mean, it's amazing. You guys have a wealth of knowledge, and you're teaching us to take the same path. [08:06.000 --> 08:12.000] And if we can ever just twist the arm a little bit to where they would give us a little more respect, [08:12.000 --> 08:15.000] it's going to be an avalanche. [08:15.000 --> 08:20.000] It'll swing the pendulum back the other way so far that it'll just shock the heck out of them. [08:20.000 --> 08:26.000] And I think Randy's hinted at that in some of his language, but I don't know. [08:26.000 --> 08:31.000] We are powerful tools. We really are. And I'm really starting to see that. [08:31.000 --> 08:34.000] Yes, sir. Well, wonderful. [08:34.000 --> 08:37.000] Thank you. Thank you guys again. [08:37.000 --> 08:40.000] Keep it up. [08:40.000 --> 08:47.000] All right. So our next caller is Ted in California. [08:47.000 --> 08:51.000] Ted, good evening to you. [08:51.000 --> 09:01.000] Good evening, gentlemen, and happy Thursday to Randy. [09:01.000 --> 09:06.000] Randy, did you hear that? This is Thursday again. [09:06.000 --> 09:11.000] No, I was back here snoring. [09:11.000 --> 09:14.000] I was napping in my dotage. [09:14.000 --> 09:19.000] Okay. So what's going on, Ted? [09:19.000 --> 09:24.000] The first response when you wake up from dozing, especially in court, the first response is, [09:24.000 --> 09:37.000] objection, objection. Anyway, I went to my appellate court hearing today for the oral argument on my traffic ticket, [09:37.000 --> 09:44.000] and it was not a three-judge panel, and there was only one judge there. [09:44.000 --> 09:50.000] And it was very bizarre. The whole thing was bizarre. [09:50.000 --> 09:58.000] I did one many years ago. Many years ago, I would say probably 10, 12 years ago, [09:58.000 --> 10:03.000] I went in with my $1,000 suit on, and I went through metal detectors and everything, [10:03.000 --> 10:07.000] all the other lawyers nodded to me and stuff. [10:07.000 --> 10:12.000] When we go up in there and I do the oral argument, I was second up, [10:12.000 --> 10:24.000] and I brought up an issue in that, look, it's a traffic ticket, but it can be life-altering. [10:24.000 --> 10:29.000] It's not just the fine. It can keep you from getting the job. [10:29.000 --> 10:37.000] And there was somebody in there that actually, and there was more to what I said on that line, [10:37.000 --> 10:44.000] but one of these lawyers picked up, and most of these appellate lawyers, [10:44.000 --> 10:49.000] they're the more expensive lawyers. [10:49.000 --> 10:54.000] And he used my line, because I hung around and listened to the other oral argument. [10:54.000 --> 10:59.000] He was up next, and it was like, what he said. [10:59.000 --> 11:03.000] Anyway, I've had that experience in the past. [11:03.000 --> 11:09.000] Like today, nothing went right, and there wasn't three judges there. [11:09.000 --> 11:12.000] It's supposed to be a three-judge panel. [11:12.000 --> 11:19.000] And ultimately, what came of all of it, this judge is going to go back [11:19.000 --> 11:28.000] and asking for another court record, the audio of the first hearing, [11:28.000 --> 11:30.000] because that wasn't in there. [11:30.000 --> 11:41.000] What they're trying to do is say that I had already recused by a 170.6 the first commissioner, [11:41.000 --> 11:44.000] and that's the correct term for these people. [11:44.000 --> 11:46.000] They're commissioners. [11:46.000 --> 11:55.000] And if they can't do that, then this commissioner that we had about trial days, [11:55.000 --> 12:00.000] and remember, she stopped me in the middle of cross-examination, [12:00.000 --> 12:03.000] had us come back on another day, and when we came back on the other day, [12:03.000 --> 12:06.000] she didn't let me continue the cross-examination. [12:06.000 --> 12:11.000] She just ruled a finding of guilty. [12:11.000 --> 12:22.000] She did all of that, and I filed a 170.6 against her, so it was in writing. [12:22.000 --> 12:29.000] You can orally do a 170.6 in California. [12:29.000 --> 12:37.000] And the sticking point here is I started to say that the first commissioner at the first hearing, [12:37.000 --> 12:45.000] he recognized it, and he just talked over me and set the next hearing date. [12:45.000 --> 12:49.000] So he wouldn't let you do – this is a recusal, right? [12:49.000 --> 12:54.000] So he wouldn't let you be heard to recuse him. [12:54.000 --> 13:02.000] I started to say, I want to do an oral recusal, and I didn't even get the 170.6 out, [13:02.000 --> 13:04.000] and he says, that's not necessary. [13:04.000 --> 13:08.000] You come back in 30 days on this case, I'm level. [13:08.000 --> 13:13.000] So he wasn't recused, and that was oral, besides. [13:13.000 --> 13:15.000] There's nothing in the record. [13:15.000 --> 13:20.000] But now this judge wants to go back and listen to that recording, [13:20.000 --> 13:26.000] because otherwise you're going to have to overturn this, okay? [13:26.000 --> 13:36.000] But I went on and explained that there's also the speedy trial issue, [13:36.000 --> 13:42.000] and we went 120 days before we had a trial. [13:42.000 --> 13:49.000] And I was saying 45 days, but on an infraction out here, it may be 30 days. [13:49.000 --> 13:54.000] In any case, it was much longer than 45 days. [13:54.000 --> 14:07.000] It was 120 days before we had the first trial, or the trial started. [14:07.000 --> 14:09.000] You're kind of breaking up right there. [14:09.000 --> 14:15.000] You said it was 120 days until you had your first trial, and then what did you say? [14:15.000 --> 14:19.000] And I said halfway past 45 days. [14:19.000 --> 14:20.000] Right. [14:20.000 --> 14:27.000] And so then I told the judge today that beyond that speedy trial issue, [14:27.000 --> 14:32.000] the judge acted as both prosecutor and referee, [14:32.000 --> 14:40.000] and shielded the deputy witness from his further perjured testimony. [14:40.000 --> 14:46.000] So the funny thing of it, again, nothing went the way it was supposed to. [14:46.000 --> 14:49.000] I said there wasn't a three-judge panel, and this judge is telling me, [14:49.000 --> 14:52.000] oh, we're going to do that for traffic tickets. [14:52.000 --> 14:56.000] And I didn't want to bring up, well, last time I was here they did. [14:56.000 --> 15:01.000] I didn't want to say that I'd been there before, because, again, it was a long time ago. [15:01.000 --> 15:06.000] And in any case, like she's going to go look at this now, [15:06.000 --> 15:14.000] and oh, she's going to give me an opportunity to do an amended opening brief [15:14.000 --> 15:18.000] regarding this recording that they're going to come up with. [15:18.000 --> 15:22.000] If they don't come up with the recording, I may have hurt myself a little bit today, [15:22.000 --> 15:27.000] but also absent today was anybody from the district attorney's office. [15:27.000 --> 15:33.000] And I failed to put that on the record. [15:33.000 --> 15:37.000] No accuser? [15:37.000 --> 15:42.000] Yes, but I did make clear that at the traffic trial, [15:42.000 --> 15:48.000] that the judge, prosecutor, and referee, and that she showed bias [15:48.000 --> 15:55.000] and convinced me that my 170.6 was warranted. [15:55.000 --> 16:02.000] And so just in general, it's funny what they're doing now. [16:02.000 --> 16:06.000] And also I said, look, I'm prejudiced here in this appeal, [16:06.000 --> 16:10.000] because I filed this appeal more than four years ago, [16:10.000 --> 16:13.000] and that we're just now having the oral argument. [16:13.000 --> 16:20.000] And I've got a little bit of record here in front of me to my memory, [16:20.000 --> 16:25.000] but I'm also at a disadvantage because it's taking so long for you guys [16:25.000 --> 16:28.000] to schedule the oral argument. [16:28.000 --> 16:34.000] So again, look, I'm just doing this as an exercise, [16:34.000 --> 16:39.000] and I intend on going ahead and taking it to the California Supreme Court. [16:39.000 --> 16:43.000] So if they will, again. [16:43.000 --> 16:45.000] Very cool. [16:45.000 --> 16:48.000] Well, we're about to go to our sponsors, [16:48.000 --> 16:50.000] and we'll pick this up on the other side. [16:50.000 --> 16:54.000] We do have some room on the board if anybody wants to call in. [16:54.000 --> 16:58.000] It's 512-646-1984. [16:58.000 --> 17:21.000] We'll be right back. [17:28.000 --> 17:30.000] We'll be right back. [17:58.000 --> 18:01.000] We'll be right back. [18:01.000 --> 18:29.000] We'll be right back. [18:29.000 --> 18:31.000] We'll be right back. [18:59.000 --> 19:05.000] We're listening to the Logos Radio Network, [19:05.000 --> 19:12.000] the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:12.000 --> 19:15.000] Well, don't let none get to you. [19:15.000 --> 19:18.000] Only the father can give it to you. [19:18.000 --> 19:21.000] So don't let bad-minded people hurt you [19:21.000 --> 19:24.000] until they can get behind you. [19:24.000 --> 19:52.000] You know what I mean, my friend? [19:52.000 --> 19:54.000] All right, we are back. [19:54.000 --> 19:56.000] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [19:56.000 --> 20:01.000] I'm Brad Fountain, and we are talking with Ted in California. [20:01.000 --> 20:04.000] Ted, when we went out, [20:04.000 --> 20:11.000] you were talking about how this traffic court has not been doing right. [20:11.000 --> 20:14.000] You know, part of me wants to tell you, hey, you know, [20:14.000 --> 20:18.000] you can file a judicial notice and say, hey, I did a motion for recusal, [20:18.000 --> 20:24.000] a 17.6 recusal, and just put a judicial notice out there and say, [20:24.000 --> 20:27.000] hey, this happened, and he hasn't recused himself, [20:27.000 --> 20:31.000] he hasn't addressed this matter, and kind of beat him up about that. [20:31.000 --> 20:33.000] If anybody wants to go back and listen to it, [20:33.000 --> 20:36.000] they can notice that he was talking over you [20:36.000 --> 20:38.000] and trying to pretend like it didn't happen or whatever. [20:38.000 --> 20:42.000] But, you know, part of me wants to tell you about that, [20:42.000 --> 20:44.000] but then another part of me says, [20:44.000 --> 20:48.000] you have this federal issue over here in your other hand [20:48.000 --> 20:56.000] that needs to be brought to the Fed, and maybe don't, I don't know, [20:56.000 --> 21:05.000] maybe you can do both, but I would love to see you drag those guys [21:05.000 --> 21:09.000] who have been making your life so difficult for seven and a half years, [21:09.000 --> 21:17.000] dragged into the Feds and, you know, not be hassling it out anymore in the state. [21:17.000 --> 21:25.000] So I don't know, this traffic issue just seems less interesting, I guess. [21:25.000 --> 21:27.000] You're absolutely right, Brett. [21:27.000 --> 21:29.000] And again, let me explain. [21:29.000 --> 21:38.000] I filed the appeal seven or four years ago, and it went radio silence for years. [21:38.000 --> 21:44.000] And so today was just a matter of going down and giving a 10-minute oral argument. [21:44.000 --> 21:46.000] I just wanted to follow through. [21:46.000 --> 21:49.000] Cool, yeah, that makes sense. [21:49.000 --> 21:51.000] That's why I did it. [21:51.000 --> 21:53.000] That's the only reason I did it. [21:53.000 --> 21:59.000] And when I called in tonight, I didn't even spend that much time talking about it. [21:59.000 --> 22:02.000] And so it really is, so this is over. [22:02.000 --> 22:04.000] They can do whatever they want. [22:04.000 --> 22:05.000] I'm not spending time on it. [22:05.000 --> 22:13.000] Yes, I need to focus 100% on the federal and go ahead. [22:13.000 --> 22:18.000] Randy sent me a meeting that I'm looking at. [22:18.000 --> 22:20.000] Wonderful. [22:20.000 --> 22:23.000] I'm going to take, I'm going to go through that. [22:23.000 --> 22:30.000] I already read a section that's perfect for me, and I'll use the other sections, [22:30.000 --> 22:36.000] but, you know, I'm going to obviously take this and then make a document from it. [22:36.000 --> 22:40.000] It's definitely not a template, but it's got good stuff in it. [22:40.000 --> 22:49.000] And so I'll be on that first thing in the morning. [22:49.000 --> 22:54.000] I do still question if people are going to get this done. [22:54.000 --> 23:02.000] You know, they're violating my rights, and I'm going to have to look at the nine-page opinion [23:02.000 --> 23:08.000] of the federal judge that dismissed my previous. [23:08.000 --> 23:15.000] But as Randy's really, I get it, Randy, that this is different because we're going back [23:15.000 --> 23:22.000] on violation of speeding trial rights, and this is so excessive. [23:22.000 --> 23:29.000] I've read, I've read appellate court opinions where people have been held up, [23:29.000 --> 23:32.000] didn't go to trial within like three years. [23:32.000 --> 23:35.000] And there was, I'm going to have to go find those. [23:35.000 --> 23:45.000] I have them, when I read things or find court cases, especially appellate court opinions, [23:45.000 --> 23:50.000] if I see they pertain to me, I grab them and save them. [23:50.000 --> 23:56.000] And unfortunately, the way I save them makes it very hard for me to find them, but I will find them. [23:56.000 --> 24:04.000] And what this appellate court judge was saying is that you can't run for somebody through the mill like this. [24:04.000 --> 24:10.000] You exhaust their finances, you exhaust them physically, you cause them harm. [24:10.000 --> 24:12.000] And he wrote all this. [24:12.000 --> 24:22.000] And so maybe this time, putting right at the top of the pleading, [24:22.000 --> 24:30.000] the first issue is the speeding trial and the seven-and-a-half year, a two-heart attack, [24:30.000 --> 24:41.000] and this extension of taking all this time has run me into the ground. [24:41.000 --> 24:48.000] I'll tell you, when I went to court today, I didn't like my performance. [24:48.000 --> 24:52.000] I'm just, I'm not up to speed right now. [24:52.000 --> 24:55.000] And I don't know... [24:55.000 --> 24:56.000] What do you mean? [24:56.000 --> 25:02.000] Are you noticing something about yourself that you didn't bring what you were hoping you would bring? [25:02.000 --> 25:08.000] I don't have the razor-sharp mind that I normally have in court. [25:08.000 --> 25:16.000] I, when I get in court, the vocabulary expands, and I do very well. [25:16.000 --> 25:27.000] I thought one of the reasons why today was a dismal performance is because they had me seated with a microphone in front of me and a mask on my face. [25:27.000 --> 25:41.000] And that, Brett, this is another reason it was very important I went because this was kind of a...if they do take me to trial, I'm not going to...I'm not saying no way am I wearing a mask [25:41.000 --> 25:46.000] because I can't get enough oxygen so that I can think. [25:46.000 --> 25:53.000] And so maybe on that respect, going there was a good thing because it's been a while... [25:53.000 --> 25:54.000] Yeah. [25:54.000 --> 26:00.000] ...other than these every two months going and just being told to come back in another two months. [26:00.000 --> 26:08.000] And so I just was really off today, and it bothered me. [26:08.000 --> 26:10.000] It just didn't come. [26:10.000 --> 26:14.000] But also, look, they give you five minutes, okay? [26:14.000 --> 26:15.000] They tell you you got five minutes. [26:15.000 --> 26:16.000] They're not supposed to interrupt you. [26:16.000 --> 26:20.000] She interrupted me within 15 seconds. [26:20.000 --> 26:27.000] And so I see now she kept me out of my rhythm, and she interrupted me repeatedly. [26:27.000 --> 26:28.000] Oh, yeah. [26:28.000 --> 26:32.000] It's like their normal common trick. [26:32.000 --> 26:38.000] But that's not normal usually when you're giving an oral argument at an appellate court. [26:38.000 --> 26:51.000] So that really tripped me up, and I'm not 100%, but this is all good because these are the things I have to fix as I work on the main event, [26:51.000 --> 27:00.000] which is this bogus seven-and-a-half-year criminal trial situation. [27:00.000 --> 27:13.000] And so, yeah, it's way past time to take all these characters and actors to the federal court and call them out and then dump everything in there. [27:13.000 --> 27:19.000] I mean, I got a six-foot-high pile of pleadings that I filed into this case. [27:19.000 --> 27:23.000] It's over six feet high, and I'll dump it all into the federal court. [27:23.000 --> 27:34.000] It'll all get those ticker lines. It'll all be out there to searchable and everything else by anybody. [27:34.000 --> 27:37.000] And so, again, thank you, Ralph. [27:37.000 --> 27:38.000] Wait a minute. [27:38.000 --> 27:51.000] I just had this image of you going in there with a dolly with six feet high stacks of paper and asking the court, the clerk, to file it all in. [27:51.000 --> 27:59.000] They'll have to hire an extra clerk for a couple of days to do all of that. [27:59.000 --> 28:07.000] Well, it's what we go through for justice. [28:07.000 --> 28:12.000] That should be a lot of...that'll get the judge's attention. [28:12.000 --> 28:26.000] Well, there's things in there like the court warrant against the judge Hastings that did my plea. [28:26.000 --> 28:33.000] He actually entered the plea, and then he waived time, and I objected. [28:33.000 --> 28:42.000] He said I couldn't object because I had a lawyer, but he was screaming at me because I wouldn't answer him. [28:42.000 --> 28:44.000] That ended it for him. [28:44.000 --> 28:51.000] I sent that to the Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, and he just seemed to vanish. [28:51.000 --> 28:53.000] He was already retired. [28:53.000 --> 28:56.000] He's one of these ringer judges they were bringing in. [28:56.000 --> 29:04.000] He retired for 12 years, but they bring him in to do dirty stuff, and they brought him in to do what he tried to do to me. [29:04.000 --> 29:17.000] My lawyer was stopped peeing down his leg, my public defender, when this judge was screaming and looking back at me all bug-eyed. [29:17.000 --> 29:27.000] I'm just like, do you want to know this guy? [29:27.000 --> 29:34.000] I think it was all an act, and it really shook me up. [29:34.000 --> 29:40.000] It didn't. [29:40.000 --> 29:42.000] Well, good for you. [29:42.000 --> 29:48.000] I hear the music, and that's my story, and I'm sticking to it. That's about all I've got tonight, guys. [29:48.000 --> 29:53.000] Okay. Well, thanks for calling, Ted. Good to hear an update. [29:53.000 --> 30:00.000] All right. We're going to go to our sponsors, and when we come back on the other side, we'll talk with Tina. [30:00.000 --> 30:08.000] Everyone knows that walking is a great exercise, but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:08.000 --> 30:14.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:38.000 --> 30:43.000] Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [30:43.000 --> 30:48.000] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:48.000 --> 30:56.000] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:56.000 --> 31:00.000] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [31:00.000 --> 31:07.000] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.000 --> 31:10.000] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.000 --> 31:16.000] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:16.000 --> 31:21.000] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.000 --> 31:30.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.000 --> 31:35.000] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [31:35.000 --> 31:39.000] At least people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.000 --> 31:43.000] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.000 --> 31:47.000] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:47.000 --> 31:52.000] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.000 --> 31:55.000] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.000 --> 32:01.000] Go to buildingwatch.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.000 --> 32:06.000] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.000 --> 32:13.000] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:13.000 --> 32:18.000] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:18.000 --> 32:25.000] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [32:25.000 --> 32:29.000] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:29.000 --> 32:33.000] where we will go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:33.000 --> 32:40.000] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [32:40.000 --> 32:45.000] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:45.000 --> 32:51.000] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:51.000 --> 32:55.000] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com, [32:55.000 --> 33:00.000] on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:25.000 --> 33:30.000] Music [33:30.000 --> 33:35.000] Music [33:35.000 --> 33:40.000] Music [33:40.000 --> 33:45.000] Music [33:45.000 --> 33:50.000] Music [33:50.000 --> 33:55.000] Music [33:55.000 --> 34:00.000] Music [34:00.000 --> 34:05.000] Okay, we are back. This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [34:05.000 --> 34:10.000] And we're going to go to our next caller, which is Tina in California. [34:10.000 --> 34:13.000] Good evening, Tina. [34:13.000 --> 34:17.000] Hello, Randy and Brett. How are you? [34:17.000 --> 34:20.000] I'm doing great. [34:20.000 --> 34:25.000] I got to turn the Bluetooth off because she can't hear me then. [34:25.000 --> 34:27.000] Can you hear me now? [34:27.000 --> 34:29.000] Yes, ma'am. [34:29.000 --> 34:35.000] Okay. Well, I just learned something today that I wanted to share with people. [34:35.000 --> 34:42.000] I was talking to someone who has been a fighter for a long time, [34:42.000 --> 34:53.000] and she was asking me what I filled in when I asked for the informal corporate. [34:53.000 --> 34:56.000] And she said, did I put all my information in? [34:56.000 --> 35:01.000] And I said, well, not a lot. I just put in my Social Security payment. [35:01.000 --> 35:03.000] And she said, well, I don't do that. [35:03.000 --> 35:07.000] And I said, how do you work it? [35:07.000 --> 35:16.000] And she said, I plead the fifth, and I ask for the fifth and right to privacy. [35:16.000 --> 35:21.000] And I said, well, how do you do that? I said, I've never been denied. [35:21.000 --> 35:25.000] I thought that was a very interesting concept. [35:25.000 --> 35:29.000] I'm not sure how it would work in California, but you know what? [35:29.000 --> 35:32.000] I wouldn't mind trying that. [35:32.000 --> 35:33.000] Exactly. [35:33.000 --> 35:38.000] She's never been denied informal corporate. [35:38.000 --> 35:42.000] So every time, she's never had to pay a filing fee. [35:42.000 --> 35:49.000] Now, I just got my appeal, my informal corporate granted for my appeal case, [35:49.000 --> 35:52.000] which I was happy about. [35:52.000 --> 35:58.000] But don't you think that's an interesting concept to plead the fifth and right to privacy? [35:58.000 --> 36:01.000] Yeah, it really is. [36:01.000 --> 36:06.000] It's interesting that she hasn't been denied in that because usually, [36:06.000 --> 36:11.000] I would imagine that since she's the one asserting something, [36:11.000 --> 36:14.000] she bears the burden of proof. [36:14.000 --> 36:19.000] She's asserting that she can't afford this, [36:19.000 --> 36:24.000] and the expectation is that she has to be able to prove that up [36:24.000 --> 36:27.000] because she's making the assertion. [36:27.000 --> 36:29.000] But that's really cool. [36:29.000 --> 36:34.000] I hadn't thought of it as being something where you could assert [36:34.000 --> 36:38.000] and at the same time claim a right to privacy, [36:38.000 --> 36:44.000] and you can't have somebody going in there and doing unlawful searches in your data. [36:44.000 --> 36:46.000] So I'm not going to provide it to you. [36:46.000 --> 36:49.000] I'm not going to be compelled to give evidence against myself. [36:49.000 --> 36:52.000] I hadn't thought of it like that. [36:52.000 --> 36:56.000] I didn't thought of it like that, but it's a really interesting concept. [36:56.000 --> 36:59.000] And when you think about it, you know, [36:59.000 --> 37:05.000] you have all these illegals coming in and getting free legal counsel. [37:05.000 --> 37:10.000] You have criminals who get free legal counsel, [37:10.000 --> 37:16.000] but people like us who have never been convicted of a crime or whatever, [37:16.000 --> 37:23.000] but we don't have the funds, we can't get free legal help. [37:23.000 --> 37:25.000] So what's the problem with this? [37:25.000 --> 37:29.000] You know, the Constitution, as far as I've read, [37:29.000 --> 37:34.000] says equal protection for the rich and the poor, but it really isn't. [37:34.000 --> 37:40.000] But the way she does it is like, hey, you know, I said, well, what if they deny you? [37:40.000 --> 37:42.000] She said, you appeal it. [37:42.000 --> 37:48.000] Are you denying me a constitutional right to privacy, you know, [37:48.000 --> 37:52.000] and exercising the Fifth Amendment? [37:52.000 --> 37:55.000] Wow, how about that? [37:55.000 --> 38:01.000] Yeah, appeal the finding of whether or not you were in form of operative. [38:01.000 --> 38:04.000] There's a doctrine for that. [38:04.000 --> 38:07.000] I just looked at it a couple of days ago. [38:07.000 --> 38:17.000] The doctrine goes to having to give up one right to claim another. [38:17.000 --> 38:21.000] Oh, I lost the name of it. [38:21.000 --> 38:27.000] Oh, you can go look. [38:27.000 --> 38:29.000] I wouldn't mind trying it. [38:29.000 --> 38:35.000] I'm probably sure I would be denied in California, but you know what? [38:35.000 --> 38:37.000] What the heck? [38:37.000 --> 38:39.000] Right. [38:39.000 --> 38:43.000] And it's something that other people might try to think about. [38:43.000 --> 38:50.000] I've never, ever thought of this before. [38:50.000 --> 38:56.000] Now, if you could just get yourself a ticket. [38:56.000 --> 38:57.000] A ticket? [38:57.000 --> 39:00.000] I don't want a ticket. [39:00.000 --> 39:03.000] Any reason to try this out? [39:03.000 --> 39:10.000] Well, yeah, if I could try it out on a minor issue rather than my fights right now, [39:10.000 --> 39:17.000] that would be different, but I would love to give this a try. [39:17.000 --> 39:24.000] And I wonder if I can go back to the time that the appeal court denied me [39:24.000 --> 39:30.000] in form of corporis a few years ago after I'd been granted it in the lower court. [39:30.000 --> 39:33.000] The appeal court just said, no, no, we don't think you're indigent. [39:33.000 --> 39:42.000] Well, who are you spending 100-plus thousand a year to do that when you're losing 30,000? [39:42.000 --> 39:49.000] How do you have that right to deny me? [39:49.000 --> 39:53.000] So anyway, I just thought I'd share that because it was a very interesting concept [39:53.000 --> 39:56.000] and I'm trying to learn more. [39:56.000 --> 39:57.000] Yeah, it is. [39:57.000 --> 39:58.000] I'm glad you brought that up. [39:58.000 --> 40:02.000] That's really timely, too. [40:02.000 --> 40:04.000] I'm sure it helps for a lot of people. [40:04.000 --> 40:09.000] I found it, the unconstitutional conditions doctrine. [40:09.000 --> 40:10.000] Okay. [40:10.000 --> 40:11.000] Conditions, yeah. [40:11.000 --> 40:16.000] Although the doctrine is not limited to the First Amendment context, blah, blah, blah, [40:16.000 --> 40:22.000] for at least a quarter century, this court has made clear, [40:22.000 --> 40:26.000] off my screen again, [40:26.000 --> 40:33.000] made clear that even though a person has no right to a valuable government benefit [40:33.000 --> 40:39.000] and even though the government may deny him in the benefit for any number of reasons, [40:39.000 --> 40:44.000] there are some reasons upon which the government may not rely. [40:44.000 --> 40:47.000] No, that didn't go well. [40:47.000 --> 40:55.000] Conditioning a building permit issuance upon an unconstitutional public right of access. [40:55.000 --> 40:56.000] I'm sorry. [40:56.000 --> 41:03.000] Conditioning a building permit issuance upon an uncompensated public right of access [41:03.000 --> 41:11.000] across the permit applicant's property violated the Fifth Amendment. [41:11.000 --> 41:23.000] Conditioning your giving up your right to privacy in order to secure your right to remedy [41:23.000 --> 41:30.000] would seem a fundamental constitutional doctrine. [41:30.000 --> 41:34.000] Unconstitutional condition doctrine. [41:34.000 --> 41:36.000] Yeah, that makes sense. [41:36.000 --> 41:42.000] I like those cool titles like that. [41:42.000 --> 41:49.000] I just mentioned on the telegram site the other day a Mary Carter agreement. [41:49.000 --> 41:51.000] I love those kind of things. [41:51.000 --> 41:53.000] That's why I like this one. [41:53.000 --> 41:54.000] I saw it. [41:54.000 --> 41:56.000] I even put it in my lawsuit. [41:56.000 --> 42:01.000] That seems to fit your issue exactly. [42:01.000 --> 42:02.000] Yeah. [42:02.000 --> 42:06.000] I think we need to pursue this and teach everyone. [42:06.000 --> 42:11.000] If it works, let's try it more because just like in California, [42:11.000 --> 42:19.000] if you are an informal focus, you have a right to a free court reporter. [42:19.000 --> 42:21.000] Do they tell you that? [42:21.000 --> 42:22.000] No. [42:22.000 --> 42:25.000] You have to find out about it through research. [42:25.000 --> 42:28.000] If I had known about this a few years ago, [42:28.000 --> 42:34.000] I would have had a free court reporter, but I didn't know about it until just last year. [42:34.000 --> 42:35.000] Yeah, exactly. [42:35.000 --> 42:38.000] They don't tell you, and they'll even tell you the opposite. [42:38.000 --> 42:44.000] But like we noticed, sometimes they lie. [42:44.000 --> 42:47.000] But it's really important to have a court reporter, [42:47.000 --> 42:53.000] but $650 a day and $350 for a half a day. [42:53.000 --> 43:00.000] If someone who lives on Social Security of $722 a month afforded it, [43:00.000 --> 43:10.000] that denies you the right to justice because you cannot afford it. [43:10.000 --> 43:15.000] I see why people stop fighting or don't even fight a fight [43:15.000 --> 43:20.000] because they cannot afford an attorney and they don't know the laws [43:20.000 --> 43:24.000] and they don't know they're entitled to a free court reporter. [43:24.000 --> 43:27.000] And in California, even in a civil case, [43:27.000 --> 43:36.000] there is some issue where you are allowed to have or apply for a court appointed attorney. [43:36.000 --> 43:41.000] They rarely, if ever granted, you should have it. [43:41.000 --> 43:48.000] It's only the justice for the rich or those who know people. [43:48.000 --> 43:50.000] Okay, hang on. [43:50.000 --> 44:00.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, we'll be right back. [44:00.000 --> 44:04.000] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:04.000 --> 44:06.000] except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.000 --> 44:09.000] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [44:09.000 --> 44:11.000] and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.000 --> 44:17.000] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.000 --> 44:22.000] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.000 --> 44:25.000] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.000 --> 44:31.000] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.000 --> 44:34.000] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [44:34.000 --> 44:40.000] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:40.000 --> 44:43.000] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [44:43.000 --> 44:47.000] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.000 --> 44:52.000] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:52.000 --> 44:55.000] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:55.000 --> 44:59.000] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:59.000 --> 45:01.000] Order now. [45:01.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.000] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:07.000 --> 45:15.000] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.000] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.000 --> 45:39.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.000 --> 45:43.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.000 --> 45:49.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.000 --> 45:52.000] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.000 --> 46:15.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:15.000 --> 46:23.000] Thank you. [46:46.000 --> 46:52.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [46:52.000 --> 46:56.000] We do have Dr. Joe on the line. We'll get to him next. [46:56.000 --> 47:01.000] Okay, Tina, what else do you have for us? [47:01.000 --> 47:07.000] You've got this, that's an interesting approach to Informa Pompers. [47:07.000 --> 47:18.000] I just paid $468 to file a civil action in a county court in Texas. [47:18.000 --> 47:24.000] It used to be $125. Now it's almost $500. [47:24.000 --> 47:27.000] So I may do that next time. [47:27.000 --> 47:29.000] Yeah, you should try it. [47:29.000 --> 47:36.000] It should be the corporations and the banks and all those people who are paying these fees, [47:36.000 --> 47:41.000] not the citizens who are struggling to make it. [47:41.000 --> 47:49.000] Why are we being forced to pay all these high fees for justice? [47:49.000 --> 47:51.000] Good, especially with as high as it's gotten. [47:51.000 --> 47:54.000] They've added all kinds of fees in there. [47:54.000 --> 47:57.000] So it would be nice to stick it to them, pay them back by doing it. [47:57.000 --> 48:01.000] I think the next one I do down there, I'll do Informa Pompers. [48:01.000 --> 48:04.000] There you go. [48:04.000 --> 48:10.000] Just to be annoying. [48:10.000 --> 48:12.000] Okay, do you have anything else for us, Tina? [48:12.000 --> 48:17.000] No, no, that's it. Thank you for all you do, as usual. [48:17.000 --> 48:19.000] Thank you, Ms. Tina. [48:19.000 --> 48:21.000] Okay, now we've got Dr. Joe on. [48:21.000 --> 48:28.000] I sent Dr. Joe a copy of the lawsuit I'm working on. [48:28.000 --> 48:34.000] And I wanted to bring him on the show because he said nice stuff about me. [48:34.000 --> 48:42.000] Everybody who wants to say nice stuff about me has an open opportunity to go on our show. [48:42.000 --> 48:48.000] Well, the truth of the matter is there's 30 million people in Texas, there's 80,000 lawyers, [48:48.000 --> 48:54.000] and nobody looked at this and said the police, the prosecutors, [48:54.000 --> 49:01.000] they're denying due process and equal protection of the laws all over the place. [49:01.000 --> 49:04.000] And then if you don't go along with what they want, [49:04.000 --> 49:07.000] they just throw you back in jail and leave you there to simmer in your own juice [49:07.000 --> 49:13.000] until finally you go along with whatever they've got in store for you. [49:13.000 --> 49:18.000] It's absolute tyranny, and it evolves so slowly, [49:18.000 --> 49:24.000] a frog sitting in a bucket of hot water, we really didn't notice it. [49:24.000 --> 49:28.000] But if you're arrested, do you get in front of a magistrate? [49:28.000 --> 49:31.000] Is there any probable cause established? [49:31.000 --> 49:33.000] No, they just take you to jail, put you in there, [49:33.000 --> 49:38.000] and it's assumed that because they have a uniform on and they have a jail in peace, [49:38.000 --> 49:41.000] they're doing the right thing. [49:41.000 --> 49:45.000] And nothing could be farther from the truth. [49:45.000 --> 49:51.000] And I don't think there's anything that's harder to convince these guys of. [49:51.000 --> 49:54.000] They don't want to hear it. [49:54.000 --> 50:01.000] I was in a room one time when a policeman was told that the traffic code [50:01.000 --> 50:04.000] applies to commercial vehicles only, [50:04.000 --> 50:09.000] and he sputtered like a cat that had been thrown into a bucket of water. [50:09.000 --> 50:16.000] He was furious, and he would not keep the black letter law right in front of his nose. [50:16.000 --> 50:20.000] He just wouldn't believe it. [50:20.000 --> 50:22.000] I think you're going to have the same... [50:22.000 --> 50:28.000] When your document supports, I think you're going to have the same response. [50:28.000 --> 50:37.000] It is obvious that without probable cause, you cannot be imprisoned. [50:37.000 --> 50:41.000] How much more fundamental can you get? [50:41.000 --> 50:44.000] And the police and the courts and the prosecutors, I believe, [50:44.000 --> 50:49.000] will just simply deny that until hell freezes open. [50:49.000 --> 50:55.000] But your document, you deserve a clap on the back for that. [50:55.000 --> 50:56.000] It's a real... [50:56.000 --> 51:02.000] It's an extensive, in-depth, inclusive, and extraordinarily powerful [51:02.000 --> 51:08.000] and absolutely just right in your face in the broad light of day, [51:08.000 --> 51:10.000] here's the law, here's the black letter law, [51:10.000 --> 51:14.000] and here's what they're doing, and the two are not the same. [51:14.000 --> 51:15.000] Not even close. [51:15.000 --> 51:17.000] Good for you, Randy Kelton. [51:17.000 --> 51:21.000] Good for you, Randy Kelton. You did a good job. [51:21.000 --> 51:22.000] Thank you, Dr. Joe. [51:22.000 --> 51:25.000] You can come on any time you want to and talk nice about me. [51:25.000 --> 51:28.000] Well, I think you deserve to have some more ribs broken [51:28.000 --> 51:31.000] and some more teeth knocked out, et cetera. [51:31.000 --> 51:33.000] Well, thank you. [51:33.000 --> 51:38.000] Because you're speaking the truth, and no good deed does unpunished. [51:38.000 --> 51:42.000] Just remember that. [51:42.000 --> 51:44.000] Okay. [51:44.000 --> 51:47.000] We do have someone else on. [51:47.000 --> 51:50.000] Hello, Ms. Jane. [51:50.000 --> 51:54.000] Good for you, Randy Kelton. You did a good job. [51:54.000 --> 51:55.000] Thank you, Dr. Joe. [51:55.000 --> 51:56.000] Thank you, Dr. Joe. [51:56.000 --> 51:58.000] You can come on any time you want to and talk nice about me. [51:58.000 --> 51:59.000] Good night. [51:59.000 --> 52:01.000] I think you deserve to have some more ribs broken [52:01.000 --> 52:05.000] and some more teeth knocked out, et cetera. [52:05.000 --> 52:07.000] Thank you. [52:07.000 --> 52:09.000] Brett, Brett, a mic. [52:09.000 --> 52:15.000] Oh, Jane, you have something on in the background. [52:15.000 --> 52:16.000] Me? [52:16.000 --> 52:19.000] Yeah, you're feeding back into our mics. [52:19.000 --> 52:21.000] Okay. [52:21.000 --> 52:25.000] Turn that off or you're feeding back what we've already said. [52:25.000 --> 52:31.000] I thought Dr. Joe was talking nice about me again, [52:31.000 --> 52:34.000] telling me how I deserve to have some teeth knocked out. [52:34.000 --> 52:38.000] Well, I'm not worried about that because I can take them out. [52:38.000 --> 52:39.000] Thank you very much. [52:39.000 --> 52:40.000] You only paid him once. [52:40.000 --> 52:44.000] You want him to talk nice about you twice? [52:44.000 --> 52:47.000] He's going to give me another bill. [52:47.000 --> 52:49.000] Jane, are you back? [52:49.000 --> 52:50.000] Yeah, I'm back. [52:50.000 --> 52:53.000] And nobody's recording? [52:53.000 --> 52:56.000] No, we've got – well, I don't know if anybody is recording, [52:56.000 --> 53:00.000] but the one who normally does is having computer problems. [53:00.000 --> 53:05.000] So he doesn't – he won't be sharing it immediately. [53:05.000 --> 53:09.000] You'll be – say that again. [53:09.000 --> 53:11.000] I was talking to my cat. [53:11.000 --> 53:12.000] Oh. [53:12.000 --> 53:13.000] Sorry. [53:13.000 --> 53:18.000] Yeah, we're back to the normal pattern of waiting until it pops up in the archives. [53:18.000 --> 53:20.000] Okay. [53:20.000 --> 53:21.000] All right. [53:21.000 --> 53:24.000] And okay, here – I have a dilemma. [53:24.000 --> 53:27.000] You know, I got convicted yesterday in court. [53:27.000 --> 53:28.000] Was it yesterday or day four? [53:28.000 --> 53:29.000] Day four. [53:29.000 --> 53:36.000] So I only have about eight days left or less than that to decide what I need to do, [53:36.000 --> 53:42.000] which – what I'm reading on Chapter 45, which is what I have to go by, I think. [53:42.000 --> 53:48.000] It says I have to post an appeal bond two times the amount of a judgment, [53:48.000 --> 53:53.000] and then that ceases a jurisdiction in the municipal court, [53:53.000 --> 53:56.000] which makes it go over to the county court, I think, for an appeal. [53:56.000 --> 53:59.000] Is that correct? [53:59.000 --> 54:06.000] You've got – when you ask for a new trial – I know you don't want a new trial in that court, [54:06.000 --> 54:10.000] but when you ask for one, you move the court to give you a new trial, [54:10.000 --> 54:17.000] you're increasing your time that you have to write your appellate brief. [54:17.000 --> 54:20.000] You don't have to have the appellate brief in right away. [54:20.000 --> 54:22.000] You just have a notice of appeal. [54:22.000 --> 54:23.000] They're asking for a bond. [54:23.000 --> 54:27.000] So file a notice of appeal and a request for an informer. [54:27.000 --> 54:29.000] You already have an informer properties, don't you? [54:29.000 --> 54:30.000] Yeah. [54:30.000 --> 54:31.000] I do. [54:31.000 --> 54:33.000] She does, but she's saying that she's going to have to – [54:33.000 --> 54:34.000] Right. [54:34.000 --> 54:36.000] This is criminal, isn't it? [54:36.000 --> 54:38.000] It's criminal, but what I'm saying is that – [54:38.000 --> 54:39.000] There's no bond. [54:39.000 --> 54:41.000] There's no bond in criminal. [54:41.000 --> 54:47.000] Well, according to the Checker 45, it's two times the amount of the fine, I thought. [54:47.000 --> 54:50.000] It looked like it was in Checker 45. [54:50.000 --> 54:53.000] You've got an Informer Papyrus. [54:53.000 --> 54:55.000] Yeah, but they know that. [54:55.000 --> 54:56.000] There's nothing. [54:56.000 --> 54:57.000] They can't charge you anything. [54:57.000 --> 55:01.000] They don't know that I'm Informer Papyrus, or whatever you want to call it. [55:01.000 --> 55:04.000] I had the judgment in the civil court. [55:04.000 --> 55:08.000] Well, file the Informer Papyrus determination in this court. [55:08.000 --> 55:11.000] And it's not too late. [55:11.000 --> 55:14.000] They're not going to make me redo the requirements or whatever. [55:14.000 --> 55:19.000] I mean, it happened on January the 10th is when it was – I was being thoughtful. [55:19.000 --> 55:21.000] This is criminal. [55:21.000 --> 55:25.000] You can file an Informer Papyrus any time. [55:25.000 --> 55:30.000] I know, but that means they're going to – it's not a good time for them to be doing that. [55:30.000 --> 55:35.000] What part of any time is hard to understand? [55:35.000 --> 55:39.000] What I'm saying is, what I'm saying is whenever they did the Papyrus before, [55:39.000 --> 55:45.000] I didn't have the income that I've had in the last – you know, they're going to show in my bank. [55:45.000 --> 55:47.000] And they're going to see if they look at my – [55:47.000 --> 55:49.000] File it anyway. [55:49.000 --> 55:53.000] Or did you hear what Tina was just saying on a previous caller? [55:53.000 --> 55:54.000] No, I didn't hear that part. [55:54.000 --> 55:56.000] I didn't hear that part. [55:56.000 --> 55:58.000] Yeah, I thought that was pretty cool. [55:58.000 --> 56:01.000] She said that a friend of hers was asking her, [56:01.000 --> 56:05.000] why are you filling out all that stuff for Informer Papyrus? [56:05.000 --> 56:09.000] And a friend of hers was talking about a right to privacy. [56:09.000 --> 56:14.000] You know, those English types, they talk about privacy when they really mean to talk about privacy. [56:14.000 --> 56:16.000] That's their fancy way of saying it. [56:16.000 --> 56:20.000] So we have a right to privacy. [56:20.000 --> 56:21.000] Okay. [56:21.000 --> 56:27.000] I wish these foreigners would learn to speak English. [56:27.000 --> 56:34.000] So her friend has never been denied in this Informer Papyrus, [56:34.000 --> 56:37.000] and she's never given any of her personal information. [56:37.000 --> 56:41.000] She's not showing them her bank accounts and telling social security numbers and things [56:41.000 --> 56:45.000] so that they can go figure out whether they agree that she can't afford it. [56:45.000 --> 56:47.000] She just tells them she can't afford it. [56:47.000 --> 56:54.000] And it tells them that, well, I don't have to give up my right to privacy [56:54.000 --> 56:58.000] just because I want to exercise my right to redress of grievances. [56:58.000 --> 57:02.000] Back in California, there's a bunch of Democrats out there. [57:02.000 --> 57:04.000] Did I say that? [57:04.000 --> 57:12.000] In that vein, we were speaking to unconstitutional conditions doctrine. [57:12.000 --> 57:14.000] Okay. [57:14.000 --> 57:17.000] They're asking you to give up your Fourth Amendment, [57:17.000 --> 57:21.000] is it Fourth Amendment right to the privacy of your paper and your person? [57:21.000 --> 57:28.000] It's fourth, and then there's also the fifth is being compelled to give evidence against yourself. [57:28.000 --> 57:29.000] Okay. [57:29.000 --> 57:34.000] Now, what about what happened in my J.P. court whenever I tried to file the wrong form, [57:34.000 --> 57:38.000] and I don't think my appeal would have gone to county court [57:38.000 --> 57:43.000] if I didn't give them the right information. [57:43.000 --> 57:46.000] You just completely shifted gears. [57:46.000 --> 57:50.000] I know, but what I'm saying is I did have to give them the information on the right form [57:50.000 --> 57:55.000] that they asked for, the state-required form for the popular form. [57:55.000 --> 57:57.000] Oh, well, that is different. [57:57.000 --> 57:59.000] You weren't fighting that issue. [57:59.000 --> 58:01.000] You were going along with whatever they said. [58:01.000 --> 58:05.000] If you want to fight that issue, that might be something worth considering. [58:05.000 --> 58:06.000] Okay. [58:06.000 --> 58:09.000] All right. [58:09.000 --> 58:13.000] Okay, we've got to go and take a break. [58:13.000 --> 58:14.000] Okay. [58:14.000 --> 58:15.000] Hang on. [58:15.000 --> 58:18.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with La Radio. [58:18.000 --> 58:22.000] Our call-in number, we do have some empty space on the board. [58:22.000 --> 58:27.000] We've got one more caller, and we have four more segments. [58:27.000 --> 58:34.000] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call, 512-646-1984. [58:34.000 --> 58:37.000] And if it seems like I'm dragging this thing out [58:37.000 --> 58:41.000] so that I don't have a lot of empty space at the end of the segment, [58:41.000 --> 58:44.000] well, that's not really the case. [58:44.000 --> 58:47.000] It's just that the music started chasing. [58:47.000 --> 58:50.000] We'll be right back. [59:18.000 --> 59:21.000] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:21.000 --> 59:24.000] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:24.000 --> 59:27.000] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.000 --> 59:30.000] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version [59:30.000 --> 59:33.000] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.000 --> 59:40.000] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.000 --> 59:44.000] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.000 --> 59:49.000] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.000 --> 59:59.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.000 --> 01:00:05.000] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.000 --> 01:00:09.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.000 --> 01:00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.000 --> 01:00:14.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:14.000 --> 01:00:17.000] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.000 --> 01:00:19.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.000 --> 01:00:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.000 --> 01:00:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.000 --> 01:00:29.000] So protect your rights. [01:00:29.000 --> 01:00:32.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.000 --> 01:00:35.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.000 --> 01:00:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:00:38.000 --> 01:00:43.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.000 --> 01:00:46.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:46.000 --> 01:00:49.000] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:49.000 --> 01:00:52.000] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:52.000 --> 01:00:55.000] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.000 --> 01:00:58.000] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me [01:00:58.000 --> 01:01:01.000] what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:01.000 --> 01:01:04.000] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:04.000 --> 01:01:07.000] a common demand in the days of our Founding Fathers. [01:01:07.000 --> 01:01:10.000] Third party? Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:10.000 --> 01:01:13.000] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:13.000 --> 01:01:17.000] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.000 --> 01:01:22.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.000 --> 01:01:36.000] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:36.000 --> 01:01:39.000] I'm going to give you the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.000 --> 01:01:41.000] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:41.000 --> 01:01:44.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:44.000 --> 01:01:47.000] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.000 --> 01:01:49.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.000 --> 01:01:52.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.000 --> 01:01:57.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.000 --> 01:01:59.000] So protect your rights. [01:01:59.000 --> 01:02:03.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:03.000 --> 01:02:05.000] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.000 --> 01:02:09.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:02:09.000 --> 01:02:13.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:02:13.000 --> 01:02:16.000] Start over with Startpage. [01:02:16.000 --> 01:02:20.000] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:20.000 --> 01:02:22.000] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.000 --> 01:02:26.000] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:26.000 --> 01:02:28.000] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:28.000 --> 01:02:31.000] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:31.000 --> 01:02:34.000] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:34.000 --> 01:02:35.000] in the name of security. [01:02:35.000 --> 01:02:40.000] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.000 --> 01:02:44.000] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:44.000 --> 01:02:47.000] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.000 --> 01:02:50.000] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:50.000 --> 01:02:54.000] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:54.000 --> 01:03:04.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:24.000 --> 01:03:27.000] Thank you very much. [01:03:55.000 --> 01:03:59.000] Okay, we are back. [01:03:59.000 --> 01:04:03.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Greenville Law Radio on this Friday, [01:04:03.000 --> 01:04:07.000] the 22nd day of July 2022. [01:04:07.000 --> 01:04:10.000] And we're talking to Jane in Texas. [01:04:10.000 --> 01:04:12.000] Okay, Jane. [01:04:12.000 --> 01:04:13.000] Okay. [01:04:13.000 --> 01:04:18.000] Informer Pauperis, you have that in one court. [01:04:18.000 --> 01:04:21.000] That should transfer to this court. [01:04:21.000 --> 01:04:25.000] That's it. That is res judicata. [01:04:25.000 --> 01:04:30.000] Okay. Do I have to get that sent to do it or can I just give them my copy? [01:04:30.000 --> 01:04:34.000] You give them a copy of the order from the original court. [01:04:34.000 --> 01:04:36.000] Okay. Okay. [01:04:36.000 --> 01:04:41.000] And now I'm going to file a regular appeal like it's going to go to another court. [01:04:41.000 --> 01:04:44.000] That's what I'm going to write it to. [01:04:44.000 --> 01:04:49.000] First, you're going to file a motion for reconsideration. [01:04:49.000 --> 01:04:51.000] That stops the clock. [01:04:51.000 --> 01:04:54.000] Do I have to do that? [01:04:54.000 --> 01:04:56.000] Say that again. [01:04:56.000 --> 01:05:01.000] Do I? Because that means I'll have to go back to the same court. [01:05:01.000 --> 01:05:03.000] Yes. Yes. [01:05:03.000 --> 01:05:07.000] That's not going to, they're not going to. [01:05:07.000 --> 01:05:10.000] How do you know, wait a minute, how do you know that? [01:05:10.000 --> 01:05:14.000] Because they already did, you wouldn't believe all the illegal stuff they did. [01:05:14.000 --> 01:05:17.000] And they, I mean, they didn't, they intended to prosecute me. [01:05:17.000 --> 01:05:23.000] Whoa, whoa, whoa. Jane, did you just say that I believe all the illegal stuff they did? [01:05:23.000 --> 01:05:27.000] Did you really say that to me? [01:05:27.000 --> 01:05:31.000] I think I did. [01:05:31.000 --> 01:05:33.000] Shame on you. [01:05:33.000 --> 01:05:37.000] Yes. I believe all the illegal stuff I do. [01:05:37.000 --> 01:05:42.000] They do. And I love it when they do illegal stuff. [01:05:42.000 --> 01:05:44.000] You don't even believe it. [01:05:44.000 --> 01:05:53.000] The last traffic court I was in, I asked the judge to make sure security was at the next hearing. [01:05:53.000 --> 01:05:55.000] And he said, why do I need security? [01:05:55.000 --> 01:06:05.000] Because you're committing crimes from the bench and I'm going to want the bailiff to arrest you. [01:06:05.000 --> 01:06:09.000] Write out your timeline on what went on in the court. [01:06:09.000 --> 01:06:14.000] Each thing they did wrong and hammer them for it. [01:06:14.000 --> 01:06:23.000] I had the clerk, I went in and filed, you know, I got the ticket on them first, April 1st, which was appropriate. [01:06:23.000 --> 01:06:27.000] And then on the 9th, I went in and instead of saying, oh, I got a ticket. [01:06:27.000 --> 01:06:29.000] And she said, are you pleased? I didn't do that. [01:06:29.000 --> 01:06:35.000] I said, here, I have these motions, this motion I want to file into this case. [01:06:35.000 --> 01:06:38.000] And I had a photocopy of the ticket and gave it to her. [01:06:38.000 --> 01:06:40.000] She was confused at first. [01:06:40.000 --> 01:06:42.000] She said, well, I don't know if I can take this. [01:06:42.000 --> 01:06:44.000] Oh, yes, ma'am. Trust me, you can take this. [01:06:44.000 --> 01:06:52.000] And she checked around a little and then she stamped it and made me a copy of the first page and stamped that and gave it back to me. [01:06:52.000 --> 01:06:58.000] But she never got a notation into some software she uses. [01:06:58.000 --> 01:07:07.000] So I get this letter from the DPS telling me that I failed to appear and that they won't renew my license. [01:07:07.000 --> 01:07:09.000] Oh, wow. [01:07:09.000 --> 01:07:15.000] So I charged her with tampering with a government document. [01:07:15.000 --> 01:07:19.000] She sort of said, oh, that was just a clerical error. [01:07:19.000 --> 01:07:21.000] Yeah, I get that. [01:07:21.000 --> 01:07:27.000] It was just a clerical error when I forgot to renew my registration, deal with it. [01:07:27.000 --> 01:07:36.000] And I asked the judge in the hearing, I told him that I have some criminal complaints filed with your court. [01:07:36.000 --> 01:07:40.000] I want you to issue a warrant for your clerk. [01:07:40.000 --> 01:07:44.000] And he told me that I didn't file them correctly. [01:07:44.000 --> 01:07:49.000] Oh, is that a fact, Jack? [01:07:49.000 --> 01:07:51.000] So I didn't tell him. [01:07:51.000 --> 01:07:54.000] I didn't say, well, what's the correct way of filing them? [01:07:54.000 --> 01:07:56.000] Heck with that. [01:07:56.000 --> 01:07:59.000] He's already rung that bell. [01:07:59.000 --> 01:08:02.000] He can't unring it. [01:08:02.000 --> 01:08:04.000] I'll be filing criminally against him for the permit. [01:08:04.000 --> 01:08:07.000] I think I filed four. [01:08:07.000 --> 01:08:13.000] Yeah, I think I filed four criminal complaints, two against the chief of police and two against his clerk. [01:08:13.000 --> 01:08:16.000] And he didn't issue warrants. [01:08:16.000 --> 01:08:19.000] Now I'll sue him personally for that. [01:08:19.000 --> 01:08:21.000] Oh, wow. [01:08:21.000 --> 01:08:24.000] This is how we do it. [01:08:24.000 --> 01:08:26.000] Well, but see, here's the difference, though. [01:08:26.000 --> 01:08:30.000] That's traffic, and what I got is something different, which is not the... [01:08:30.000 --> 01:08:31.000] How is it different? [01:08:31.000 --> 01:08:42.000] How is it different in any court in the United States that a judge is not required to follow law? [01:08:42.000 --> 01:08:43.000] Oh, yeah, I'm just... [01:08:43.000 --> 01:08:44.000] You're exactly right. [01:08:44.000 --> 01:08:45.000] He's required to follow law. [01:08:45.000 --> 01:08:46.000] Okay. [01:08:46.000 --> 01:08:49.000] You used the pronoun that. [01:08:49.000 --> 01:08:52.000] What did that... [01:08:52.000 --> 01:08:56.000] What did that refer to? [01:08:56.000 --> 01:08:58.000] You said that is different. [01:08:58.000 --> 01:09:01.000] How is it... What is different? [01:09:01.000 --> 01:09:03.000] What's different is I'm convicted now. [01:09:03.000 --> 01:09:06.000] It's going to be on my record of trespassing theft, which I... [01:09:06.000 --> 01:09:09.000] How does that make it different? [01:09:09.000 --> 01:09:15.000] Because if it's going to be on my record, then one thing that I hate is a thief. [01:09:15.000 --> 01:09:18.000] And I do not want a thief associated with my name. [01:09:18.000 --> 01:09:20.000] Stop, stop, stop, stop. [01:09:20.000 --> 01:09:23.000] You just went to something else altogether. [01:09:23.000 --> 01:09:25.000] Mm-hmm. [01:09:25.000 --> 01:09:29.000] You know, I've been noticing on the channel that's what you do. [01:09:29.000 --> 01:09:33.000] That's why you have so much problem with people keeping up with you, [01:09:33.000 --> 01:09:36.000] because you jump from one thing to another to another to another to another. [01:09:36.000 --> 01:09:38.000] Nobody can keep up with it. [01:09:38.000 --> 01:09:40.000] We were talking about you were going to court, [01:09:40.000 --> 01:09:47.000] and you were doing a lot of complaining about the judges and the clerks not following law. [01:09:47.000 --> 01:09:50.000] But you're not doing anything about it. [01:09:50.000 --> 01:09:52.000] You're just complaining about it. [01:09:52.000 --> 01:09:54.000] Who would not believe what I did about it? [01:09:54.000 --> 01:09:57.000] And I had three prosecutors in there trying to... [01:09:57.000 --> 01:09:59.000] What did you do about it? [01:09:59.000 --> 01:10:00.000] What did you do? [01:10:00.000 --> 01:10:05.000] I had three prosecutors trying to take me down because of the stuff I filed before I went in there. [01:10:05.000 --> 01:10:08.000] What did you file? [01:10:08.000 --> 01:10:10.000] I filed memorandum. [01:10:10.000 --> 01:10:15.000] It was a challenge to the subject matter jurisdiction, but it was a constitutional challenge. [01:10:15.000 --> 01:10:26.000] And what were added for Texas Constitution, Article 1, Section 29, 28, and... [01:10:26.000 --> 01:10:28.000] Wait a minute. [01:10:28.000 --> 01:10:29.000] Excuse me? [01:10:29.000 --> 01:10:31.000] You followed... [01:10:31.000 --> 01:10:34.000] You filed Section 1, 28. [01:10:34.000 --> 01:10:36.000] Tell us what you actually filed. [01:10:36.000 --> 01:10:38.000] A little more detail. [01:10:38.000 --> 01:10:39.000] Okay. [01:10:39.000 --> 01:10:41.000] Well, you'll see all of it pretty quick. [01:10:41.000 --> 01:10:47.000] I'm almost done with the complete thing that happened, but let me tell you one thing that happened that blows my mind. [01:10:47.000 --> 01:10:52.000] They amended their complaint and didn't give it to me until I got to the court that day. [01:10:52.000 --> 01:10:56.000] They were supposed to give it to me 24 hours in advance. [01:10:56.000 --> 01:10:57.000] Okay. [01:10:57.000 --> 01:11:00.000] Did you file an objection? [01:11:00.000 --> 01:11:04.000] Yeah, I had already been objecting to your complaint from the get-go. [01:11:04.000 --> 01:11:05.000] Okay. [01:11:05.000 --> 01:11:07.000] That's a point for appeal. [01:11:07.000 --> 01:11:08.000] Yeah. [01:11:08.000 --> 01:11:13.000] Listen, you should not care what they do in the trial court. [01:11:13.000 --> 01:11:18.000] Your only purpose in the trial court is what, Jane? [01:11:18.000 --> 01:11:20.000] To set the record. [01:11:20.000 --> 01:11:21.000] Set the record. [01:11:21.000 --> 01:11:22.000] You don't care what they do. [01:11:22.000 --> 01:11:28.000] Everything they do that's wrong gives you more record to set, criminal complaints, bar grievances, [01:11:28.000 --> 01:11:32.000] judicial conduct complaints, all kinds of stuff you can hammer them with. [01:11:32.000 --> 01:11:35.000] A laundry list of things they did wrong. [01:11:35.000 --> 01:11:38.000] Most definitely, yeah. [01:11:38.000 --> 01:11:40.000] So go for it. [01:11:40.000 --> 01:11:45.000] The reason we say your only purpose in the trial court is to set record for appeal. [01:11:45.000 --> 01:11:50.000] Dr. Graves is the one that came up with that, but when I heard that, I said that's perfect. [01:11:50.000 --> 01:12:00.000] We go to court and we have this expectation in America that our courts are fair and they will protect us from wrong. [01:12:00.000 --> 01:12:04.000] Then we go to court and find that's not the case. [01:12:04.000 --> 01:12:09.000] And that causes this feeling of betrayal. [01:12:09.000 --> 01:12:12.000] I'm a combat veteran. [01:12:12.000 --> 01:12:18.000] I went to Vietnam and really bad stuff happened there. [01:12:18.000 --> 01:12:22.000] When I came back, I was in jungle fatigues. [01:12:22.000 --> 01:12:23.000] I'd been in for a week. [01:12:23.000 --> 01:12:29.000] I'd unloaded helicopters in them and they're soaked in blood. [01:12:29.000 --> 01:12:36.000] I'd been in the tropics and Vietnam, when you get there, it has a special odor. [01:12:36.000 --> 01:12:38.000] I smelled like Vietnam. [01:12:38.000 --> 01:12:40.000] I smelled like dried blood. [01:12:40.000 --> 01:12:42.000] I was in these ragged fatigues. [01:12:42.000 --> 01:12:50.000] I hit Sea-Tac Airport in Seattle, Washington at 1 o'clock in the morning with 15 cents in my pocket. [01:12:50.000 --> 01:13:03.000] I was trying to get to my family before two officers in uniform walked up their steps to tell them that my twin brother had just passed. [01:13:03.000 --> 01:13:07.000] I was walking down the terminal at Sea-Tac Airport. [01:13:07.000 --> 01:13:09.000] This young woman saw me. [01:13:09.000 --> 01:13:11.000] She had three little kids with her. [01:13:11.000 --> 01:13:20.000] She pushed her children behind her and got up against the wall with her between me and her children as I passed. [01:13:20.000 --> 01:13:31.000] To this day, that is by far the most horrible experience of my life. [01:13:31.000 --> 01:13:34.000] It was betrayal. [01:13:34.000 --> 01:13:37.000] There's nothing worse than betrayal. [01:13:37.000 --> 01:13:43.000] You go to these courts and your security depends on a fair and honest court. [01:13:43.000 --> 01:13:50.000] You go to this court and find out it's not fair and honest and you tend to be absolutely devastated. [01:13:50.000 --> 01:13:53.000] It tends to numb people. [01:13:53.000 --> 01:13:56.000] They're unable to function. [01:13:56.000 --> 01:14:05.000] We try to get people to treat the courts as if they're just there to set the record for appeal. [01:14:05.000 --> 01:14:08.000] Appeal is where the action is. [01:14:08.000 --> 01:14:09.000] You're in the lower courts. [01:14:09.000 --> 01:14:16.000] The lower courts are by far the most corrupt of all courts. [01:14:16.000 --> 01:14:22.000] They tend to get pro se litigants like you that don't know squat and they can do anything they want to do. [01:14:22.000 --> 01:14:23.000] Nothing happens to them. [01:14:23.000 --> 01:14:25.000] They do that all the time. [01:14:25.000 --> 01:14:30.000] They're not accustomed to a pro se litigant. [01:14:30.000 --> 01:14:31.000] I'm trying. [01:14:31.000 --> 01:14:33.000] Go ahead. [01:14:33.000 --> 01:14:35.000] That's not what happened, though. [01:14:35.000 --> 01:14:37.000] I mean, I reamed them. [01:14:37.000 --> 01:14:45.000] As a matter of fact, I caught the prosecutor in a lie, the officer in a lie or two, and the witness in two lies. [01:14:45.000 --> 01:14:47.000] I had proof of every one of them that lied. [01:14:47.000 --> 01:14:51.000] Did you file criminal charges against them? [01:14:51.000 --> 01:14:52.000] Not yet. [01:14:52.000 --> 01:14:54.000] I mean, it just happened. [01:14:54.000 --> 01:15:01.000] I'm trying to get finished with what's so-called appeal or findings of fact or whatever it is I'm trying to file. [01:15:01.000 --> 01:15:07.000] I've got this thing that's already 10 pages long, but I don't know what it is yet. [01:15:07.000 --> 01:15:13.000] It was supposed to be a findings of fact and it was just inclusions of law. [01:15:13.000 --> 01:15:14.000] And that's what it says. [01:15:14.000 --> 01:15:16.000] But now I'm saying... [01:15:16.000 --> 01:15:17.000] Okay. [01:15:17.000 --> 01:15:26.000] You're in a J.P. court and Rule 297 doesn't apply to a J.P. court. [01:15:26.000 --> 01:15:29.000] We like to ask for it anyway and get the judge to deny it. [01:15:29.000 --> 01:15:35.000] So you don't have to write up your own findings of fact and conclusions of law for this. [01:15:35.000 --> 01:15:36.000] Okay. [01:15:36.000 --> 01:15:43.000] If you've got more than you can handle, just file a request for findings of fact and conclusions of law. [01:15:43.000 --> 01:15:48.000] That puts you in the court and stops your appeal clock. [01:15:48.000 --> 01:15:49.000] It does? [01:15:49.000 --> 01:15:50.000] Okay. [01:15:50.000 --> 01:16:00.000] Yes. Any motion you file, it stops the clock because then his ruling is no longer final. [01:16:00.000 --> 01:16:01.000] Okay. [01:16:01.000 --> 01:16:03.000] So put that in. [01:16:03.000 --> 01:16:06.000] But take some time. [01:16:06.000 --> 01:16:09.000] Go back, line out a few of the criminal complaints. [01:16:09.000 --> 01:16:15.000] See if you can find a criminal complaint that would disqualify the judge. [01:16:15.000 --> 01:16:22.000] File that criminal complaint and then go to Rule 18 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure and read that. [01:16:22.000 --> 01:16:23.000] 18A. [01:16:23.000 --> 01:16:25.000] 18A. I'm sorry. [01:16:25.000 --> 01:16:26.000] And read that. [01:16:26.000 --> 01:16:30.000] It will tell you how to file a recusal for the judge. [01:16:30.000 --> 01:16:32.000] File a recusal for the judge. [01:16:32.000 --> 01:16:35.000] Or disqualification. [01:16:35.000 --> 01:16:38.000] Disqualification is a lot harder. [01:16:38.000 --> 01:16:40.000] I'm working up a disqualification. [01:16:40.000 --> 01:16:44.000] If he's got a criminal complaint against him, I don't know if he can say he's not interested. [01:16:44.000 --> 01:16:52.000] That's what I'm working up, is a criminal complaint that says, see, disqualification is constitutional and it's very specific. [01:16:52.000 --> 01:16:59.000] And what I'm saying, what I'm working up or pleading to say is, is if... [01:16:59.000 --> 01:17:04.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.000 --> 01:17:08.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:17:08.000 --> 01:17:14.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [01:17:14.000 --> 01:17:20.000] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. 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[01:18:04.000 --> 01:18:07.000] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.000 --> 01:18:10.000] I need my truth fake. I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:10.000 --> 01:18:13.000] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.000 --> 01:18:16.000] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.000 --> 01:18:20.000] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.000 --> 01:18:22.000] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.000 --> 01:18:24.000] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.000 --> 01:18:27.000] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.000 --> 01:18:31.000] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, the first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.000 --> 01:18:37.000] Now, go to logosradio.network.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.000 --> 01:18:43.000] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.000 --> 01:18:44.000] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.000 --> 01:18:45.000] No. [01:18:45.000 --> 01:18:47.000] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.000 --> 01:18:48.000] No. [01:18:48.000 --> 01:18:49.000] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.000 --> 01:18:51.000] No. I mean, yes. [01:18:51.000 --> 01:18:55.000] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. [01:18:55.000 --> 01:18:57.000] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.000 --> 01:18:58.000] We are welcome. [01:18:58.000 --> 01:19:25.000] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:28.000 --> 01:19:47.000] If I can't get everything I want, maybe I'll get a Ranger. [01:19:47.000 --> 01:19:58.000] If I can't get everything I need, maybe I'll get a Ranger. [01:19:58.000 --> 01:20:10.000] If the people of the world can get happiness and peace, maybe I'll get a Ranger. [01:20:10.000 --> 01:20:23.000] If I can't get all these crazy wars to cease, maybe I'll get a Ranger. [01:20:23.000 --> 01:20:25.000] Okay. We are back. [01:20:25.000 --> 01:20:28.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:20:28.000 --> 01:20:34.000] And Jane, you're having a problem with surface-level stuff. [01:20:34.000 --> 01:20:41.000] You're not digging deep and touching all the bases you need to touch. [01:20:41.000 --> 01:20:47.000] Right now, Brett, will you read the Rules of Appellate Procedure? [01:20:47.000 --> 01:20:50.000] Did you say it's 38? [01:20:50.000 --> 01:20:53.000] But that's not, that doesn't apply to this right now, what I'm doing. [01:20:53.000 --> 01:20:55.000] Hold on. Stop, stop. [01:20:55.000 --> 01:20:56.000] Okay. [01:20:56.000 --> 01:20:59.000] Stop. It does apply. [01:20:59.000 --> 01:21:04.000] Did I read that? [01:21:04.000 --> 01:21:05.000] Did I lose you, Brett? [01:21:05.000 --> 01:21:12.000] Okay, what it said is in order to have a complete record, go ahead and read that. [01:21:12.000 --> 01:21:13.000] Do you have that up, Brett? [01:21:13.000 --> 01:21:18.000] Yeah, it's 34.5 in the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. [01:21:18.000 --> 01:21:21.000] It's talking about the clerk's record. [01:21:21.000 --> 01:21:28.000] And it says unless the parties designate the filings in the appellate record by agreement under Rule 34.2, [01:21:28.000 --> 01:21:32.000] the record must include copies of the following. [01:21:32.000 --> 01:21:41.000] And you go on down here to criminal cases, it says the record must include the indictment or information. [01:21:41.000 --> 01:21:44.000] Well, they're not going to be able to check that box. [01:21:44.000 --> 01:21:50.000] It says it's got to include any special plea or defense motion that was presented to the court and overruled. [01:21:50.000 --> 01:21:54.000] Well, that was, she did that. [01:21:54.000 --> 01:22:00.000] If they're going to have to say that she challenged jurisdiction, that was her plea. [01:22:00.000 --> 01:22:02.000] And it got overruled. [01:22:02.000 --> 01:22:07.000] Let's see, written waivers, stipulations. [01:22:07.000 --> 01:22:14.000] Here, the court's finding of fact and conclusions of law. [01:22:14.000 --> 01:22:25.000] And I read in a court case where it said that if you did not request findings of fact and conclusions at law, you waived any error. [01:22:25.000 --> 01:22:33.000] Now, I've never seen that actually adjudicated in Texas law. [01:22:33.000 --> 01:22:37.000] But that's what the case law says. They could. [01:22:37.000 --> 01:22:39.000] Yeah, it totally lines up with this. It makes sense. [01:22:39.000 --> 01:22:48.000] You read 34.2 and an agreed record will be presumed to contain all evidence and filings relevant. [01:22:48.000 --> 01:22:53.000] So if you don't say anything, then the presumption is, well, it must all be there. [01:22:53.000 --> 01:23:00.000] And look at Walker v. Packer. Send me an email, ask for it. [01:23:00.000 --> 01:23:02.000] I will send you the... [01:23:02.000 --> 01:23:04.000] I have it. [01:23:04.000 --> 01:23:15.000] Okay. If you have reason to believe that the judge failed to properly apply the law to the facts, you should file criminally against it. [01:23:15.000 --> 01:23:19.000] I understand that, but I only got 10 days to get the appeal in. [01:23:19.000 --> 01:23:23.000] So I know that the findings of fact gives me a little bit more time. [01:23:23.000 --> 01:23:29.000] You are not listening. You are absolutely intending that you only have 10 days. [01:23:29.000 --> 01:23:34.000] You just gave me three or four ways to stretch it out. [01:23:34.000 --> 01:23:34.000] Okay. [01:23:34.000 --> 01:23:35.000] What are you doing? [01:23:35.000 --> 01:23:42.000] What else would I do? How many more days did findings of fact give me? [01:23:42.000 --> 01:23:54.000] He has 20 days. If he fails to produce it in 20 days, then you can file a notice of late filing gives you another 10 days. [01:23:54.000 --> 01:23:55.000] Rule 297. [01:23:55.000 --> 01:24:01.000] Is it another two? I thought it was the 20 becomes 40 from the first... [01:24:01.000 --> 01:24:06.000] No, no, it becomes 30. We have done this before. That is why I remember that one. [01:24:06.000 --> 01:24:07.000] But I thought you... [01:24:07.000 --> 01:24:12.000] Jane, you are getting a hysterical fix on 10 days. [01:24:12.000 --> 01:24:13.000] Okay. [01:24:13.000 --> 01:24:16.000] File for informapoperous. That stops the clock. [01:24:16.000 --> 01:24:17.000] Okay. [01:24:17.000 --> 01:24:23.000] File for findings of fact. File for reconsideration. All of those stop the clock. [01:24:23.000 --> 01:24:27.000] Okay. [01:24:27.000 --> 01:24:28.000] All right. [01:24:28.000 --> 01:24:34.000] Okay. And in the meantime, most of reconsideration is easy. [01:24:34.000 --> 01:24:36.000] Okay. [01:24:36.000 --> 01:24:43.000] A request for a notice of informapoperous. You don't request informapoperous. You already got it. [01:24:43.000 --> 01:24:50.000] It is res judicata. Already been adjudicated. Give notice of informapoperous. [01:24:50.000 --> 01:24:51.000] Okay. [01:24:51.000 --> 01:25:00.000] And give a written notice of intent to appeal. If you give a written notice of intent to appeal early, [01:25:00.000 --> 01:25:07.000] then it sits in the record until it is ripe. [01:25:07.000 --> 01:25:13.000] So when all this other time runs out, you already have your notice in. [01:25:13.000 --> 01:25:18.000] Does that notice have to be including everything that happens? [01:25:18.000 --> 01:25:21.000] Hereby give notice of my intent to appeal. That's it. [01:25:21.000 --> 01:25:24.000] Okay. Okay. [01:25:24.000 --> 01:25:27.000] All of these are easy. These are not anything that needs a whole lot of stuff. [01:25:27.000 --> 01:25:34.000] Then you can set about going back to the beginning and mark out everywhere they've done something improper [01:25:34.000 --> 01:25:36.000] and start pounding them for it. [01:25:36.000 --> 01:25:37.000] Yeah. [01:25:37.000 --> 01:25:41.000] So far they beat you up with impunity. [01:25:41.000 --> 01:25:43.000] Okay. [01:25:43.000 --> 01:25:52.000] I started beating up the court, and after this hearing on my subject matter jurisdiction challenge, [01:25:52.000 --> 01:26:01.000] they sent me a copy of everything in the record, and the judge sent me a signed order for each of his decisions. [01:26:01.000 --> 01:26:04.000] You ever seen that in traffic court, Brett? [01:26:04.000 --> 01:26:06.000] No. [01:26:06.000 --> 01:26:08.000] Got his attention. [01:26:08.000 --> 01:26:18.000] I looked at that and thought, Bubba, you should not play poker. [01:26:18.000 --> 01:26:26.000] The best defense is a good, effective offense. Go for their throats. [01:26:26.000 --> 01:26:32.000] Do I need to space those fileings out like a week apart or something like that, the ones you said, the easy ones? [01:26:32.000 --> 01:26:46.000] Yeah. Well, no, those are not really necessary. You can. I'm not sure. Brett, is there a... I don't think there's any... [01:26:46.000 --> 01:26:51.000] I would lump them all in there. I would just go ahead and do them all right up front and put them all together. [01:26:51.000 --> 01:26:54.000] Get them in so they don't become an issue. [01:26:54.000 --> 01:26:55.000] Yeah. [01:26:55.000 --> 01:26:56.000] Okay. [01:26:56.000 --> 01:26:59.000] You don't want them... Yeah. Just go ahead and get them in there. [01:26:59.000 --> 01:27:00.000] Okay. [01:27:00.000 --> 01:27:06.000] She's also got a question about the transcript, difficulty getting the transcript. [01:27:06.000 --> 01:27:13.000] And I've run into that before, too, where people who want to keep you from being able to appeal, not the people. [01:27:13.000 --> 01:27:20.000] I mean, the judge doesn't want you to be able to appeal, and they make it where it's difficult for you to do that, to get the transcript. [01:27:20.000 --> 01:27:24.000] That's why you file criminally against the judge every time he does something you don't like. [01:27:24.000 --> 01:27:33.000] I understand, but I want the transcript, and what they're trying to make me do is, since I notified and told them I wanted the copy of the transcript, [01:27:33.000 --> 01:27:46.000] they said that they send the reporting to a transcribing company, a third party, and those people actually contact me and give me a quote how much it's going to cost for me to get a copy of it, the transcript. [01:27:46.000 --> 01:27:49.000] That's your informal paupers. [01:27:49.000 --> 01:27:54.000] I know, but the third party is not part of the government. [01:27:54.000 --> 01:27:58.000] Part of informal paupers is hard to understand. [01:27:58.000 --> 01:28:03.000] You pay nothing. [01:28:03.000 --> 01:28:12.000] So then whenever that third party calls me and says, this is how much it's going to cost, I'm going to say, hey, here's my paupers, and they're going to say, if we don't say that, we're going to have something real. [01:28:12.000 --> 01:28:21.000] Then quit, Jane. Just throw everything down and walk away, because everybody's going to do something you don't like. [01:28:21.000 --> 01:28:25.000] If they do that, you have recourse. [01:28:25.000 --> 01:28:28.000] Okay. All right. Well, tell me. [01:28:28.000 --> 01:28:42.000] Jane, Jane, look, we've talked to you a long time, and in every time I've talked to you, there has never been anything I told you that you didn't rebut. Tell me why it won't work. [01:28:42.000 --> 01:28:50.000] You're hamstringing yourself. You're making yourself crazy. I've watched you make yourself insane. [01:28:50.000 --> 01:28:54.000] Stop. Back up. Chill. [01:28:54.000 --> 01:28:58.000] You're informal paupers. That company want to charge you? [01:28:58.000 --> 01:29:06.000] You say, yeah, Bubba, you want to charge me? I'll sue you. You got a bill there, send it to the court. Don't bother me with it. [01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:09.000] Okay. [01:29:09.000 --> 01:29:13.000] You have tools if you start using them. [01:29:13.000 --> 01:29:17.000] You seem to be concerned that they're doing wrong things. [01:29:17.000 --> 01:29:21.000] I like it when they do wrong things. [01:29:21.000 --> 01:29:27.000] It gives you more leverage against them. [01:29:27.000 --> 01:29:31.000] So you had to listen to my recording then, right? [01:29:31.000 --> 01:29:37.000] Yeah. I listened to part of it. I had trouble hearing the judge in that. [01:29:37.000 --> 01:29:39.000] But I've been to a hundred of those. [01:29:39.000 --> 01:29:42.000] I'm trying to get that through. [01:29:42.000 --> 01:29:46.000] What do you think I'm not doing anything? I'm doing, you know, I do a lot of stuff these days. [01:29:46.000 --> 01:29:52.000] No, it's not what I'm saying. I'm saying you're deliberately making yourself nuts. [01:29:52.000 --> 01:30:01.000] That's what you're doing. You're not calming down. Hang on. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:30:01.000 --> 01:30:05.000] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:05.000 --> 01:30:11.000] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.000 --> 01:30:16.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:16.000 --> 01:30:21.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.000 --> 01:30:26.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.000 --> 01:30:32.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.000 --> 01:30:34.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.000 --> 01:30:41.000] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.000 --> 01:30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.000 --> 01:30:52.000] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.000 --> 01:30:59.000] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.000 --> 01:31:08.000] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast. If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.000 --> 01:31:15.000] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:15.000 --> 01:31:19.000] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:19.000 --> 01:31:24.000] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:24.000 --> 01:31:31.000] Call Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.000 --> 01:31:37.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:37.000 --> 01:31:44.000] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.000 --> 01:31:47.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:47.000 --> 01:31:49.000] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.000 --> 01:31:51.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.000 --> 01:31:52.000] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.000 --> 01:31:53.000] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.000 --> 01:31:54.000] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.000 --> 01:31:55.000] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.000 --> 01:31:58.000] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.000 --> 01:32:02.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.000 --> 01:32:06.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:06.000 --> 01:32:13.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.000 --> 01:32:20.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.000 --> 01:32:26.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.000 --> 01:32:36.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.000 --> 01:32:41.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.000 --> 01:32:48.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.000 --> 01:32:51.000] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.000 --> 01:32:55.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.000 --> 01:33:02.000] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.000 --> 01:33:19.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:32.000 --> 01:33:39.000] Okay, we are back. [01:33:39.000 --> 01:33:41.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:41.000 --> 01:33:48.000] And Jane, I've been listening to you for a while, reading your posts on the Telegram channel. [01:33:48.000 --> 01:33:52.000] And something was going on there. [01:33:52.000 --> 01:33:56.000] And I've been trying to kind of get a handle on what it is. [01:33:56.000 --> 01:34:04.000] Something that has nothing to do with the case, but has to do with the way you're interacting with the people around you. [01:34:04.000 --> 01:34:10.000] I'm an old guy, and I've studied psychology for a long time, trying to figure out how things work. [01:34:10.000 --> 01:34:14.000] And I come to understand something. [01:34:14.000 --> 01:34:21.000] You will not achieve in your life what you want or what you wish for. [01:34:21.000 --> 01:34:24.000] The brain is not motivated that way. [01:34:24.000 --> 01:34:26.000] I know it seems like it is. [01:34:26.000 --> 01:34:31.000] But what you will actually achieve is what you expect. [01:34:31.000 --> 01:34:34.000] Take the child who's been abused all his life. [01:34:34.000 --> 01:34:38.000] Take him out of the abusive environment, treat him the way he's always wanted and always wished for. [01:34:38.000 --> 01:34:42.000] He likes it. This is great. This is wonderful. [01:34:42.000 --> 01:34:46.000] But he's always waiting for the other foot to fall. [01:34:46.000 --> 01:34:55.000] You've put him in an environment that he doesn't know how to react and respond in. [01:34:55.000 --> 01:34:59.000] What we achieve in our lives is what we expect. [01:34:59.000 --> 01:35:07.000] We will keep ourselves in our comfort zone, no matter how horrible it is. [01:35:07.000 --> 01:35:13.000] I'm not saying your comfort zone is horrible, but something else is going on here. [01:35:13.000 --> 01:35:18.000] In the comfort zone, I'm doing a lot of stuff that I've never done before, [01:35:18.000 --> 01:35:21.000] and I've been molded this way over the last few years. [01:35:21.000 --> 01:35:23.000] You know, I've changed. [01:35:23.000 --> 01:35:31.000] I'm hearing a comfort zone that has nothing to do with the content of what's going on. [01:35:31.000 --> 01:35:41.000] There's one time I read some of your posts, and you were giving someone else advice. [01:35:41.000 --> 01:35:45.000] Remember I put in the comment, Jane, you have learned? [01:35:45.000 --> 01:35:47.000] Yeah, I do remember that. [01:35:47.000 --> 01:35:53.000] Yeah, you were giving someone exactly the kind of advice people have been giving you, [01:35:53.000 --> 01:35:58.000] and you blow it off and jump from one thing to the next to the next to the next to the next. [01:35:58.000 --> 01:36:01.000] And I'm wondering, what the heck is going on here? [01:36:01.000 --> 01:36:09.000] What is your intended ultimate outcome in all this litigation? [01:36:09.000 --> 01:36:12.000] Okay, the reason why I'm even fighting it, [01:36:12.000 --> 01:36:18.000] because I thought I could make the municipal court stop doing what they're doing. [01:36:18.000 --> 01:36:23.000] No, no, no, stop, stop, stop. That's not the question I asked. [01:36:23.000 --> 01:36:32.000] What is, at the end of the day, what is your purpose in fighting all this? [01:36:32.000 --> 01:36:34.000] Is the reason why I'm still going with this, [01:36:34.000 --> 01:36:37.000] instead of just paying $100 and having it be deferred? [01:36:37.000 --> 01:36:42.000] Yeah, 99% of the people would have just paid it. [01:36:42.000 --> 01:36:43.000] Oh, no. [01:36:43.000 --> 01:36:49.000] The reason I'm spending this time with you, you're in a small group. [01:36:49.000 --> 01:36:58.000] I do this show, I do this telegram channel, I do all this to find people just like you. [01:36:58.000 --> 01:37:02.000] Can you provide me with any case law at all, [01:37:02.000 --> 01:37:07.000] where anybody's been successful or had any kind of cases at all? [01:37:07.000 --> 01:37:09.000] You keep doing that, too. [01:37:09.000 --> 01:37:10.000] Okay. [01:37:10.000 --> 01:37:14.000] You ask everybody for stuff, and then when you get it, [01:37:14.000 --> 01:37:17.000] you test them against others, against others, against others. [01:37:17.000 --> 01:37:19.000] You don't trust anybody. [01:37:19.000 --> 01:37:20.000] No, if I hold... [01:37:20.000 --> 01:37:25.000] And what that tells me is Jane doesn't trust Jane. [01:37:25.000 --> 01:37:30.000] No, that's not it. I need case laws. I can cite something that... [01:37:30.000 --> 01:37:35.000] You have no idea how easy case law is to find. [01:37:35.000 --> 01:37:41.000] Every time somebody asks me for case law, I want to say, well, that's really easy. [01:37:41.000 --> 01:37:51.000] Just go to the computer and open the program called GOGGLE. [01:37:51.000 --> 01:37:54.000] And type in what you want. [01:37:54.000 --> 01:37:55.000] You'll find it. [01:37:55.000 --> 01:38:04.000] I had a woman call me from Florida for six months asking me if she could record someone in Florida. [01:38:04.000 --> 01:38:07.000] After six months, I got irritated. [01:38:07.000 --> 01:38:15.000] And while she's asking the question, I got on Google and I typed in, recording people in Florida. [01:38:15.000 --> 01:38:16.000] Boom. [01:38:16.000 --> 01:38:19.000] Ten seconds, I read her the statute. [01:38:19.000 --> 01:38:27.000] There's not anything on Google that says that anybody had any success from a municipal court with a challenge for the Constitution of Texas. [01:38:27.000 --> 01:38:30.000] There's not any case law on that. I can't find anything. [01:38:30.000 --> 01:38:33.000] Wait a minute. Say that again. [01:38:33.000 --> 01:38:42.000] I have been looking and searching any kind of case that goes to the Code of Criminal Procedure, 2.01, 2.02, [01:38:42.000 --> 01:38:48.000] or the Texas Constitution, which I'm challenging that they have the right to even prosecute me. [01:38:48.000 --> 01:38:56.000] I cannot find any case where anybody's had any success that is actually gone because there's none there. [01:38:56.000 --> 01:38:57.000] There's none there. [01:38:57.000 --> 01:38:58.000] Okay. Well, hold on, hold on. [01:38:58.000 --> 01:39:02.000] And there's a really good reason why there's none there. [01:39:02.000 --> 01:39:07.000] Because you make your argument well and they're going to dismiss. [01:39:07.000 --> 01:39:12.000] They are not going to let this get to the Court of Appeals. [01:39:12.000 --> 01:39:16.000] We had a case, Pixler in Newark. [01:39:16.000 --> 01:39:19.000] They came after him for junk cars. [01:39:19.000 --> 01:39:25.000] He had an auto repair place and the city manager was upset at him for something and came after him. [01:39:25.000 --> 01:39:42.000] We filed a petition for writ amandamus in the Court of Appeals and claimed that the application of a city ordinance to the public was unconstitutional. [01:39:42.000 --> 01:39:53.000] The court got that argument and they looked at it and said, holy crap, if this gets to the Supreme and the Supreme rules in his favor, [01:39:53.000 --> 01:39:59.000] all city ordinances and county ordinances in the state will be rendered null and void. [01:39:59.000 --> 01:40:11.000] So they went into the record, into the codes, and found this obscure code that said before they could hold this one hearing that they held, [01:40:11.000 --> 01:40:19.000] they had to convene a meeting of the city council and the city council had to vote on whether or not they could hold this particular meeting. [01:40:19.000 --> 01:40:23.000] And they didn't do that so they dismissed it for that reason. [01:40:23.000 --> 01:40:28.000] That way it kept our argument from getting to the Supreme. [01:40:28.000 --> 01:40:30.000] So was he convicted? [01:40:30.000 --> 01:40:32.000] No, they threw it out. [01:40:32.000 --> 01:40:34.000] They dismissed it. [01:40:34.000 --> 01:40:36.000] But they didn't dismiss it on his issue. [01:40:36.000 --> 01:40:47.000] So we can't show you that his issue won because they went and found another issue to make damn well sure his didn't win. [01:40:47.000 --> 01:40:48.000] Right. [01:40:48.000 --> 01:40:53.000] There is no way the courts are going to let this get to the Supreme. [01:40:53.000 --> 01:40:55.000] Not going to happen. [01:40:55.000 --> 01:40:57.000] You're not going to find it. [01:40:57.000 --> 01:40:58.000] Okay. [01:40:58.000 --> 01:40:59.000] Okay. [01:40:59.000 --> 01:41:02.000] So I would like to have my charges overturn. [01:41:02.000 --> 01:41:04.000] Okay. [01:41:04.000 --> 01:41:14.000] But you're setting, you seem to be setting some kind of conditions that if you don't find a case where the courts have ruled in this particular way, [01:41:14.000 --> 01:41:16.000] then you can't argue that issue. [01:41:16.000 --> 01:41:18.000] Is that what I'm understanding? [01:41:18.000 --> 01:41:20.000] I'm not saying that I can't argue it. [01:41:20.000 --> 01:41:24.000] I'm saying that I'm wondering if I can even win. [01:41:24.000 --> 01:41:28.000] You have just moved to a different subject. [01:41:28.000 --> 01:41:35.000] That's what you have been wondering from the start if you can even win, and that's what I kept hearing from you. [01:41:35.000 --> 01:41:40.000] I keep hearing this expectation that you're going to lose. [01:41:40.000 --> 01:41:42.000] You don't like it. [01:41:42.000 --> 01:41:43.000] You don't want it. [01:41:43.000 --> 01:41:45.000] But that's what you keep going to. [01:41:45.000 --> 01:41:48.000] But I didn't go into court like that. [01:41:48.000 --> 01:41:52.000] I went into court very confident, and I actually did really well. [01:41:52.000 --> 01:41:53.000] I was proud of myself. [01:41:53.000 --> 01:42:00.000] And I was really surprised that they still convicted me anyway, but that was their intent. [01:42:00.000 --> 01:42:02.000] So they were not. [01:42:02.000 --> 01:42:04.000] They were going to convict me no matter what. [01:42:04.000 --> 01:42:06.000] How many times did I tell you that? [01:42:06.000 --> 01:42:08.000] How many times did Brett tell you that? [01:42:08.000 --> 01:42:12.000] Never expect to win in the trial court. [01:42:12.000 --> 01:42:14.000] Mm-hmm. [01:42:14.000 --> 01:42:19.000] Have you always held unreasonable expectations? [01:42:19.000 --> 01:42:23.000] No, I don't think. [01:42:23.000 --> 01:42:27.000] I'm really asking rhetorical questions here. [01:42:27.000 --> 01:42:35.000] Jane, there's something going on, something besides law and that. [01:42:35.000 --> 01:42:38.000] I don't know exactly what it is yet. [01:42:38.000 --> 01:42:43.000] But if you can get a handle on it, the reason I ask you what your intended outcome is, [01:42:43.000 --> 01:42:48.000] because if you don't have one, then you're just all over the place. [01:42:48.000 --> 01:42:54.000] And you'll always be all over the place. [01:42:54.000 --> 01:42:58.000] Anybody who knows me knows I'm not particularly religious. [01:42:58.000 --> 01:43:03.000] But there is this thing about goal setting. [01:43:03.000 --> 01:43:06.000] Goal setting is magic. [01:43:06.000 --> 01:43:13.000] God, if there is a God, he don't have to do everything because he was smart. [01:43:13.000 --> 01:43:20.000] And he created this setup so that people would take care of themselves [01:43:20.000 --> 01:43:23.000] and get what they wanted themselves. [01:43:23.000 --> 01:43:26.000] And this is how I told him to do it. [01:43:26.000 --> 01:43:28.000] He said, decide what you want. [01:43:28.000 --> 01:43:30.000] Align it, define it, specify it. [01:43:30.000 --> 01:43:34.000] What exactly do you want? [01:43:34.000 --> 01:43:36.000] Then ask. [01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:38.000] Ask for it. [01:43:38.000 --> 01:43:43.000] And then, then accept on faith that it will materialize in your existence [01:43:43.000 --> 01:43:46.000] and then forget about it. [01:43:46.000 --> 01:43:52.000] That sends a subliminal direction to the inner mind to make every decision it makes [01:43:52.000 --> 01:43:54.000] toward the achievement of that outcome. [01:43:54.000 --> 01:43:57.000] God don't have to do all the work, you do it yourself. [01:43:57.000 --> 01:44:11.000] Hang on, Randy Felton, Brett Felton will be right back. [01:44:27.000 --> 01:44:35.000] We have come to trust YoungGevity so much, we became a marketing distributor [01:44:35.000 --> 01:44:39.000] along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. [01:44:39.000 --> 01:44:44.000] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve [01:44:44.000 --> 01:44:47.000] as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.000 --> 01:44:51.000] As you realize the benefits of YoungGevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.000 --> 01:44:56.000] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family [01:44:56.000 --> 01:44:59.000] and increase your income. [01:44:59.000 --> 01:45:03.000] Order now. [01:45:03.000 --> 01:45:06.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:06.000 --> 01:45:10.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, [01:45:10.000 --> 01:45:17.000] easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:17.000 --> 01:45:21.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:21.000 --> 01:45:25.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:25.000 --> 01:45:30.000] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [01:45:30.000 --> 01:45:36.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:36.000 --> 01:45:41.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:41.000 --> 01:45:45.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.000 --> 01:45:51.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:51.000 --> 01:45:55.000] pro se tactics and much more. [01:45:55.000 --> 01:46:22.000] Visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.000 --> 01:46:54.000] The people come down from the hill [01:46:54.000 --> 01:47:05.000] into the city they will suffer. [01:47:05.000 --> 01:47:07.000] Okay, we are back. [01:47:07.000 --> 01:47:11.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Jane in Texas. [01:47:11.000 --> 01:47:19.000] And have you ever heard of the book Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill? [01:47:19.000 --> 01:47:20.000] Mm-hmm. [01:47:20.000 --> 01:47:22.000] I probably have it. [01:47:22.000 --> 01:47:23.000] It's in there. [01:47:23.000 --> 01:47:27.000] Have you ever heard of the concept of manifestation? [01:47:27.000 --> 01:47:29.000] Yes, I have. [01:47:29.000 --> 01:47:32.000] What you believe and perceive, you will achieve. [01:47:32.000 --> 01:47:34.000] What? [01:47:34.000 --> 01:47:43.000] In prayer, in Harvard School of Business they call it setting specific goals. [01:47:43.000 --> 01:47:48.000] If you are going to achieve something in your life, [01:47:48.000 --> 01:47:53.000] you have to have some concept of what it is you're going to achieve. [01:47:53.000 --> 01:48:01.000] And then you have to program your inner mind to lead you toward that ultimate outcome. [01:48:01.000 --> 01:48:06.000] That's why I talk to people all the time and I ask them what the purpose is. [01:48:06.000 --> 01:48:11.000] I want to know what your intended ultimate outcome is. [01:48:11.000 --> 01:48:16.000] What is it that lights your fire, that wakes you up in the morning, that keeps you going? [01:48:16.000 --> 01:48:28.000] What is it that you are absolutely going to achieve at the end of the day no matter what? [01:48:28.000 --> 01:48:34.000] When you use the tools of setting specific goals, setting specific goals, decide what you want, [01:48:34.000 --> 01:48:37.000] align it, define it, specify it, [01:48:37.000 --> 01:48:49.000] then tell yourself that no matter what, I will achieve this outcome. [01:48:49.000 --> 01:48:51.000] And then forget about it. [01:48:51.000 --> 01:48:56.000] What that does from a psychological perspective is it programs your inner mind, [01:48:56.000 --> 01:49:04.000] that part of your mind that sends up to your conscious awareness behaviors. [01:49:04.000 --> 01:49:09.000] Most of the behaviors that we exhibit, we don't do those consciously. [01:49:09.000 --> 01:49:13.000] Somebody says something or does something and we don't sit back [01:49:13.000 --> 01:49:19.000] and consciously contemplate the ramifications of the communication. [01:49:19.000 --> 01:49:25.000] There's some inner part of it that just pushes a response up. [01:49:25.000 --> 01:49:30.000] We don't think the response, it just comes out. [01:49:30.000 --> 01:49:36.000] There's another aspect of mind that does not always represent itself in the conscious aspect. [01:49:36.000 --> 01:49:44.000] The conscious aspect, science says, can only handle 7 plus or minus 2 pieces of information at a time. [01:49:44.000 --> 01:49:47.000] When I'm doing a therapeutic metaphor or secret hypnosis, [01:49:47.000 --> 01:49:52.000] I use that because I'll do what's called a reality stack. [01:49:52.000 --> 01:49:56.000] I'll tell you about my sister. I've got a sister. She's older than me. [01:49:56.000 --> 01:50:01.000] She lives in Chicago. All her kids grew up, moved out. [01:50:01.000 --> 01:50:05.000] She got bored, went back to school, became a nurse. [01:50:05.000 --> 01:50:09.000] Now, I'm doing an analog mark with my voice there. [01:50:09.000 --> 01:50:15.000] I've got a sister and I leave a break. She's older than me, another break. [01:50:15.000 --> 01:50:21.000] So I get my listener to mark that. Okay, she's got a sister and I mark that. [01:50:21.000 --> 01:50:24.000] She's older than me, I mark that. She lives in Chicago, I mark that. [01:50:24.000 --> 01:50:29.000] Like all of these things are important, they're not important. [01:50:29.000 --> 01:50:33.000] Just a reality stack. I get your mind busy, your conscious mind busy, [01:50:33.000 --> 01:50:42.000] so I can deal with that inner part of your mind that has access to all of the things you know. [01:50:42.000 --> 01:50:45.000] That's the one where the action is. [01:50:45.000 --> 01:50:51.000] When you set specific goals, you talk to that inner aspect. [01:50:51.000 --> 01:50:57.000] You give that inner aspect an internal directive so that every reaction, [01:50:57.000 --> 01:51:05.000] every response you have is filtered through that particular filter. [01:51:05.000 --> 01:51:09.000] It creates a new expectation. [01:51:09.000 --> 01:51:14.000] I don't know what expectation you have, Jane. [01:51:14.000 --> 01:51:18.000] I don't know what expectations I have. [01:51:18.000 --> 01:51:23.000] And I doubt that you could ever know what expectations you have. [01:51:23.000 --> 01:51:26.000] It's the way this brain works. [01:51:26.000 --> 01:51:34.000] Unless you have consciously redirected your internal expectation, [01:51:34.000 --> 01:51:41.000] then that inner mind will start directing you where you intend that it go. [01:51:41.000 --> 01:51:44.000] I don't know if this makes sense to you, [01:51:44.000 --> 01:51:48.000] but it may not make sense to you to the conscious aspect. [01:51:48.000 --> 01:51:57.000] And anybody who's listening, you have to know I'm trying to speak to more than the conscious aspect of our experience. [01:51:57.000 --> 01:52:05.000] And most people listening to this, and I suspect, Jane, that when you hear this, it makes sense to you. [01:52:05.000 --> 01:52:08.000] It does make sense. [01:52:08.000 --> 01:52:12.000] It makes sense because we already know this is true. [01:52:12.000 --> 01:52:17.000] We get in our busy day-to-day life and we kind of forget some of these special things, [01:52:17.000 --> 01:52:20.000] and we let them go by the wayside, but they're true. [01:52:20.000 --> 01:52:26.000] I've been talking to you, and there's a part of you that's listening to what I'm saying. [01:52:26.000 --> 01:52:32.000] Even if there's another part that's frantic, that's terrified of what's about to happen, you don't know what's coming, [01:52:32.000 --> 01:52:35.000] that part is in the conscious aspect. [01:52:35.000 --> 01:52:39.000] There's another aspect that knows exactly what I'm talking about. [01:52:39.000 --> 01:52:45.000] And I suggest that in the days and weeks and months ahead, you will begin to get more focused [01:52:45.000 --> 01:52:52.000] if you sit down and write down your intended outcome. [01:52:52.000 --> 01:52:56.000] I do know what that is. [01:52:56.000 --> 01:52:59.000] I do know what that is. [01:52:59.000 --> 01:53:02.000] Do you have an intended outcome written down? [01:53:02.000 --> 01:53:09.000] In regards to what I'm doing with legal stuff, is that what you're talking about, with my fight? [01:53:09.000 --> 01:53:12.000] No, this is not about legal. [01:53:12.000 --> 01:53:14.000] No, I don't. [01:53:14.000 --> 01:53:16.000] Legal is merely a symptom. [01:53:16.000 --> 01:53:22.000] I'm too busy fighting, I'm too busy defending myself, and that's the reason why. [01:53:22.000 --> 01:53:28.000] Everything that I'm doing is causing me more work because of the fact that I just don't go ahead [01:53:28.000 --> 01:53:31.000] and do what everybody else is doing and just pay $100. [01:53:31.000 --> 01:53:33.000] And now I've got to pay $1,000. [01:53:33.000 --> 01:53:35.000] And I don't know what's going to happen. [01:53:35.000 --> 01:53:39.000] And that's the reason why I didn't pay that $100 because I wanted to fight. [01:53:39.000 --> 01:53:45.000] I wanted to make them stop ruining people's lives over there by prosecuting people illegally. [01:53:45.000 --> 01:53:47.000] Okay, okay. [01:53:47.000 --> 01:53:48.000] Now we've got something. [01:53:48.000 --> 01:53:51.000] Write that down. [01:53:51.000 --> 01:53:54.000] You're not doing this for Jane. [01:53:54.000 --> 01:53:55.000] Okay. [01:53:55.000 --> 01:54:02.000] You're not doing this because you want these people to stop doing this to everybody else. [01:54:02.000 --> 01:54:07.000] You know, with what I do with the courts, I have a goal. [01:54:07.000 --> 01:54:09.000] That resonates. [01:54:09.000 --> 01:54:10.000] I have a goal. [01:54:10.000 --> 01:54:17.000] It is my purpose to place every judge in the country in a position such that when he steps up behind the bench [01:54:17.000 --> 01:54:21.000] and looks out across the bar at the gallery, I want him wondering which one. [01:54:21.000 --> 01:54:27.000] There are scoundrels out there waiting for me to render a ruling so he can run down and try to get me arrested. [01:54:27.000 --> 01:54:29.000] That's my goal. [01:54:29.000 --> 01:54:33.000] I had a bailiff drag me down the stairs, shove me out the door, knock me down, break my elbow, [01:54:33.000 --> 01:54:38.000] to keep me from getting to the grand jury with criminal complaints against the district attorney. [01:54:38.000 --> 01:54:43.000] I did not go after the bailiff. [01:54:43.000 --> 01:54:44.000] I could have sued him. [01:54:44.000 --> 01:54:46.000] I could have ruined his career. [01:54:46.000 --> 01:54:56.000] But I looked at it and I said, okay, how can I use this to lead me toward my intended ultimate outcome? [01:54:56.000 --> 01:55:06.000] I could not find a way to frame that so that it would lead me to my intended ultimate outcome so I didn't go after the bailiff. [01:55:06.000 --> 01:55:10.000] It turned out to be the most powerful thing I did in Wise County. [01:55:10.000 --> 01:55:14.000] Because then they realized that was the real deal. [01:55:14.000 --> 01:55:20.000] And I wouldn't be led astray, even to the point breaking bones wasn't going to lead me astray. [01:55:20.000 --> 01:55:24.000] I'm focused on one thing. [01:55:24.000 --> 01:55:30.000] Set down that you want to make sure they don't do this to anybody else. [01:55:30.000 --> 01:55:35.000] And before you do anything, compare it to that outcome. [01:55:35.000 --> 01:55:44.000] Will what I'm about to do lead the courts toward this outcome? [01:55:44.000 --> 01:55:47.000] If it won't, don't do it. [01:55:47.000 --> 01:55:49.000] No matter how much you think you'd like to. [01:55:49.000 --> 01:55:53.000] I really would have liked to sue that bailiff. [01:55:53.000 --> 01:56:01.000] But my inner mind said, no, rabbit hole, don't go down it. [01:56:01.000 --> 01:56:03.000] Write that down as a goal. [01:56:03.000 --> 01:56:10.000] A lot of these problems you're having, a lot of these frustrations you're having will start to go away. [01:56:10.000 --> 01:56:13.000] Because you'll look at this, say, okay, they did this. [01:56:13.000 --> 01:56:18.000] How do I turn this back on them so they don't do it to the next guy? [01:56:18.000 --> 01:56:28.000] And then the things Brett and I are telling you you should do, you'll begin to tell other people they should be doing those things because it will become clear to you. [01:56:28.000 --> 01:56:30.000] I'll tell you what it is that gets me. [01:56:30.000 --> 01:56:33.000] It's the time when it takes me, so the limitations of time. [01:56:33.000 --> 01:56:35.000] I hate deadlines like that. [01:56:35.000 --> 01:56:39.000] I hate having to do something that I know I can do it well. [01:56:39.000 --> 01:56:44.000] But when somebody says I have to have it done by a certain time, that's what kills me. [01:56:44.000 --> 01:56:45.000] Okay. [01:56:45.000 --> 01:56:48.000] All that we can handle. [01:56:48.000 --> 01:56:55.000] Any time they've got a deadline, then you look for ways of stretching out the time. [01:56:55.000 --> 01:56:58.000] Like here, you've got a deadline to appeal. [01:56:58.000 --> 01:57:01.000] Final motion for reconsideration. [01:57:01.000 --> 01:57:06.000] That takes the final ruling and makes it not a final ruling. [01:57:06.000 --> 01:57:09.000] And it runs it out until he responds. [01:57:09.000 --> 01:57:13.000] And then you're not convicted. [01:57:13.000 --> 01:57:14.000] It's pending. [01:57:14.000 --> 01:57:17.000] It's not final yet. [01:57:17.000 --> 01:57:21.000] It's within what they call their plenary power to fix the ruling that they just made. [01:57:21.000 --> 01:57:29.000] They had some bad ruling, and they have plenary power, even after the judgment, to fix it. [01:57:29.000 --> 01:57:32.000] And then ask for findings, facts, and conclusions of law. [01:57:32.000 --> 01:57:40.000] And when he doesn't do that one, you can file a petition for writ of mandamus with the appellate court. [01:57:40.000 --> 01:57:43.000] In your case, it would be with the county court. [01:57:43.000 --> 01:57:53.000] And ask the county court to order the judge to give you the facts and law he relied on to make his rulings. [01:57:53.000 --> 01:57:59.000] Yeah, especially that first one where he said he has a jurisdiction, just because he said he has it. [01:57:59.000 --> 01:58:01.000] That's going to slow him up again. [01:58:01.000 --> 01:58:05.000] So of all things, you can always slow him down. [01:58:05.000 --> 01:58:12.000] The first lawsuit I put together for somebody, he came to me, he had one day before an eviction hearing. [01:58:12.000 --> 01:58:17.000] Seven years later, he was still in court with him. [01:58:17.000 --> 01:58:18.000] I wrote him a suit. [01:58:18.000 --> 01:58:20.000] They said, this is crap. [01:58:20.000 --> 01:58:22.000] The other side said, this is crap. [01:58:22.000 --> 01:58:23.000] And the judge said, yeah, it's crap. [01:58:23.000 --> 01:58:24.000] Do it again. [01:58:24.000 --> 01:58:25.000] Fix it. [01:58:25.000 --> 01:58:26.000] We did it again. [01:58:26.000 --> 01:58:27.000] This one's crap. [01:58:27.000 --> 01:58:28.000] The third one stuck. [01:58:28.000 --> 01:58:32.000] Seven years later, he's still in court. [01:58:32.000 --> 01:58:35.000] One thing you can do is buy time. [01:58:35.000 --> 01:58:37.000] We are out of time. [01:58:37.000 --> 01:58:40.000] Grant Kelton, Rhett Fountain, thank you all for listening. [01:58:40.000 --> 01:58:46.000] We'll be back next week at our regular time. [01:58:46.000 --> 01:58:47.000] What am I supposed to say now, Brad? [01:58:47.000 --> 01:58:50.000] I ran out of words. [01:58:50.000 --> 01:58:57.000] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.000 --> 01:59:04.000] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.000 --> 01:59:08.000] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.000 --> 01:59:11.000] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.000 --> 01:59:20.000] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.000 --> 01:59:30.000] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.000 --> 01:59:32.000] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.000 --> 01:59:41.000] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.000 --> 01:59:49.000] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:49.000 --> 01:59:52.000] Looking for some truth? [01:59:52.000 --> 01:59:54.000] You found it. 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