[00:00.000 --> 00:05.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.800 --> 00:09.460] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.460 --> 00:10.880] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.880 --> 00:14.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.860 --> 00:16.960] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.960 --> 00:18.560] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.560 --> 00:22.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.160 --> 00:26.940] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.940 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:33.000] Privacy. [00:33.000 --> 00:34.720] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.720 --> 00:39.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.000 --> 00:42.520] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.520 --> 00:44.800] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.800 --> 00:46.600] Spar. [00:46.600 --> 00:47.600] It's what fighters do. [00:47.600 --> 00:50.800] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.800 --> 00:54.560] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.560 --> 01:01.560] Spar with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.560 --> 01:03.080] and R for religion. [01:03.080 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:08.520] assembly, and religion. [01:08.520 --> 01:10.480] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.480 --> 01:14.600] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.600 --> 01:18.120] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.120 --> 01:20.800] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.800 --> 01:31.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.120 --> 01:34.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.800 --> 01:38.240] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.240 --> 01:39.720] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.720 --> 01:43.620] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.620 --> 01:46.760] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.760 --> 01:48.360] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.360 --> 01:51.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.960 --> 01:56.720] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.720 --> 02:01.720] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.720 --> 02:04.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.480 --> 02:08.780] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.780 --> 02:12.320] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.320 --> 02:15.920] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.920 --> 02:20.240] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.240 --> 02:22.320] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.320 --> 02:26.800] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.800 --> 02:30.640] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.640 --> 02:31.640] Get it? [02:31.640 --> 02:33.960] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.960 --> 02:37.560] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.560 --> 02:43.320] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.320 --> 02:47.880] rights, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:47.880 --> 02:50.680] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.680 --> 02:52.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.480 --> 03:14.000] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:14.000 --> 03:36.440] Thanks for watching. [03:44.000 --> 03:54.000] too good to use, but I was good for the gander, don't work for the goose. [03:54.000 --> 04:05.000] I know some architects, I know some engineers, they've seen the evidence, [04:05.000 --> 04:11.000] they know a certain seems queer, what's up with the blatant deception, [04:11.000 --> 04:15.000] what is the nature of what you might say. [04:15.000 --> 04:23.000] We are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruth Love Radio on this, the 9th day of December, 2022. [04:23.000 --> 04:31.000] And Nancy, we don't have many callers on the board, so frankly I kind of used you. [04:31.000 --> 04:42.000] I use my callers on occasion to go into issues that we need to speak to on the air. [04:42.000 --> 04:48.000] And Brett reminded me that we never really got to the question you had. [04:48.000 --> 04:58.000] Yeah, I did call for another reason, but going over how to write a suit is also good [04:58.000 --> 05:04.000] because that's also in the works for this other issue. [05:04.000 --> 05:08.000] Okay, then when I get done here, then we'll go back to your question. [05:08.000 --> 05:09.000] Yeah. [05:09.000 --> 05:15.000] I do a lot of stuff, and I've read and studied my whole life. [05:15.000 --> 05:25.000] I've spent the last, I guess it's 50 years now, mid-70s I started studying new linguistic programming. [05:25.000 --> 05:30.000] I came back from Vietnam, and I was broken. [05:30.000 --> 05:32.000] I was badly broken. [05:32.000 --> 05:37.000] And I did a couple of things that were really, really bad, and it got my attention. [05:37.000 --> 05:40.000] I once beat up a guy really bad. [05:40.000 --> 05:47.000] And his wife hit me across the shoulder with a 2x4, and it broke across my shoulders. [05:47.000 --> 05:52.000] I'm pounding her husband, and she smear this 2x4. [05:52.000 --> 05:58.000] I had grabbed her husband up by his shirt, picked him up off the ground, [05:58.000 --> 06:01.000] threw him down so hard that his shoulders hit the ground, [06:01.000 --> 06:05.000] and my father-in-law said his feet were at my shoulder height. [06:05.000 --> 06:11.000] He said the guy bounced a foot off the ground, and I dove on him, and I was pounding him. [06:11.000 --> 06:15.000] This woman saw me do that to her husband and picked up a 2x4 [06:15.000 --> 06:20.000] and hit me across the back of the neck with it, and it broke. [06:20.000 --> 06:24.000] And I went down. I came back up, and I thought, boy, this guy can hit. [06:24.000 --> 06:27.000] I looked down. I've got his arms bent. He couldn't. [06:27.000 --> 06:31.000] I looked up, and his wife is standing there with a broken 2x4 [06:31.000 --> 06:35.000] and a look of mortal terror on her face. [06:35.000 --> 06:43.000] And I thought my father would roll over in his grave [06:43.000 --> 06:48.000] if he saw that I put a woman in mortal terror of her life. [06:48.000 --> 06:52.000] That really got my attention. [06:52.000 --> 06:58.000] So I went to all my friends, and I married a woman [06:58.000 --> 07:02.000] that I was introduced to by a friend of mine's girlfriend. [07:02.000 --> 07:07.000] He wound up marrying her, and the woman I married was her sister. [07:07.000 --> 07:14.000] So I actually introduced him to his wife. [07:14.000 --> 07:18.000] He married her, and then he introduced me to her sister and paid me back [07:18.000 --> 07:21.000] because I married a sister. [07:21.000 --> 07:24.000] Well, he was my best friend. I'm sitting across the table from him. [07:24.000 --> 07:29.000] And I said, Gary, did you know I was crazy? [07:29.000 --> 07:32.000] He said, yeah, I knew. [07:32.000 --> 07:35.000] I said, well, damn it. Why didn't you tell me? [07:35.000 --> 07:38.000] And he leaned across the table, and he looked me right in the eye, [07:38.000 --> 07:44.000] and he said, I did a hole. [07:44.000 --> 07:47.000] That was intriguing. [07:47.000 --> 07:52.000] Here I was, a fully functioning adult in my native culture. [07:52.000 --> 07:58.000] I spoke the language for crying out loud. What was the problem? [07:58.000 --> 08:05.000] Well, I was crazy, but I wasn't crazy in my conscious aspect. [08:05.000 --> 08:08.000] I was crazy somewhere else. [08:08.000 --> 08:11.000] And he tried to talk to me in my conscious aspect, [08:11.000 --> 08:15.000] and I couldn't understand him there because I wasn't crazy there. [08:15.000 --> 08:18.000] I started studying all the popular psychology. [08:18.000 --> 08:24.000] This was back in the 60s, the late 60s, early 70s. [08:24.000 --> 08:28.000] In 1976, I was in a book store in Fort Worth [08:28.000 --> 08:35.000] and came across a book called Structures of Magic by Grinder and Bandelier. [08:35.000 --> 08:40.000] It was a book written by psychologists for psychologists. [08:40.000 --> 08:46.000] It was extremely complex and extremely in-depth, but I'm an engineer. [08:46.000 --> 08:52.000] And it treated the living mind as if it was absolutely consistent [08:52.000 --> 08:55.000] and absolutely understandable. [08:55.000 --> 08:58.000] And I had been reading all the popular psychology, [08:58.000 --> 09:03.000] and everybody had a different story about how the mind worked. [09:03.000 --> 09:07.000] Well, this one was the first one that treated the mind as if it was consistent. [09:07.000 --> 09:14.000] So I started studying neuroendocrine programming, and it was extremely powerful. [09:14.000 --> 09:22.000] And over the years, I've developed some tools that helped me put some things together. [09:22.000 --> 09:31.000] And from those tools, once I was engaged in writing legal documents, [09:31.000 --> 09:39.000] I used those tools to develop a theoretical model for building legal documents [09:39.000 --> 09:45.000] that is based on how the mind does what it does. [09:45.000 --> 09:49.000] And this is basically what the model is. [09:49.000 --> 09:55.000] Before I write a motion or a pleading, I put together a timeline of all the facts, [09:55.000 --> 09:58.000] and that's what I ask everybody for. [09:58.000 --> 10:02.000] I ask them for it because when I do a document, I need that, [10:02.000 --> 10:05.000] because otherwise you get things all out of place. [10:05.000 --> 10:09.000] You need to make sure everything follows in line. [10:09.000 --> 10:16.000] And once you have the timeline, then you want to build an argument and support. [10:16.000 --> 10:25.000] You want to build a story that tells how each of these pieces in the timeline fit together. [10:25.000 --> 10:31.000] Now, when you build that story, there are going to be things that happen that are anomalous, [10:31.000 --> 10:34.000] that were bad things and they were annoying things, [10:34.000 --> 10:38.000] but they don't go to the overall story. [10:38.000 --> 10:39.000] Leave them out. [10:39.000 --> 10:44.000] Well, put them in your timeline, but when you build your argument and support, [10:44.000 --> 10:47.000] you don't have to address everything. [10:47.000 --> 10:54.000] Only address what leads from one fact to the next to the next to the next. [10:54.000 --> 10:58.000] The anomalous stuff that would be a distraction, just take it out. [10:58.000 --> 11:04.000] So that you want a reader to read your document [11:04.000 --> 11:11.000] and never have a question occur in their mind that you don't answer. [11:11.000 --> 11:16.000] First, I write my documents so that there are no questions. [11:16.000 --> 11:22.000] And we have a telegram channel, Brett and I, where I post a lot of documents, [11:22.000 --> 11:25.000] and I ask people to rip them to shreds. [11:25.000 --> 11:32.000] I ask them to tell me when do I create a question in your mind [11:32.000 --> 11:40.000] that I do not answer either immediately or sometime, if not exactly immediately, [11:40.000 --> 11:46.000] sometime close to where I create the question. [11:46.000 --> 11:53.000] Most everybody here, I suspect, has been to a seminar or a presentation [11:53.000 --> 11:55.000] where you have a speaker up here talking, [11:55.000 --> 12:00.000] and he says something and it creates a question in your mind. [12:00.000 --> 12:04.000] And you're sitting there trying to figure out what he was speaking to, [12:04.000 --> 12:08.000] and while you're trying to figure it out, he keeps going. [12:08.000 --> 12:11.000] By the time you get it sorted out, you're behind. [12:11.000 --> 12:16.000] And you spend the rest of the time in the seminar trying to catch up. [12:16.000 --> 12:22.000] When we write legal documents, we do not want to do what is called a pattern interruption. [12:22.000 --> 12:28.000] We want to create a set of expectations [12:28.000 --> 12:32.000] and move the reader from one expectation to the next. [12:32.000 --> 12:36.000] Most everybody has read a book that was so well written [12:36.000 --> 12:40.000] that they'll be reading it and they just fall into the content, [12:40.000 --> 12:44.000] and 30 minutes, an hour later, they wake up. [12:44.000 --> 12:47.000] It's like they come out of a trance. [12:47.000 --> 12:50.000] Actually, it's not like they come out of a trance. [12:50.000 --> 12:54.000] They do, in fact, come out of a trance. [12:54.000 --> 12:56.000] Everybody goes into trance all the time. [12:56.000 --> 13:00.000] Trance is just mental focus. [13:00.000 --> 13:03.000] The only way you can do that, [13:03.000 --> 13:07.000] draw one into text, [13:07.000 --> 13:11.000] is to never create a question in the mind of your reader [13:11.000 --> 13:15.000] that you do not immediately answer. [13:15.000 --> 13:21.000] If you trip them up, then part of their brain [13:21.000 --> 13:25.000] backs out from the content and tries to figure out the context [13:25.000 --> 13:29.000] and get everything put back together, and then it comes back again. [13:29.000 --> 13:31.000] And that's where you lose your reader. [13:31.000 --> 13:35.000] So when you write, you want to write your documentation [13:35.000 --> 13:38.000] so one thing follows from another. [13:38.000 --> 13:41.000] And the best way to do that [13:41.000 --> 13:45.000] is to put a heading on every single paragraph. [13:45.000 --> 13:49.000] Microsoft Word has a very good styles menu [13:49.000 --> 13:52.000] that allows you to put headings. [13:52.000 --> 13:55.000] It's got a heading section. [13:55.000 --> 13:58.000] You write a heading and then you select it, [13:58.000 --> 14:02.000] and you go to the heading style sheet and you select a heading. [14:02.000 --> 14:03.000] It puts it on there. [14:03.000 --> 14:06.000] When you do that, the document, [14:06.000 --> 14:11.000] the Word will use those headings to create a table of contents. [14:11.000 --> 14:15.000] When you get into the higher level pleadings, you need a table of contents. [14:15.000 --> 14:17.000] So that'll do it automatically. [14:17.000 --> 14:21.000] But what it does for you when you're writing the document [14:21.000 --> 14:25.000] is it keeps you focused on point. [14:25.000 --> 14:30.000] You put in a heading and write a paragraph [14:30.000 --> 14:34.000] focused specifically on that heading. [14:34.000 --> 14:37.000] We write these documents and something comes to mind [14:37.000 --> 14:39.000] we feel like we need to address, [14:39.000 --> 14:43.000] and we tend to shift gears in the middle of a paragraph. [14:43.000 --> 14:45.000] Well, it makes people crazy. [14:45.000 --> 14:50.000] I've read these legal documents and they just go all over the place. [14:50.000 --> 14:53.000] I got a half a page paragraph. What the heck is that? [14:53.000 --> 14:56.000] They hadn't done that since the 1700s. [14:56.000 --> 14:58.000] Put a paragraph on every single sentence [14:58.000 --> 15:06.000] and make sure your sentence stays within the confines of the heading. [15:06.000 --> 15:09.000] And if you're writing a document [15:09.000 --> 15:12.000] and something else comes to mind you need to address, [15:12.000 --> 15:16.000] just go below the paragraph you're working on, [15:16.000 --> 15:22.000] write the heading to the paragraph that came to your mind, [15:22.000 --> 15:25.000] set a heading style on it, [15:25.000 --> 15:28.000] and then go back and finish your paragraph. [15:28.000 --> 15:32.000] That helps because now this is something I need to address [15:32.000 --> 15:36.000] and you don't have a need to address it right now. [15:36.000 --> 15:39.000] You put a heading down there, when you get to that heading [15:39.000 --> 15:41.000] it'll remind you to address that issue [15:41.000 --> 15:48.000] and it allows you to stay much more focused in each paragraph. [15:48.000 --> 15:51.000] If you want some examples, I've got some. [15:51.000 --> 15:54.000] I've got some that I've worked on very carefully [15:54.000 --> 16:02.000] and I ask anybody to read my documents and rip them to shreds. [16:02.000 --> 16:07.000] I do not care about grammar. I don't care about spelling. [16:07.000 --> 16:12.000] If God had meant for man to spell he would not have created spell check. [16:12.000 --> 16:14.000] I'll do that at the end. [16:14.000 --> 16:19.000] Tell me when you drop out of mental flow. [16:19.000 --> 16:25.000] There's a book that I wrote, it's an e-book, it's on radio, [16:25.000 --> 16:28.000] called Legal 101. [16:28.000 --> 16:32.000] There's a major section in there called mental flow. [16:32.000 --> 16:39.000] How do we create documents and start the mind down a path [16:39.000 --> 16:43.000] and never trip them out of that path? [16:43.000 --> 16:46.000] You do that by mental flow. [16:46.000 --> 16:49.000] You do that by heading on every paragraph [16:49.000 --> 16:52.000] and staying consistent to that paragraph [16:52.000 --> 16:54.000] and then in the next heading tells them [16:54.000 --> 16:57.000] I'm going to talk about something else in this paragraph and stay to it. [16:57.000 --> 17:00.000] And in that context, move your ass. [17:00.000 --> 17:05.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:05.000 --> 17:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.000 --> 17:13.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors [17:13.000 --> 17:15.000] and now you can win too. [17:15.000 --> 17:18.000] Step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court [17:18.000 --> 17:20.000] using federal civil rights statutes. [17:20.000 --> 17:24.000] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [17:24.000 --> 17:26.000] How to answer letters and phone calls. [17:26.000 --> 17:28.000] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [17:28.000 --> 17:33.000] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.000 --> 17:38.000] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.000 --> 17:40.000] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.000 --> 17:44.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:44.000 --> 17:49.000] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.000 --> 17:57.000] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [17:57.000 --> 18:01.000] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:01.000 --> 18:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:05.000 --> 18:07.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [18:07.000 --> 18:09.000] If we the people are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.000 --> 18:12.000] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.000 --> 18:15.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:15.000 --> 18:17.000] the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:17.000 --> 18:19.000] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.000 --> 18:22.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [18:22.000 --> 18:25.000] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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[18:54.000 --> 19:00.000] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:00.000 --> 19:11.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:11.000 --> 19:14.000] Well, don't let nothing get to you. [19:14.000 --> 19:17.000] Only the Father can deliver you. [19:17.000 --> 19:20.000] Don't let bad-minded people hurt you. [19:20.000 --> 19:23.000] Until Satan gets behind you. [19:23.000 --> 19:26.000] You know what I mean, my friend? [19:26.000 --> 19:30.000] And all I've got to say is, come on. [19:56.000 --> 20:07.000] Okay, we are back. [20:07.000 --> 20:09.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [20:09.000 --> 20:11.000] We're talking to Nancy in Pennsylvania, [20:11.000 --> 20:15.000] and we're talking about how to construct legal documents. [20:15.000 --> 20:20.000] And on the break, Brett had an issue. [20:20.000 --> 20:23.000] Will you go to that issue, Brett? [20:23.000 --> 20:29.000] Yeah, I was just about to interject there when the sponsors did anyway. [20:29.000 --> 20:33.000] So you were talking about mental flow, [20:33.000 --> 20:38.000] and I don't know exactly to what extent it would be the same for other people, [20:38.000 --> 20:43.000] but for me personally, when I am reading a document [20:43.000 --> 20:50.000] and I encounter a misspelled word, that is a mental flow issue for me. [20:50.000 --> 20:55.000] Or if I see somebody, a punctuation is missing, [20:55.000 --> 21:01.000] or even something like a singular and plural mismatch between a subject verb. [21:01.000 --> 21:06.000] If I see something that's just a little off in the grammar, [21:06.000 --> 21:10.000] or you were saying grammar and spelling, yeah, put that for last, [21:10.000 --> 21:13.000] for me that is, it's a major mental flow issue. [21:13.000 --> 21:16.000] But maybe it's not that same way for everybody, I don't know. [21:16.000 --> 21:21.000] It's the same that way for me, and I suspect it is for everybody. [21:21.000 --> 21:25.000] But when I ask people to evaluate my documentation, [21:25.000 --> 21:28.000] generally all I get is grammar and spelling. [21:28.000 --> 21:33.000] So I'm trying to get them initially to focus on the content. [21:33.000 --> 21:35.000] We'll get to the grammar. [21:35.000 --> 21:39.000] That's the last thing I do to make sure all of that's right, [21:39.000 --> 21:44.000] because that demonstrates pattern interruption. [21:44.000 --> 21:48.000] Well, I'll tell you, Randy, probably people that are reading these documents [21:48.000 --> 21:52.000] are thinking, this came from the Randy Kelton. [21:52.000 --> 21:56.000] So everything in here is for a purpose, [21:56.000 --> 22:03.000] and they don't necessarily take their brain to a position of evaluating, [22:03.000 --> 22:05.000] hey, I think he's repeating this paragraph. [22:05.000 --> 22:10.000] Because, well, if it's repeated, I'm sure he has a reason to repeat it. [22:10.000 --> 22:12.000] You know what I'm saying? [22:12.000 --> 22:16.000] I'm having trouble getting people to understand that part. [22:16.000 --> 22:22.000] If you notice something, and recently I put a document on, [22:22.000 --> 22:25.000] and I got one person to read through it. [22:25.000 --> 22:28.000] And the first thing he did was do all the spelling punctuation. [22:28.000 --> 22:30.000] I said, okay, okay, I got all that. [22:30.000 --> 22:34.000] But we're going to be changing things, so that'll change up. [22:34.000 --> 22:40.000] The last thing I'll do is edit for grammar and spelling. [22:40.000 --> 22:45.000] Right now, see if you can look at it for mental flow, how this moves. [22:45.000 --> 22:47.000] And he went back and went through it, [22:47.000 --> 22:53.000] and he found places where I had done subtle redundancies. [22:53.000 --> 22:59.000] I used the same string of words in one sentence. [22:59.000 --> 23:04.000] Wow, that's exactly the kind of stuff I needed. [23:04.000 --> 23:07.000] He noticed that it was redundant. [23:07.000 --> 23:10.000] He found places, he found that kind of stuff. [23:10.000 --> 23:13.000] That was absolutely excellent. [23:13.000 --> 23:19.000] The subtle stuff, that the one part of the brain notices it, [23:19.000 --> 23:23.000] while the other part of the brain is formulating all the content. [23:23.000 --> 23:26.000] We've got another part, a secondary part of the brain [23:26.000 --> 23:29.000] that's paying attention to grammar and syntax, [23:29.000 --> 23:33.000] and I tripped him up on that. [23:33.000 --> 23:38.000] Because that other part of the brain noticed the same string of verbiage [23:38.000 --> 23:44.000] in two different places in the sentence, that's an absolute no-no. [23:44.000 --> 23:48.000] But when you're putting together all the legal issues, [23:48.000 --> 23:54.000] there are only so many pieces of information you can pay attention to at one time. [23:54.000 --> 23:58.000] So I put it together in a way I think it reads great for me, [23:58.000 --> 24:06.000] and I can read it ten times and miss the grammatical error every time, [24:06.000 --> 24:13.000] or miss something as subtle as a redundancy, a subtle redundancy. [24:13.000 --> 24:19.000] And this guy gave me really, really good feedback. [24:19.000 --> 24:23.000] And he wasn't worried about hurting my feelings, and that's what I liked the most. [24:23.000 --> 24:27.000] If you notice anything, let me know about it. [24:27.000 --> 24:32.000] And the reason I said about grammar and spelling is because that's all I get. [24:32.000 --> 24:38.000] I say, okay, that's okay, but don't read my document for grammar and spelling. [24:38.000 --> 24:42.000] Read it for content. Read it for mental flow. [24:42.000 --> 24:45.000] And let me know about the grammar and content. [24:45.000 --> 24:50.000] That's okay, but let me know where I used the subtle redundancy. [24:50.000 --> 24:58.000] Let me know where I alluded to something that I hadn't addressed before. [24:58.000 --> 25:01.000] Let me know where I used a pronoun, [25:01.000 --> 25:11.000] and it's not clear to you what that pronoun or who that pronoun refers to. [25:11.000 --> 25:14.000] Or where I use an adjective that's unnecessary, [25:14.000 --> 25:18.000] where I use a participial phrase, a descriptive phrase that's unnecessary. [25:18.000 --> 25:23.000] I wrote this book and used it as a tool. [25:23.000 --> 25:30.000] I went back through it recently and took out all the participial phrases, all the adverb phrases. [25:30.000 --> 25:35.000] He did this very, very diligently. [25:35.000 --> 25:37.000] Take out very, very diligently. [25:37.000 --> 25:40.000] Just take out, put in, he did this. [25:40.000 --> 25:47.000] And let the reader formulate based on the content how he did this. [25:47.000 --> 25:52.000] Don't put in any information that's not necessary. [25:52.000 --> 25:57.000] No description that's not necessary. [25:57.000 --> 26:01.000] Anywhere you come across the word that, take it out if you can. [26:01.000 --> 26:07.000] Ninety percent of the time you can take the word that and simply take it out of the document. [26:07.000 --> 26:11.000] And the reader's brain will put it back. [26:11.000 --> 26:20.000] I have something that, excuse me, I kind of coined myself, [26:20.000 --> 26:24.000] and I call it a conversational ellipsis. [26:24.000 --> 26:31.000] It goes to giving, not giving more description than you need to. [26:31.000 --> 26:42.000] Look at phrases that if you take them out and reread the sentence, will it change the sentence? [26:42.000 --> 26:47.000] Will it take away from the understanding if it doesn't take it out? [26:47.000 --> 26:52.000] Because the brain will tend to put it right back. [26:52.000 --> 26:58.000] And that engages the reader in the process of the reading. [26:58.000 --> 27:04.000] They put in those empty spaces and it takes a part of the brain that tends to be critical, [27:04.000 --> 27:08.000] tends to be looking for things to criticize and object to, [27:08.000 --> 27:14.000] and gets them busy adding in these missing participial phrases. [27:14.000 --> 27:18.000] And they don't tend to criticize as much. [27:18.000 --> 27:21.000] Does that make sense, Brett? [27:21.000 --> 27:28.000] Yeah, I suppose. I mean, I don't know how to analyze that in myself, but yeah. [27:28.000 --> 27:33.000] And it is sophisticated. It is sophisticated neuro-linguistic programming. [27:33.000 --> 27:39.000] But it's easy to notice when you're writing and when you're reading. [27:39.000 --> 27:48.000] Whenever you bump out of mental flow, when I put in a string of words in there and you notice them, [27:48.000 --> 27:52.000] they stand out at you. I've screwed up. [27:52.000 --> 27:58.000] If they did not flow evenly, mentally evenly, then I've missed something. [27:58.000 --> 28:01.000] In a legal document, we have some rules. [28:01.000 --> 28:04.000] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [28:04.000 --> 28:07.000] And sometimes that's difficult in a legal document. [28:07.000 --> 28:12.000] Everything you say in that legal document must be a certain way. [28:12.000 --> 28:19.000] You have to say, this has to be this way based on this. [28:19.000 --> 28:30.000] The officer committed the act of official oppression as defined by 39.03 penal code, [28:30.000 --> 28:35.000] which reads as follows. And then I quote it underneath it. [28:35.000 --> 28:40.000] And visually, you shrink it two points of font, set it to italics, [28:40.000 --> 28:45.000] and shrink the margins on both sides by a half inch. [28:45.000 --> 28:52.000] It's like an image there. The brain can see that as a separate piece. [28:52.000 --> 28:58.000] If I quote 14.06 and the reader knows exactly what 14.06 is, [28:58.000 --> 29:03.000] they see this section here they know is a quotation of 14.06. [29:03.000 --> 29:06.000] They just jump right over and keep going. [29:06.000 --> 29:10.000] But if they don't know what 14.06 is, then they read it. [29:10.000 --> 29:12.000] That keeps them from getting lost in the text. [29:12.000 --> 29:19.000] I read legal documents and they reference case after case after case after case after case. [29:19.000 --> 29:22.000] And they paraphrase what the case says. [29:22.000 --> 29:26.000] I don't know if the case says that or not. [29:26.000 --> 29:30.000] So when I go through a document and it has all these case references, [29:30.000 --> 29:36.000] the first thing I do is hyperlink the document, the case, take the case citation, [29:36.000 --> 29:40.000] drop it into a search engine, and find the case. [29:40.000 --> 29:47.000] And then I use the terms they use asserting what the case says, [29:47.000 --> 29:52.000] and I put it in a search parameter in the file that's showing my case [29:52.000 --> 29:55.000] and see if I can find that section. [29:55.000 --> 30:00.000] And then I go in and grab that section and I drop it in the document in quotes. [30:00.000 --> 30:03.000] Everyone knows that walking is a great exercise, [30:03.000 --> 30:08.000] but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:08.000 --> 30:09.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [30:09.000 --> 30:14.000] and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:14.000 --> 30:16.000] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.000 --> 30:19.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:19.000 --> 30:24.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.000 --> 30:29.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:29.000 --> 30:32.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.000 --> 30:35.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:35.000 --> 30:39.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:39.000 --> 30:43.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.000 --> 30:47.000] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.000 --> 30:51.000] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults [30:51.000 --> 30:55.000] who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.000 --> 31:00.000] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [31:00.000 --> 31:04.000] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy [31:04.000 --> 31:07.000] as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.000 --> 31:10.000] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.000 --> 31:13.000] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [31:13.000 --> 31:16.000] It only takes a stopwatch some space to walk in 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 --> 31:31.000] I lost my son. [31:31.000 --> 31:32.000] My nephew. [31:32.000 --> 31:33.000] My uncle. [31:33.000 --> 31:34.000] My son. [31:34.000 --> 31:35.000] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.000 --> 31:38.000] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.000 --> 31:42.000] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.000 --> 31:46.000] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.000 --> 31:50.000] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.000 --> 31:52.000] and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.000 --> 31:53.000] Bring justice to my son. [31:53.000 --> 31:54.000] My uncle. [31:54.000 --> 31:55.000] My nephew. [31:55.000 --> 31:56.000] My son. [31:56.000 --> 31:57.000] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:57.000 --> 32:01.000] 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 --> 32:12.000] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.000 --> 32:17.000] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:17.000 --> 32:22.000] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [32:22.000 --> 32:24.000] rightly dividing the word of truth. [32:24.000 --> 32:28.000] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.000 --> 32:32.000] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.000 --> 32:37.000] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [32:37.000 --> 32:39.000] and Christian character development. [32:39.000 --> 32:44.000] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.000 --> 32:47.000] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [32:47.000 --> 32:50.000] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.000 --> 32:54.000] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:54.000 --> 33:02.000] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:24.000 --> 33:45.000] Okay, we are back. [33:45.000 --> 33:48.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, [33:48.000 --> 33:53.000] and we're talking to Nancy in Pennsylvania and Nancy from We Went to Break. [33:53.000 --> 33:58.000] I asked Brett, does what I'm talking about make sense to you? [33:58.000 --> 34:03.000] And he said, well, I'm not sure. I was kind of drifting there. [34:03.000 --> 34:10.000] And that was absolutely the kind of feedback that I needed. [34:10.000 --> 34:15.000] I'm throwing too much stuff at you too fast and you can't keep up with all of it, [34:15.000 --> 34:21.000] so you tend to just stop trying to keep up with me and drift away. [34:21.000 --> 34:30.000] Who here has not read a document to where you got to a point where you're reading it [34:30.000 --> 34:36.000] but a part of your mind is getting bored and just goes off somewhere else? [34:36.000 --> 34:39.000] I need to know when that happens. [34:39.000 --> 34:45.000] When we're writing legal documents, we need to lock our reader in [34:45.000 --> 34:48.000] and not let them drift away. [34:48.000 --> 34:57.000] And earlier on I spoke to Brett about a letter I wrote to the chief of police in the city of Fort Worth. [34:57.000 --> 35:08.000] I wrote the letter and once it was finished I went back and counted the syllable sounds in each sentence. [35:08.000 --> 35:19.000] Not the words, but the syllable sounds. Unfortunate. Four syllable sounds. [35:19.000 --> 35:25.000] So I went through and counted all the syllable sounds and put a number at the end for each sentence. [35:25.000 --> 35:32.000] And then I did an average of the high number of syllable sounds and low number of syllable sounds. [35:32.000 --> 35:36.000] And I came up with nine and twelve. [35:36.000 --> 35:42.000] So I went back and set the document to meter. [35:42.640 --> 35:46.640] Da da da da da da da da da da da da da da. [35:47.580 --> 35:51.200] Da da da da da da da da da da da da da. [35:51.520 --> 35:56.080] Da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da. [35:56.100 --> 35:59.380] Da da da da da da da da da da da da da da. [36:00.160 --> 36:05.880] Each second sentence had exactly the same number of syllables. [36:05.880 --> 36:14.140] The reader, I had several people read it and every person who read it read the document [36:14.140 --> 36:20.460] from the beginning to the end before they made a comment. [36:20.460 --> 36:23.140] Never had that happen before. [36:23.140 --> 36:33.700] The reason that happened is one part of their mind is like someone listening to a song and [36:33.700 --> 36:41.960] someone is singing and they have a lyric that doesn't fall on the beat and it trips [36:41.960 --> 36:43.800] them up. [36:43.800 --> 36:50.360] You expect in a song every syllable to land on a beat in the rhythm. [36:50.360 --> 36:58.000] If it falls off, if any of you are familiar with the piano tune Clare de Lune, no, no, [36:58.000 --> 37:11.320] Fur Elise, it's a soft piano tune and at one point he hits an odd key and it always stands [37:11.320 --> 37:14.520] out to the listener. [37:14.520 --> 37:17.800] So we said everything to each other. [37:17.800 --> 37:22.180] Everybody read the whole thing from front to back because one part of the mind is looking [37:22.180 --> 37:30.520] at the beat and they're checking to make sure the last syllable lands on the beat until [37:30.520 --> 37:37.040] they get to the end of the whole document. [37:37.040 --> 37:45.140] There are a lot of really powerful tools out there and these are just literary tools. [37:45.140 --> 37:52.920] We also have new and interesting programming tools that we can use to increase the power [37:52.920 --> 37:58.320] of the documents and I'm hoping that if anybody is really interested in this, I'll do some [37:58.320 --> 38:06.400] separate shows just on how to manipulate the mind with prose. [38:06.400 --> 38:11.040] Does that sound interesting, Nancy? [38:11.040 --> 38:12.040] Yeah. [38:12.040 --> 38:21.280] It's like creating an artwork, sounds like you have the objective facts and you have [38:21.280 --> 38:27.880] the law and then you're creating art with them, is that kind of right? [38:27.880 --> 38:38.160] Yeah, that's kind of right but this art is engineered, there is a very specific strategy [38:38.160 --> 38:45.480] to it and I talk about pieces of this on the air all the time, I try to stitch in these [38:45.480 --> 38:51.800] pieces so when I get to the real meat of it, it's a little easier to understand but there [38:51.800 --> 38:55.360] are some really powerful tools we can use. [38:55.360 --> 39:06.840] Building a petition, if you sue these guys, you have plenty of time to build your petition [39:06.840 --> 39:11.640] so that you can incorporate all these tools into it. [39:11.640 --> 39:18.000] You build your timeline, you build your argument and support, you build your statement of facts, [39:18.000 --> 39:23.960] you then after the argument and support and statement of facts are built, then you put [39:23.960 --> 39:26.920] in an introduction. [39:26.920 --> 39:33.160] You tell the reader what you're going to tell them and you tell it in the order that it's [39:33.160 --> 39:38.200] in the statement of facts and the argument and support. [39:38.200 --> 39:45.880] That creates an expectation that at each end of a line, they'll expect you to go to the [39:45.880 --> 39:53.960] next issue or each end of a thought or a paragraph and if you go to the issue that you've led [39:53.960 --> 40:02.160] them to expect you to go to, that will create rapport and when you create your statement [40:02.160 --> 40:10.400] of facts, if you craft those facts so that a reasonable person of ordinary prudence will [40:10.400 --> 40:21.280] tend to come to the conclusion that you came to or when they read the facts, you want them [40:21.280 --> 40:26.680] to come to certain conclusions and then when they read the argument and support, you will [40:26.680 --> 40:32.720] address the conclusions that you came to from reading those facts. [40:32.720 --> 40:41.840] If it's the same conclusion that you engineered them to come to in your statement of facts, [40:41.840 --> 40:49.360] they may not necessarily believe you or accept your reasoning, but they will have what's [40:49.360 --> 40:57.760] called rapport, they will understand how you came to this conclusion and it will give it [40:57.760 --> 41:02.880] more credibility and when you're writing legal documents, you have to keep in mind you're [41:02.880 --> 41:06.520] dealing with a sophisticated reader here. [41:06.520 --> 41:12.680] So you have to be sophisticated in the writing of the documents. [41:12.680 --> 41:18.400] If anybody's interested, send me an email, I'll send you some of my documents, look at [41:18.400 --> 41:25.960] them, read them and you'll get an idea of how to construct these things and then let [41:25.960 --> 41:32.280] me know where I missed anything, will you notice something where I can find to them? [41:32.280 --> 41:33.280] And that'll be... [41:33.280 --> 41:34.280] So what does the email say? [41:34.280 --> 41:37.280] Send your documents for reading? [41:37.280 --> 41:45.520] Yes, just send me an email, ask me for some documents, I'll send you some of my latest [41:45.520 --> 41:52.680] stuff and ask you to read it and give me good commentary, rip it to shreds and absolutely [41:52.680 --> 41:58.800] these are going to be fairly complete documents, so if I have any typos or any grammatical [41:58.800 --> 42:06.080] errors, absolutely let me know, but mainly let me know about mental flow. [42:06.080 --> 42:12.640] Let me know where I've come to a conclusion that trips you up and you don't have to agree [42:12.640 --> 42:18.880] with the conclusion, but you can see how I came to that conclusion. [42:18.880 --> 42:22.800] If you can't see how I got there, I screwed up. [42:22.800 --> 42:27.760] If I create a question in your mind that I don't answer, I screwed up. [42:27.760 --> 42:34.080] If I knocked you out of mental flow, I screwed up. [42:34.080 --> 42:42.200] Read them, rip them to shreds, give me no mercy and then when you start writing documents, [42:42.200 --> 42:48.040] these issues will be apparent in your brain and will get people producing, I hope, better [42:48.040 --> 42:49.040] documentation. [42:49.040 --> 42:56.360] And I have your legal 101 book, so e-book, so you discussed that in there too. [42:56.360 --> 42:59.720] I haven't studied it yet. [42:59.720 --> 43:00.720] That is... [43:00.720 --> 43:14.800] I have a section in the top about how law really works and I have a section on politics. [43:14.800 --> 43:16.840] Everything's political. [43:16.840 --> 43:20.560] About the third section down is my section on mental flow. [43:20.560 --> 43:25.280] It's in the section on how to create out-of-right legal documents. [43:25.280 --> 43:33.040] Okay, now, we never did really get to your questions. [43:33.040 --> 43:35.040] Okay, right. [43:35.040 --> 43:37.040] So, all right. [43:37.040 --> 43:41.760] Oh, well, out of time. [43:41.760 --> 43:45.160] We do have some room on the caller board, so if you have a question or a comment, give [43:45.160 --> 43:53.520] us a call, 512-646-1984, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we'll be [43:53.520 --> 43:56.520] right back. [43:56.520 --> 44:05.160] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [44:05.160 --> 44:06.600] of nutrition. [44:06.600 --> 44:11.320] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.320 --> 44:17.000] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.000 --> 44:23.360] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [44:23.360 --> 44:25.560] provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.560 --> 44:30.480] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [44:30.480 --> 44:31.600] we reject. [44:31.600 --> 44:36.840] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [44:36.840 --> 44:39.640] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.640 --> 44:46.040] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [44:46.040 --> 44:47.040] quality radio. [44:47.040 --> 44:51.600] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.600 --> 44:57.280] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [44:57.280 --> 44:58.280] increase your income. [44:58.280 --> 44:59.280] Order now. [44:59.280 --> 45:04.280] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.280 --> 45:11.040] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.040 --> 45:14.960] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.960 --> 45:18.800] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.800 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.720] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [45:28.720 --> 45:34.640] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.640 --> 45:39.320] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.320 --> 45:43.480] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.480 --> 45:49.640] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.640 --> 45:51.920] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.920 --> 46:20.480] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:20.480 --> 46:44.440] We'll be right back. [46:50.480 --> 47:07.480] shot in distance, both for bravery and against slavery, showing resistance. First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting. I'm just so glad to make my living pushing buttons. [47:20.480 --> 47:40.480] Today, the ninth day of December 2022, and we are talking to Nancy in Pennsylvania. Okay, I've talked enough about how to write legal documents. Now let's go back and do you have any more questions for us? [47:40.480 --> 48:06.480] Okay, well, I have an issue that some people consider BS. But otherwise, I think it's much more involved than that. In fact, when I listened to your sponsor ads, like protecting the right to privacy and the whole 9-11 conspiracy, [48:06.480 --> 48:19.480] you know, what happened on September 11th, you know, listening to those ads, this issue I'm bringing up is of that importance, that level of importance, I think. [48:19.480 --> 48:48.480] So it concerns smart meters. So I am considering, given that the whole, in Pennsylvania, there's no opt-out. If you don't know what these smart meters are about, it will seem like BS to complain to your utility provider. [48:48.480 --> 49:12.480] To stop forcing these smart meters because, hey, you know, you are accepting their service. So what right do you have to complain? But if you know what these meters are about, these meters are involving, subverting the rule of law in this country. [49:12.480 --> 49:26.480] It's an issue from all my understanding of what they're really about and what's going on. [49:26.480 --> 49:32.480] What is your consideration of what they're really about? [49:32.480 --> 49:56.480] Well, like 9-11, there was an agenda behind all of that, and it was to get more control over our economy, our nation, and it's being forced by people who have no connection to our government or the Constitution. [49:56.480 --> 50:11.480] It's the whole world agenda, actually, and smart meters are just part of that agenda to bring harm and control. [50:11.480 --> 50:35.480] So, okay, you're talking to an electrical engineer, and I understand the possibilities of smart meters probably more than you do. So, but what I want to know is, you know, I can project the possibilities of what a smart meter is capable of. [50:35.480 --> 50:55.480] It can read and analyze your usage. It can hear a lot of what goes on in your building through the wiring. Are you familiar with induction? [50:55.480 --> 51:00.480] No, but dirty electricity and radiation I am. [51:00.480 --> 51:23.480] Okay, okay, dirty electricity. I have a guy, his email name is Free Text, and he was a jail guard in a prison in Texas, and he worked right under a 250,000 watt power line that went across the complex, [51:23.480 --> 51:31.480] and it caused him some serious physiological issues, and he's been researching these ever since. [51:31.480 --> 51:45.480] And it turns out that some people are susceptible to these electromagnetic radiation impulses and such, and he was one that was especially susceptible to it. [51:45.480 --> 51:54.480] But we have evolved on this planet in an electromagnetic soup. [51:54.480 --> 52:04.480] We are bombarded constantly by electromagnetic radiation from the sun, from the cosmos itself. [52:04.480 --> 52:08.480] It's everywhere. We evolved in this soup. [52:08.480 --> 52:20.480] So we're pretty well adapted to handle most of it. My biggest concern about smart meters is they're pretty smart. [52:20.480 --> 52:36.480] They can tell when your refrigerator comes on. They can tell when you turn on your television, and there's a very good chance that they can hear what you say when your television is on. [52:36.480 --> 52:41.480] You have a speaker in there, and that speaker has a diaphragm in it. [52:41.480 --> 52:53.480] And sound waves will, you've got a little electric coil there that they send electric impulses to it, and it causes that coil to move back and forth. [52:53.480 --> 53:03.480] And that coil vibrates this diaphragm, and that compresses air in front of it and sends out sound. [53:03.480 --> 53:13.480] Well, if you send sound into the device, the sound will cause the diaphragm to vibrate. [53:13.480 --> 53:17.480] The diaphragm vibrating will cause the coil to vibrate, cause magnet. [53:17.480 --> 53:31.480] And when a conductor passes an electromagnetic radiation, it will induce current into whatever the coil is. [53:31.480 --> 53:39.480] So you've got this coil that wraps around a magnet that we send power to it and it moves. [53:39.480 --> 53:45.480] If we move the diaphragm and it moves the coil, the coil becomes a generator. [53:45.480 --> 53:49.480] It generates a signal and sends it back. [53:49.480 --> 53:56.480] I can hear you through your speakers. [53:56.480 --> 53:59.480] Part of the problem with smart meters. [53:59.480 --> 54:03.480] A smart meter can read the waveform. [54:03.480 --> 54:07.480] We've got a 60-cycle waveform coming into the house. [54:07.480 --> 54:22.480] And if we have a speaker that's hooked to a system that is connected to that feed and we vibrate the diaphragm of the speaker, [54:22.480 --> 54:32.480] it vibrates the coil and induces a current into the leads that will do what's, are you familiar with superheterogene? [54:32.480 --> 54:34.480] No. [54:34.480 --> 54:40.480] FM radio signal, AM radio signal is amplitude modulated. [54:40.480 --> 54:45.480] They send out a signal and they superimpose sound over it. [54:45.480 --> 54:54.480] And when the sound hits the signal, the signal gets higher or lower depending on the nature of the current sent to it. [54:54.480 --> 54:59.480] A superheterogene signal, that's FM, frequency modulated. [54:59.480 --> 55:09.480] You have a specific frequency coming out and they superimpose another signal over the top of that frequency. [55:09.480 --> 55:21.480] So if you're 90.1, you're at 91.1 coming out, but on top of the 90.1 wave, you have a high-frequency oscillation that follows it. [55:21.480 --> 55:35.480] So if I put in my receiver a resistor, capacitor, tank trap, resistors knock out low frequencies, capacitors lock out high frequencies. [55:35.480 --> 55:46.480] If I put in a bandpass that knocks out 60 cycles, I've got that superheterogene signal that was on top of the 60 cycles left. [55:46.480 --> 55:50.480] That's what FM is. [55:50.480 --> 55:58.480] These speakers in your house can create a superheterogene signal on the frequency coming into your building. [55:58.480 --> 56:03.480] They can read what you're, they can hear what you're saying inside the building. [56:03.480 --> 56:12.480] So another way of saying that is it can pass through the same wires where it's got 60 hertz going to power everything. [56:12.480 --> 56:18.480] It can have an overlaid signal of a representation of the sound that was in the room. [56:18.480 --> 56:24.480] Exactly. And we can figure out that 60 cycle easy enough and leave what's left and hear it. [56:24.480 --> 56:27.480] But there's an easy solution to this too. [56:27.480 --> 56:35.480] Let me get one of these battery backups that if you were to plug in something into it that the purpose of the battery backup is [56:35.480 --> 56:50.480] if the power company sends you what they call it a brownout when the power kind of goes low or you see the lights dim for a second. [56:50.480 --> 57:00.480] Well, this battery backup unit is designed to protect computers and electronic sensitive equipment from any damage that would come [57:00.480 --> 57:05.480] from receiving a signal that's not perfectly clean and clear. [57:05.480 --> 57:15.480] And so if you plug your devices into that, well, then you have put a block in between what the smart meter can detect out of your house like that. [57:15.480 --> 57:20.480] Yeah, that's an uninterruptible power supply. And yes, that will do that. [57:20.480 --> 57:24.480] But it is extremely inefficient. [57:24.480 --> 57:31.480] The incoming signal will charge the battery and the battery is a frequency sink. [57:31.480 --> 57:43.480] Everything that comes in on the positive side is fed into this battery and the battery converts the energy into charge in the battery. [57:43.480 --> 57:50.480] It's just a battery charger. And then you draw signal out on the other side that is the power that's in the battery. [57:50.480 --> 57:53.480] So it's kind of a sink in between. [57:53.480 --> 58:04.480] But it's not quite that simple because you're connected across an uninterruptible power supply to the power line. [58:04.480 --> 58:11.480] When the power stop power line stops feeding, the uninterruptible power supply starts feeding. [58:11.480 --> 58:15.480] So when the power line is feeding, you still get that trash. [58:15.480 --> 58:19.480] There's an easier way to do it. We'll speak to that when we come back on the other side. [58:19.480 --> 58:21.480] It's called an RC tank trap. [58:21.480 --> 58:28.480] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [58:28.480 --> 58:31.480] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [58:31.480 --> 58:36.480] And we have 18 seconds left, Brett. You're on. [58:36.480 --> 58:44.480] And Nancy hasn't really finished telling us yet about what her specific concern is about these smart meters. [58:44.480 --> 58:49.480] So maybe when we come back, we'll speak to that. [58:49.480 --> 58:53.480] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.480 --> 59:00.480] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.480 --> 59:05.480] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.480 --> 59:12.480] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.480 --> 59:17.480] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.480 --> 59:23.480] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.480 --> 59:27.480] growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.480 --> 59:33.480] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.480 --> 59:40.480] call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.480 --> 59:44.480] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.480 --> 59:49.480] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.480 --> 59:59.480] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.480 --> 01:00:05.480] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.480 --> 01:00:08.480] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.480 --> 01:00:10.480] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.480 --> 01:00:16.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.480 --> 01:00:18.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.480 --> 01:00:22.480] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.480 --> 01:00:26.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:00:26.480 --> 01:00:32.480] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.480 --> 01:00:34.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:34.480 --> 01:00:38.480] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.480 --> 01:00:42.480] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.480 --> 01:00:45.480] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:45.480 --> 01:00:48.480] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.480 --> 01:00:51.480] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.480 --> 01:00:54.480] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.480 --> 01:01:00.480] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.480 --> 01:01:06.480] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.480 --> 01:01:09.480] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.480 --> 01:01:12.480] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.480 --> 01:01:17.480] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.480 --> 01:01:31.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.480 --> 01:01:35.480] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.480 --> 01:01:38.480] They guarantee it is specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.480 --> 01:01:40.480] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.480 --> 01:01:46.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.480 --> 01:01:48.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.480 --> 01:01:51.480] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:51.480 --> 01:01:56.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.480 --> 01:01:58.480] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.480 --> 01:02:01.480] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:01.480 --> 01:02:04.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.480 --> 01:02:12.480] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.480 --> 01:02:15.480] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.480 --> 01:02:21.480] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.480 --> 01:02:27.480] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.480 --> 01:02:30.480] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:30.480 --> 01:02:34.480] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.480 --> 01:02:39.480] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.480 --> 01:02:46.480] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.480 --> 01:02:53.480] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.480 --> 01:03:10.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.480 --> 01:03:32.480] I will identify my father's heart until he returns. [01:03:32.480 --> 01:03:43.480] He has me with the strength and wisdom that aid my concern. [01:03:43.480 --> 01:03:54.480] I will identify my father's heart until I see his face. [01:03:54.480 --> 01:04:03.480] I will guard these walls if that's there, I will come to take his place. [01:04:03.480 --> 01:04:13.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this, the 9th day of December, 2022. [01:04:13.480 --> 01:04:18.480] And we've kind of got off the standard subject. We're getting into electronics and stuff. [01:04:18.480 --> 01:04:23.480] And that's kind of my field as I'm an electrical engineer. [01:04:23.480 --> 01:04:43.480] But we're talking to Nancy in Pennsylvania. As to smart meters, the biggest concern I've heard about them is that they transmit such a powerful signal back to the electric company. [01:04:43.480 --> 01:04:52.480] So I was at my mom's, taking care of my mom. She was 98 and I'm trying to give her a couple of extra years, which I was able to do. [01:04:52.480 --> 01:04:55.480] And they put a smart meter on. [01:04:55.480 --> 01:05:07.480] And we were concerned because the smart meter was so powerful, it threw out such a strong signal that there's indication that can cause physiological problems. [01:05:07.480 --> 01:05:27.480] So I went and got a piece of sheet metal and slid it behind them between the meter in the house and hooked a wire to it and drove a copper rod into the ground and clipped a lead from the sheet metal to the copper rod. [01:05:27.480 --> 01:05:33.480] A piece of metal is what's called a Faraday screen. [01:05:33.480 --> 01:05:42.480] Electromagnetic radiation will hit that metal and the metal becomes a conductor and it will travel through the metal. [01:05:42.480 --> 01:05:50.480] So if you look at these old televisions and stuff with tubes, you'll notice some of them have metal collar around them. [01:05:50.480 --> 01:05:57.480] And that's because the other components within the system throw up an electromagnetic field around it. [01:05:57.480 --> 01:06:09.480] And if that magnetic field passes another tube that's sensitive to frequency, the electromagnetic radiation will change the frequency within the tube. [01:06:09.480 --> 01:06:12.480] So they put a metal screen around it and ground it. [01:06:12.480 --> 01:06:27.480] So when the electromagnetic radiation hits it, when an electromagnetic wave passes through a conductor, it induces a current in the conductor. That's how we make generators. [01:06:27.480 --> 01:06:37.480] Well, that's great when we're making a generator, but when we're trying to fine tune an electromagnetic component and we get this field moving across it, it changes all the parameters. [01:06:37.480 --> 01:06:40.480] So they put a screen around it and ground it. [01:06:40.480 --> 01:06:44.480] So the field hits it and the screen sends it to ground. [01:06:44.480 --> 01:06:47.480] That's called a Faraday screen. [01:06:47.480 --> 01:06:52.480] And these smart meters put out some really powerful signals. [01:06:52.480 --> 01:06:58.480] So I put a piece of sheet metal behind it and I hung a wash tub over it. [01:06:58.480 --> 01:07:09.480] I tied it to the header post going up so that the wash tub sat over the meter. [01:07:09.480 --> 01:07:13.480] And it was two days the electric company was out there and they were hot. [01:07:13.480 --> 01:07:16.480] They were upset about that. [01:07:16.480 --> 01:07:20.480] They said, I have to move that. I said, no, I don't. [01:07:20.480 --> 01:07:27.480] Well, we can't read our signal. Your problem, not my problem. [01:07:27.480 --> 01:07:35.480] You broadcast that into the air because your broadcast can't get through my wash tub. [01:07:35.480 --> 01:07:37.480] That's not my problem. [01:07:37.480 --> 01:07:40.480] Are you doing that somewhere else? No, I don't. [01:07:40.480 --> 01:07:43.480] And they finally gave up and went away. [01:07:43.480 --> 01:07:49.480] But if you don't want the smart meter in almost every jurisdiction I've ever looked at, [01:07:49.480 --> 01:07:57.480] they have a condition in their contract that you can have the smart meter removed, [01:07:57.480 --> 01:08:05.480] but they'll charge you for the cost of sending someone out to read your meter every month. [01:08:05.480 --> 01:08:09.480] Nancy? And it was a lot of money. [01:08:09.480 --> 01:08:14.480] Yeah. Well, in Pennsylvania, we're one of two states. [01:08:14.480 --> 01:08:20.480] Virginia is the other one in which they're allowing absolutely no opt-out. [01:08:20.480 --> 01:08:28.480] And the way they went about creating that law, what they consider law, [01:08:28.480 --> 01:08:33.480] they broke the rule of law in the whole process. [01:08:33.480 --> 01:08:45.480] And the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling to me just oozes all the rule of law they broke [01:08:45.480 --> 01:08:53.480] because it's full of logical inconsistencies. It has lies in it. [01:08:53.480 --> 01:09:02.480] I think it was a bought and paid for piece of legal analysis, that's my suspicion. [01:09:02.480 --> 01:09:09.480] When the public tried, the Pennsylvania citizens tried to make it clear they wanted opt-out [01:09:09.480 --> 01:09:16.480] and asked their senators, legislators to introduce opt-out bills to clarify, [01:09:16.480 --> 01:09:25.480] all those bills were killed by the Senate chair whose son manages the deployment of smart meters [01:09:25.480 --> 01:09:34.480] in one of the major utilities in this state. They allowed no public comment period, [01:09:34.480 --> 01:09:40.480] the PUC that is, which is an administrative agency. [01:09:40.480 --> 01:09:54.480] It's all controlled, I would say, by the lawyers and this extra outside agent to this country [01:09:54.480 --> 01:10:02.480] to be forcing this on the world because they want to set up their matrix system [01:10:02.480 --> 01:10:08.480] and the rule of law be damned. [01:10:08.480 --> 01:10:15.480] Well, how important is it to you? How much are you willing to spend to fix this? [01:10:15.480 --> 01:10:20.480] Well, that's just it. That's what I question them up against. [01:10:20.480 --> 01:10:26.480] The average citizen is up against an enormous force. [01:10:26.480 --> 01:10:31.480] There are a lot of these issues out there, and yes, we're up against it. [01:10:31.480 --> 01:10:37.480] This has always been the case since we've had government. [01:10:37.480 --> 01:10:42.480] Right now, it's becoming more acute because there are so many possibilities, [01:10:42.480 --> 01:10:48.480] but for the smart meter, there are things you can do. [01:10:48.480 --> 01:10:58.480] I'm an electrical engineer. I think I could build a tool that would superimpose a signal [01:10:58.480 --> 01:11:10.480] on the incoming line that would send their smart meter to GaGa land. [01:11:10.480 --> 01:11:15.480] Is it worth the time and money to do that? [01:11:15.480 --> 01:11:19.480] How many battles do you have to fight? [01:11:19.480 --> 01:11:30.480] Right, but at the same time, by being forced to take this thing, it has a lot of problems to it, [01:11:30.480 --> 01:11:36.480] so I am risking my health, my liberty. [01:11:36.480 --> 01:11:43.480] It's inviting a British soldier into your home. It's analogous to that. [01:11:43.480 --> 01:11:48.480] It's surveillance without probable cause or certain seizure. [01:11:48.480 --> 01:11:54.480] Then they're selling your usage data. It's happening in San Francisco. [01:11:54.480 --> 01:12:00.480] It gets sold to the police department, and they use it without probable cause. [01:12:00.480 --> 01:12:08.480] They can come to your house, and it just opens the door for more lack of rule of law. [01:12:08.480 --> 01:12:11.480] It just gets worse and worse. [01:12:11.480 --> 01:12:16.480] I got that. Brett and I do this show on legal reform, [01:12:16.480 --> 01:12:23.480] and you have to know we have addressed all these issues and a lot more. [01:12:23.480 --> 01:12:34.480] So we had to go to the place where we said, which fights are most important to have right now? [01:12:34.480 --> 01:12:41.480] I have potentially more fights than I could ever get to. [01:12:41.480 --> 01:12:45.480] From my perspective, and I'm an electrical engineer, [01:12:45.480 --> 01:12:52.480] and I understand what the smart meter is on a level that most people don't because they don't have the background, [01:12:52.480 --> 01:13:03.480] but in the overall scheme of things, I've got much bigger fights to have in order to build the foundation I need [01:13:03.480 --> 01:13:10.480] so that I can go after these more sophisticated and less pervasive issues. [01:13:10.480 --> 01:13:17.480] My point is, pick your fights very carefully. [01:13:17.480 --> 01:13:22.480] If you win this fight, how will it change things? [01:13:22.480 --> 01:13:29.480] And are there other fights you can have that will not only cause more profound change, [01:13:29.480 --> 01:13:36.480] but give you more tools to take on this issue with? [01:13:36.480 --> 01:13:44.480] For instance, right now I'm in a process of beating up public officials [01:13:44.480 --> 01:13:51.480] when they don't take criminal complaints by private citizens. [01:13:51.480 --> 01:13:57.480] If I get judges forced to take criminal complaints when I filed one, [01:13:57.480 --> 01:14:04.480] that opens the door for me going after any of these public officials that are acting improperly. [01:14:04.480 --> 01:14:11.480] And once I get that one done, and then I have another one for grand juries, I have several, [01:14:11.480 --> 01:14:20.480] but they're all built on the idea of giving everybody else more tools to work with. [01:14:20.480 --> 01:14:24.480] How important is the smart meter to you? [01:14:24.480 --> 01:14:27.480] What is the importance of the smart meter? [01:14:27.480 --> 01:14:31.480] Is it the fact that they're able to gather information about you? [01:14:31.480 --> 01:14:39.480] Or is it the EMF that they're throwing out there that could cause all kinds of physiological issues? [01:14:39.480 --> 01:14:41.480] Is it the prospect of surveillance? [01:14:41.480 --> 01:14:46.480] What is your major concern about smart meters? [01:14:46.480 --> 01:14:50.480] All of that, plus they're a fire hazard, they're missing the surge protector, [01:14:50.480 --> 01:14:55.480] so my appliances will be at risk. [01:14:55.480 --> 01:15:02.480] They have lithium batteries, which, you know, they can easily leak, [01:15:02.480 --> 01:15:08.480] and they're a big fire hazard, so I have a fire hazard sitting next to my house then. [01:15:08.480 --> 01:15:16.480] Yeah, but you're talking batteries like a AAA battery or a AA battery. [01:15:16.480 --> 01:15:20.480] Or even a 9-volt DC. [01:15:20.480 --> 01:15:25.480] It's inside the meter, and getting out of that meter, as small as that battery is, [01:15:25.480 --> 01:15:29.480] that battery is just kind of a backup for when they lose power. [01:15:29.480 --> 01:15:30.480] It's very small. [01:15:30.480 --> 01:15:34.480] It's no more than what you've got in your cell phone. [01:15:34.480 --> 01:15:37.480] They've caused some very bad fires already, [01:15:37.480 --> 01:15:43.480] and the electric companies just cover it up and say, no, it's the homeowner's problem. [01:15:43.480 --> 01:15:46.480] The homeowner's faulty this or faulty that, [01:15:46.480 --> 01:15:52.480] or they tell the fire department to ignore that it was the meter. [01:15:52.480 --> 01:15:54.480] It's just a... [01:15:54.480 --> 01:15:57.480] Okay, there are things you can do. [01:15:57.480 --> 01:16:02.480] It's just that we have to pick our fights very carefully. [01:16:02.480 --> 01:16:03.480] Yeah. [01:16:03.480 --> 01:16:11.480] If you really want to take that issue on, I've got some really nasty stuff you can do to these guys. [01:16:11.480 --> 01:16:14.480] A metal screen behind it between you and the house, [01:16:14.480 --> 01:16:19.480] that will block the signal from passing through your house. [01:16:19.480 --> 01:16:21.480] Put a wash tub over it. [01:16:21.480 --> 01:16:26.480] That'll block their signal from going anywhere other than the wash tub. [01:16:26.480 --> 01:16:27.480] It absorbs all of it. [01:16:27.480 --> 01:16:30.480] The only thing left is fire hazard for the meter. [01:16:30.480 --> 01:16:34.480] And they'll come out and jump up and down, rile in righteous indignation. [01:16:34.480 --> 01:16:38.480] You tell them, you put your smart meter in here, but this property's mine. [01:16:38.480 --> 01:16:41.480] I can do with it what I want to, so go scratch. [01:16:41.480 --> 01:16:44.480] Oh, you can't read your signal through my wash tub? [01:16:44.480 --> 01:16:48.480] Your problem, not my problem. [01:16:48.480 --> 01:16:50.480] If your system's not working, fix it. [01:16:50.480 --> 01:16:56.480] I'm not obligated to fix it for you. [01:16:56.480 --> 01:16:59.480] Mainly it's about picking your badge. [01:16:59.480 --> 01:17:04.480] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.480 --> 01:17:08.480] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:17:08.480 --> 01:17:12.480] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [01:17:12.480 --> 01:17:14.480] and now you can win two. [01:17:14.480 --> 01:17:18.480] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court [01:17:18.480 --> 01:17:20.480] using federal civil rights statutes, [01:17:20.480 --> 01:17:24.480] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, [01:17:24.480 --> 01:17:26.480] how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:17:26.480 --> 01:17:28.480] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:17:28.480 --> 01:17:33.480] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.480 --> 01:17:38.480] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.480 --> 01:17:40.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.480 --> 01:17:44.480] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:17:44.480 --> 01:17:49.480] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.480 --> 01:17:57.480] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:17:57.480 --> 01:18:00.480] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.480 --> 01:18:01.480] I love logos. [01:18:01.480 --> 01:18:04.480] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.480 --> 01:18:07.480] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.480 --> 01:18:08.480] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.480 --> 01:18:10.480] I'd be lost without logos, [01:18:10.480 --> 01:18:13.480] and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.480 --> 01:18:16.480] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.480 --> 01:18:20.480] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.480 --> 01:18:22.480] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.480 --> 01:18:24.480] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.480 --> 01:18:27.480] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.480 --> 01:18:29.480] You can order new supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.480 --> 01:18:31.480] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.480 --> 01:18:34.480] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:18:34.480 --> 01:18:37.480] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.480 --> 01:18:40.480] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, [01:18:40.480 --> 01:18:43.480] and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.480 --> 01:18:44.480] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.480 --> 01:18:45.480] No. [01:18:45.480 --> 01:18:47.480] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.480 --> 01:18:48.480] No. [01:18:48.480 --> 01:18:49.480] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.480 --> 01:18:50.480] No. [01:18:50.480 --> 01:18:51.480] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.480 --> 01:18:54.480] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.480 --> 01:18:55.480] This is perfect. [01:18:55.480 --> 01:18:56.480] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.480 --> 01:18:58.480] We are welcome. [01:18:58.480 --> 01:19:00.480] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:28.480 --> 01:19:29.480] Thank you. [01:19:58.480 --> 01:20:08.480] Okay. [01:20:08.480 --> 01:20:09.480] We are back. [01:20:09.480 --> 01:20:11.480] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruval Radio, [01:20:11.480 --> 01:20:13.480] and we're talking to Nancy in Pennsylvania. [01:20:13.480 --> 01:20:18.480] And, Nancy, I don't mean to sound insensitive about the issue. [01:20:18.480 --> 01:20:19.480] No. [01:20:19.480 --> 01:20:22.480] It's just that there are so many issues out there. [01:20:22.480 --> 01:20:26.480] If you want, I will get you in touch with FreeTex. [01:20:26.480 --> 01:20:32.480] He is really deep into this issue. [01:20:32.480 --> 01:20:33.480] Okay. [01:20:33.480 --> 01:20:35.480] If there's any remedy he has, [01:20:35.480 --> 01:20:39.480] send me an email to Randy at Ruval Radio [01:20:39.480 --> 01:20:47.480] and ask for a link to the EOF guy or FreeTex. [01:20:47.480 --> 01:20:48.480] FreeTex? [01:20:48.480 --> 01:20:56.480] Yeah, just tell what the context is and I'll get it to him [01:20:56.480 --> 01:20:57.480] and he'll talk to you. [01:20:57.480 --> 01:20:58.480] Okay. [01:20:58.480 --> 01:20:59.480] All right. [01:20:59.480 --> 01:21:01.480] Well, thank you for your time. [01:21:01.480 --> 01:21:03.480] Well, one thing you have to be warned about, [01:21:03.480 --> 01:21:05.480] he's a bit of a redneck. [01:21:05.480 --> 01:21:06.480] Yeah. [01:21:06.480 --> 01:21:08.480] And he doesn't speak English. [01:21:08.480 --> 01:21:09.480] He speaks redneck. [01:21:09.480 --> 01:21:10.480] Okay. [01:21:10.480 --> 01:21:16.480] See, I used to live up north, so I speak the Yankee dialect. [01:21:16.480 --> 01:21:20.480] I also speak hillbilly and I speak redneck. [01:21:20.480 --> 01:21:22.480] No, you'll like this guy. [01:21:22.480 --> 01:21:24.480] He's really a nice guy. [01:21:24.480 --> 01:21:25.480] He's really accommodating. [01:21:25.480 --> 01:21:28.480] And this is his primary area of interest. [01:21:28.480 --> 01:21:31.480] So if you'll send me an email, I'll get it to him. [01:21:31.480 --> 01:21:32.480] Okay. [01:21:32.480 --> 01:21:33.480] Thank you. [01:21:33.480 --> 01:21:34.480] Okay. [01:21:34.480 --> 01:21:35.480] Thank you, Nancy. [01:21:35.480 --> 01:21:42.480] And don't be a stranger. [01:21:42.480 --> 01:21:43.480] Okay. [01:21:43.480 --> 01:21:45.480] Now we're going to Ted in California. [01:21:45.480 --> 01:21:46.480] Hello, Ted. [01:21:46.480 --> 01:21:48.480] What are you up to? [01:21:48.480 --> 01:21:50.480] How is your federal case going? [01:21:50.480 --> 01:21:55.480] Good evening, Randy, Brett. [01:21:55.480 --> 01:21:58.480] It's going. [01:21:58.480 --> 01:22:04.480] There's really nothing to do. [01:22:04.480 --> 01:22:06.480] I actually have two federal cases. [01:22:06.480 --> 01:22:10.480] The one that I filed and removed, the criminal case, [01:22:10.480 --> 01:22:15.480] is the one that they're looking at it. [01:22:15.480 --> 01:22:22.480] They're trying to combine it with the similar cases that I filed before. [01:22:22.480 --> 01:22:25.480] So I got a little work I need to put in. [01:22:25.480 --> 01:22:32.480] I'm going to take the judge's opinion, the federal court judge that gave an opinion [01:22:32.480 --> 01:22:41.480] and dismissed the last one, and I'm going to use her opinion and her word [01:22:41.480 --> 01:22:48.480] as to why now they have to intervene, they have to take jurisdiction. [01:22:48.480 --> 01:23:00.480] Now, that case, you know, I filed it just days before [01:23:00.480 --> 01:23:05.480] what was supposed to be my September 26 trial, [01:23:05.480 --> 01:23:13.480] and so really the criminal court lost jurisdiction [01:23:13.480 --> 01:23:17.480] once I filed notice of removal with that court. [01:23:17.480 --> 01:23:23.480] And, of course, we filed the notice of removal Monday morning, the 26th, [01:23:23.480 --> 01:23:28.480] just before walking upstairs to the courtroom where this trial was supposed to take place. [01:23:28.480 --> 01:23:36.480] And I made the court clerk, the manager, in fact, [01:23:36.480 --> 01:23:41.480] I made him file it against orders from the judge. [01:23:41.480 --> 01:23:44.480] The judge had talked to him on the phone and told him, [01:23:44.480 --> 01:23:47.480] don't you file no papers from him. [01:23:47.480 --> 01:23:54.480] But I told him how it was and how it was going to be, and he filed them. [01:23:54.480 --> 01:23:58.480] I said, I command you to file them. [01:23:58.480 --> 01:24:04.480] And I also directed him to look at the second page of the document [01:24:04.480 --> 01:24:10.480] where it clearly spelled out it was a felony for him to refuse to file them. [01:24:10.480 --> 01:24:22.480] So we went on upstairs, and, of course, you know, the case somewhat resolved. [01:24:22.480 --> 01:24:25.480] And remember I told you it was diversion. [01:24:25.480 --> 01:24:29.480] Well, that has changed. [01:24:29.480 --> 01:24:35.480] I went for what was supposed to be, well, I appeared by phone on December 2 [01:24:35.480 --> 01:24:40.480] after criminal court only really to see what they're doing. [01:24:40.480 --> 01:24:48.480] And it turned out, and I also at the previous hearing on the 26th, you know, [01:24:48.480 --> 01:24:51.480] had said that I didn't want to come back to court [01:24:51.480 --> 01:24:54.480] and that I'd electronically appear. [01:24:54.480 --> 01:24:57.480] And then, of course, they turned around and said, well, no, you don't have to come. [01:24:57.480 --> 01:24:58.480] The lawyer will come. [01:24:58.480 --> 01:25:00.480] And the whole time I was sitting there shaking my head [01:25:00.480 --> 01:25:09.480] because this lawyer who has attached himself to me, I told him, you don't represent me. [01:25:09.480 --> 01:25:14.480] So where this criminal case is at is it's basically over. [01:25:14.480 --> 01:25:20.480] And on December 2, I won't spare you guys a lot of details of it. [01:25:20.480 --> 01:25:28.480] I think I only made one mistake, maybe two, but by appearing, I made it. [01:25:28.480 --> 01:25:33.480] Because once you remove a case, I mean, you can, the only thing you should say [01:25:33.480 --> 01:25:41.480] if you go have anything to do with the case is that I'm just here as a courtesy to sell the court. [01:25:41.480 --> 01:25:43.480] Remind them that you don't have jurisdiction. [01:25:43.480 --> 01:25:47.480] I mean, really, that's all you should do. [01:25:47.480 --> 01:25:52.480] You cannot give them jurisdiction. [01:25:52.480 --> 01:25:56.480] Jurisdiction cannot be conveyed by agreement. [01:25:56.480 --> 01:25:58.480] They either have it or they don't. [01:25:58.480 --> 01:26:02.480] If they don't, there's nothing they can do to get it. [01:26:02.480 --> 01:26:07.480] Okay, but they're going along acting like they have jurisdiction. [01:26:07.480 --> 01:26:12.480] So I listened and it turned out they had a problem, Randy. [01:26:12.480 --> 01:26:21.480] And it turned out that count one felony, this judge thinks that it's not a wobbler. [01:26:21.480 --> 01:26:27.480] A wobbler is something that can be charged as a felony or a misdemeanor. [01:26:27.480 --> 01:26:34.480] He somehow came to the conclusion that it's not a wobbler. [01:26:34.480 --> 01:26:39.480] Because what was supposed to occur on December 2 was the DA, [01:26:39.480 --> 01:26:42.480] the deputy DA was to come in, they were to call the case. [01:26:42.480 --> 01:26:48.480] The deputy DA was to take count one felony and count two felony [01:26:48.480 --> 01:26:56.480] and recharge them as misdemeanors and immediately dismiss them. [01:26:56.480 --> 01:27:02.480] Because I guess the deputy DA, the DA's office cannot dismiss a felony, I guess. [01:27:02.480 --> 01:27:07.480] And maybe the caveat is after a preliminary hearing. [01:27:07.480 --> 01:27:09.480] But anyway... [01:27:09.480 --> 01:27:16.480] Okay, that's problematic in that the DA is not a judicial officer in this context. [01:27:16.480 --> 01:27:17.480] Right. [01:27:17.480 --> 01:27:22.480] He can't dismiss a prosecution period. [01:27:22.480 --> 01:27:26.480] He has to ask the judge for permission, ask the judge to do it. [01:27:26.480 --> 01:27:27.480] That's right. [01:27:27.480 --> 01:27:32.480] And a defendant can't ask the judge, but the judge can on his own. [01:27:32.480 --> 01:27:34.480] I've read this. [01:27:34.480 --> 01:27:42.480] He dismissed under 1368A, and this is better than... [01:27:42.480 --> 01:27:47.480] It's getting better and better as far as my damages and lawsuit against them. [01:27:47.480 --> 01:27:52.480] Because this judge has now dismissed this under 1368A, [01:27:52.480 --> 01:27:57.480] which is in the interest of justice. [01:27:57.480 --> 01:28:02.480] Now, they were supposed to both be dismissed and the whole thing was supposed to be sealed. [01:28:02.480 --> 01:28:09.480] And count three, reentry after ouster, was the only thing that was actually going through diversion. [01:28:09.480 --> 01:28:17.480] So one thing I should have brought up was that, well, if you're a judge dismissing two felonies [01:28:17.480 --> 01:28:20.480] in the interest of justice, why aren't... [01:28:20.480 --> 01:28:24.480] You know, I'm going to move the court to dismiss count three misdemeanor [01:28:24.480 --> 01:28:26.480] to be dismissed in the interest of justice. [01:28:26.480 --> 01:28:30.480] There's no need to call this diversion. [01:28:30.480 --> 01:28:36.480] And why this is more important is because this now comes down to a judge [01:28:36.480 --> 01:28:39.480] has dismissed the charges of the DA. [01:28:39.480 --> 01:28:45.480] And that's only going to bolster a civil claim, my civil claim, [01:28:45.480 --> 01:28:53.480] of the eight years and 154 hearings that I had to go through. [01:28:53.480 --> 01:28:54.480] Wow. [01:28:54.480 --> 01:29:00.480] And my heart attack and, you know, for eight years I couldn't get a job. [01:29:00.480 --> 01:29:07.480] I couldn't get a job because of just the charges. [01:29:07.480 --> 01:29:11.480] I couldn't get a job, for example, at Uber as a driver, [01:29:11.480 --> 01:29:16.480] even though in their employee manual it said that if you're convicted of a felony, [01:29:16.480 --> 01:29:18.480] you can still work for them. [01:29:18.480 --> 01:29:19.480] I pointed this out to them. [01:29:19.480 --> 01:29:24.480] I tried, haggled with them for about seven, eight months, back and forth, [01:29:24.480 --> 01:29:25.480] several times, tried to work for them. [01:29:25.480 --> 01:29:28.480] So I only bring that up to... [01:29:28.480 --> 01:29:39.480] That's just one example of the slander and libel by putting these fake charges on. [01:29:39.480 --> 01:29:42.480] Oh, it is certainly time for you to go after them. [01:29:42.480 --> 01:29:49.480] Okay, hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio, calling. [01:29:49.480 --> 01:29:50.480] I'm not going to grab the call-in number. [01:29:50.480 --> 01:29:52.480] We've only got two segments left. [01:29:52.480 --> 01:29:54.480] We've got two callers. [01:29:54.480 --> 01:29:55.480] Hang on. [01:29:55.480 --> 01:30:01.480] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.480 --> 01:30:04.480] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:04.480 --> 01:30:08.480] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come [01:30:08.480 --> 01:30:11.480] and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.480 --> 01:30:15.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.480 --> 01:30:17.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.480 --> 01:30:21.480] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.480 --> 01:30:26.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.480 --> 01:30:27.480] So protect your rights. [01:30:27.480 --> 01:30:31.480] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.480 --> 01:30:34.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.480 --> 01:30:37.480] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.480 --> 01:30:41.480] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.480 --> 01:30:45.480] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.480 --> 01:30:49.480] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power [01:30:49.480 --> 01:30:52.480] going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.480 --> 01:30:56.480] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor [01:30:56.480 --> 01:30:59.480] electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.480 --> 01:31:03.480] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast. [01:31:03.480 --> 01:31:06.480] If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:06.480 --> 01:31:08.480] hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.480 --> 01:31:12.480] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [01:31:12.480 --> 01:31:15.480] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:15.480 --> 01:31:18.480] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons, [01:31:18.480 --> 01:31:21.480] but catastrophic failures caused by hackers? [01:31:21.480 --> 01:31:23.480] There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.480 --> 01:31:26.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, [01:31:26.480 --> 01:31:31.480] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.480 --> 01:31:36.480] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.480 --> 01:31:38.480] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.480 --> 01:31:43.480] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.480 --> 01:31:46.480] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.480 --> 01:31:49.480] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.480 --> 01:31:50.480] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.480 --> 01:31:51.480] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.480 --> 01:31:52.480] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.480 --> 01:31:53.480] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.480 --> 01:31:55.480] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.480 --> 01:31:58.480] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.480 --> 01:32:02.480] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:58.480 --> 01:33:02.480] We all want and deserve it. [01:33:02.480 --> 01:33:05.480] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [01:33:05.480 --> 01:33:32.480] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:35.480 --> 01:33:40.480] Okay. [01:33:40.480 --> 01:33:41.480] We are back. [01:33:41.480 --> 01:33:44.480] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with Logos Radio. [01:33:44.480 --> 01:33:46.480] We're talking to Ted in California. [01:33:46.480 --> 01:33:53.480] And Ted, you've been a while since you've been on Bring Everybody Up to Speed. [01:33:53.480 --> 01:33:55.480] You and I know what we're talking about here, [01:33:55.480 --> 01:34:00.480] but most people don't realize how egregious your issue was. [01:34:00.480 --> 01:34:04.480] Will you kind of give us a synopsis? [01:34:04.480 --> 01:34:05.480] Okay. [01:34:05.480 --> 01:34:11.480] The synopsis is my home of 32 years was foreclosed on, [01:34:11.480 --> 01:34:19.480] but the foreclosure was botched, and the house ended up back in my name. [01:34:19.480 --> 01:34:28.480] And I subsequently, under the advice of a firm that had a lawyer on staff, [01:34:28.480 --> 01:34:37.480] suggested that I transfer my house to a trust, my trust. [01:34:37.480 --> 01:34:41.480] And they told me they would create the trust. [01:34:41.480 --> 01:34:50.480] And then to fund the trust, you record a quit claim deed from my name, [01:34:50.480 --> 01:34:56.480] and I checked, and I had rightful title for the property on the day [01:34:56.480 --> 01:35:00.480] of recording a quit claim deed from my name to my trust. [01:35:00.480 --> 01:35:06.480] I'd been fighting the foreclosure, the vulture that bought it at foreclosure sales, [01:35:06.480 --> 01:35:15.480] and he was suing me in civil court for quiet title as a result, and I was winning. [01:35:15.480 --> 01:35:21.480] At this point, this crooked judge got involved, Dr. T. Peter Mnuchin. [01:35:21.480 --> 01:35:28.480] And he, when I had filed a federal lawsuit, I had a federal lawsuit going [01:35:28.480 --> 01:35:33.480] where I had removed this case from the state court. [01:35:33.480 --> 01:35:40.480] And so when he held hearings in the state court after this removal without jurisdiction, [01:35:40.480 --> 01:35:46.480] I added his name to the federal case, and U.S. Marshals went out to the courthouse and served him. [01:35:46.480 --> 01:35:54.480] And six weeks later, I've got an army of law enforcement at my house in full tactical gear [01:35:54.480 --> 01:36:01.480] pointing machine guns at me, dragging me out of my house, and kept me in jail for three days [01:36:01.480 --> 01:36:05.480] and charged me with recording a false document. [01:36:05.480 --> 01:36:11.480] And it just goes on from there, a whole litany of things, after about 14 months, [01:36:11.480 --> 01:36:17.480] and I probably went to about 12 hearings, and I'm out in the street with nothing. [01:36:17.480 --> 01:36:19.480] Okay, I've been in the home for 32 years. [01:36:19.480 --> 01:36:25.480] I'm out in the street with nothing, no money, nowhere to go, and so I succumb to a heart attack. [01:36:25.480 --> 01:36:35.480] And then they, against doctor's orders, want me to appear at another criminal court hearing [01:36:35.480 --> 01:36:39.480] when I've got a letter from the doctor that says I'm subject to sudden death. [01:36:39.480 --> 01:36:47.480] They said that Judge Brown says if he doesn't show up, we're going to arrest him again, issue a warrant. [01:36:47.480 --> 01:36:49.480] So I went down there. [01:36:49.480 --> 01:36:51.480] They called the case. [01:36:51.480 --> 01:36:58.480] She needed to take a break to check law, and as she did that, I started to have another heart attack. [01:36:58.480 --> 01:37:04.480] So then she is told she comes on the bench, continues to prosecute me while I'm in the throes of a second heart attack [01:37:04.480 --> 01:37:10.480] just five weeks after a severe heart attack that required emergency surgery. [01:37:10.480 --> 01:37:17.480] So then she runs out of the room as paramedics get there when she's told they're in the elevator. [01:37:17.480 --> 01:37:19.480] And it just goes on from there. [01:37:19.480 --> 01:37:31.480] After that, and then remember, this all, the machine guns and the arrests and all that took place on February 11, 2015. [01:37:31.480 --> 01:37:39.480] And so until just this December 2, almost eight years, all they've been doing is putting me through hearings, [01:37:39.480 --> 01:37:48.480] hearings, hearings, threatening me, added a second felony charge that's totally bogus by all accounts. [01:37:48.480 --> 01:37:56.480] And I don't know if I ever told you, Randy, but I also had the appellate court stay of my eviction in the house. [01:37:56.480 --> 01:38:00.480] And they came out one time and threw me out of the house while I had the stay. [01:38:00.480 --> 01:38:02.480] So I went right back in. [01:38:02.480 --> 01:38:08.480] And then a second time they came and arrested me. [01:38:08.480 --> 01:38:15.480] And instead of taking me to the jail, they ended up dumping me in the parking lot at the hospital across town. [01:38:15.480 --> 01:38:26.480] And then, like I said, this final time they came out, I firmly believe that they wanted me to believe they were there just to do an eviction [01:38:26.480 --> 01:38:29.480] and that I would act as I'd done before, not open the door. [01:38:29.480 --> 01:38:32.480] And this time they were going to bust the door down and kill me. [01:38:32.480 --> 01:38:35.480] That was the plan. [01:38:35.480 --> 01:38:36.480] Okay. [01:38:36.480 --> 01:38:44.480] And luckily, I could come out the front door and was in the driveway when this army marched up. [01:38:44.480 --> 01:38:49.480] And so we just went along all this time. [01:38:49.480 --> 01:38:51.480] Now, they put lawyers on me. [01:38:51.480 --> 01:38:54.480] I got rid of them. [01:38:54.480 --> 01:39:01.480] You know, I learned that the county, the state court judges who are paid and compensated by the state of California, [01:39:01.480 --> 01:39:06.480] I learned that the county of Santa Clara is also paying them. [01:39:06.480 --> 01:39:14.480] So they have a DA prosecuting me for the county, and the county is paying the judges on the side, and it's significant money. [01:39:14.480 --> 01:39:16.480] And so I started exposing that. [01:39:16.480 --> 01:39:24.480] And one thing after another, I filed papers in this case that it's got to be – I said six feet high, [01:39:24.480 --> 01:39:28.480] but I bet it's closer to eight feet high at this point. [01:39:28.480 --> 01:39:29.480] And I beat them. [01:39:29.480 --> 01:39:34.480] I beat them over and over again, and they just ignored it, and they kept on going. [01:39:34.480 --> 01:39:39.480] And so the walk of shame is going to be huge. [01:39:39.480 --> 01:39:44.480] I don't even know how these people are going to come to federal court and show their faces, [01:39:44.480 --> 01:39:49.480] because I'm going to be able to connect the fact – the fact that the county is paying the judges, [01:39:49.480 --> 01:39:54.480] it connects the whole thing and shows that this is a RICO. [01:39:54.480 --> 01:39:55.480] Okay. [01:39:55.480 --> 01:39:58.480] And I've talked before about the county doesn't care if you lose your house. [01:39:58.480 --> 01:40:01.480] They want you to lose your house, especially here in California, [01:40:01.480 --> 01:40:05.480] because I was only paying $3,000 a year in property taxes, [01:40:05.480 --> 01:40:10.480] and now they're collecting more than $14,000 a year in property taxes off my home alone. [01:40:10.480 --> 01:40:17.480] So every person who is illegally foreclosed on by these banks, it's a windfall for Santa Clara County. [01:40:17.480 --> 01:40:23.480] That's why D.A. Rosen never prosecuted any of the banks for any of the false documents [01:40:23.480 --> 01:40:28.480] they recorded into the county record, which I'm sure there's hundreds of. [01:40:28.480 --> 01:40:29.480] Okay, so this case – [01:40:29.480 --> 01:40:31.480] And theirs are actually false. [01:40:31.480 --> 01:40:32.480] Yours wasn't. [01:40:32.480 --> 01:40:35.480] They said it was, but it wasn't. [01:40:35.480 --> 01:40:36.480] Yeah. [01:40:36.480 --> 01:40:37.480] It's an illegal impossibility. [01:40:37.480 --> 01:40:41.480] And that was the other thing that was such a nightmare about this case, [01:40:41.480 --> 01:40:44.480] is that I would go to lawyers and they're like, what? [01:40:44.480 --> 01:40:47.480] This isn't a crime. [01:40:47.480 --> 01:40:58.480] And so I had a whole range of responses, including some of these lawyers thought I was hunking them. [01:40:58.480 --> 01:41:00.480] And so here we are now. [01:41:00.480 --> 01:41:02.480] I somehow survived all of this. [01:41:02.480 --> 01:41:11.480] And like I told you before, Randy, at one point, a very dark point in this thing, had you not talked to me, it was over. [01:41:11.480 --> 01:41:13.480] I was checking out. [01:41:13.480 --> 01:41:22.480] I was waking up every hour on the hour, terrified that I was going to prison. [01:41:22.480 --> 01:41:25.480] And nobody would help me. [01:41:25.480 --> 01:41:37.480] And what I mean by that is nobody locally, anybody that I knew, nobody helped. [01:41:37.480 --> 01:41:45.480] And even now, I've got to work on my health. [01:41:45.480 --> 01:41:53.480] I've got to stay alive so that now I can go after them for all the damages they've done to me. [01:41:53.480 --> 01:42:01.480] And again, I think that we have, there's such an evidence trail. [01:42:01.480 --> 01:42:03.480] It's all in the court papers. [01:42:03.480 --> 01:42:05.480] It's in the appellate court. [01:42:05.480 --> 01:42:07.480] It's in the federal court. [01:42:07.480 --> 01:42:10.480] It's in this criminal case. [01:42:10.480 --> 01:42:12.480] It's all there. [01:42:12.480 --> 01:42:21.480] Now, the second federal case I have going on, you know, the last public defender they put on me, [01:42:21.480 --> 01:42:27.480] I sued them, and about two years into suing him, he kept representing me in this criminal case. [01:42:27.480 --> 01:42:37.480] But remember, he, one day after court, when I told him I knew about the secret meeting, he screamed at me, [01:42:37.480 --> 01:42:40.480] why don't I have another heart attack and die? [01:42:40.480 --> 01:42:47.480] And so at that point, the public defender's office got out of the case at the next hearing. [01:42:47.480 --> 01:42:54.480] But then this guy from the, not the alternate defender, but the independent defender's office jumps up [01:42:54.480 --> 01:42:57.480] and says, I'm here to take over the case. [01:42:57.480 --> 01:43:03.480] So this is another example of showing that these people are having conversations behind my back. [01:43:03.480 --> 01:43:12.480] Then I sued this independent defender now, Coughlin is his last name. [01:43:12.480 --> 01:43:17.480] I sued him in small claims court and for perjury of oath, [01:43:17.480 --> 01:43:24.480] and I named the United States as a coat, as a second defendant, [01:43:24.480 --> 01:43:26.480] because they're responsible for this guy ultimately. [01:43:26.480 --> 01:43:29.480] He has an oath, okay? [01:43:29.480 --> 01:43:40.480] And so exactly what we wanted to have happen, at the last second, the United States removed the case to federal court. [01:43:40.480 --> 01:43:47.480] So that's how that case is down in federal court. [01:43:47.480 --> 01:43:51.480] And that's a long synopsis, but there you go. [01:43:51.480 --> 01:43:54.480] And I hear the music, I think we're about to go to break. [01:43:54.480 --> 01:44:00.480] Yeah, you're right. We will be right back. [01:44:00.480 --> 01:44:06.480] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.480 --> 01:44:09.480] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:09.480 --> 01:44:11.480] It's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.480 --> 01:44:17.480] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.480 --> 01:44:22.480] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:22.480 --> 01:44:25.480] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.480 --> 01:44:31.480] Logos Relial Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.480 --> 01:44:34.480] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [01:44:34.480 --> 01:44:39.480] it became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.480 --> 01:44:47.480] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.480 --> 01:44:51.480] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.480 --> 01:44:58.480] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:44:58.480 --> 01:45:02.480] Order now. [01:45:02.480 --> 01:45:05.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:05.480 --> 01:45:09.480] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:09.480 --> 01:45:17.480] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:17.480 --> 01:45:21.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:21.480 --> 01:45:24.480] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.480 --> 01:45:29.480] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.480 --> 01:45:35.480] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.480 --> 01:45:40.480] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:40.480 --> 01:45:44.480] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.480 --> 01:45:53.480] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.480 --> 01:46:03.480] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:23.480 --> 01:46:45.480] Okay. [01:46:45.480 --> 01:46:49.480] We are back with Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking Ted in Colorado. [01:46:49.480 --> 01:46:54.480] Okay, Ted in California. [01:46:54.480 --> 01:46:57.480] Okay, where were we, Ted, when we went out? [01:46:57.480 --> 01:47:05.480] I think I've pretty much finished up the story of, you know, what my story is. [01:47:05.480 --> 01:47:11.480] I was kind of distracted in your last, right at the end of the last segment. [01:47:11.480 --> 01:47:14.480] Did you address your federal suit? [01:47:14.480 --> 01:47:16.480] Where is it at? [01:47:16.480 --> 01:47:22.480] Well, where that is, it was, this is good information for people. [01:47:22.480 --> 01:47:27.480] There's a form lawsuit that you can get off the federal court website. [01:47:27.480 --> 01:47:35.480] And instead of writing my own pleading, I used their form this time. [01:47:35.480 --> 01:47:50.480] And I removed, so I filed the federal lawsuit using a form lawsuit, and then I removed the criminal case to federal court. [01:47:50.480 --> 01:48:00.480] I then went to the criminal court and gave them the notice of removal, which takes jurisdiction away from the criminal court. [01:48:00.480 --> 01:48:05.480] What is left in the criminal case? [01:48:05.480 --> 01:48:06.480] Excuse me? [01:48:06.480 --> 01:48:08.480] What's left in the criminal? [01:48:08.480 --> 01:48:11.480] I thought that had been pretty well dismissed. [01:48:11.480 --> 01:48:23.480] I did this a few days before the 26th trial date, which is probably like the 30th time they put a trial date out there. [01:48:23.480 --> 01:48:36.480] So the reason for it was to speedy trial issue wanted the federal court to come down and say, hey, eight years is too damn long, cease and desist. [01:48:36.480 --> 01:48:38.480] That was the whole purpose of that lawsuit. [01:48:38.480 --> 01:48:41.480] But now I think I want to convert the lawsuit. [01:48:41.480 --> 01:48:52.480] I still want to get an order from them, okay, and from the federal court to tell the lower court to stop. [01:48:52.480 --> 01:49:01.480] Even though now the criminal court, the lower court, went ahead ignoring the fact they don't have jurisdiction, [01:49:01.480 --> 01:49:12.480] and they went ahead and held these two hearings now and basically dismissed all charges. [01:49:12.480 --> 01:49:24.480] So they're trying to hamstring the feds and render the case moot before the feds get a hold of it. [01:49:24.480 --> 01:49:32.480] Well, but the feds basically already have a hold of it because the moment you remove the case and give notice of the removal, it's done. [01:49:32.480 --> 01:49:33.480] It's over. [01:49:33.480 --> 01:49:34.480] Exactly. [01:49:34.480 --> 01:49:44.480] And I've got a case out of North Carolina, black guy, white bar, fight, beats up a white guy, kills him. [01:49:44.480 --> 01:49:45.480] They prosecuted him. [01:49:45.480 --> 01:49:48.480] They picked the jury, started the prosecution. [01:49:48.480 --> 01:49:50.480] He filed a notice of removal. [01:49:50.480 --> 01:49:55.480] Since he had the jury picked, they went ahead and had the trial, found him guilty. [01:49:55.480 --> 01:50:06.480] And the federal court got the removal and said, you have absolutely zero grounds for removal and remanded it back. [01:50:06.480 --> 01:50:12.480] But they also said when it was removed initially, the trial court lost jurisdiction. [01:50:12.480 --> 01:50:19.480] So the conviction they got was thrown out, and they had to do it again. [01:50:19.480 --> 01:50:28.480] And what they're going to do with this is they're, see, this just shows again for all listeners, these courts are all connected. [01:50:28.480 --> 01:50:29.480] These judges are all connected. [01:50:29.480 --> 01:50:36.480] And they're going to expect the federal court to remand and give a remitter to the lower court. [01:50:36.480 --> 01:50:44.480] So the lower court resumes jurisdiction, and then they're going to say, oh, well, you know, we've already done this, and this case is dismissed. [01:50:44.480 --> 01:50:46.480] It's over. [01:50:46.480 --> 01:50:49.480] But hey. [01:50:49.480 --> 01:50:51.480] And that's okay, because that frees up your liberty. [01:50:51.480 --> 01:50:53.480] Now you get to go back. [01:50:53.480 --> 01:50:57.480] You can go back after them with pretty much impunity. [01:50:57.480 --> 01:50:58.480] Exactly. [01:50:58.480 --> 01:51:02.480] And so do you still have that other caller on there? [01:51:02.480 --> 01:51:05.480] Get off. [01:51:05.480 --> 01:51:06.480] Wait, I missed that. [01:51:06.480 --> 01:51:08.480] If I have what? [01:51:08.480 --> 01:51:11.480] Is there another caller still waiting to talk? [01:51:11.480 --> 01:51:12.480] Yes. [01:51:12.480 --> 01:51:14.480] Yeah, John in New York is waiting. [01:51:14.480 --> 01:51:17.480] I'll go ahead and get off and so John can talk. [01:51:17.480 --> 01:51:18.480] Okay. [01:51:17.480 --> 01:51:19.480] Thank you, Ted. [01:51:19.480 --> 01:51:20.480] All right. [01:51:19.480 --> 01:51:23.480] Ted is the master. [01:51:23.480 --> 01:51:26.480] Eight years, how many hearings? [01:51:26.480 --> 01:51:29.480] 154. [01:51:29.480 --> 01:51:34.480] And he hung in there and came, he saw, he kicked their behinds. [01:51:34.480 --> 01:51:36.480] Thank you, Ted. [01:51:36.480 --> 01:51:40.480] Now we're going to go to John in New York. [01:51:40.480 --> 01:51:48.480] John, what do you have for us today? [01:51:48.480 --> 01:51:49.480] Hello, John. [01:51:49.480 --> 01:51:50.480] Oh, wait, wait, wait. [01:51:50.480 --> 01:51:51.480] I'm sorry. [01:51:51.480 --> 01:51:53.480] Unmuted Ted. [01:51:53.480 --> 01:51:55.480] Okay, here we go, John. [01:51:55.480 --> 01:51:56.480] Okay, now you're open. [01:51:56.480 --> 01:51:58.480] Talk to us, John. [01:51:58.480 --> 01:51:59.480] Hi, Randy. [01:51:59.480 --> 01:52:00.480] Hi, Brett. [01:52:00.480 --> 01:52:01.480] Thank you. [01:52:01.480 --> 01:52:05.480] I've got, hold on. [01:52:05.480 --> 01:52:06.480] Give me a second here. [01:52:06.480 --> 01:52:11.480] Let me get the screen back so you can hear me. [01:52:11.480 --> 01:52:14.480] Okay, can you hear me nice and clear now? [01:52:14.480 --> 01:52:17.480] We can hear you nice and clear. [01:52:17.480 --> 01:52:19.480] Okay, here we go. [01:52:19.480 --> 01:52:23.480] A relative of mine got seven tickets. [01:52:23.480 --> 01:52:28.480] They're a combination, I'll tell you briefly in a minute. [01:52:28.480 --> 01:52:35.480] Then a few days after he got all these tickets, he had a bad stroke. [01:52:35.480 --> 01:52:40.480] And he's paralyzed on the left side, can't talk very well. [01:52:40.480 --> 01:52:42.480] He can sort of talk. [01:52:42.480 --> 01:52:46.480] And I just want these tickets to go away. [01:52:46.480 --> 01:52:49.480] I'm sick and tired of them following him around. [01:52:49.480 --> 01:52:51.480] This is a concerted effort. [01:52:51.480 --> 01:52:58.480] And it's a concerted effort not only in the county he lives in, but it's a concerted effort. [01:52:58.480 --> 01:53:01.480] It was even in the next county over. [01:53:01.480 --> 01:53:03.480] They must have been discussing it. [01:53:03.480 --> 01:53:04.480] And I know this goes on. [01:53:04.480 --> 01:53:11.480] I did news stories about the collusion between the state police and the local people in his county, [01:53:11.480 --> 01:53:15.480] and the state police, rather, and the judges in his county. [01:53:15.480 --> 01:53:20.480] And it was a major state investigation several times over that subject. [01:53:20.480 --> 01:53:21.480] So I know it goes on. [01:53:21.480 --> 01:53:23.480] But anyway, that's beside the point. [01:53:23.480 --> 01:53:26.480] The tickets are as follows. [01:53:26.480 --> 01:53:28.480] Unsafe breaks. [01:53:28.480 --> 01:53:32.480] Well, while the cops had stopped him for something else, I don't know, [01:53:32.480 --> 01:53:43.480] if it was no signal, he happened to mention, well, I'm going to the garage now to take care of the brakes. [01:53:43.480 --> 01:53:48.480] And so the cop wrote him a ticket for unsafe brakes. [01:53:48.480 --> 01:53:51.480] It's called keep your mouth shut, I know. [01:53:51.480 --> 01:53:52.480] Wait a minute. [01:53:52.480 --> 01:54:00.480] How did the policeman know he had unsafe brakes because he was going to get the brakes worked on? [01:54:00.480 --> 01:54:03.480] I don't know what he said to the cop. [01:54:03.480 --> 01:54:04.480] I don't know what he said to the cop. [01:54:04.480 --> 01:54:10.480] If he said, I'm getting the brakes worked on, or if he said, my brakes are bad, I've got to, [01:54:10.480 --> 01:54:13.480] I can't picture him being stupid enough to say, my brakes are bad. [01:54:13.480 --> 01:54:24.480] That's exactly the thing that I figured, that that ticket was written without probable cause. [01:54:24.480 --> 01:54:27.480] OK, what else did they charge him with? [01:54:27.480 --> 01:54:31.480] OK, unsafe lane changing. [01:54:31.480 --> 01:54:34.480] I think that was in two different counties. [01:54:34.480 --> 01:54:37.480] What does unsafe lane change mean? [01:54:37.480 --> 01:54:39.480] Well, we don't know. [01:54:39.480 --> 01:54:49.480] And for the, they gave him depositions on all those tickets already at the stop. [01:54:49.480 --> 01:54:56.480] At the stops, they gave him depositions, but it still says you have the right to ask for depositions. [01:54:56.480 --> 01:55:04.480] Wait a minute, you have the right to ask for depositions or representation? [01:55:04.480 --> 01:55:06.480] No, depositions. [01:55:06.480 --> 01:55:17.480] A deposition is a further explanation of what took place, why the cop gave you a ticket. [01:55:17.480 --> 01:55:22.480] And it's supposed to tell you things that the ticket doesn't tell you. [01:55:22.480 --> 01:55:28.480] Did they record these supposed definitions, depositions? [01:55:28.480 --> 01:55:31.480] Oh, I'm sure they recorded them, yeah, because he's got a copy. [01:55:31.480 --> 01:55:35.480] The defendant has a copy of all seven depositions. [01:55:35.480 --> 01:55:42.480] And they're supposed to tell you, they're supposed to amplify and explain what a ticket might not. [01:55:42.480 --> 01:55:47.480] And I've seen them thrown out of court when they don't, when they just say what the ticket says. [01:55:47.480 --> 01:55:52.480] But they do give a little bit of, you know, representation of what happened. [01:55:52.480 --> 01:55:57.480] Okay, you're saying he got six tickets? [01:55:57.480 --> 01:56:01.480] I think he got seven or eight, at least seven. [01:56:01.480 --> 01:56:03.480] At one stop? [01:56:03.480 --> 01:56:07.480] Seven, at two stops. [01:56:07.480 --> 01:56:10.480] Oh, okay, two different stops. [01:56:10.480 --> 01:56:13.480] And two different counties. [01:56:13.480 --> 01:56:16.480] Okay, what do you want to do about it? [01:56:16.480 --> 01:56:18.480] I want them to go away. [01:56:18.480 --> 01:56:19.480] I want to teach them a lesson. [01:56:19.480 --> 01:56:21.480] I want to play hardball with them. [01:56:21.480 --> 01:56:24.480] If he's willing to play hardball, I'm willing to play hardball. [01:56:24.480 --> 01:56:26.480] And I mean hardball. [01:56:26.480 --> 01:56:31.480] What standing do you have to intervene in the case? [01:56:31.480 --> 01:56:33.480] I wasn't even there. [01:56:33.480 --> 01:56:38.480] Can I represent him because of his medical condition? [01:56:38.480 --> 01:56:40.480] No. [01:56:40.480 --> 01:56:42.480] All right, he's got a stroke. [01:56:42.480 --> 01:56:45.480] He's been in bed for the last, well, [01:56:45.480 --> 01:56:47.480] the last week or so. [01:56:47.480 --> 01:56:48.480] He's been in bed. [01:56:48.480 --> 01:56:53.480] You should petition for a continuance for 22 years because he's had strokes [01:56:53.480 --> 01:57:00.480] and it will be that long before he is well enough to participate in a hearing. [01:57:00.480 --> 01:57:03.480] Are you serious, 22 years? [01:57:03.480 --> 01:57:08.480] No, maybe 10 years. [01:57:08.480 --> 01:57:14.480] They're going to try to prosecute this guy after he's had a stroke? [01:57:14.480 --> 01:57:16.480] Yeah, he had a serious stroke. [01:57:16.480 --> 01:57:20.480] His left side, I got to carry him. [01:57:20.480 --> 01:57:23.480] Was he vaccinated? [01:57:23.480 --> 01:57:25.480] No, no, no. [01:57:25.480 --> 01:57:27.480] He's like me. [01:57:27.480 --> 01:57:28.480] He knows. [01:57:28.480 --> 01:57:33.480] Has he been around people who were, were these police vaccinated? [01:57:33.480 --> 01:57:35.480] Well, I'm sure they were. [01:57:35.480 --> 01:57:37.480] And I know about the shedding. [01:57:37.480 --> 01:57:41.480] I'm a medical journalist, so I know all about that. [01:57:41.480 --> 01:57:49.480] Okay, charged the officers with shedding vaccine and causing his stroke. [01:57:49.480 --> 01:57:50.480] What caused his stroke? [01:57:50.480 --> 01:57:53.480] Do you have any idea? [01:57:53.480 --> 01:57:56.480] No. [01:57:56.480 --> 01:58:00.480] I'd like to talk to the doctor, though, with his permission, talk to the doctor. [01:58:00.480 --> 01:58:04.480] How old is he? [01:58:04.480 --> 01:58:06.480] He's 63. [01:58:06.480 --> 01:58:11.480] Oh, okay. So he's old enough to be getting strokes. [01:58:11.480 --> 01:58:14.480] Oh, yeah, definitely. [01:58:14.480 --> 01:58:17.480] Okay. [01:58:17.480 --> 01:58:23.480] Too complicated for us to give you any idea of what we can do because we don't know what the cases are. [01:58:23.480 --> 01:58:27.480] We're out of time. I apologize for that. [01:58:27.480 --> 01:58:33.480] Well, what I could do is to send you the tickets. [01:58:33.480 --> 01:58:37.480] Yeah, let me look at them and I'll give you my comment. [01:58:37.480 --> 01:58:38.480] Okay. [01:58:38.480 --> 01:58:42.480] I'm wondering about representation by next friend or something like that. [01:58:42.480 --> 01:58:45.480] Unfortunately, we're out of time. [01:58:45.480 --> 01:58:47.480] Thank you all for listening. Good night. [01:58:47.480 --> 01:58:50.480] Thank you. [01:58:50.480 --> 01:58:57.480] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.480 --> 01:59:04.480] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.480 --> 01:59:08.480] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.480 --> 01:59:11.480] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. 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