[00:00.000 --> 00:04.500] This news brief brought to you by the International News Net. [00:04.500 --> 00:09.800] Economist Lawrence Kotlikoff says U.S. government debt is not 13.5 trillion, [00:09.800 --> 00:15.700] but rather 200 trillion or 840 percent of gross domestic product. [00:15.700 --> 00:18.800] Writing in the September issue of Finance and Development, [00:18.800 --> 00:22.900] Kotlikoff says the International Monetary Fund has quietly confirmed [00:22.900 --> 00:25.400] the U.S. is in terrible fiscal trouble, [00:25.400 --> 00:30.900] far worse than the lender of last resort has previously acknowledged. [00:30.900 --> 00:36.000] The Tigris River, which bisects Baghdad and several other major Iraqi cities, [00:36.000 --> 00:40.800] has about one billion cubic meters of polluted material dumped into it. [00:40.800 --> 00:44.900] Kamel al-Sadiq, Baghdad province's expert on the environment, [00:44.900 --> 00:48.200] said pollution was surging in the river at an alarming rate [00:48.200 --> 00:52.400] and called for immediate measures to halt it. [00:52.400 --> 00:56.800] Burma said Thursday it may release democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi [00:56.800 --> 00:59.300] after the November 7th elections. [00:59.300 --> 01:04.000] The regime has detained Suu Kyi for 15 of the past 21 years. [01:04.000 --> 01:07.000] Critics have derided the upcoming elections as a sham [01:07.000 --> 01:11.600] since Suu Kyi and other opposition figures are not running. [01:11.600 --> 01:16.300] Foreign policy magazine Thursday posted online an administration memo [01:16.300 --> 01:19.000] stating the White House will continue funding countries [01:19.000 --> 01:21.500] that use children in their armed forces. [01:21.500 --> 01:26.900] These include Chad, Yemen, Sudan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. [01:26.900 --> 01:31.200] The memo signed by Barack Obama states the U.S. will continue to fund Yemen [01:31.200 --> 01:35.000] despite its use of child soldiers because a funding prohibition [01:35.000 --> 01:38.800] would jeopardize Yemen's capability to conduct special operations [01:38.800 --> 01:41.000] and counterterrorism missions. [01:41.000 --> 01:45.300] In the past year, the U.S. has covertly extended its war on terror to Yemen, [01:45.300 --> 01:47.500] firing cruise missiles at terror suspects [01:47.500 --> 01:51.100] and helping the Yemeni military carry out home raids. [01:51.100 --> 01:54.900] Children as young as 14 are recruited by Yemen's military. [01:54.900 --> 01:58.500] According to the White House memo, there are 1,200 boys and girls [01:58.500 --> 02:04.700] as young as 12 in Chad's army, serving as combatants, guards, and cooks. [02:04.700 --> 02:07.500] Further grim details of the war in Iraq have emerged [02:07.500 --> 02:11.100] from the 400,000 documents published by WikiLeaks. [02:11.100 --> 02:16.300] During the violent month of 2005, one police unit known as the Wolf Brigade [02:16.300 --> 02:20.600] struck more fear into Iraqis than the occupying U.S. Army. [02:20.600 --> 02:22.900] Brutal even by Iraqi standards, [02:22.900 --> 02:26.300] Wolf Brigade soldiers and officers answered to no one. [02:26.300 --> 02:29.000] The unit's reputation was well known in Iraq, [02:29.000 --> 02:33.500] but the full range of their abuses and close cooperation with the U.S. Army [02:33.500 --> 02:38.000] remained in the shadows until WikiLeaks revealed them in stark detail. [02:38.000 --> 02:42.500] Torture and death were synonymous with the almost exclusively Shia unit. [02:42.500 --> 02:47.600] They were often seen alongside U.S. forces, particularly in Baghdad and Mosul. [02:47.600 --> 02:52.100] Omar Salem Shebab, a Wolf Brigade torture victim, said, [02:52.100 --> 03:19.100] The Americans weren't just witnesses, they were part of the operation against us. [03:52.100 --> 04:04.100] Also, I have a special for your customers tonight. [04:04.100 --> 04:08.100] You have a special for our customers tonight? [04:08.100 --> 04:11.100] That's right, folks. [04:11.100 --> 04:16.100] Tonight is Friday, October 29th. [04:16.100 --> 04:20.700] We are here on the Rule of Law radio, ruleoflawradio.com. [04:20.700 --> 04:26.900] That was our guest, Steven Rogers, piping in, just as we were coming on the air, folks. [04:26.900 --> 04:28.100] Good evening, everyone. [04:28.100 --> 04:29.300] Yes, yes. [04:29.300 --> 04:31.500] We are so happy to have Steven Rogers tonight. [04:31.500 --> 04:37.300] Tonight we're going to be talking to Steven for a few segments during this hour. [04:37.300 --> 04:41.500] And we're going to be getting into various different aspects of nutritional [04:41.500 --> 04:48.500] and political aspects of hemp and some of the other nutritional aspects of the herbs [04:48.500 --> 04:50.700] that are in his product. [04:50.700 --> 04:55.100] And we wanted to start off first just by giving our own personal testimonials, [04:55.100 --> 04:58.500] Randy and I, of our experiences with the product. [04:58.500 --> 05:01.700] It's been about a month now that I've been taking it on a daily basis. [05:01.700 --> 05:04.700] And I just have to say I'm very impressed. [05:04.700 --> 05:09.700] I've seen a change just in my health in general. [05:09.700 --> 05:15.700] It doesn't seem like I'm so tired all the time and my energy levels. [05:15.700 --> 05:20.900] It's not like they're spiking, but everything just seems to be more of an even keel. [05:20.900 --> 05:21.900] And I really like that. [05:21.900 --> 05:26.900] And I guess that goes to the balancing aspects that we had talked about last time. [05:26.900 --> 05:28.300] Yes, definitely. [05:28.300 --> 05:29.300] Right, okay. [05:29.300 --> 05:32.500] So it's not like, you know, folks are going to get some big caffeine rush [05:32.500 --> 05:33.700] or some other kind of rush. [05:33.700 --> 05:37.100] I mean, it's just going to balance you out one way or the other, [05:37.100 --> 05:40.100] whether if you've got too much energy it may kind of calm you down [05:40.100 --> 05:42.500] or if you don't have enough energy it might bring you up. [05:42.500 --> 05:45.300] But it's never like any kind of jittery feel. [05:45.300 --> 05:48.500] It's a very balancing feeling. [05:48.500 --> 05:52.100] And so just overall I just feel more healthy. [05:52.100 --> 05:58.100] It's kind of hard to pinpoint exactly, you know, some exact specifics. [05:58.100 --> 06:01.700] But I would say it's an improvement and I really enjoy it. [06:01.700 --> 06:03.100] I'm continuing to take it. [06:03.100 --> 06:04.100] Well, that's excellent. [06:04.100 --> 06:07.700] You know, that just goes right toward the heart of adaptogens they're all about. [06:07.700 --> 06:09.100] They help us adapt. [06:09.100 --> 06:14.900] And their key function is helping the body to maintain homeostasis efficiently. [06:14.900 --> 06:17.300] That's the key word, efficiently. [06:17.300 --> 06:18.700] We're in homeostasis. [06:18.700 --> 06:22.300] It's just our body either runs inefficiently to maintain it [06:22.300 --> 06:23.700] or efficiently to maintain it. [06:23.700 --> 06:29.300] And people who run inefficiently are usually sick or tired all of the time. [06:29.300 --> 06:34.300] If people have more efficient systems, that is, they maintain homeostasis easy, [06:34.300 --> 06:38.100] they have all that extra energy to create, to love, to give, to, you know, [06:38.100 --> 06:39.700] live life to its fullest. [06:39.700 --> 06:42.300] And that's the key to the adaptogenic herbs [06:42.300 --> 06:44.900] and the other ingredients in this formula. [06:44.900 --> 06:45.700] Absolutely. [06:45.700 --> 06:48.700] And Randy, you had some experiences as well. [06:48.700 --> 06:52.100] Yes, I can go to something very specific. [06:52.100 --> 06:53.900] Nice. [06:53.900 --> 06:57.900] I was, I've been working on this foreclosure issue for quite a while [06:57.900 --> 07:00.700] and I've pretty well been running around the clock. [07:00.700 --> 07:07.700] I sent an email to a friend in, a voicemail to a friend in Minnesota [07:07.700 --> 07:11.700] and she sent a response back asking me what was wrong with me, [07:11.700 --> 07:15.300] what had happened that I hadn't told her. [07:15.300 --> 07:16.500] And that surprised me. [07:16.500 --> 07:20.300] So I pulled the voicemail I sent to her and listened to it [07:20.300 --> 07:23.500] and I was surprised at what I sounded like. [07:23.500 --> 07:26.500] And of those of you who were listening a couple of months ago, [07:26.500 --> 07:32.700] you probably noticed that my voice began to kind of falter. [07:32.700 --> 07:38.100] And I had kind of noticed it, but I just felt exhausted. [07:38.100 --> 07:43.500] And I was gaining weight, I was uncomfortable. [07:43.500 --> 07:47.900] I would eat and always be hungry even when I'm stuffed. [07:47.900 --> 07:48.700] Wow. [07:48.700 --> 07:53.900] I got the chintrition, I took the first dose of it [07:53.900 --> 07:57.300] and that constant hunger was gone. [07:57.300 --> 07:59.900] Gone and it hasn't come back. [07:59.900 --> 08:04.700] My voice is back where it was, my energy level is back up. [08:04.700 --> 08:08.300] I am really amazed at how well it worked. [08:08.300 --> 08:15.100] And that is, that's the best testimony that someone can give about our product [08:15.100 --> 08:18.100] is it just returns them back to themselves. [08:18.100 --> 08:22.300] And what that basically does is it restores the body's battery, [08:22.300 --> 08:28.100] the kidneys and the adrenal gland with the reserve life force that we need. [08:28.100 --> 08:30.100] What people don't understand about the kidneys, [08:30.100 --> 08:32.700] namely the adrenal glands that sit on top of them, [08:32.700 --> 08:35.700] is that a primary mechanism for responding to stress. [08:35.700 --> 08:39.500] Going through foreclosures and anything, that's a tremendous amount of stress. [08:39.500 --> 08:43.900] So when we're up against that all the time, we drain the body's battery. [08:43.900 --> 08:47.900] So what adaptogens and the superfoods and the hemp protein does [08:47.900 --> 08:51.700] is it goes in there and restores those batteries so we return to ourselves. [08:51.700 --> 08:56.300] We can function normal and in an optimum way. [08:56.300 --> 08:59.900] So that's a great testimony. [08:59.900 --> 09:06.900] Well, I'm sure pleased with it and right now I can't see not having it. [09:06.900 --> 09:09.900] Excellent. All right, I got a steady customer. [09:09.900 --> 09:15.900] Well, another thing, it dramatically decreased my appetite. [09:15.900 --> 09:16.900] Yes, stress eating. [09:16.900 --> 09:17.900] My energy stayed up. [09:17.900 --> 09:23.300] So whatever it was I was missing and starving for, I got it from this. [09:23.300 --> 09:28.500] So whatever it cost to buy the product, that is chump change [09:28.500 --> 09:32.300] compared to what I've been spending trying to get rid of this hunger [09:32.300 --> 09:34.300] that wouldn't go away. [09:34.300 --> 09:35.500] That's great, Randy. [09:35.500 --> 09:39.700] You know, the key to eating healthy, you know, [09:39.700 --> 09:43.700] this is the reverse of what we think of in the West, [09:43.700 --> 09:49.700] is nutrient-dense, low-calorie, balanced in the macronutrients, [09:49.700 --> 09:52.100] that is protein fats and carbohydrates. [09:52.100 --> 09:56.700] We typically have calorie-high and nutrient-depleted food. [09:56.700 --> 09:58.700] Two things are happening here, it sounds like, [09:58.700 --> 10:01.700] is that you're getting a lot of the nutrients that you weren't getting [10:01.700 --> 10:04.700] and also this helps us adapt to stress. [10:04.700 --> 10:07.700] So all of the stress eating and the grazing that we do throughout the day [10:07.700 --> 10:11.700] to help calm all of the feelings and stuff we can't deal with, [10:11.700 --> 10:13.700] now they're being dealt with more effectively [10:13.700 --> 10:16.700] because the adrenals and the other parts of the endocrine system [10:16.700 --> 10:18.700] can respond effectively. [10:18.700 --> 10:20.700] So beautiful. [10:20.700 --> 10:23.700] Yeah, well, this is, I especially need it. [10:23.700 --> 10:25.700] I'm not the one going through foreclosure. [10:25.700 --> 10:28.700] If I was, I would only have one to deal with. [10:28.700 --> 10:31.700] The problem is, I've got about 800. [10:31.700 --> 10:34.700] Wow. [10:34.700 --> 10:42.700] Well, I'm really pleased to hear the results you all are having with centrician. [10:42.700 --> 10:45.700] I hope we can have this great product [10:45.700 --> 10:49.700] and have it to share with everyone over the course of the next three years. [10:49.700 --> 10:52.700] It's part of the talk I want to talk about tonight, [10:52.700 --> 10:56.700] that it may not, it's starting to look like over the next three years [10:56.700 --> 10:59.700] that they're dismantling all of our health freedoms [10:59.700 --> 11:03.700] and nutrition is a big one that's on the forefront. [11:03.700 --> 11:07.700] So all the listeners out there, you need to start to mobilize [11:07.700 --> 11:11.700] and write your congressmen and write your senators [11:11.700 --> 11:19.700] and start calling people and get motivated to stop these things that are happening [11:19.700 --> 11:22.700] with the Codex Alimentarius languages coming up, [11:22.700 --> 11:27.700] the GMP laws that are already putting manufacturers out of business left and right. [11:27.700 --> 11:29.700] I mean, there's just so many things going on, [11:29.700 --> 11:34.700] and that ties into our key ingredient in centrician, [11:34.700 --> 11:37.700] which is hemp seed protein and the prohibition on hemp, [11:37.700 --> 11:43.700] which is another ridiculous law that's been in effect since 1941 [11:43.700 --> 11:47.700] that we need to get removed. [11:47.700 --> 11:51.700] Yes, absolutely. I mean, it is my understanding also. [11:51.700 --> 11:55.700] I mean, hemp is such an incredible product, I mean, not just for the nutritional value, [11:55.700 --> 12:03.700] but I mean, just for the fiber itself, for making paper, for making fabric, [12:03.700 --> 12:06.700] for making rope, just all kinds of things. [12:06.700 --> 12:10.700] I mean, they used to make, that was what they would make the sails out of [12:10.700 --> 12:14.700] for these giant ships that came across the ocean. [12:14.700 --> 12:17.700] Okay, the riggings, everything was made from hemp. [12:17.700 --> 12:21.700] I mean, cotton is just not strong enough for those kinds of stress levels, [12:21.700 --> 12:26.700] and it used to be that, and I'm not in agreement with any kind of government regulations [12:26.700 --> 12:28.700] by any means because I'm a libertarian, [12:28.700 --> 12:32.700] but it used to be so extreme that our own government would require [12:32.700 --> 12:37.700] that 10% of all farmers' farmlands had to grow hemp. [12:37.700 --> 12:40.700] Yes, you're right, and one of two of the biggest hemp growers [12:40.700 --> 12:45.700] were our forefathers, Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. [12:45.700 --> 12:48.700] In fact, the Declaration of Independence and, [12:48.700 --> 12:53.700] or the draft of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were crafted on hemp. [12:53.700 --> 12:58.700] You know, hemp, a lot of people, there's been a negative propaganda campaign, [12:58.700 --> 13:02.700] like with everything else, but against hemp since the 1940s, [13:02.700 --> 13:08.700] and it's a very interesting painted history, if you would, about hemp. [13:08.700 --> 13:11.700] A lot of people, when they hear hemp, they immediately think of marijuana, [13:11.700 --> 13:16.700] and marijuana is a slang term for a certain variety of hemp. [13:16.700 --> 13:18.700] When we're thinking of the two different types of hemp, [13:18.700 --> 13:24.700] we're thinking of non-THC and THC hemp, and the non-THC, the industrial, medical, [13:24.700 --> 13:29.700] the type of hemp we're discussing here is cannabis sativa sativa, [13:29.700 --> 13:32.700] and the cannabis sativa indica is the kind you smoke, [13:32.700 --> 13:36.700] so you can say one is rope and one is dope. [13:36.700 --> 13:40.700] And I'm not against the, I don't, of course, I'm not a medical doctor, [13:40.700 --> 13:44.700] I'm a holistic physician, so I can't refer people to medical marijuana, [13:44.700 --> 13:49.700] but it does have its uses also, but the one I'm concerned about is the non-THC kind. [13:49.700 --> 13:53.700] And that has been used since the beginning of time, you know, [13:53.700 --> 13:58.700] as far back as history has been recorded, for all kinds of purposes, [13:58.700 --> 14:04.700] and many of them, as you said, for food, for body care, for paper, for fuel. [14:04.700 --> 14:12.700] I mean, Henry Ford in 1941 completely crafted an entire body of a car out of hemp plastic. [14:12.700 --> 14:17.700] It was ten times, it could take ten times the impact of steel, [14:17.700 --> 14:19.700] and it was a fraction of the weight. [14:19.700 --> 14:20.700] That's amazing. [14:20.700 --> 14:25.700] He also, at that time, that car was designed to run off of a hemp-based ethanol. [14:25.700 --> 14:26.700] Yes. [14:26.700 --> 14:27.700] Now, we know the most, what's that? [14:27.700 --> 14:31.700] Well, I was just going to say, with the hemp-based ethanol, [14:31.700 --> 14:38.700] one acre of hemp will make as much ethanol as ten acres of corn. [14:38.700 --> 14:40.700] Yes, that's the important thing. [14:40.700 --> 14:45.700] We don't have anything right now as far in the ethanol that will rival oil, [14:45.700 --> 14:47.700] but we do with hemp. [14:47.700 --> 14:50.700] We don't have anything that's currently growing in the United States, [14:50.700 --> 14:56.700] but the beauty about hemp is it's pesticide, it's pest-resistant, it's drought-resistant. [14:56.700 --> 15:01.700] You can take all this arid land up here in Montana and Wyoming and the Dakotas [15:01.700 --> 15:04.700] and grow hemp and put people to work. [15:04.700 --> 15:10.700] You know, I use hemp in my product because I cannot find one food source, [15:10.700 --> 15:14.700] one foodstuff that rivals hemp's bioavailability. [15:14.700 --> 15:19.700] It's one of the only plant proteins that's a complete protein. [15:19.700 --> 15:23.700] So all the vegans and vegetarians out there, they need to listen up right now, [15:23.700 --> 15:27.700] because one of the things in my practice, I used to rescue vegans and vegetarians [15:27.700 --> 15:31.700] from those kinds of diets because they weren't getting complete protein, [15:31.700 --> 15:35.700] and we would have them start to use quinoa, amaranth, or hemp. [15:35.700 --> 15:38.700] Hemp is far better because hemp is not only bioactive. [15:38.700 --> 15:40.700] It's neutral in its energetics. [15:40.700 --> 15:41.700] It's not too hot or too cold. [15:41.700 --> 15:43.700] The pH is just right. [15:43.700 --> 15:47.700] It's also got all the amino acids that are synergistically balanced. [15:47.700 --> 15:49.700] It's full of plant enzymes. [15:49.700 --> 15:52.700] It's one of the highest plant enzymes of any foodstuff available, [15:52.700 --> 15:57.700] which those are the spark, the ignition you need to be able to metabolize foods [15:57.700 --> 15:58.700] and assimilate them. [15:58.700 --> 16:01.700] It's also full of all kinds of other vitamins, and it has all the omegas, [16:01.700 --> 16:04.700] omega-3s, omega-6s, and omega-9s. [16:04.700 --> 16:08.700] I mean, name another food source that can do that. [16:08.700 --> 16:10.700] So I mean, it's complete in and of itself. [16:10.700 --> 16:13.700] A person could survive just off hemp if they had to. [16:13.700 --> 16:15.700] Why aren't we growing it in this country? [16:15.700 --> 16:22.700] Because of the negative propaganda that was put in place after the prohibition of alcohol. [16:22.700 --> 16:27.700] I mean, there's big industrialists that were involved in this, the press. [16:27.700 --> 16:29.700] Randolph Hearst was involved in this. [16:29.700 --> 16:35.700] Anslinger, which is the head of alcohol prohibitions involved, [16:35.700 --> 16:37.700] and Mellon Banks involved in this. [16:37.700 --> 16:42.700] Yes, absolutely, and obviously the petroleum industry doesn't want it around [16:42.700 --> 16:44.700] because it will put the petroleum industry out of business. [16:44.700 --> 16:49.700] It will put the logging industry out of business because you can make paper with it. [16:49.700 --> 16:55.700] And of course, the THC version will put the pharmaceutical business out of business. [16:55.700 --> 16:57.700] So there's a lot of reasons. [16:57.700 --> 17:01.700] We'll be right back, folks. [17:01.700 --> 17:05.700] Capital Coin and Bullion is your local source for rare coins, precious metals, [17:05.700 --> 17:08.700] and coin supplies in the Austin metro area. [17:08.700 --> 17:10.700] We also ship worldwide. [17:10.700 --> 17:14.700] We are a family-owned and operated business that offers competitive prices [17:14.700 --> 17:16.700] on your coin and metals purchases. [17:16.700 --> 17:21.700] We buy, sell, trade, and consign rare coins, gold and silver coin collections, [17:21.700 --> 17:23.700] precious metals, and scrap gold. [17:23.700 --> 17:27.700] We will purchase and sell gold and jewelry items as well. [17:27.700 --> 17:29.700] We offer daily specials on coins and bullions. [17:29.700 --> 17:33.700] We're located at 5448 Barnett Road, Suite 3, [17:33.700 --> 17:39.700] and we're open Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. [17:39.700 --> 17:42.700] You are welcome to stop in our shop during regular business hours [17:42.700 --> 17:47.700] or call 512-646-6440 with any questions. [17:47.700 --> 17:52.700] Ask for Chad and say you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio or 90.1 FM. [17:52.700 --> 17:59.700] That's Capital Coin and Bullion, 512-646-6440. [17:59.700 --> 18:04.700] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:04.700 --> 18:08.700] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:08.700 --> 18:12.700] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [18:12.700 --> 18:14.700] and now you can win two. [18:14.700 --> 18:16.700] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [18:16.700 --> 18:20.700] on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [18:20.700 --> 18:23.700] what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, [18:23.700 --> 18:25.700] how to answer letters and phone calls, [18:25.700 --> 18:28.700] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [18:28.700 --> 18:33.700] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:33.700 --> 18:38.700] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.700 --> 18:40.700] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.700 --> 18:43.700] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [18:43.700 --> 18:48.700] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:48.700 --> 18:56.700] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-f at yahoo.com [18:56.700 --> 19:16.700] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:16.700 --> 19:18.700] Okay, folks, we're back. [19:18.700 --> 19:27.700] Yes, so there's a lot of reasons that this corporate fascist government that we've had, [19:27.700 --> 19:35.700] total fascism, ever since, well, probably the beginning of the turn of the last century at the least, [19:35.700 --> 19:40.700] if not long before, the corporates controlling, [19:40.700 --> 19:43.700] the corporates who are controlling our government right now [19:43.700 --> 19:49.700] forced the legislators to outlaw the growing of hemp in this country, [19:49.700 --> 19:55.700] and we're talking about the industrial form of hemp now, not the THC version, [19:55.700 --> 19:58.700] because you can make plastics out of it. [19:58.700 --> 20:00.700] You can make paper out of it. [20:00.700 --> 20:02.700] You can make fuel out of it. [20:02.700 --> 20:05.700] You can also make gasoline out of it, not the petroleum gasoline, [20:05.700 --> 20:10.700] but anything that you can make ethanol out of, you can distill into alcohol, [20:10.700 --> 20:16.700] and alcohol is basically like another you can use in combustion engines like gasoline, [20:16.700 --> 20:20.700] so it would totally do away with the petroleum industry altogether, [20:20.700 --> 20:25.700] and there wouldn't be a monopoly over the land, because hemp is a weed. [20:25.700 --> 20:29.700] It will grow anywhere, and it's pest resistant, as Stephen was saying, [20:29.700 --> 20:34.700] and it doesn't really need much fertilizer, and it will grow in almost any climate, [20:34.700 --> 20:39.700] and so with the oil industry, it's all dependent on who owns the land, where the minerals are. [20:39.700 --> 20:42.700] Well, with hemp, everyone could grow it, [20:42.700 --> 20:46.700] so it would totally put the oil barons out of business, [20:46.700 --> 20:51.700] so that's a reason, and it would put the logging industry out of business, [20:51.700 --> 20:53.700] because you can make paper out of it. [20:53.700 --> 20:58.700] I mean, textiles, it would take over the textile industry, [20:58.700 --> 21:03.700] and of course the THC version, and put the pharmaceutical business out of business as well, [21:03.700 --> 21:09.700] so it's the enemy of big corporates, big time, [21:09.700 --> 21:11.700] so Stephen, why don't you get into a little bit more, [21:11.700 --> 21:16.700] you were talking about the plastics, and then let's talk about the nutritional aspects of it. [21:16.700 --> 21:19.700] All right, well, absolutely. [21:19.700 --> 21:23.700] First of all, I want to extend a special we're having just for your listeners, [21:23.700 --> 21:27.700] and they can go to your website and click on our banner, [21:27.700 --> 21:32.700] and when they get to the top of our card, they will see a nice big picture of Deborah, [21:32.700 --> 21:34.700] and if you click on that, it will take you to the special, [21:34.700 --> 21:37.700] and the special is if you buy one, you get the second one half off, [21:37.700 --> 21:42.700] so it works out the wholesale prices for first-time users who are a little skeptical of the product, [21:42.700 --> 21:45.700] so go ahead and click on that and read about it, [21:45.700 --> 21:53.700] and I think it's important to understand why most people still think of hemp as marijuana, [21:53.700 --> 21:59.700] which marijuana is actually a slang term that was used by Hispanics in Central America [21:59.700 --> 22:05.700] to describe the THC Cannabis Sativa Indica, not the Cannabis Sativa Sativa, [22:05.700 --> 22:13.700] but when I explain all this, you'll understand who actually tagged hemp and why they used that term. [22:13.700 --> 22:19.700] You know, hemp was a primary source of paper and textile for thousands of years [22:19.700 --> 22:22.700] until just after here recently in the 20th century, [22:22.700 --> 22:27.700] and it was about that time that companies like DuPont were first developing chemicals [22:27.700 --> 22:30.700] that enabled trees to be processed to paper. [22:30.700 --> 22:37.700] Now, DuPont's chemicals made wood paper cheaper than paper made from manual crops like hemp, [22:37.700 --> 22:41.700] but that was only on the initial harvest because unless you're growing loblolly pines, [22:41.700 --> 22:44.700] which are fast-growing in Georgia and Florida, [22:44.700 --> 22:50.700] and it still takes 16 years to get your first crop out of those, usually, you know, [22:50.700 --> 22:55.700] hemp was far better because you could every 120 days have a crop and every year grow it again, [22:55.700 --> 22:57.700] and that's how they do the public right there. [22:57.700 --> 22:59.700] Sure, it was cheaper on the initial harvest, [22:59.700 --> 23:06.700] but then when you look at the return crop rotation every year, then, of course, that argument's silly. [23:06.700 --> 23:10.700] Now, at the same time, William Randolph Hearst, and this is an important name in this [23:10.700 --> 23:14.700] because he had owned all the largest newspapers in the United States, [23:14.700 --> 23:16.700] and he was backed by Mellon Bank. [23:16.700 --> 23:20.700] Now, Mellon Bank, that's important too, and they both invested, [23:20.700 --> 23:25.700] or Mellon invested in Randolph Hearst in timberland and wood paper mills. [23:25.700 --> 23:28.700] So Randolph Hearst was not only the big newspaper guy, [23:28.700 --> 23:34.700] but he owned paper mills and timberland that he was also using DuPont's chemicals for the process. [23:34.700 --> 23:38.700] So we'll look at this crazy marriage that was going on. [23:38.700 --> 23:42.700] So DuPont also developed at the same time came up with nylon fiber, [23:42.700 --> 23:46.700] and that was a direct competitor to hemp in the textile and cordage industry. [23:46.700 --> 23:50.700] Nylon, at that time, would even build a synthetic hemp, [23:50.700 --> 23:56.700] but they dropped that term fairly quickly after they got hemp out of the competitive marketplace. [23:56.700 --> 24:02.700] So now DuPont was also manufacturing at the time chemical pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizer [24:02.700 --> 24:08.700] used in the cotton industry, and the cotton industry was the number one competitor with hemp. [24:08.700 --> 24:10.700] Now, cotton can't even come close to hemp. [24:10.700 --> 24:14.700] Their fibers are three-quarters of an inch long, and hemp can be several feet, [24:14.700 --> 24:17.700] I mean, up to, in some cases, 12 to 14 feet. [24:17.700 --> 24:26.700] In fact, hemp, to the untrained eye, the Cannabis Sativa Sativa looks completely different from Cannabis Sativa Indica. [24:26.700 --> 24:30.700] It looks more like bamboo other than your typical marijuana. [24:30.700 --> 24:35.700] So now Mellon Bank, this is the important name because this is the guy with all the money. [24:35.700 --> 24:44.700] He was owned, or Mellon Bank actually was owned by U.S. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon. [24:44.700 --> 24:46.700] So can you imagine this? [24:46.700 --> 24:52.700] The U.S. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon was also the owner of the bank that was financing all these industrialists. [24:52.700 --> 24:57.700] He was DuPont's primary financier, he was Hertz's primary financier, [24:57.700 --> 25:01.700] and his niece was married to Harry Aingslinger, [25:01.700 --> 25:05.700] who was a definite commissioner of the federal government's alcohol prohibition campaign. [25:05.700 --> 25:11.700] Now, after the repeal of the prohibition, Aingslinger and all his bureaucracy were out of a job. [25:11.700 --> 25:14.700] But Treasurer Mellon, he didn't let them go without a job. [25:14.700 --> 25:19.700] No, he created a new government bureaucracy called the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, [25:19.700 --> 25:22.700] and he not only kept them employed, but now he went after hemp. [25:22.700 --> 25:28.700] Hemp was the number one enemy because Popular Mechanics at that particular time [25:28.700 --> 25:31.700] predicted hemp would be the world's first billion-dollar crop. [25:31.700 --> 25:35.700] It would support thousands of jobs, today it would be millions of jobs, [25:35.700 --> 25:41.700] and provide a vast array of consumer products from dynamite to plastics. [25:41.700 --> 25:48.700] Now, the potential rejuvenation of hemp was not only a threat to Mellon's friends and business associates, [25:48.700 --> 25:53.700] but it was also just a threat to their control on the population. [25:53.700 --> 25:58.700] It was obviously a big threat to DuPont, his petrochemical and synthetic fiber. [25:58.700 --> 26:07.700] So what they did is they began to confuse through the Randolph-Hertz's papers, [26:07.700 --> 26:14.700] they began to confuse initially hemp, cannabis, sativa sativa, and cannabis sativa indica [26:14.700 --> 26:18.700] by calling both of them and lumping them in as marijuana. [26:18.700 --> 26:23.700] Then, at the time, racism was very high, so they tapped into that racism, [26:23.700 --> 26:29.700] and they began to publish hundreds of stories, which of course were not true, negative propaganda, [26:29.700 --> 26:34.700] that Hispanics were coming across the border, namely Mexicans and African Americans, [26:34.700 --> 26:39.700] and they were murdering and raping people, namely white women. [26:39.700 --> 26:42.700] Of course, this created all kinds of outrage, [26:42.700 --> 26:46.700] and they were disrespectful to whites in general when they used this stuff. [26:46.700 --> 26:52.700] So that's how the prohibition of hemp came about. [26:52.700 --> 26:55.700] Yeah, what a whitewash, so to speak. [26:55.700 --> 26:59.700] So now, Ainslinger, this is important in what's going on today. [26:59.700 --> 27:02.700] Once they got it out of the United States, they didn't stop there. [27:02.700 --> 27:11.700] Of course, Ainslinger went to work with the UN, and they began an entire campaign, [27:11.700 --> 27:16.700] negative campaigning against hemp all over the entire globe. [27:16.700 --> 27:20.700] So, for example, here's something that I didn't know. [27:20.700 --> 27:26.700] Bangladesh, bang means marijuana, and Bangladesh means marijuana land and people. [27:26.700 --> 27:30.700] Now, the people in Bangladesh, for thousands of years, [27:30.700 --> 27:35.700] had used it not only to make a certain kind of concrete to make their homes, [27:35.700 --> 27:40.700] but they used it for their clothes, they used it for their food, they used it in trade, [27:40.700 --> 27:45.700] they used it, you know, the fibers to weave baskets to make rope, [27:45.700 --> 27:47.700] as you said before, to make sails. [27:47.700 --> 27:49.700] Now, the U.S. government went into Bangladesh [27:49.700 --> 27:54.700] and cropped up their entire country with toxic herbicides to try to kill out hemp. [27:54.700 --> 27:57.700] And not only did they poison the people of Bangladesh, [27:57.700 --> 28:01.700] but they killed all the hemp that was holding the damn hillsides together. [28:01.700 --> 28:03.700] So what happens in Bangladesh every year? [28:03.700 --> 28:04.700] They have a flood season. [28:04.700 --> 28:09.700] So the massive flooding of landsides ended up killing thousands of people [28:09.700 --> 28:13.700] as a result of them crop-dusting the ground. [28:13.700 --> 28:15.700] And we've done that in other places. [28:15.700 --> 28:20.700] We pay King Assad of Syria to go in the camps of Lebanese Bedouin nomads, [28:20.700 --> 28:25.700] and they cut down their hemp fields, took all their food and fiber out. [28:25.700 --> 28:27.700] And we're still doing that today. [28:27.700 --> 28:34.700] In fact, part of the poorer countries, part of the deal for them to actually get aid from us [28:34.700 --> 28:40.700] is they develop their own bureaucracy that goes out and eradicates hemp [28:40.700 --> 28:43.700] from their hillsides and all the countryside. [28:43.700 --> 28:47.700] So they can't even get aid from us unless they go out and eradicate hemp, [28:47.700 --> 28:51.700] which is the easiest crop for them to grow. [28:51.700 --> 28:52.700] I mean, think about this. [28:52.700 --> 28:56.700] This stuff is a weed, and it will grow in sub-Saharan Africa. [28:56.700 --> 29:00.700] I mean, the most desolate places on the earth, [29:00.700 --> 29:04.700] the most nutrient-depleted soils, hemp will grow. [29:04.700 --> 29:10.700] And in fact, it's one of the few crops that if you plant it on any piece of land on this planet right now [29:10.700 --> 29:13.700] and you pull the hemp and you harvest it, [29:13.700 --> 29:16.700] and you go back and test that soil after you harvested that hemp, [29:16.700 --> 29:19.700] the soil is better off for the hemp being there. [29:19.700 --> 29:21.700] It doesn't take from the soil. [29:21.700 --> 29:23.700] It gives to the soil. [29:23.700 --> 29:28.700] Yeah, it's a great crop rotation plant because it replenishes the soil, as you say. [29:28.700 --> 29:31.700] Yeah, I mean, all of the – yes, exactly. [29:31.700 --> 29:34.700] Most of the trace metals go to the taproot, which they don't pull up. [29:34.700 --> 29:35.700] It stays in the ground. [29:35.700 --> 29:40.700] And then all the nice leaves fall down and put all the nice nitrogen back in the soil. [29:40.700 --> 29:42.700] Yeah, and going back to the proper role of government, [29:42.700 --> 29:46.700] what business does our government have anyway, number one, given foreign aid? [29:46.700 --> 29:51.700] They shouldn't be doing it all, much less going around killing other countries' crops. [29:51.700 --> 29:52.700] I mean, this is just ridiculous. [29:52.700 --> 29:55.700] This is not what the Founding Fathers had in mind. [29:55.700 --> 30:00.700] All right, we'll be back, folks, right after this break. [30:26.700 --> 30:30.700] ...to beat One Love Kitchen, Austin, Texas. [30:30.700 --> 30:31.700] The fountain of youth? [30:31.700 --> 30:33.700] How about the fountain of health? [30:33.700 --> 30:36.700] Turmeric, a golden herb used in Indian cooking, [30:36.700 --> 30:40.700] contains an amazing compound that has researchers doing cartwheels. [30:40.700 --> 30:41.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [30:41.700 --> 30:44.700] and I'll tell you about terrific turmeric in just a moment. [30:44.700 --> 30:48.700] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches [30:48.700 --> 30:52.700] and creating a massive database of your personal information. [30:52.700 --> 30:53.700] That's creepy. [30:53.700 --> 30:54.700] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:54.700 --> 30:58.700] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:58.700 --> 31:00.700] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, [31:00.700 --> 31:03.700] make a record of your searches or use tracking cookies, [31:03.700 --> 31:04.700] and they're third-party certified. [31:04.700 --> 31:09.700] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [31:09.700 --> 31:11.700] Great search results and total privacy. [31:11.700 --> 31:15.700] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:15.700 --> 31:19.700] Turmeric is the spice that lends that golden yellow color to curry dishes. [31:19.700 --> 31:21.700] It's been traditionally used in Asian medicine [31:21.700 --> 31:23.700] to treat everything from indigestion to arthritis. [31:23.700 --> 31:27.700] Now Western doctors say curcumin, a compound found in turmeric, [31:27.700 --> 31:29.700] can help treat breast cancer and liver disease, [31:29.700 --> 31:32.700] reduce inflammation, and lower cholesterol. [31:32.700 --> 31:34.700] It may also help Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, [31:34.700 --> 31:37.700] irritable bowel syndrome, depression, and even lymphoma. [31:37.700 --> 31:40.700] You don't need expensive supplements to get the benefits. [31:40.700 --> 31:42.700] Turmeric is available in the spice aisle of your supermarket [31:42.700 --> 31:44.700] or as an ingredient in curry. [31:44.700 --> 31:47.700] Heat some oil in a pan, sauté an onion, sprinkle in some turmeric, [31:47.700 --> 31:49.700] and add your favorite vegetable. [31:49.700 --> 31:52.700] Voila, no side effects and no prescription required. [31:52.700 --> 31:53.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:53.700 --> 32:22.700] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:23.700 --> 32:50.700] Thank you very much. [32:53.700 --> 33:22.700] Okay, folks. [33:22.700 --> 33:23.700] We are back. [33:23.700 --> 33:27.700] We're here with our very special guest, Stephen Rogers of Shintrician, [33:27.700 --> 33:30.700] and he's got a special deal going right now. [33:30.700 --> 33:34.700] If you click on the banner on ruleoflawradio.com, [33:34.700 --> 33:35.700] it's the big green banner. [33:35.700 --> 33:38.700] It's the top banner right underneath where the broadcasters are, [33:38.700 --> 33:40.700] the broadcasters section. [33:40.700 --> 33:43.700] It will say more energy, less stress. [33:43.700 --> 33:45.700] Click on that banner, and you buy one, [33:45.700 --> 33:48.700] get one at half price for our new customers. [33:48.700 --> 33:51.700] So I encourage everyone out there to get some Shintrician. [33:51.700 --> 33:53.700] Really, it will make you feel better. [33:53.700 --> 33:56.700] And I think maybe I just, for me personally, [33:56.700 --> 34:02.700] not having so much specific results like Randy is saying, [34:02.700 --> 34:07.700] is that I've just always been very health conscious about foods. [34:07.700 --> 34:08.700] I've always eaten spirulina. [34:08.700 --> 34:11.700] I've always tried to eat organic and balanced diet [34:11.700 --> 34:13.700] and try to eat macrobotic as much as I can, [34:13.700 --> 34:17.700] which means you pay attention to the pH balance of the foods, [34:17.700 --> 34:20.700] the mixture of foods in the dishes and stuff like that. [34:20.700 --> 34:23.700] And so for me, I think my health was already pretty good, [34:23.700 --> 34:26.700] and it's just brought me to a higher level, [34:26.700 --> 34:28.700] which I'm very much appreciative of. [34:28.700 --> 34:31.700] And with Randy, he's been eating all the empty calories since, [34:31.700 --> 34:37.700] and so it's brought him to a more healthier level as well. [34:37.700 --> 34:39.700] All right, now with Stephen. [34:39.700 --> 34:41.700] Okay, so Stephen, you're on a roll here. [34:41.700 --> 34:42.700] Tell us more. [34:42.700 --> 34:44.700] You're into the history and everything. [34:44.700 --> 34:48.700] You know, it's funny because I was a physician, [34:48.700 --> 34:52.700] and I used hemp as a carrier because the adaptogenic herbs, [34:52.700 --> 34:54.700] which are, they grow in herbs, [34:54.700 --> 35:00.700] that's the primary ingredients in our product. [35:00.700 --> 35:02.700] And I needed something because the body, [35:02.700 --> 35:03.700] we don't eat herbs all the time, [35:03.700 --> 35:05.700] so the body doesn't recognize them, [35:05.700 --> 35:07.700] and they don't assimilate them very well a lot of times. [35:07.700 --> 35:10.700] So I wanted to trick the body with some kind of food source [35:10.700 --> 35:14.700] that would cause the body to gobble up the herbs [35:14.700 --> 35:16.700] and we'd get a high assimilation rate. [35:16.700 --> 35:18.700] And that's why I started to use hemp. [35:18.700 --> 35:21.700] And I never thought of myself as a, you know, a hemp activist. [35:21.700 --> 35:25.700] And when I moved to Montana after I got out of practice [35:25.700 --> 35:28.700] and when I started to promote Shentrition [35:28.700 --> 35:31.700] and our Shen Life teachings and stuff like that, [35:31.700 --> 35:35.700] and I found that Montana is the only state in the entire country, [35:35.700 --> 35:38.700] and this just happened last year, they legalized the growing of hemp. [35:38.700 --> 35:44.700] Now I'm starting to think, hey, because I have 40 ingredients in my product, [35:44.700 --> 35:47.700] some of them come from Tibet and Nepal. [35:47.700 --> 35:49.700] I mean, all over the world they source these ingredients, [35:49.700 --> 35:52.700] and hemp is the closest ingredient grown. [35:52.700 --> 35:54.700] It's grown about 400 miles from me. [35:54.700 --> 35:56.700] A friend of mine actually has one of the biggest hemp growers [35:56.700 --> 35:58.700] right over in Canada. [35:58.700 --> 36:03.700] And it causes my production time to double to get that in this country. [36:03.700 --> 36:04.700] Can you believe that? [36:04.700 --> 36:07.700] It's the closest and it doubles my production time to get that. [36:07.700 --> 36:08.700] So I'm starting to think, you know what, [36:08.700 --> 36:11.700] maybe it's time to grow hemp here in the state of Montana. [36:11.700 --> 36:14.700] However, the feds, of course, haven't legalized it, [36:14.700 --> 36:15.700] but the state has. [36:15.700 --> 36:17.700] There are a few people trying to grow it. [36:17.700 --> 36:19.700] So I guess I am a hemp activist, [36:19.700 --> 36:21.700] and I may be a hemp farmer in the very near future, [36:21.700 --> 36:25.700] but to get back to what's really going on with hemp [36:25.700 --> 36:29.700] and the thing that we have to confront to get the prohibition lifted [36:29.700 --> 36:32.700] is the mistake the public has, [36:32.700 --> 36:35.700] and it's just due to ignorance and false propaganda, [36:35.700 --> 36:39.700] that one is the other, that rope is dope. [36:39.700 --> 36:42.700] I mean, the prohibition of domestic hemp growth [36:42.700 --> 36:45.700] is really what this is all about. [36:45.700 --> 36:46.700] It's all about money. [36:46.700 --> 36:48.700] I mean, the drug war is big business. [36:48.700 --> 36:49.700] It's huge business. [36:49.700 --> 36:51.700] If hemp cultivation were legalized, [36:51.700 --> 36:55.700] I mean, there will be an awful lot of DEA agents out of jobs. [36:55.700 --> 36:57.700] I mean, it's a fact. [36:57.700 --> 36:59.700] Consider this. [36:59.700 --> 37:05.700] Of the 1.5 billion cannabis plants found and destroyed by the U.S. drug agents [37:05.700 --> 37:08.700] in the 90s, I think somewhere between 93 and 97, [37:08.700 --> 37:11.700] only 14 million were marijuana. [37:11.700 --> 37:15.700] One and a half billion, only 14 million were marijuana. [37:15.700 --> 37:17.700] That's less than 1%. [37:17.700 --> 37:22.700] That means that 99% were all the rope kind, the low THC. [37:22.700 --> 37:25.700] So legalizing hemp would translate into laying off [37:25.700 --> 37:28.700] 99% of all the agents on the war on marijuana. [37:28.700 --> 37:31.700] That would be fewer guns, fewer helicopters, fewer automobiles, [37:31.700 --> 37:33.700] fewer flap jackets, fewer probation officers, [37:33.700 --> 37:36.700] parole officers, and so on and so forth. [37:36.700 --> 37:39.700] A lot of money in government, contracts. [37:39.700 --> 37:42.700] So people have a vested interest to keep their jobs [37:42.700 --> 37:44.700] and to keep that tax money coming in. [37:44.700 --> 37:46.700] I mean, hemp is a plant that can naturally [37:46.700 --> 37:51.700] and sustainably provide many products that are presently only available [37:51.700 --> 37:53.700] through some of the corporate giants we've been talking about, [37:53.700 --> 37:59.700] like DuPont Chemicals, International Paper, Texaco, BASF. [37:59.700 --> 38:01.700] I mean, think about this. [38:01.700 --> 38:05.700] These are major, major corporations that are really pulling the strings, [38:05.700 --> 38:07.700] all of your listeners know, and this one plant, [38:07.700 --> 38:11.700] what it would do to them would be, you know, it would be wow. [38:11.700 --> 38:15.700] You know, it would be awesome from our point of view [38:15.700 --> 38:17.700] what it would do to them. [38:17.700 --> 38:20.700] But again, you know, I use the product [38:20.700 --> 38:23.700] and I use the ingredient in my formula [38:23.700 --> 38:26.700] because I can't find another food stuff on the plant [38:26.700 --> 38:29.700] or on the planet that's more bioavailable. [38:29.700 --> 38:31.700] But just to run through some of those ingredients [38:31.700 --> 38:38.700] that hemp makes available is we use 38 other ingredients besides hemp. [38:38.700 --> 38:40.700] Holy basil is one of them. [38:40.700 --> 38:43.700] Lithium fruit, Foti, I mean, all of these, [38:43.700 --> 38:46.700] holy basil is the chief ingredient used in Ayurvedic medicine. [38:46.700 --> 38:51.700] It's herald for its ability to reduce stress, restore homeostasis. [38:51.700 --> 38:54.700] It's considered the all-in-one herb in Ayurveda. [38:54.700 --> 38:59.700] It's even used by meditators to lift consciousness for spiritual pursuits. [38:59.700 --> 39:02.700] Lithium fruit, of which a lot of people know as goji berry [39:02.700 --> 39:06.700] or wolfberry in this country, is another great adaptogen. [39:06.700 --> 39:09.700] It's also a great immune stimulator and a great immunomodulator. [39:09.700 --> 39:11.700] It's great for the skin. It's great for fertility. [39:11.700 --> 39:15.700] It's great to brighten the eyes. It's great for all-around energy. [39:15.700 --> 39:19.700] Foti, or hushu, as they call it in Chinese medicine, [39:19.700 --> 39:22.700] it's one of the chief ingredients of this formula. [39:22.700 --> 39:24.700] I've used it for years. [39:24.700 --> 39:27.700] I've had many people, many people call me and tell me, [39:27.700 --> 39:29.700] I can't figure out why my hair's regrowing [39:29.700 --> 39:32.700] or my hair's turning from white to brown. [39:32.700 --> 39:36.700] Well, it's the chief herb used in China [39:36.700 --> 39:41.700] for returning hair back to its normal color and regrowing follicles. [39:41.700 --> 39:43.700] And if you look at all the hair care products now [39:43.700 --> 39:46.700] and a lot of the synthetic pharmaceutical-type hair care products, [39:46.700 --> 39:52.700] they are synthetic copies of none other than Foti or hushu. [39:52.700 --> 39:55.700] Now, my favorite herb in this is American ginseng, [39:55.700 --> 39:58.700] and there are many different ginsengs, [39:58.700 --> 40:00.700] but American ginseng is far superior, [40:00.700 --> 40:02.700] and I'll tell you how far superior it is. [40:02.700 --> 40:03.700] The Chinese have got to figure it out. [40:03.700 --> 40:08.700] They buy up 85% of all the American ginseng we can produce. [40:08.700 --> 40:11.700] We don't even appreciate this great herb, but the Chinese, they do. [40:11.700 --> 40:17.700] They feel that their ginseng, which they ship outside their country, [40:17.700 --> 40:20.700] they export, and they turn around and buy up 85% of ours [40:20.700 --> 40:22.700] because ours is far superior. [40:22.700 --> 40:25.700] And you were talking about macrobiotics [40:25.700 --> 40:29.700] and being very conscious about pH levels [40:29.700 --> 40:33.700] that we call the energetic levels in Chinese medicine. [40:33.700 --> 40:35.700] Well, American ginseng, what makes it so superior [40:35.700 --> 40:38.700] is that it's not hot like a lot of other ginsengs. [40:38.700 --> 40:41.700] It doesn't create an excessive heat in the body or high acidity. [40:41.700 --> 40:43.700] It's actually neutral. [40:43.700 --> 40:46.700] And that's what's really key about this formula that I have, [40:46.700 --> 40:48.700] and you're talking about balancing, [40:48.700 --> 40:54.700] is it's always maintaining or at least helping people to maintain homeostasis. [40:54.700 --> 40:58.700] That is its neutral and its energetic quality. [40:58.700 --> 41:02.700] It's a great immunomodulator and immunostimulator. [41:02.700 --> 41:03.700] What does that mean? [41:03.700 --> 41:05.700] It stimulates the immune system when it's low, [41:05.700 --> 41:09.700] but it also regulates it so you don't have a hyperimmune system. [41:09.700 --> 41:12.700] There's a lot of people out there who have autoimmune problems. [41:12.700 --> 41:14.700] They can't take things that just throw their immune system out of whack. [41:14.700 --> 41:16.700] So it's one thing to stimulate the immune system, [41:16.700 --> 41:19.700] but you also want it to be modulated or regulated. [41:19.700 --> 41:22.700] So, again, we come back to balance, [41:22.700 --> 41:25.700] and that's the important thing because there's a stragolus root in there. [41:25.700 --> 41:27.700] There's a tract of loads in there. [41:27.700 --> 41:28.700] There's licorice in there. [41:28.700 --> 41:29.700] There's rhodiola. [41:29.700 --> 41:31.700] Now, the rhodiola is an incredible herb. [41:31.700 --> 41:35.700] Most of it's grown in Tibet, very high altitude. [41:35.700 --> 41:39.700] It's, oddly enough, it's great for lung expansion. [41:39.700 --> 41:41.700] Well, you're 14,000 feet. [41:41.700 --> 41:46.700] You have herbs there that help for not only lung expansion, [41:46.700 --> 41:50.700] but they help you to breathe easier, but also for blood thinning. [41:50.700 --> 41:55.700] I mean, this rhodiola, there's an old story about rhodiola in Tibet. [41:55.700 --> 41:57.700] It's their chief longevity herb, [41:57.700 --> 42:00.700] and the story goes that those who regularly took rhodiola [42:00.700 --> 42:02.700] easily lived to see 100 years. [42:02.700 --> 42:06.700] Now, I can't imagine anyone in Tibet in that harsh environment [42:06.700 --> 42:09.700] living past 78 years of age [42:09.700 --> 42:13.700] and to think that people actually lived past 100 years in Tibet. [42:13.700 --> 42:16.700] I mean, that's an amazing, remarkable feat because, I mean, [42:16.700 --> 42:18.700] Tibet is very, very harsh winter. [42:18.700 --> 42:21.700] It's very dry, very high altitude, barren land, [42:21.700 --> 42:24.700] and that's one of their chief longevity herbs. [42:24.700 --> 42:29.700] Ashwagandha root, dangshin, longan fruit, rishi mushroom, shiitake mushroom, [42:29.700 --> 42:32.700] mataki mushroom, and shilaji. [42:32.700 --> 42:37.700] Shilaji is another great adaptogenic herb. [42:37.700 --> 42:39.700] It's not an actual plant. [42:39.700 --> 42:44.700] It's more of a humic substance or part of the soil and the rock. [42:44.700 --> 42:49.700] It's one of the most trace mineral dense substances [42:49.700 --> 42:51.700] you can find on the planet. [42:51.700 --> 42:53.700] They call it the destroyer of weaknesses. [42:53.700 --> 42:55.700] What actually happens at a very high altitude, [42:55.700 --> 43:01.700] over thousands and thousands of years, rocks begin to break down, [43:01.700 --> 43:05.700] and they break down into a form that we can actually metabolize them [43:05.700 --> 43:07.700] and assimilate them. [43:07.700 --> 43:09.700] Shilaji wasn't used for thousands of years, [43:09.700 --> 43:13.700] but its rediscovery was made by Himalayan villagers [43:13.700 --> 43:15.700] who observed monkeys chewing this semi-soft substance, [43:15.700 --> 43:18.700] losing from between the layers of rocks, [43:18.700 --> 43:21.700] giving them incredible strength, vitality, and longevity. [43:21.700 --> 43:24.700] So later research studies, we put our scientists on, [43:24.700 --> 43:27.700] and it showed that the substance is a combination of organic plant matter [43:27.700 --> 43:30.700] combined with the decomposing rocks, [43:30.700 --> 43:34.700] and it contains over 85 minerals in ionic form. [43:34.700 --> 43:37.700] Ionic is the best form. [43:37.700 --> 43:39.700] Amazing, amazing stuff. [43:39.700 --> 43:42.700] Okay, are you going to stay with us one more segment, Stephen? [43:42.700 --> 43:43.700] Yes, I will. [43:43.700 --> 43:44.700] Okay, great. [43:44.700 --> 43:46.700] We've got one more segment with Stephen Rogers. [43:46.700 --> 43:49.700] Folks, if you'd like to ask Stephen Rogers a question from Schintrichian, [43:49.700 --> 43:51.700] Stephen Rogers from Schintrichian, [43:51.700 --> 43:53.700] call him 512-646-1984. [43:53.700 --> 43:55.700] I know Eddie had something he wanted to say [43:55.700 --> 43:57.700] when we get back on the other side. [43:57.700 --> 43:59.700] This is Rule of Law. [43:59.700 --> 44:06.700] More energy, stronger immune power, improved sense of well-being. [44:06.700 --> 44:10.700] How many supplements have you heard boast of these benefits? [44:10.700 --> 44:13.700] The team behind Schintrichian believes that supplements [44:13.700 --> 44:16.700] should over-deliver on their promises, [44:16.700 --> 44:19.700] and Schintrichian does just that. [44:19.700 --> 44:24.700] Schintrichian utilizes the ancient healing wisdom of Chinese medicine. [44:24.700 --> 44:27.700] In conjunction with the science of modern nutrition, [44:27.700 --> 44:30.700] adaptogenic herbs serve as the healing component, [44:30.700 --> 44:34.700] and organic hemp protein in greens and superfoods [44:34.700 --> 44:37.700] act as a balanced nutrient base. [44:37.700 --> 44:41.700] Plus, Schintrichian tastes great in just water. [44:41.700 --> 44:44.700] This powder supplement is everything you'd want in a product, [44:44.700 --> 44:46.700] and it's all natural. [44:46.700 --> 44:49.700] Visit Schintrichian.com to order yours, [44:49.700 --> 44:55.700] or call 1-866-497-7436. [44:55.700 --> 44:59.700] After you use Schintrichian, you'll believe in supplements again. [45:06.700 --> 45:11.700] Aerial spraying, chemtrails, the modified atmosphere, [45:11.700 --> 45:15.700] heavy metals and pesticides, carcinogens and chemical fibers [45:15.700 --> 45:18.700] all falling from the sky. [45:18.700 --> 45:21.700] You have a choice to keep your body clean, [45:21.700 --> 45:26.700] detoxify with micro-plant powder from hempusa.org, [45:26.700 --> 45:31.700] or call 908-691-2608. [45:31.700 --> 45:35.700] It's odorless and tasteless and used in any liquid or food. [45:35.700 --> 45:39.700] Protect your family now with micro-plant powder. [45:39.700 --> 45:43.700] Cleaning out heavy metals, parasites and toxins, [45:43.700 --> 45:48.700] order it now for daily intake and stock it now for long-term storage. [45:48.700 --> 45:55.700] Visit hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608 today. [46:19.700 --> 46:28.700] Oh, yes, always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:28.700 --> 46:33.700] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:33.700 --> 46:39.700] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:39.700 --> 46:45.700] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [46:45.700 --> 46:51.700] I give my message out to anyone in shot and distance, [46:51.700 --> 46:55.700] both for bravery and against slavery. [46:55.700 --> 46:56.700] Okay, folks, we are back. [46:56.700 --> 46:59.700] We've got one last segment with our very special guest, [46:59.700 --> 47:01.700] Stephen Rogers from Shintrician. [47:01.700 --> 47:03.700] Please support our sponsors, folks, [47:03.700 --> 47:06.700] and I guarantee you, you won't be sorry with Shintrician. [47:06.700 --> 47:08.700] We love it here at Rule of Law Radio. [47:08.700 --> 47:10.700] We fully endorse Shintrician. [47:10.700 --> 47:11.700] Randy and I both. [47:11.700 --> 47:13.700] I don't think Eddie's had a chance to try it yet, [47:13.700 --> 47:18.700] but I'm sure he will be a firm believer once he gets it. [47:18.700 --> 47:21.700] And, Eddie, you wanted to make a comment. [47:21.700 --> 47:25.700] Yeah, if you actually look at the law in Texas regarding cannabis, [47:25.700 --> 47:32.700] of the five varieties, only the narcotic version with the TAC is illegal in Texas. [47:32.700 --> 47:34.700] The other four are not. [47:34.700 --> 47:35.700] The indica. [47:35.700 --> 47:38.700] Yeah, the indica is illegal, but the other four are not, [47:38.700 --> 47:44.700] and they will try to attempt to say that it's all the same thing when they arrest you, [47:44.700 --> 47:50.700] even though the law is very clear that it is not illegal to grow hemp in Texas, [47:50.700 --> 47:52.700] unless it contains THC. [47:52.700 --> 47:57.700] Right, and so then they'll have to do a laboratory test to figure out which strain it is, [47:57.700 --> 48:02.700] and by then the prosecutor's going to squeeze people into a plea deal anyway. [48:02.700 --> 48:04.700] And I have a feeling that, you know, Stephen, [48:04.700 --> 48:08.700] like you're saying of all the so-called marijuana that's confiscated, [48:08.700 --> 48:11.700] only 1% of it's actually the indica version. [48:11.700 --> 48:15.700] I mean, that shows that a lot of people out there are smoking rope, [48:15.700 --> 48:20.700] not dope, because they think they have this thing that is a narcotic, [48:20.700 --> 48:25.700] and it's actually not, and I find that quite interesting. [48:25.700 --> 48:32.700] Well, you know, people are, of course, marijuana connoisseurs are smoking marijuana. [48:32.700 --> 48:37.700] What's happening is that when they go out and they eradicate marijuana, [48:37.700 --> 48:41.700] which there's not near as much as we just said in the billion and a half plants [48:41.700 --> 48:45.700] compared to the 14 million of that, they're just eradicating hemp, too, [48:45.700 --> 48:52.700] which grows wild all in states like Indiana and Iowa and Illinois and the Midwest. [48:52.700 --> 48:56.700] I mean, just as far as the eye can see along the side of the road, [48:56.700 --> 49:02.700] and, you know, to the untrained eye, to someone who's just seen a pot leaf [49:02.700 --> 49:06.700] or a marijuana leaf on CNN just flash, they may say, [49:06.700 --> 49:11.700] hey, that's marijuana, but anyone who actually looks at it, you know, [49:11.700 --> 49:14.700] for a few minutes can see there is a distinct difference. [49:14.700 --> 49:17.700] In fact, we're the only country, and this is the excuse. [49:17.700 --> 49:22.700] This is the excuse how Ainslinger was able to outlaw both here. [49:22.700 --> 49:26.700] He said that our federal officials will not be able to distinguish [49:26.700 --> 49:30.700] between the two varieties or strains. [49:30.700 --> 49:34.700] So that's how he was able to usurp the actual Prohibition Act [49:34.700 --> 49:37.700] and completely eradicate it from this country, which is senseless [49:37.700 --> 49:44.700] because over three or 200-and-something different countries around the country [49:44.700 --> 49:46.700] eradicate one and not the other. [49:46.700 --> 49:51.700] And if they're able to do it, you know, our federal officials should be able to do it, too. [49:51.700 --> 49:53.700] No, actually, he was right. [49:53.700 --> 49:55.700] That just proves what we've said all along. [49:55.700 --> 50:01.700] Most federal employees are stupid. [50:01.700 --> 50:06.700] They don't have basic scientific skills to run a laboratory testing, [50:06.700 --> 50:08.700] the money to contract everything. [50:08.700 --> 50:11.700] Before you can get a job as a federal official, [50:11.700 --> 50:15.700] you have to take an intelligence test. [50:15.700 --> 50:18.700] And if you pass it, they don't hire you. [50:18.700 --> 50:24.700] Oh, man. [50:24.700 --> 50:26.700] Oh, wow. [50:26.700 --> 50:29.700] Well, you know, I'm a hemp activist now. [50:29.700 --> 50:30.700] I am. [50:30.700 --> 50:34.700] I have to be for my own survival because that's what makes my product really good. [50:34.700 --> 50:39.700] It allows the body to absorb the other 38 ingredients. [50:39.700 --> 50:43.700] And without it, my product, it's not near as good. [50:43.700 --> 50:47.700] I mean, people, sure, it's going to have all the same milligram dosages. [50:47.700 --> 50:49.700] It's going to have all the same ingredients. [50:49.700 --> 50:54.700] But if the body doesn't recognize it as a food source and then gobble it up [50:54.700 --> 50:59.700] and it only uses, say, 10% or 20% rather than 90% to 100%, [50:59.700 --> 51:01.700] then you don't get the same effect. [51:01.700 --> 51:04.700] And all those nice things that you were talking about, [51:04.700 --> 51:06.700] Deborah and Randy was talking about how you feel, [51:06.700 --> 51:08.700] people just wouldn't feel them as much. [51:08.700 --> 51:10.700] Now, go ahead. [51:10.700 --> 51:11.700] Go ahead. [51:11.700 --> 51:17.700] Well, I was just going to say, talking about the protein, [51:17.700 --> 51:20.700] it being a complete protein string, [51:20.700 --> 51:24.700] I want to get into just a little bit here for the vegetarians out there [51:24.700 --> 51:28.700] because I'm not a pure vegetarian, but I'm mostly vegetarian. [51:28.700 --> 51:32.700] At any rate, I heard you saying on Tom Keiley's show the other night [51:32.700 --> 51:36.700] something about people shouldn't eat more than one serving of beans per day, [51:36.700 --> 51:38.700] of any kind of beans, you said, [51:38.700 --> 51:42.700] unless it's something like hummus where it's combined with garlic. [51:42.700 --> 51:43.700] And I want you to get into that. [51:43.700 --> 51:47.700] Why should people not eat more than one serving of beans out there today [51:47.700 --> 51:50.700] for all these vegetarians out there? [51:50.700 --> 51:51.700] Well, because they're damp-producing. [51:51.700 --> 51:53.700] And when you're thinking about balancing foods, [51:53.700 --> 51:55.700] you have to think about the macronutrients, [51:55.700 --> 51:57.700] which are proteins, fats, and carbohydrates. [51:57.700 --> 52:00.700] They have to be in the right balance. [52:00.700 --> 52:03.700] What does that mean, damp-producing? [52:03.700 --> 52:04.700] Well, hold on just a second. [52:04.700 --> 52:07.700] The macronutrients have to be in the right balance for blood sugar, [52:07.700 --> 52:12.700] but then you also have everything in the right pH or energetic balance. [52:12.700 --> 52:16.700] When a vegan and vegetarian, they eliminate animal products. [52:16.700 --> 52:18.700] The animal products are a bit warming. [52:18.700 --> 52:20.700] They're more acidic. [52:20.700 --> 52:22.700] So they eat mostly plant-based diets, [52:22.700 --> 52:24.700] or they eat a lot of wheat and stuff like that, [52:24.700 --> 52:29.700] which would be more neutral and cooling. [52:29.700 --> 52:32.700] And anything that grows in the ground is more damp. [52:32.700 --> 52:35.700] And we're already damp when we're 80% water. [52:35.700 --> 52:37.700] I mean, we're just like a big sponge walking around. [52:37.700 --> 52:41.700] So beans, even though they have a lot of protein in them, [52:41.700 --> 52:43.700] and they're not all complete proteins, [52:43.700 --> 52:46.700] but they also have a lot of carbohydrates in them, [52:46.700 --> 52:49.700] because they grow in the ground, they are damp. [52:49.700 --> 52:54.700] And the body's already prone to damp things, especially females, [52:54.700 --> 52:58.700] because females are more yin, whereas men are more young, [52:58.700 --> 53:02.700] or females tend to be cooler and men to be hotter. [53:02.700 --> 53:05.700] So you have to watch how many damp products you eat. [53:05.700 --> 53:10.700] And when I was talking about soy, that's what I was talking about. [53:10.700 --> 53:14.700] Soy is okay as a condiment. [53:14.700 --> 53:19.700] The reason why soy's got such a bad press other than the GMO soy out there [53:19.700 --> 53:22.700] is because we use soy as a staple in this country, [53:22.700 --> 53:27.700] and it should only be used as a condiment, and fermented soy, preferably, [53:27.700 --> 53:31.700] because fermented soy, of course, has been changed from the fermentation, [53:31.700 --> 53:34.700] and we get a lot of the natural chelating properties. [53:34.700 --> 53:38.700] That means it pulls heavy metals out of our body and toxins out of our body. [53:38.700 --> 53:42.700] And that, of course, fermented soy, we know as miso, [53:42.700 --> 53:45.700] and that's all I always take a spoonful of it a day. [53:45.700 --> 53:53.700] In fact, you can go on Wikipedia and read about how it saved an entire hospital of people in the 1940s in Japan [53:53.700 --> 53:57.700] from radioactive poisoning from the initial blast. [53:57.700 --> 54:00.700] I can't remember if it was in Nagasaki or Hiroshima, [54:00.700 --> 54:03.700] but there was two hospitals equal distance from one of the blast zones, [54:03.700 --> 54:09.700] and one of the doctors had to wear with saw three days before to start feeding the miso and nori or seaweed. [54:09.700 --> 54:12.700] And one hospital that didn't get it, everybody died, [54:12.700 --> 54:15.700] and the other hospital most of the people lived. [54:15.700 --> 54:22.700] And the heavy metal isotopes, what fermented soy and nori does is it goes in and bonds and chelates and gets them out. [54:22.700 --> 54:25.700] So if anyone out there is looking for a heavy metal chelator that's inexpensive, [54:25.700 --> 54:33.700] go buy sheets of nori and organic fermented soy or miso and take a spoon a day and a sheet of nori a day for about a month. [54:33.700 --> 54:37.700] Yeah, and I think the fermented is the key because there's been a lot of studies done [54:37.700 --> 54:47.700] that even three servings of just regular old unfermented soy per week will cut a man's sperm count in half [54:47.700 --> 54:52.700] and cut his testosterone level in half, and that's whether or not it's GMO. [54:52.700 --> 54:58.700] I mean, traditionally, soy has never been used as a staple for human consumption. [54:58.700 --> 55:02.700] It's always been used as animal feed, and only in the Far East, [55:02.700 --> 55:09.700] only when it's been fermented to remove all of the phytoestrogens was it used for human consumption. [55:09.700 --> 55:12.700] So we've got to get back. [55:12.700 --> 55:18.700] If you're going to eat tofu, people, it needs to be the right kind of tofu that's been aged and fermented or miso. [55:18.700 --> 55:25.700] Don't just go eat everything soy because it will affect your health, both men and women. [55:25.700 --> 55:26.700] Yes, exactly. [55:26.700 --> 55:29.700] In a negative way, in a negative way. [55:29.700 --> 55:36.700] So back to the hemp thing, the reason I was asking that is that hemp is not a dampener. [55:36.700 --> 55:39.700] It's more neutral, is that correct? [55:39.700 --> 55:41.700] Yeah, it's neutral and it's energetic. [55:41.700 --> 55:44.700] It's not too hot and not too cold, and it's a complete protein. [55:44.700 --> 55:50.700] And what that means, it has all the essential amino acids, and they're synergistically balanced. [55:50.700 --> 55:53.700] They're in the right amount, the correct amount. [55:53.700 --> 55:59.700] And there's only a few other plant sources on the planet that are actually complete proteins like that, [55:59.700 --> 56:02.700] and they're not near as plentiful or easy to grow as hemp. [56:02.700 --> 56:06.700] One of them is amaranth and one is quinoa, and I've used both in my diet, [56:06.700 --> 56:13.700] and they're more difficult for the body to process and assimilate than hemp, way more difficult. [56:13.700 --> 56:17.700] Quinoa I love, but every time I eat quinoa or I have people eat it, [56:17.700 --> 56:21.700] there's always problems that begin to arise if they eat too much of it. [56:21.700 --> 56:24.700] It's fine if that's what you have, it's inexpensive. [56:24.700 --> 56:28.700] But hemp is also inexpensive, but yet you don't have any problems with hemp. [56:28.700 --> 56:33.700] I've never known anyone have problems with hemp seed, hemp seed protein. [56:33.700 --> 56:34.700] Right. [56:34.700 --> 56:41.700] And as Jerry was telling me, and I know this is a fact because I've known people that have parakeets and other birds, [56:41.700 --> 56:46.700] you throw some hemp seeds in their bird feed with the rest of the seeds, [56:46.700 --> 56:49.700] and the hemp seeds are always the first ones to go. [56:49.700 --> 56:56.700] They will pick through all the seeds for the hemp seeds, and they'll eat those first before anything else. [56:56.700 --> 56:59.700] So even the birds know it too. [56:59.700 --> 57:02.700] Yes, exactly. I mean, they're very nutritious. [57:02.700 --> 57:11.700] It's funny, animals will gravitate to the natural, the things that they need quicker than we will because they're not as sentient. [57:11.700 --> 57:15.700] So they don't have a spoiled palate. [57:15.700 --> 57:18.700] They're operating off pure instinct a lot of times, [57:18.700 --> 57:22.700] so they'll go to the things that help them to survive or run the most efficient, [57:22.700 --> 57:28.700] whereas we go with things based on our senses, what tastes good or what smells good. [57:28.700 --> 57:34.700] Yes, a comment. You mentioned soiled palate. [57:34.700 --> 57:42.700] Before I took the chintrician, I knew I was missing something. [57:42.700 --> 57:48.700] I knew my body was craving something, but I had no clue as to what it could be [57:48.700 --> 57:54.700] because my palate was so saturated with all the garbage around us. [57:54.700 --> 58:00.700] My system wasn't able to tell. Whatever I needed was in it because it sure fixed it. [58:00.700 --> 58:03.700] That's nice. That's why it's good every now and then to do a fast. [58:03.700 --> 58:05.700] Absolutely. [58:05.700 --> 58:07.700] To kill that spoiled palate. [58:07.700 --> 58:10.700] Absolutely. All right. Well, Stephen, thank you. You've been with us for an hour. [58:10.700 --> 58:15.700] I really appreciate it. Next time, I want to talk about spirulina, the other superfood. [58:15.700 --> 58:23.700] I've been taking spirulina for almost 20 years, so I'm kind of a pseudo-expert, maybe you might say, on spirulina. [58:23.700 --> 58:27.700] So I'd like to have a conversation about the spirulina next time that you're on. [58:27.700 --> 58:29.700] Beautiful. I look forward to it. [58:29.700 --> 58:33.700] Excellent. And folks, just go to ruleoflawradio.com, click on the big green banner, [58:33.700 --> 58:38.700] more energy, less stress, and get your special deal for first-time customers. [58:38.700 --> 58:41.700] Buy one, get one, half price or chintrician. I promise you, you won't regret it. [58:41.700 --> 58:44.700] And you will be supporting ruleoflawradio.com. [58:44.700 --> 58:49.700] You'll be supporting this broadcast and all the other great shows on this network as well. [58:49.700 --> 58:52.700] We'll be right back after the top of the hour news break. [58:52.700 --> 58:57.700] Folks, call in 512-646-1984 about whatever topic's on your mind. [58:57.700 --> 59:23.700] We'll be right back. [59:27.700 --> 59:31.700] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:31.700 --> 59:37.700] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond what you've ever experienced before. [59:37.700 --> 59:42.700] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:42.700 --> 59:53.700] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:53.700 --> 01:00:00.700] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [01:00:00.700 --> 01:00:04.700] This news brief brought to you by the International News Network. [01:00:04.700 --> 01:00:09.700] Nouriel Roubini, one of the first economists to predict the 2008 financial crash, [01:00:09.700 --> 01:00:13.700] said Friday the U.S. is a fiscal train wreck waiting to happen, [01:00:13.700 --> 01:00:19.700] ushering in a period of stagnation featuring minimal growth, high unemployment, and falling wages. [01:00:19.700 --> 01:00:23.700] Nicknamed Dr. Doom says, quote, the risk is something will snap, [01:00:23.700 --> 01:00:30.700] adding the trigger could be a debt rollover crisis in a major U.S. state government. [01:00:30.700 --> 01:00:36.700] The unemployment rate in the U.S. for young people has skyrocketed since the recession began in 2007. [01:00:36.700 --> 01:00:42.700] Friday's Economic Policy Institute reports show the hardest hit were young blacks. [01:00:42.700 --> 01:00:49.700] The unemployment rate for African American high school graduates aged 16 to 24 was 31%, [01:00:49.700 --> 01:00:54.700] 24% for Hispanics, and 22% for Asian Americans. [01:00:54.700 --> 01:01:02.700] In Brazil, mad soy disease has yielded losses of up to 40% in genetically modified soybean crops. [01:01:02.700 --> 01:01:09.700] Mad soy disease causes plants to remain green until they eventually rot in the field. [01:01:09.700 --> 01:01:15.700] It is very unknown to people buying chocolate ahead of Halloween when children go door-to-door collecting candy. [01:01:15.700 --> 01:01:20.700] Much of it is produced using the labor of enslaved West African children. [01:01:20.700 --> 01:01:29.700] Night-ridder reporters first exposed the use of forced child labor on cocoa plantations in the Ivory Coast in Ghana in 2001. [01:01:29.700 --> 01:01:34.700] At the time, Hershey's, Nestle, and other large chocolate companies vowed to create a system [01:01:34.700 --> 01:01:39.700] to certify no producers in their supply chains use child labor. [01:01:39.700 --> 01:01:46.700] Nine years later, a research team from Tulane University charged by Congress to oversee these voluntary efforts reported, [01:01:46.700 --> 01:01:50.700] quote, the chocolate industry is far from achieving its target. [01:01:50.700 --> 01:01:55.700] The majority of children exposed to the worst forms of child labor remain unreached. [01:01:55.700 --> 01:02:02.700] Former child slaves described working 13-hour days punctuated by beatings. [01:02:02.700 --> 01:02:10.700] A recent study shows one-fifth of the world's vertebrates are on the verge of extinction due to climate change and environmental issues. [01:02:10.700 --> 01:02:17.700] More than 170 scientists using data from the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List [01:02:17.700 --> 01:02:22.700] examined the status of the world's mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles, and fish. [01:02:22.700 --> 01:02:27.700] Results showed that, on average, 50 species face extinction each year [01:02:27.700 --> 01:02:32.700] due to the expansion of farms and plantations, logging, and hunting. [01:02:32.700 --> 01:02:39.700] According to the study published in the journal Science, competition from species introduced from other areas was also a factor. [01:02:39.700 --> 01:02:47.700] Representatives from nearly 200 countries have gathered in Nagoya, Japan to set new targets to protect plant and animal species, [01:02:47.700 --> 01:02:54.700] draft a protocol to share resources, and allocate more funding to protect nature. [01:02:54.700 --> 01:02:59.700] For more details on these stories, visit www.inmworldrecord.net. [01:02:59.700 --> 01:03:06.700] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:03:06.700 --> 01:03:10.700] Live free speech talk radio at its best. [01:03:19.700 --> 01:03:24.700] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. [01:03:24.700 --> 01:03:31.700] I read this book and it says it cares not for the unsightly. [01:03:31.700 --> 01:03:38.700] These warmongers come by that term rightly. [01:03:38.700 --> 01:03:45.700] I won't pay for the war with my body. [01:03:45.700 --> 01:03:49.700] Ain't gonna pay for their car with my money. [01:03:49.700 --> 01:03:52.700] I won't pay for the fun with my body. [01:03:52.700 --> 01:03:56.700] Their plans wicked and their logic shoddy. [01:03:56.700 --> 01:03:59.700] Ain't gonna pay for the oil with my body. [01:03:59.700 --> 01:04:03.700] I won't pay for the boys with my money. [01:04:03.700 --> 01:04:07.700] Ain't gonna pay for the kids with my body. [01:04:07.700 --> 01:04:10.700] The whole agenda smells funny. [01:04:10.700 --> 01:04:17.700] I wanna fight in a war of my own. [01:04:17.700 --> 01:04:24.700] That one would be less accidental. [01:04:24.700 --> 01:04:30.700] I wanna pay for war of my own. [01:04:30.700 --> 01:04:37.700] They live in glass houses so I can watch them throw bones. [01:04:37.700 --> 01:04:40.700] I wanna fight in a war I can win. [01:04:40.700 --> 01:04:44.700] I can never win the one that hit at me again. [01:04:44.700 --> 01:04:48.700] That one I lose long before it begins. [01:04:48.700 --> 01:04:51.700] I wanna pay for a war I can win. [01:04:51.700 --> 01:04:58.700] When I'm fighting in my own war. [01:04:58.700 --> 01:05:05.700] It's such a peaceful feeling. [01:05:05.700 --> 01:05:11.700] When I'm paying for my own war. [01:05:11.700 --> 01:05:16.700] I take time for the healing. [01:05:16.700 --> 01:05:21.700] Yeah. [01:05:21.700 --> 01:05:28.700] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. [01:05:28.700 --> 01:05:35.700] I read his book and he says he cares not for the unsightly. [01:05:35.700 --> 01:05:39.700] These fear mongers come by that sunrise. [01:05:39.700 --> 01:05:41.700] Hey folks, we are back. [01:05:41.700 --> 01:05:43.700] This is the rule of law. [01:05:43.700 --> 01:05:45.700] We're taking your calls. [01:05:45.700 --> 01:05:49.700] 512-646-1984. [01:05:49.700 --> 01:05:53.700] We are going now to Edward in South Dakota. [01:05:53.700 --> 01:05:54.700] Edward, thanks for calling in. [01:05:54.700 --> 01:05:56.700] What's on your mind tonight? [01:05:56.700 --> 01:05:58.700] Thank you for having me. [01:05:58.700 --> 01:06:03.700] I had a question about a traffic ticket which turned into a DUI [01:06:03.700 --> 01:06:05.700] that I'm going to fight in court. [01:06:05.700 --> 01:06:10.700] I was wondering if you guys could give me a take on it. [01:06:10.700 --> 01:06:12.700] October 1st, I was on my way home. [01:06:12.700 --> 01:06:15.700] I only have a five-minute commute from where I was going to home. [01:06:15.700 --> 01:06:17.700] And I got pulled over speeding. [01:06:17.700 --> 01:06:20.700] The officer told me I was doing a... [01:06:20.700 --> 01:06:21.700] Hello? [01:06:21.700 --> 01:06:22.700] Yeah, go ahead. [01:06:22.700 --> 01:06:23.700] Hello? [01:06:23.700 --> 01:06:24.700] Yeah, keep going. [01:06:24.700 --> 01:06:25.700] I'm sorry. [01:06:25.700 --> 01:06:27.700] I'm having to screen calls while I'm on the air. [01:06:27.700 --> 01:06:30.700] And sometimes I forget to turn the ringer off when my mic is unmuted. [01:06:30.700 --> 01:06:32.700] So go ahead. [01:06:32.700 --> 01:06:37.700] The officer was telling me that I was doing a 48 and 35 which is ludicrous [01:06:37.700 --> 01:06:41.700] because, again, I had a five-minute commute home. [01:06:41.700 --> 01:06:46.700] I knew the officer was out looking for drunk drivers and knew I wasn't drunk. [01:06:46.700 --> 01:06:49.700] He continued on being a little rude. [01:06:49.700 --> 01:06:54.700] I asked him a few questions about the radar, his name that wasn't obvious, [01:06:54.700 --> 01:06:57.700] and he told me the wrong name. [01:06:57.700 --> 01:06:59.700] He asked me to do a sobriety test. [01:06:59.700 --> 01:07:02.700] I did part of which and then I declined to do the breathalyzing. [01:07:02.700 --> 01:07:05.700] He went ahead and arrested me for a DUI. [01:07:05.700 --> 01:07:08.700] Once he put the handcuffs on me, I refused to say anything else. [01:07:08.700 --> 01:07:10.700] They pretty much kept me overnight. [01:07:10.700 --> 01:07:15.700] The next morning they gave me a parents and reconnaissance bond [01:07:15.700 --> 01:07:24.700] which I signed without prejudice stating UCC-1-207, and they accepted it. [01:07:24.700 --> 01:07:29.700] I went to court. My first court date was on the 18th of October, [01:07:29.700 --> 01:07:32.700] and, again, I was reserving my rights. [01:07:32.700 --> 01:07:36.700] I reminded the court of the judge of his judicial oath, [01:07:36.700 --> 01:07:39.700] and pretty much kept my right to remain silent. [01:07:39.700 --> 01:07:45.700] What I expected and what happened are obviously two different things. [01:07:45.700 --> 01:07:50.700] I expected him, I really was expecting the police officer to be there [01:07:50.700 --> 01:07:55.700] as well as the DA or whoever, but they weren't there. [01:07:55.700 --> 01:08:00.700] They do something different than what they do from what my hometown of Chicago is. [01:08:00.700 --> 01:08:02.700] They do an initial hearing, then a status hearing, [01:08:02.700 --> 01:08:05.700] then you actually have the hearing, which is kind of new to me. [01:08:05.700 --> 01:08:07.700] What state are you in right now? [01:08:07.700 --> 01:08:10.700] I'm in South Dakota, the state capital of care. [01:08:10.700 --> 01:08:12.700] Okay. [01:08:12.700 --> 01:08:17.700] So what he did was once I told him that I was going to remain silent, [01:08:17.700 --> 01:08:23.700] what he did was he assigned me a lawyer, a court-appointed lawyer, [01:08:23.700 --> 01:08:26.700] and he gave me another court date. [01:08:26.700 --> 01:08:31.700] Neither one I won, and I'm trying to figure out... [01:08:31.700 --> 01:08:34.700] Okay, okay, okay, stop, stop, stop. [01:08:34.700 --> 01:08:37.700] Don't...he assigned you an attorney? [01:08:37.700 --> 01:08:38.700] Yes, he did. [01:08:38.700 --> 01:08:41.700] Life is good. [01:08:41.700 --> 01:08:43.700] Possibly. [01:08:43.700 --> 01:08:52.700] Now what you need to tell this attorney is if you fail to adequately adjudicate [01:08:52.700 --> 01:08:58.700] every single one of my constitutional and statutory rights, [01:08:58.700 --> 01:09:02.700] I will file a separate bar grievance against you for each one, [01:09:02.700 --> 01:09:07.700] and then I will personally sue you for malpractice. [01:09:07.700 --> 01:09:09.700] Do we understand each other? [01:09:09.700 --> 01:09:14.700] If you go to that judge and ask that judge to remove you from this case, [01:09:14.700 --> 01:09:17.700] I'll file a bar grievance against you from that, [01:09:17.700 --> 01:09:20.700] and then I'll sue the judge when he removes me from the case [01:09:20.700 --> 01:09:24.700] for interfering with a private contract. [01:09:24.700 --> 01:09:28.700] Now, I can suggest this because I did it myself. [01:09:28.700 --> 01:09:29.700] Oh, wow. [01:09:29.700 --> 01:09:32.700] Now, let me make a suggestion at this point. [01:09:32.700 --> 01:09:39.700] The UCC stuff, stop, quit, don't, okay? [01:09:39.700 --> 01:09:41.700] Not going to help you. [01:09:41.700 --> 01:09:48.700] UCC applies to the sale of goods and services, not to criminal prosecution. [01:09:48.700 --> 01:09:54.700] Okay, now let me tell you another thing about your right to remain silent. [01:09:54.700 --> 01:09:56.700] You're not required to prove yourself innocent. [01:09:56.700 --> 01:10:01.700] They are required to prove that you are guilty, okay? [01:10:01.700 --> 01:10:06.700] However, you must speak up when it comes to protecting your rights, [01:10:06.700 --> 01:10:09.700] as Randy's noting, in regards to your attorney. [01:10:09.700 --> 01:10:14.700] And at any point during any trial when that attorney is doing something [01:10:14.700 --> 01:10:17.700] that he shouldn't be doing, and the only way you're going to know that [01:10:17.700 --> 01:10:20.700] is if you spend a little bit of time in the code of criminal procedure. [01:10:20.700 --> 01:10:23.700] Now, here's the part you've got to look forward to [01:10:23.700 --> 01:10:25.700] in the fact that they assigned you an attorney. [01:10:25.700 --> 01:10:27.700] Why did you get an attorney? [01:10:27.700 --> 01:10:35.700] Because the charge against you involves jail time. [01:10:35.700 --> 01:10:40.700] That's why he had to appoint you an attorney, okay? [01:10:40.700 --> 01:10:44.700] So if you aren't careful, you will get sold down the river, [01:10:44.700 --> 01:10:47.700] and you will get some probationary confinement, [01:10:47.700 --> 01:10:50.700] or you will be spending some time behind bars [01:10:50.700 --> 01:10:56.700] if you let this attorney do anything he's not supposed to do. [01:10:56.700 --> 01:11:03.700] So since he's appointed, it was not his decision. [01:11:03.700 --> 01:11:06.700] He has a duty to represent you. [01:11:06.700 --> 01:11:13.700] When the DPS arrested me after I called 911 on them, [01:11:13.700 --> 01:11:18.700] I went to court, and the court appointed me counsel. [01:11:18.700 --> 01:11:24.700] First thing I told counsel, he started to tell me how things were going to work, [01:11:24.700 --> 01:11:29.700] and I told him, no, this is how things are going to work. [01:11:29.700 --> 01:11:31.700] You're going to go to the judge, [01:11:31.700 --> 01:11:35.700] and you're going to ask the judge to be removed from this case. [01:11:35.700 --> 01:11:37.700] And I'm going to go to the judge and tell the judge, [01:11:37.700 --> 01:11:41.700] don't you dare remove him from this case. [01:11:41.700 --> 01:11:43.700] He's my counsel of choice. [01:11:43.700 --> 01:11:45.700] He's under contract to me, [01:11:45.700 --> 01:11:47.700] and you are not to interfere with that private contract. [01:11:47.700 --> 01:11:50.700] And the attorney said, well, Mr. Kelton, I'm not under contract to you. [01:11:50.700 --> 01:11:52.700] I'm under contract to the state. [01:11:52.700 --> 01:11:54.700] Yes, you are. [01:11:54.700 --> 01:11:57.700] But I am the intended third-party beneficiary, [01:11:57.700 --> 01:12:01.700] and I have standing to enforce the contract. [01:12:01.700 --> 01:12:06.700] And if that judge interferes with my contract, I'm going to sue that judge. [01:12:06.700 --> 01:12:09.700] And the attorney sat back in his seat, and he's thinking, [01:12:09.700 --> 01:12:13.700] this guy's going to give me this barn. [01:12:13.700 --> 01:12:15.700] So he terrified him. [01:12:15.700 --> 01:12:16.700] And later I told him, [01:12:16.700 --> 01:12:21.700] fail to properly adjudicate every single one of my due process rights [01:12:21.700 --> 01:12:25.700] and I'll file a bar grievance against you on each one. [01:12:25.700 --> 01:12:29.700] My attorney was terrified I would end his career. [01:12:29.700 --> 01:12:32.700] This is how you get control of your attorney. [01:12:32.700 --> 01:12:39.700] Now, what you do by that is you put the judge in a position [01:12:39.700 --> 01:12:44.700] to where he has to protect your attorney from you. [01:12:44.700 --> 01:12:47.700] Now, he's just trying to collect some money. [01:12:47.700 --> 01:12:48.700] He don't care if you're guilty or innocent. [01:12:48.700 --> 01:12:50.700] That's irrelevant. [01:12:50.700 --> 01:12:52.700] It's about the money. [01:12:52.700 --> 01:12:54.700] So you give him another consideration. [01:12:54.700 --> 01:12:56.700] He's got a young attorney here. [01:12:56.700 --> 01:12:58.700] He comes down to the court and asks. [01:12:58.700 --> 01:12:59.700] He don't have any business. [01:12:59.700 --> 01:13:00.700] He gets out of law school. [01:13:00.700 --> 01:13:03.700] He can't advertise directly. [01:13:03.700 --> 01:13:06.700] He can do general advertising, but that is very expensive. [01:13:06.700 --> 01:13:10.700] He's already got his law school student loans to pay. [01:13:10.700 --> 01:13:12.700] He doesn't have any money. [01:13:12.700 --> 01:13:17.700] And if he didn't get picked up by a law firm, it's real hard to get started. [01:13:17.700 --> 01:13:20.700] So the way they get started is they come down, sit down at the courthouse, [01:13:20.700 --> 01:13:25.700] and wait to get appointed as court-appointed counsel. [01:13:25.700 --> 01:13:30.700] Well, so you have an attorney who's trying to get started here. [01:13:30.700 --> 01:13:34.700] Or you have a chump that can't make it as an attorney, [01:13:34.700 --> 01:13:37.700] and the only way he can get any business is to come down to the courthouse [01:13:37.700 --> 01:13:39.700] and get appointed counsel. [01:13:39.700 --> 01:13:41.700] You file a bar grievance against him? [01:13:41.700 --> 01:13:44.700] That cancels his malpractice insurance. [01:13:44.700 --> 01:13:49.700] If it's his first year in practice, they'll cancel it immediately. [01:13:49.700 --> 01:13:55.700] If he's been in practice 20 years and he gets two, they'll cancel it. [01:13:55.700 --> 01:14:00.700] So a bar grievance for an attorney is a really big deal. [01:14:00.700 --> 01:14:04.700] They're not going to tell you that because they don't want you to know. [01:14:04.700 --> 01:14:07.700] You get to know that. [01:14:07.700 --> 01:14:09.700] It's a big deal. [01:14:09.700 --> 01:14:14.700] It doesn't matter if your bar grievance is valid or not [01:14:14.700 --> 01:14:17.700] because the bar is going to toss out every bar grievance they get. [01:14:17.700 --> 01:14:21.700] They're a public relations agency for the attorneys. [01:14:21.700 --> 01:14:25.700] Their insurance company knows that. [01:14:25.700 --> 01:14:28.700] So they don't care what the bar grievance is. [01:14:28.700 --> 01:14:31.700] You get in a minor fender bender, [01:14:31.700 --> 01:14:34.700] your insurance company doesn't care who's at fault. [01:14:34.700 --> 01:14:37.700] They only know they have to pay. [01:14:37.700 --> 01:14:40.700] You get in two of them, they're going to cancel your insurance. [01:14:40.700 --> 01:14:43.700] They don't care if it's your fault, their fault, nobody's fault. [01:14:43.700 --> 01:14:45.700] They're going to cancel it. [01:14:45.700 --> 01:14:48.700] Attorneys are in the same position. [01:14:48.700 --> 01:14:51.700] So that's a primary weakness the attorney has. [01:14:51.700 --> 01:14:54.700] So first thing you do is let the attorney know, [01:14:54.700 --> 01:14:57.700] I know where you live, Bubba. [01:14:57.700 --> 01:15:00.700] I know how to end your career for you. [01:15:00.700 --> 01:15:04.700] At least temporarily until you find some other way, [01:15:04.700 --> 01:15:07.700] you can go to work as an accountant for somebody. [01:15:07.700 --> 01:15:12.700] But I can really stick a cog in your works. [01:15:12.700 --> 01:15:16.700] And then he's going to let the judge know that. [01:15:16.700 --> 01:15:18.700] And it's a young attorney. [01:15:18.700 --> 01:15:21.700] The judges are all attorneys and they try to help each other. [01:15:21.700 --> 01:15:30.700] Now he's got to help the attorney by protecting him against the pro se from hell. [01:15:30.700 --> 01:15:33.700] The one who knows how to sting the attorney. [01:15:33.700 --> 01:15:39.700] I went out to lunch and they got a dismissal while I was out to lunch. [01:15:39.700 --> 01:15:43.700] And I told my attorney, don't you dare let them dismiss this case [01:15:43.700 --> 01:15:46.700] unless they dismiss it with prejudice. [01:15:46.700 --> 01:15:50.700] So they wait until I go out to lunch to get a dismissal. [01:15:50.700 --> 01:15:56.700] This is the first thing you do is let your attorney know you're going to make him do his job. [01:15:56.700 --> 01:16:01.700] Now, this is not as bad for the attorney as it sounds. [01:16:01.700 --> 01:16:07.700] I did this to my attorney and at first he was terrified. [01:16:07.700 --> 01:16:10.700] And then I filed my notice in demand. [01:16:10.700 --> 01:16:15.700] And if you'll send me an email, I will send you my notice in demand. [01:16:15.700 --> 01:16:20.700] And the notice in demand is for the attorney's benefit. [01:16:20.700 --> 01:16:23.700] I sat down in the attorney's office and he said, [01:16:23.700 --> 01:16:26.700] I saw this notice in demand but I don't know what it is. [01:16:26.700 --> 01:16:30.700] And I told the attorney, remember when I told you [01:16:30.700 --> 01:16:33.700] you adjudicate my rights, I'll protect you? [01:16:33.700 --> 01:16:36.700] He said, yes, this is your protection. [01:16:36.700 --> 01:16:41.700] I just told the judge, you have a jerk for a client that you can't control [01:16:41.700 --> 01:16:45.700] and he's going to have to protect you from me. [01:16:45.700 --> 01:16:47.700] That's your protection. [01:16:47.700 --> 01:16:48.700] Okay. [01:16:48.700 --> 01:16:53.700] You will give your attorney an opportunity to actually do his job. [01:16:53.700 --> 01:16:56.700] And my attorney was thrilled to be able to do that. [01:16:56.700 --> 01:16:58.700] He was also terrified. [01:16:58.700 --> 01:17:01.700] Okay. [01:17:01.700 --> 01:17:04.700] Capital Coin and Bullion is your local source for rare coins, [01:17:04.700 --> 01:17:07.700] precious metals and coin supplies in the Austin metro area. [01:17:07.700 --> 01:17:09.700] We also ship worldwide. [01:17:09.700 --> 01:17:12.700] We are a family-owned and operated business that offers competitive prices [01:17:12.700 --> 01:17:14.700] on your coin and metal purchases. [01:17:14.700 --> 01:17:18.700] We buy, sell, trade and confine rare coins, gold and silver coin collections, [01:17:18.700 --> 01:17:20.700] precious metals and scrap gold. [01:17:20.700 --> 01:17:22.700] We purchase and sell gold and jewelry items. [01:17:22.700 --> 01:17:25.700] We offer daily specials on coins and bullion. [01:17:25.700 --> 01:17:29.700] We do that 5448 Burnett Road, Suite 3 at the corner of Burnett and Shulmont. [01:17:29.700 --> 01:17:33.700] And we're open Mondays and Fridays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 5. [01:17:33.700 --> 01:17:36.700] You are welcome to stop in our shop during regular business hours [01:17:36.700 --> 01:17:41.700] or call 512-646-6440 with any questions. [01:17:41.700 --> 01:17:45.700] Ask for Chad and say you heard about us on Google Law Radio or Texas Liberty Radio. [01:17:45.700 --> 01:17:48.700] That's Capital Coin and Bullion at the corner of Burnett and Shulmont. [01:17:48.700 --> 01:17:52.700] And we're open Mondays and Fridays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 5. [01:17:52.700 --> 01:17:59.700] That's Capital Coin and Bullion, 512-646-6440. [01:17:59.700 --> 01:18:02.700] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, [01:18:02.700 --> 01:18:05.700] but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy, [01:18:05.700 --> 01:18:08.700] and neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [01:18:08.700 --> 01:18:11.700] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books, then. [01:18:11.700 --> 01:18:12.700] Brave New Books? [01:18:12.700 --> 01:18:15.700] Yes, Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for [01:18:15.700 --> 01:18:19.700] by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul and Geobert Griffin. [01:18:19.700 --> 01:18:23.700] They even stock inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [01:18:23.700 --> 01:18:25.700] There's no way a place like that exists. [01:18:25.700 --> 01:18:27.700] Go check it out for yourself. [01:18:27.700 --> 01:18:31.700] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [01:18:31.700 --> 01:18:35.700] By UT, there's never anywhere to park down there. [01:18:35.700 --> 01:18:37.700] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking [01:18:37.700 --> 01:18:42.700] for paying customers at the 500 MLK Parking Facility, just behind the bookstore. [01:18:42.700 --> 01:18:46.700] It does exist, but when are they open? [01:18:46.700 --> 01:18:51.700] Monday through Saturday, 11 AM to 9 PM, and 1 to 6 PM on Sundays. [01:18:51.700 --> 01:18:55.700] So give them a call at 512-480-2503, [01:18:55.700 --> 01:19:20.700] or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:19:25.700 --> 01:19:30.700] I was blindsided, but now I can see your plan. [01:19:30.700 --> 01:19:35.700] You put the fear in my pocket, took the money from my hand. [01:19:35.700 --> 01:19:44.700] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:44.700 --> 01:19:51.700] Ain't gonna fool me. [01:19:51.700 --> 01:19:55.700] Okay, folks, we're back. Eddie, you wanted to say something before we go back to Edward? [01:19:55.700 --> 01:19:59.700] Yes, I have a lady named Marnie out there that should be listening to us. [01:19:59.700 --> 01:20:02.700] Marnie, go ahead and give us a call and get on the board, [01:20:02.700 --> 01:20:06.700] so that we can bring your issue up and talk about what happened with you today [01:20:06.700 --> 01:20:11.700] on a traffic ticket that you received recently. [01:20:11.700 --> 01:20:17.700] Okay. We were talking about how to handle your attorney. [01:20:17.700 --> 01:20:23.700] There are a lot of guys out there in the legal reform community that tell you [01:20:23.700 --> 01:20:26.700] that you can remain silent. Don't say anything. [01:20:26.700 --> 01:20:29.700] If you open your mouth, you give them jurisdiction. [01:20:29.700 --> 01:20:33.700] Horse manure. [01:20:33.700 --> 01:20:38.700] You have a right to remain silent, and you should invoke that right [01:20:38.700 --> 01:20:44.700] when you are giving evidence that can be used against yourself. [01:20:44.700 --> 01:20:49.700] When they ask you if your name is a certain name, [01:20:49.700 --> 01:20:55.700] that is not evidence that can be used against you in spite of what these people say. [01:20:55.700 --> 01:20:58.700] It's merely your name. [01:20:58.700 --> 01:21:04.700] And by remaining silent, if you fail to invoke your rights, [01:21:04.700 --> 01:21:09.700] the courts will assume that you waived them. [01:21:09.700 --> 01:21:13.700] Now, I know these guys are out there saying, well, they don't have jurisdiction. [01:21:13.700 --> 01:21:15.700] Well, maybe they don't. [01:21:15.700 --> 01:21:20.700] But they got guns, and they think they have jurisdiction. [01:21:20.700 --> 01:21:26.700] And if you don't deal with it, they'll act like they have jurisdiction [01:21:26.700 --> 01:21:28.700] and throw you in their jail. [01:21:28.700 --> 01:21:32.700] And it will feel like they have jurisdiction. [01:21:32.700 --> 01:21:35.700] It will feel like you're actually in the jail. [01:21:35.700 --> 01:21:38.700] I know these guys are saying, well, that's not really the case. [01:21:38.700 --> 01:21:41.700] But that's what happens. [01:21:41.700 --> 01:21:51.700] So on this show, we try not to get so deep into legal theory as in legal reality. [01:21:51.700 --> 01:21:56.700] In legal reality, protect your rights. [01:21:56.700 --> 01:22:01.700] And one of the best ways to do that is get into points counsel. [01:22:01.700 --> 01:22:09.700] Now, I was talking to someone today who helped me develop an epiphany. [01:22:09.700 --> 01:22:17.700] As I understand, an attorney can represent a person who is incompetent, a minor, [01:22:17.700 --> 01:22:26.700] a fiduciary, and there was one more, I forget, a corporation. [01:22:26.700 --> 01:22:30.700] I can hire a counsel, but he can't represent me. [01:22:30.700 --> 01:22:32.700] He's not my representative. [01:22:32.700 --> 01:22:35.700] He is my counsel. [01:22:35.700 --> 01:22:40.700] And when I need his counsel, I'll ask for it unless I'm one of these four people [01:22:40.700 --> 01:22:42.700] who can't represent myself. [01:22:42.700 --> 01:22:44.700] Otherwise, I can represent myself. [01:22:44.700 --> 01:22:46.700] And I mentioned earlier the notice in demand, [01:22:46.700 --> 01:22:50.700] and that's what the notice in demand was about. [01:22:50.700 --> 01:22:57.700] I notice to court that I do not waive any right unless that right is waived in court. [01:22:57.700 --> 01:23:06.700] I am still present, full disclosure, free of coercion, in writing. [01:23:06.700 --> 01:23:11.700] The courts want to say if you don't demand a right, you waive it. [01:23:11.700 --> 01:23:13.700] So this handles that. [01:23:13.700 --> 01:23:17.700] And the other part of this is I demand my right to counsel. [01:23:17.700 --> 01:23:22.700] I also demand my right to represent myself. [01:23:22.700 --> 01:23:31.700] And inasmuch as one right may not be waived in order to exert another, I demand both. [01:23:31.700 --> 01:23:35.700] If you file that notice in demand, [01:23:35.700 --> 01:23:41.700] you tell the judge that the attorney he appointed to represent you [01:23:41.700 --> 01:23:46.700] has a real problem client that he cannot control. [01:23:46.700 --> 01:23:50.700] And then the judge winds up in a position trying to protect the, [01:23:50.700 --> 01:23:55.700] especially these attorneys that are getting appointed as counsel [01:23:55.700 --> 01:23:58.700] or either incompetent, they can't get their own business, [01:23:58.700 --> 01:24:01.700] or there are new attorneys just starting out in business. [01:24:01.700 --> 01:24:07.700] In either case, the court feels like they have a duty to protect their brethren. [01:24:07.700 --> 01:24:10.700] This will put you in a much better position. [01:24:10.700 --> 01:24:14.700] The judge may not like you, but that's not important. [01:24:14.700 --> 01:24:20.700] If the judge is more worried about what you'll do to his friend than anything else, [01:24:20.700 --> 01:24:22.700] you're more likely to get justice. [01:24:22.700 --> 01:24:23.700] In my case, I did. [01:24:23.700 --> 01:24:26.700] And in your case, you're more likely to. [01:24:26.700 --> 01:24:29.700] You don't have to be nice to the counsels, [01:24:29.700 --> 01:24:31.700] but you do have to understand your position. [01:24:31.700 --> 01:24:37.700] Do not stand there mute when they're stealing your rights from you. [01:24:37.700 --> 01:24:43.700] These guys who say if you open your mouth to give them jurisdiction are the same ones that say, [01:24:43.700 --> 01:24:48.700] rights only belong to the belligerent litigant. [01:24:48.700 --> 01:24:54.700] The belligerent litigant is the one that stands up and demands them. [01:24:54.700 --> 01:24:58.700] I had a long discussion with someone on this issue today, [01:24:58.700 --> 01:25:00.700] and that's why it's kind of on my mind. [01:25:00.700 --> 01:25:05.700] It's a real frustration that we have people telling folks to go out there [01:25:05.700 --> 01:25:08.700] and do stupid stuff that gets them in trouble. [01:25:08.700 --> 01:25:13.700] And one of the things they tell them to do is go in and use the Uniform Commercial Code, [01:25:13.700 --> 01:25:20.700] which is clearly intended to apply to the sale of goods and services [01:25:20.700 --> 01:25:24.700] and try to use that in a criminal prosecution. [01:25:24.700 --> 01:25:29.700] And then they're always surprised when the court just ignores them. [01:25:29.700 --> 01:25:32.700] Well, the court has no duty to give you legal advice [01:25:32.700 --> 01:25:36.700] and tell you what you're doing doesn't apply here. [01:25:36.700 --> 01:25:40.700] And they have no duty to respond to what you're asking them to respond to. [01:25:40.700 --> 01:25:44.700] So they just stand there and let you do your little song and dance, [01:25:44.700 --> 01:25:48.700] and when you get done, they will get you out of hand. [01:25:48.700 --> 01:25:57.700] So in your case, I suggest fight for your rights. [01:25:57.700 --> 01:26:00.700] Do not testify. [01:26:00.700 --> 01:26:05.700] Telling them who you are, identifying yourself, is not testifying. [01:26:05.700 --> 01:26:10.700] But talking about merits, that's testifying. [01:26:10.700 --> 01:26:14.700] Any question about the merits, you don't go there. [01:26:14.700 --> 01:26:19.700] Other than that, you have a lot of things you can do to protect yourself, [01:26:19.700 --> 01:26:23.700] and if you have an attorney, you can certainly control him. [01:26:23.700 --> 01:26:27.700] When you mention bar grievance, you look in his eyes. [01:26:27.700 --> 01:26:32.700] You will see that look in his eyes that tells him you hit a raw nerve. [01:26:32.700 --> 01:26:37.700] Okay, we have a lot of callers, and I just wanted to address that issue. [01:26:37.700 --> 01:26:40.700] Do you have any other questions or comments? [01:26:40.700 --> 01:26:42.700] I just want to say thank you. [01:26:42.700 --> 01:26:46.700] And one last question is that, do you record these shows? [01:26:46.700 --> 01:26:47.700] Yes, we do. [01:26:47.700 --> 01:26:51.700] Yes, there are archives available on ruleoflawradio.com. [01:26:51.700 --> 01:26:53.700] Thank you. [01:26:53.700 --> 01:26:55.700] All right, thanks, Edward. [01:26:55.700 --> 01:26:57.700] All right, have a great day. [01:26:57.700 --> 01:26:58.700] Okay. [01:26:58.700 --> 01:27:01.700] All right, we are going now to Alex in Texas. [01:27:01.700 --> 01:27:02.700] Alex, thanks for calling in. [01:27:02.700 --> 01:27:04.700] What's on your mind tonight? [01:27:04.700 --> 01:27:05.700] Well, hello. [01:27:05.700 --> 01:27:07.700] I'm so glad I got through. [01:27:07.700 --> 01:27:10.700] I don't have a traffic ticket. [01:27:10.700 --> 01:27:11.700] I'm not arrested. [01:27:11.700 --> 01:27:15.700] I'm pretty much a clean, upstanding citizen. [01:27:15.700 --> 01:27:17.700] Wait a minute. [01:27:17.700 --> 01:27:19.700] You can't be a real American. [01:27:19.700 --> 01:27:21.700] I think I am. [01:27:21.700 --> 01:27:27.700] But I found out about your program because I heard Randy on Catherine Albrecht's show, [01:27:27.700 --> 01:27:32.700] and then I have never listened to you live, but I got your podcast, [01:27:32.700 --> 01:27:35.700] and I've been listening to you everything on your podcast. [01:27:35.700 --> 01:27:38.700] So then, of course, last night you said, listen, streaming, [01:27:38.700 --> 01:27:40.700] and I figured out finally how to do that. [01:27:40.700 --> 01:27:44.700] So I've got the thing streaming so that I could add to your shout out there. [01:27:44.700 --> 01:27:46.700] But I've been going through your archives, [01:27:46.700 --> 01:27:51.700] and you mentioned Bill Davis with the red light camera thing, [01:27:51.700 --> 01:27:55.700] and I am really annoyed with all the cameras on my street. [01:27:55.700 --> 01:27:58.700] I live in Cedar Hill, south of Dallas. [01:27:58.700 --> 01:28:02.700] And so I did my own research to figure out what's going on here. [01:28:02.700 --> 01:28:08.700] So in Austin it was Red Flex, but in this area, or at least in my town, [01:28:08.700 --> 01:28:11.700] it's the American Traffic Solutions. [01:28:11.700 --> 01:28:13.700] They're still out of Phoenix. [01:28:13.700 --> 01:28:17.700] And I contacted my city hall, [01:28:17.700 --> 01:28:21.700] and the secretary has been giving me information because of the Freedom Act. [01:28:21.700 --> 01:28:26.700] And so I got a copy of the contract to figure out what's going on with my city, [01:28:26.700 --> 01:28:31.700] and trying to research this whole thing about the red light camera. [01:28:31.700 --> 01:28:36.700] And what I found just going through the Austin archives, [01:28:36.700 --> 01:28:44.700] and at that time Attorney General Cornyn in 2002 said they couldn't do that. [01:28:44.700 --> 01:28:51.700] And then later in my town of Dallas, John Corona got that Senate bill in [01:28:51.700 --> 01:28:58.700] so that they can give municipalities the authority to create ordinances, [01:28:58.700 --> 01:29:00.700] which my city did. [01:29:00.700 --> 01:29:04.700] But that Senate bill didn't pass until 2007. [01:29:04.700 --> 01:29:09.700] And I'm calling you because I'm looking for strategy to get rid of these cameras. [01:29:09.700 --> 01:29:14.700] And in the pursuit of my own town's information, [01:29:14.700 --> 01:29:17.700] they got their contract with American Traffic Solutions, [01:29:17.700 --> 01:29:27.700] which happens to be a Goldman Sachs investment, not Australian like the Red Flex. [01:29:27.700 --> 01:29:30.700] But they got it in 2006. [01:29:30.700 --> 01:29:33.700] And I asked them when they had the cameras installed. [01:29:33.700 --> 01:29:39.700] That was 2006, and yet the bill was not passed until 2007. [01:29:39.700 --> 01:29:43.700] So I'm thinking, is there a possibility I could approach the city council [01:29:43.700 --> 01:29:46.700] about their setting these cameras up illegally? [01:29:46.700 --> 01:29:47.700] Okay, hang on. [01:29:47.700 --> 01:29:48.700] We're about to go to break. [01:29:48.700 --> 01:29:49.700] Okay. [01:29:49.700 --> 01:29:52.700] Yeah, we'll finish this question on the other side. [01:29:52.700 --> 01:29:53.700] That has been interesting. [01:29:53.700 --> 01:29:54.700] I have an interesting issue. [01:29:54.700 --> 01:29:56.700] I have some questions that I need to ask. [01:29:56.700 --> 01:29:59.700] But we'll be right back on the other side. [01:29:59.700 --> 01:30:03.700] Top ten reasons to question the official story of the Oklahoma City bombing. [01:30:03.700 --> 01:30:05.700] Number nine, the extra leg. [01:30:05.700 --> 01:30:08.700] Former Oklahoma State medical examiner Dr. Fred Jordan had stated, [01:30:08.700 --> 01:30:12.700] we had eight people with amputated left legs and nine left legs to account for. [01:30:12.700 --> 01:30:15.700] Chief pathologist for Northern Ireland T.K. Marshall, [01:30:15.700 --> 01:30:18.700] who performed over 2,500 autopsies in his time, stated, [01:30:18.700 --> 01:30:20.700] there has never been an unknown victim. [01:30:20.700 --> 01:30:22.700] This leg belonged to a perpetrator close enough to the bomb [01:30:22.700 --> 01:30:26.700] for his body to be damaged, leaving only a left leg behind. [01:30:26.700 --> 01:30:27.700] Who was this person? [01:30:27.700 --> 01:30:32.700] Please go to okcbombingtruth.com. [01:30:32.700 --> 01:30:33.700] Stop right there, young man. [01:30:33.700 --> 01:30:34.700] Are your hands clean? [01:30:34.700 --> 01:30:37.700] Crazy as it sounds, researchers have been lurking in public restrooms [01:30:37.700 --> 01:30:41.700] spying on people to make sure they wash their hands after using the facilities. [01:30:41.700 --> 01:30:46.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment to share their findings. [01:30:46.700 --> 01:30:48.700] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:48.700 --> 01:30:51.700] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:51.700 --> 01:30:56.700] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:56.700 --> 01:31:01.700] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:31:01.700 --> 01:31:04.700] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:31:04.700 --> 01:31:07.700] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:31:07.700 --> 01:31:11.700] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:31:11.700 --> 01:31:15.700] Start over with Startpage. [01:31:15.700 --> 01:31:19.700] Researchers recently staked out public restrooms in four U.S. cities [01:31:19.700 --> 01:31:23.700] and found that only 15 percent of us failed to wash our hands before leaving. [01:31:23.700 --> 01:31:28.700] That's not bad compared to 2007 when nearly a quarter of people failed to address their hand hygiene. [01:31:28.700 --> 01:31:33.700] Women were the cleaner sex with 93 percent washing up compared to just 77 percent of men. [01:31:33.700 --> 01:31:35.700] Although statistics could use some improvement, [01:31:35.700 --> 01:31:39.700] I found the thought of people spending hours in dirty bathrooms watching and waiting [01:31:39.700 --> 01:31:42.700] while the rest of us go about our business downright bizarre. [01:31:42.700 --> 01:31:45.700] Yes, it's important to wash your hands before leaving the bathroom [01:31:45.700 --> 01:31:49.700] because it helps prevent the spread of disease, not because the bathroom police are watching. [01:31:49.700 --> 01:31:54.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:32:19.700 --> 01:32:31.700] All right, folks, we are back. We're taking your calls. [01:32:31.700 --> 01:32:37.700] Right now we're speaking to Alex in Texas concerning these red light cameras. [01:32:37.700 --> 01:32:41.700] Okay, so go ahead, Alex, will you repeat the question? [01:32:41.700 --> 01:32:45.700] I don't know what the question was. That's how Randy wanted to give me a question. [01:32:45.700 --> 01:32:49.700] Okay, well, no, you asked a question right before the break, [01:32:49.700 --> 01:32:53.700] and so I was saying if you would just please repeat your question before. [01:32:53.700 --> 01:32:55.700] Wait, wait, wait. I was going to ask the question. [01:32:55.700 --> 01:32:59.700] Okay, all right. Well, I just, for the sake of the listeners who may not have heard, [01:32:59.700 --> 01:33:00.700] I just want to ask. [01:33:00.700 --> 01:33:03.700] I'm telling you because I want strategy to get rid of these cameras. [01:33:03.700 --> 01:33:06.700] Yeah, okay. Here was my question. [01:33:06.700 --> 01:33:11.700] When did they begin to enforce the red light camera issue? [01:33:11.700 --> 01:33:18.700] That I don't know. I got the, I asked how much money they made. [01:33:18.700 --> 01:33:22.700] He asked what fiscal year, so I went ahead and just this year, [01:33:22.700 --> 01:33:24.700] and they got half a million. [01:33:24.700 --> 01:33:30.700] But I realized afterwards I need to contact them to find out how much money they collected [01:33:30.700 --> 01:33:34.700] that first year between 2006 and 2007. [01:33:34.700 --> 01:33:38.700] That will let me know, that will answer your question there. [01:33:38.700 --> 01:33:43.700] Plus, if there was any kind of laws you brought, I don't have standing. [01:33:43.700 --> 01:33:46.700] I mean, I haven't gotten a ticket, but those people who got tickets, [01:33:46.700 --> 01:33:51.700] if it could be proven to be illegal, they're the ones that need the money refunded. [01:33:51.700 --> 01:33:58.700] Yes. You can go, well, I started to say you could go by town, but no, you can't. [01:33:58.700 --> 01:34:03.700] If you can show that these public officials enforced [01:34:03.700 --> 01:34:09.700] or purported to enforce a law that was not yet in existence, [01:34:09.700 --> 01:34:21.700] then you can go after them under a court of inquiry and sue to have them removed from office. [01:34:21.700 --> 01:34:22.700] Yeah. [01:34:22.700 --> 01:34:24.700] There's another aspect of this as well. [01:34:24.700 --> 01:34:29.700] You can show fraud by the red light camera company for issuing citations [01:34:29.700 --> 01:34:34.700] without any authority within the state to collect funds that were not yet available to them. [01:34:34.700 --> 01:34:40.700] I'm trying to find how he can get personal static. [01:34:40.700 --> 01:34:46.700] Well, my wife did get a ticket, but that was recent, but it doesn't go back to 2006. [01:34:46.700 --> 01:34:49.700] Oh, yes it does. [01:34:49.700 --> 01:34:50.700] Okay. [01:34:50.700 --> 01:34:55.700] If the fraud began there and continued, [01:34:55.700 --> 01:35:00.700] if your wife was subjected to the fraud at any point, [01:35:00.700 --> 01:35:05.700] if you can show that there was fraud involved in this [01:35:05.700 --> 01:35:08.700] and that they received fraudulent funds, [01:35:08.700 --> 01:35:12.700] they can enter into the contract anytime they want to [01:35:12.700 --> 01:35:23.700] so long as they don't begin to enforce a statute before it was enacted. [01:35:23.700 --> 01:35:31.700] Now, these municipalities know full well that these cameras are illegal, [01:35:31.700 --> 01:35:34.700] that they won't pass muster. [01:35:34.700 --> 01:35:37.700] They had cameras back in the 60s. [01:35:37.700 --> 01:35:39.700] They were doing this. [01:35:39.700 --> 01:35:44.700] They were putting up just regular video cameras and videoing people [01:35:44.700 --> 01:35:47.700] and charging them tickets, and the Supreme Court said, [01:35:47.700 --> 01:35:50.700] no, no, no, you can't do that, so they took them out. [01:35:50.700 --> 01:35:53.700] Well, in the meantime, they made millions. [01:35:53.700 --> 01:35:56.700] And then in the 70s, they brought them back again, [01:35:56.700 --> 01:36:00.700] and the court said, no, no, no, you can't do that, and they took them out. [01:36:00.700 --> 01:36:03.700] But in the meantime, they made millions. [01:36:03.700 --> 01:36:04.700] Yeah. [01:36:04.700 --> 01:36:09.700] Someone needs to go after the millions. [01:36:09.700 --> 01:36:14.700] So are you saying that if they began enforcing this in 2006, [01:36:14.700 --> 01:36:17.700] before the Senate bill was passed, [01:36:17.700 --> 01:36:20.700] it's considered fraud even after 2007? [01:36:20.700 --> 01:36:27.700] Well, I would say you can certainly make that claim. [01:36:27.700 --> 01:36:31.700] They were engaged in an ongoing criminal conspiracy, [01:36:31.700 --> 01:36:37.700] and you can certainly claim that the cameras are unconstitutional. [01:36:37.700 --> 01:36:45.700] If an official enforces an unconstitutional law, he has no protection. [01:36:45.700 --> 01:36:50.700] I have the case, I just had it sent to me by Jeff the other day. [01:36:50.700 --> 01:36:59.700] Absolutely, if a public official enforces a law that is unconstitutional. [01:36:59.700 --> 01:37:03.700] Well, okay, this case says he has no protection, but maybe he does. [01:37:03.700 --> 01:37:09.700] The individual enforcing may have a protection, but the agency will not. [01:37:09.700 --> 01:37:16.700] The agency receiving unjust enrichment from a unconstitutional law will have no protection. [01:37:16.700 --> 01:37:18.700] In my case, it would be my city. [01:37:18.700 --> 01:37:19.700] Be your city. [01:37:19.700 --> 01:37:20.700] Yeah. [01:37:20.700 --> 01:37:25.700] And another issue I'm sure Eddie would like to address were the legislature [01:37:25.700 --> 01:37:34.700] granted the municipality the authority to enact ordinances. [01:37:34.700 --> 01:37:36.700] Would you like to address that, Eddie? [01:37:36.700 --> 01:37:47.700] Yes, you need to check Texas Constitution Article 3, Section 29, 30, 31, and 32. [01:37:47.700 --> 01:37:53.700] It is very, very clear that law may only be enacted by the legislature. [01:37:53.700 --> 01:37:57.700] That authority and power cannot be delegated. [01:37:57.700 --> 01:38:01.700] I have voluminous case law stating exactly that. [01:38:01.700 --> 01:38:06.700] The legislature may not delegate its power and authority to create law. [01:38:06.700 --> 01:38:14.700] Therefore, no ordinance, whether it be city or county, has the force and effect of law [01:38:14.700 --> 01:38:21.700] and therefore is not binding upon the people as law. [01:38:21.700 --> 01:38:23.700] Well, that's good to know. [01:38:23.700 --> 01:38:25.700] I'm a bit of a coward though. [01:38:25.700 --> 01:38:28.700] I've got the jurisdictionary, I'm running through it, trying to learn it, [01:38:28.700 --> 01:38:31.700] but you guys make it sound real easy. [01:38:31.700 --> 01:38:33.700] There's a whole lot to know. [01:38:33.700 --> 01:38:34.700] No, no, no. [01:38:34.700 --> 01:38:35.700] Wait, wait. [01:38:35.700 --> 01:38:36.700] You don't have to know all of it. [01:38:36.700 --> 01:38:37.700] Okay. [01:38:37.700 --> 01:38:42.700] What you don't know is what those morons don't know. [01:38:42.700 --> 01:38:44.700] That's true. [01:38:44.700 --> 01:38:51.700] And when you go in there going after them, it's a whole other animal. [01:38:51.700 --> 01:38:52.700] Yeah. [01:38:52.700 --> 01:38:57.700] And you haven't tried that yet, so you haven't found out how much fun it is. [01:38:57.700 --> 01:39:03.700] Well, I had a small taste yesterday in communicating with the secretary. [01:39:03.700 --> 01:39:05.700] She said, well, I'll need 10 days to get this done. [01:39:05.700 --> 01:39:06.700] That's a little loud. [01:39:06.700 --> 01:39:08.700] So I said, fine. [01:39:08.700 --> 01:39:12.700] And then I went to the website, the Texas website, [01:39:12.700 --> 01:39:21.700] and pulled up Attorney General Abbott's handbook on the Freedom of Information Act [01:39:21.700 --> 01:39:23.700] and double-checked on that. [01:39:23.700 --> 01:39:25.700] He couldn't find it, and I called him. [01:39:25.700 --> 01:39:29.700] And then he told me, yeah, they have a grace, but they're supposed to do it promptly. [01:39:29.700 --> 01:39:34.700] So then when I gave my next communication to her, I said, yeah, I'm not trying to press this, [01:39:34.700 --> 01:39:38.700] but Angie Abbott told me that it is really supposed to be prompted. [01:39:38.700 --> 01:39:43.700] And I got all kinds of information real fast within the next few hours, [01:39:43.700 --> 01:39:45.700] which she didn't need to do 10 days on. [01:39:45.700 --> 01:39:46.700] Yeah. [01:39:46.700 --> 01:39:48.700] Odd how that works. [01:39:48.700 --> 01:39:53.700] And here's another interesting little tidbit about the Open Records Act. [01:39:53.700 --> 01:39:59.700] The custodian of the record may withhold the records [01:39:59.700 --> 01:40:04.700] while he makes a request for an opinion from the attorney general. [01:40:04.700 --> 01:40:11.700] However, the custodian is required to do due diligence [01:40:11.700 --> 01:40:17.700] in seeking out the existence of a preexisting determination. [01:40:17.700 --> 01:40:22.700] If there is a preexisting determination, he has a duty to know what it is. [01:40:22.700 --> 01:40:26.700] So if an agency requests an opinion from the attorney general [01:40:26.700 --> 01:40:32.700] and there is preexisting determination, he's in violation of the act. [01:40:32.700 --> 01:40:37.700] And the Open Records Act is not a civil statute. [01:40:37.700 --> 01:40:38.700] It's criminal. [01:40:38.700 --> 01:40:39.700] It's criminal, yeah. [01:40:39.700 --> 01:40:40.700] That's right. [01:40:40.700 --> 01:40:42.700] It's class A misdemeanor. [01:40:42.700 --> 01:40:47.700] So my strategy is I'm not their attorney. [01:40:47.700 --> 01:40:51.700] If they want legal counsel, they can go talk to the district attorney. [01:40:51.700 --> 01:40:56.700] I'm sure he'll be glad to give them all the counsel they want. [01:40:56.700 --> 01:41:01.700] If I can coax them into stepping across a legal line, [01:41:01.700 --> 01:41:04.700] why, that gets a 911 call. [01:41:04.700 --> 01:41:08.700] Now, you want them getting your information really quick? [01:41:08.700 --> 01:41:11.700] Call 911 on them. [01:41:11.700 --> 01:41:14.700] You wind up with a policeman down there, [01:41:14.700 --> 01:41:18.700] and you're asking the policeman to arrest the clerk. [01:41:18.700 --> 01:41:21.700] And then you get to see the policeman do this little chicken dance, [01:41:21.700 --> 01:41:23.700] where he steps from one foot to the other, [01:41:23.700 --> 01:41:30.700] and he's trying to give you all of these reasons why he don't have to arrest the clerk. [01:41:30.700 --> 01:41:35.700] I'm not really wanting to alienate these people. [01:41:35.700 --> 01:41:37.700] You don't understand. [01:41:37.700 --> 01:41:42.700] I want them to join their counsel meeting and talk to them during their citizens' forums time, [01:41:42.700 --> 01:41:47.700] not give them the legal stuff, but just talk to them about how it's very intrusive, [01:41:47.700 --> 01:41:51.700] but it makes me feel uneasy to have cameras on me all the time. [01:41:51.700 --> 01:41:55.700] And this is a small little community of 40,000 people, [01:41:55.700 --> 01:41:57.700] and the mayor considers himself a Christian. [01:41:57.700 --> 01:42:00.700] And I'm just like, why are you doing this? [01:42:00.700 --> 01:42:02.700] Obviously for the money, but that's all. [01:42:02.700 --> 01:42:11.700] I used to live in a small community of 2,000, and the mayor absolutely hated me. [01:42:11.700 --> 01:42:16.700] The city council would choke me if they could. [01:42:16.700 --> 01:42:22.700] But when I walked into the city council room, well, hello, Mr. Kelton. [01:42:22.700 --> 01:42:24.700] How are things going, Mr. Kelton? [01:42:24.700 --> 01:42:28.700] They bent over backwards to give me what I want. [01:42:28.700 --> 01:42:32.700] These guys who are not your friends, they have their own agenda. [01:42:32.700 --> 01:42:36.700] Yeah, and Alex, you may want to check out what the funding is for these cameras, [01:42:36.700 --> 01:42:40.700] because 99% guaranteed it's federal funding. [01:42:40.700 --> 01:42:46.700] And if it is, then you're going to want to look at what authority do they have to take [01:42:46.700 --> 01:42:50.700] federal funding for such a thing, being that they are a municipality. [01:42:50.700 --> 01:42:53.700] They're supposed to be run by municipal tax revenue. [01:42:53.700 --> 01:42:58.700] And as far as I know, there's not even a state law authorizing municipalities [01:42:58.700 --> 01:43:03.700] or any other state entity to take federal funds for anything. [01:43:03.700 --> 01:43:06.700] It amounts to basically a bribe. [01:43:06.700 --> 01:43:11.700] I mean, seriously, it's like nobody else can come up to them [01:43:11.700 --> 01:43:15.700] and offer them money for something, but it's okay, but the federal government doesn't. [01:43:15.700 --> 01:43:17.700] I mean, it's straight-up bribery. [01:43:17.700 --> 01:43:20.700] So we need to look into filing criminal charges against these people [01:43:20.700 --> 01:43:24.700] for taking bribery money from the federal government. [01:43:24.700 --> 01:43:26.700] I mean, this is ridiculous. [01:43:26.700 --> 01:43:29.700] Exactly. I could offer money, and I'm not even a foreigner. [01:43:29.700 --> 01:43:30.700] Yeah. [01:43:30.700 --> 01:43:31.700] Federal government. [01:43:31.700 --> 01:43:33.700] Well, you know, I did ask about funds, [01:43:33.700 --> 01:43:37.700] going by what Bill Davis had said about the system [01:43:37.700 --> 01:43:42.700] where the company provides the camera for free and then they do the take. [01:43:42.700 --> 01:43:44.700] I asked how much went to... [01:43:44.700 --> 01:43:46.700] Okay, Alex, wait a minute. We're going to break. [01:43:46.700 --> 01:43:49.700] Do you need to stay on the line anymore? [01:43:49.700 --> 01:43:51.700] No, I think you guys need to help me out. [01:43:51.700 --> 01:43:52.700] Okay, great. [01:43:52.700 --> 01:43:54.700] I'll contact you another time, too. [01:43:54.700 --> 01:43:55.700] Okay, all right. We're going to break. [01:43:55.700 --> 01:44:05.700] We'll be right back, folks. This is Rule of Law. 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[01:45:03.700 --> 01:45:07.700] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.700 --> 01:45:10.700] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [01:45:10.700 --> 01:45:15.700] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.700 --> 01:45:18.700] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.700 --> 01:45:22.700] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.700 --> 01:45:27.700] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:27.700 --> 01:45:30.700] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:30.700 --> 01:45:33.700] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.700 --> 01:45:38.700] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.700 --> 01:45:42.700] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.700 --> 01:45:46.700] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:46.700 --> 01:45:51.700] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.700 --> 01:45:55.700] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:55.700 --> 01:46:00.700] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:00.700 --> 01:46:16.700] Okay, folks, we're back. We're taking your calls. [01:46:16.700 --> 01:46:19.700] Right now we've got Carlos in California. [01:46:19.700 --> 01:46:21.700] Carlos, thanks for calling in. [01:46:21.700 --> 01:46:24.700] What is on your mind tonight? [01:46:24.700 --> 01:46:27.700] Hello. Hi, Dan. [01:46:27.700 --> 01:46:29.700] What's on your mind, Carlos? [01:46:29.700 --> 01:46:32.700] Okay, thank you. [01:46:32.700 --> 01:46:39.700] Randy, when it comes to bar agreements, we know you love this. [01:46:39.700 --> 01:46:45.700] Can I file a bar agreement against an attorney that I have notified more than once [01:46:45.700 --> 01:46:49.700] that whatever he's doing when he's trying to foreclose on a property, [01:46:49.700 --> 01:46:52.700] can I give him all the documents that he's doing the wrong thing [01:46:52.700 --> 01:46:55.700] or give him all the evidence, and he still goes ahead [01:46:55.700 --> 01:46:59.700] and evicts that family out of their home? [01:46:59.700 --> 01:47:01.700] Can I file the bar grievance? [01:47:01.700 --> 01:47:02.700] Absolutely. [01:47:02.700 --> 01:47:06.700] You can file a bar grievance essentially for anything you want to. [01:47:06.700 --> 01:47:12.700] It's better if you have good grounds, but if the attorney is acting improperly [01:47:12.700 --> 01:47:15.700] and knows full well he's acting improperly, [01:47:15.700 --> 01:47:18.700] absolutely file a bar grievance against him. [01:47:18.700 --> 01:47:20.700] Okay, and you said it's not that hard, right? [01:47:20.700 --> 01:47:22.700] Oh, it's piece of cake. [01:47:22.700 --> 01:47:28.700] You can go right on the state website and they'll have the bar grievance form. [01:47:28.700 --> 01:47:33.700] What I suggest you do is you read the canons of ethics [01:47:33.700 --> 01:47:36.700] or the bar association standards. [01:47:36.700 --> 01:47:40.700] I'm sorry, canons of ethics go to judges. [01:47:40.700 --> 01:47:43.700] Bar association standards go to attorneys, [01:47:43.700 --> 01:47:50.700] and write the grievance in the language of the standard that the attorney violates. [01:47:50.700 --> 01:47:54.700] And when you read the standards, it's real easy. [01:47:54.700 --> 01:47:57.700] There's so many of them, there's just about everything the attorney does [01:47:57.700 --> 01:48:01.700] you can claim a bar grievance against him on. [01:48:01.700 --> 01:48:04.700] Okay, another quick question. [01:48:04.700 --> 01:48:08.700] After you remove, you may not know this, but I'll go ahead and ask you. [01:48:08.700 --> 01:48:09.700] Okay. [01:48:09.700 --> 01:48:17.700] After I remove my unlawful detainer from state court into district court, [01:48:17.700 --> 01:48:20.700] it's federal court out here in California. [01:48:20.700 --> 01:48:26.700] And I did file an answer on my state, and then after I filed the answer, [01:48:26.700 --> 01:48:30.700] because I didn't want them to default me, I moved it over to district court. [01:48:30.700 --> 01:48:35.700] Okay, wait, you filed an answer to the unlawful detainer charge. [01:48:35.700 --> 01:48:36.700] Yes. [01:48:36.700 --> 01:48:38.700] Okay, and then you filed a removal. [01:48:38.700 --> 01:48:43.700] Yes, I filed a removal, it's been removed to federal court. [01:48:43.700 --> 01:48:50.700] Now, my question is this, do I have to file another answer in the federal court? [01:48:50.700 --> 01:48:52.700] No, no. [01:48:52.700 --> 01:48:58.700] What you do is you file a notice of removal in the state, [01:48:58.700 --> 01:49:05.700] and you file a petition for removal in the Fed, and in the petition for removal, [01:49:05.700 --> 01:49:11.700] there you have to argue the grounds and show points and authorities and support. [01:49:11.700 --> 01:49:12.700] Did you do that? [01:49:12.700 --> 01:49:13.700] Yes. [01:49:13.700 --> 01:49:14.700] Okay. [01:49:14.700 --> 01:49:17.700] So, but I don't have to file another answer, right? [01:49:17.700 --> 01:49:20.700] No, your answer comes with the case. [01:49:20.700 --> 01:49:21.700] Okay. [01:49:21.700 --> 01:49:25.700] But you do have to address how you get to the federal issue. [01:49:25.700 --> 01:49:28.700] Yes, jurisdiction, venue and jurisdiction. [01:49:28.700 --> 01:49:33.700] Well, venue and jurisdiction, you also have to name either a federal question [01:49:33.700 --> 01:49:35.700] or diversity jurisdiction. [01:49:35.700 --> 01:49:37.700] Yes, that's Respratila and HOPA. [01:49:37.700 --> 01:49:42.700] Okay, did you address tolling? [01:49:42.700 --> 01:49:43.700] No. [01:49:43.700 --> 01:49:46.700] How old is the note? [01:49:46.700 --> 01:49:48.700] How old is the note? [01:49:48.700 --> 01:49:51.700] It's probably no more than three years. [01:49:51.700 --> 01:49:59.700] Okay, if it's less than three years, you still need to address equitable tolling [01:49:59.700 --> 01:50:05.700] if it's over a year because you only have a year to make a civil claim. [01:50:05.700 --> 01:50:15.700] So the way to address equitable tolling, what gives you equitable tolling is [01:50:15.700 --> 01:50:21.700] you have to be able to demonstrate that you exercised due diligence [01:50:21.700 --> 01:50:26.700] in an attempt to discover the improprieties by the lender, [01:50:26.700 --> 01:50:31.700] and you have to show fraudulent concealment. [01:50:31.700 --> 01:50:32.700] Right. [01:50:32.700 --> 01:50:39.700] And we've looked at this as we say we made certain that we only dealt with [01:50:39.700 --> 01:50:44.700] licensed professionals who were acting under the color of [01:50:44.700 --> 01:50:49.700] and under the oversight of state and federal officials. [01:50:49.700 --> 01:50:57.700] Therefore, we exercised due diligence in attempting to ensure good faith [01:50:57.700 --> 01:50:59.700] and fair dealing. [01:50:59.700 --> 01:51:02.700] So there's how we go to the due diligence, [01:51:02.700 --> 01:51:08.700] and then you go to fraudulent concealment, [01:51:08.700 --> 01:51:15.700] and I've been readjusting the way I make the accusation. [01:51:15.700 --> 01:51:22.700] The straight-up notices they're supposed to give you, [01:51:22.700 --> 01:51:29.700] like you can rescind within three days or we have to notify you [01:51:29.700 --> 01:51:34.700] if we have a financial relationship with one of the parties [01:51:34.700 --> 01:51:37.700] like the insurance company or the trustee. [01:51:37.700 --> 01:51:44.700] What I'm looking at is where the lender charges you a fee [01:51:44.700 --> 01:51:49.700] that by Hopati-Larespa, they're forbidden to charge, [01:51:49.700 --> 01:51:51.700] primarily through the Lending Act. [01:51:51.700 --> 01:51:54.700] They're forbidden to charge certain fees, [01:51:54.700 --> 01:52:00.700] those fees that they would pay to a third-party vendor for services. [01:52:00.700 --> 01:52:03.700] Those are intended to be, [01:52:03.700 --> 01:52:07.700] a number of those are intended to be absorbed in the interest rate. [01:52:07.700 --> 01:52:12.700] The loan origination fee, appraisal fee, underwriting fee, [01:52:12.700 --> 01:52:14.700] they always charge you those, [01:52:14.700 --> 01:52:17.700] and then they charge you other fees [01:52:17.700 --> 01:52:24.700] that may or may not have actually been provided by a third-party vendor. [01:52:24.700 --> 01:52:27.700] So those don't really go to notice. [01:52:27.700 --> 01:52:30.700] Those go to outright fraud. [01:52:30.700 --> 01:52:34.700] So you say, regardless of the notice requirement, [01:52:34.700 --> 01:52:36.700] these guys stole from me. [01:52:36.700 --> 01:52:38.700] They were forbidden to collect this from me. [01:52:38.700 --> 01:52:43.700] They collected this from me by adding it to the head of the note, [01:52:43.700 --> 01:52:46.700] and that created an overpayment that occurred every month. [01:52:46.700 --> 01:52:51.700] Every month, the harm accrued. [01:52:51.700 --> 01:52:54.700] It occurred every month anew. [01:52:54.700 --> 01:52:59.700] So the harm is recurring anew every month. [01:52:59.700 --> 01:53:03.700] So therefore, regardless of equitable tolling, [01:53:03.700 --> 01:53:11.700] we still have a right to recoupment by common law recoupment. [01:53:11.700 --> 01:53:14.700] We claim fraud, they're stealing from us [01:53:14.700 --> 01:53:21.700] because TILA forbid them to assess this fee in the first place. [01:53:21.700 --> 01:53:22.700] So they stole it from us. [01:53:22.700 --> 01:53:24.700] It doesn't go to the notice requirement. [01:53:24.700 --> 01:53:25.700] Okay. [01:53:25.700 --> 01:53:26.700] And last question real quick, [01:53:26.700 --> 01:53:29.700] because I want to give some of the opportunity. [01:53:29.700 --> 01:53:32.700] In fact, on this attorney that we're talking about, [01:53:32.700 --> 01:53:35.700] about the bar grievance, is it okay, [01:53:35.700 --> 01:53:39.700] or should I not let him know that, for instance, to another attorney, [01:53:39.700 --> 01:53:41.700] if you do this, I'm going to file? [01:53:41.700 --> 01:53:43.700] Absolutely never. [01:53:43.700 --> 01:53:45.700] Okay, great, great. [01:53:45.700 --> 01:53:48.700] Bushwhack is great. [01:53:48.700 --> 01:53:52.700] Besides, if you file a bar grievance, you can't mention it to it. [01:53:52.700 --> 01:53:53.700] Okay. [01:53:53.700 --> 01:53:55.700] So since you can't mention it to him afterward, [01:53:55.700 --> 01:54:00.700] it would be inappropriate to wave it in his face like a red flag. [01:54:00.700 --> 01:54:01.700] Okay. [01:54:01.700 --> 01:54:04.700] It's better when he gets kicked in the behind by it. [01:54:04.700 --> 01:54:05.700] Right, right. [01:54:05.700 --> 01:54:07.700] But you have to have a reason, right? [01:54:07.700 --> 01:54:08.700] No. [01:54:08.700 --> 01:54:09.700] Okay, great. [01:54:09.700 --> 01:54:10.700] It's better if you do. [01:54:10.700 --> 01:54:11.700] Yeah, okay. [01:54:11.700 --> 01:54:13.700] But technically, no, you don't. [01:54:13.700 --> 01:54:15.700] You can just file a bar grievance. [01:54:15.700 --> 01:54:16.700] All right, all right. [01:54:16.700 --> 01:54:17.700] I'll let somebody else. [01:54:17.700 --> 01:54:18.700] Thank you. [01:54:18.700 --> 01:54:19.700] Good job. [01:54:19.700 --> 01:54:20.700] Okay. [01:54:20.700 --> 01:54:21.700] And just for the record, [01:54:21.700 --> 01:54:23.700] I don't suggest that you file a frivolous bar grievance. [01:54:23.700 --> 01:54:24.700] Okay, no, no, no. [01:54:24.700 --> 01:54:25.700] That would distract you. [01:54:25.700 --> 01:54:32.700] But these attorneys are such knuckleheads that they give you plenty of opportunity. [01:54:32.700 --> 01:54:35.700] Yeah, I had a problem with one of them, [01:54:35.700 --> 01:54:37.700] but I'll tell you about it some other show. [01:54:37.700 --> 01:54:40.700] At least they nailed me big time. [01:54:40.700 --> 01:54:41.700] Okay, thank you. [01:54:41.700 --> 01:54:42.700] Thank you, Carlos. [01:54:42.700 --> 01:54:43.700] Thanks, Carlos. [01:54:43.700 --> 01:54:44.700] Thank everybody. [01:54:44.700 --> 01:54:49.700] Okay, we're going now to first-time caller Jason in Texas. [01:54:49.700 --> 01:54:50.700] Jason, thanks for calling in. [01:54:50.700 --> 01:54:52.700] Thanks for being a first-time caller. [01:54:52.700 --> 01:54:53.700] What is on your mind tonight? [01:54:53.700 --> 01:54:54.700] Hi, how are you? [01:54:54.700 --> 01:54:55.700] Pretty good. [01:54:55.700 --> 01:55:00.700] I got pulled over Wednesday night two nights ago. [01:55:00.700 --> 01:55:04.700] I'm here in Austin, and I was pulled over, [01:55:04.700 --> 01:55:06.700] the officer said, for running a red light. [01:55:06.700 --> 01:55:13.700] And on the ticket, he wrote accelerating through intersection as a violation [01:55:13.700 --> 01:55:16.700] and then a violation code number on the side. [01:55:16.700 --> 01:55:18.700] I couldn't find those anywhere, though. [01:55:18.700 --> 01:55:22.700] It's not listed on the ticket for any kind of a fine or anything like that. [01:55:22.700 --> 01:55:24.700] So I wasn't sure. [01:55:24.700 --> 01:55:26.700] Accelerating through intersection. [01:55:26.700 --> 01:55:28.700] What's the code number? [01:55:28.700 --> 01:55:36.700] It says 545.351. [01:55:36.700 --> 01:55:37.700] That's speeding. [01:55:37.700 --> 01:55:40.700] That's not accelerating through an intersection. [01:55:40.700 --> 01:55:46.700] 545.351 is prima facie speed limits. [01:55:46.700 --> 01:55:54.700] There is no such offense in that section as accelerating through an intersection. [01:55:54.700 --> 01:55:55.700] This amazes me. [01:55:55.700 --> 01:55:58.700] Did his name tag say moron? [01:55:58.700 --> 01:55:59.700] Yeah, it must have. [01:55:59.700 --> 01:56:01.700] These guys are professional police officers. [01:56:01.700 --> 01:56:04.700] They do this all day, every day. [01:56:04.700 --> 01:56:09.700] For crying out loud, where are you guys coming up with this crapola? [01:56:09.700 --> 01:56:11.700] They're just making it up, Randy. [01:56:11.700 --> 01:56:13.700] Yeah, he was a very young guy. [01:56:13.700 --> 01:56:15.700] Not that that really affects things, [01:56:15.700 --> 01:56:23.700] but I could tell he hadn't been a police officer very long. [01:56:23.700 --> 01:56:25.700] Anyway, I don't really know what to even do with this, [01:56:25.700 --> 01:56:33.700] because I usually try to fight these, and it was kind of confusing to me at the time. [01:56:33.700 --> 01:56:35.700] Well, that's fairly easy. [01:56:35.700 --> 01:56:38.700] Failure to state a charge upon which relief can be granted. [01:56:38.700 --> 01:56:40.700] Though that sounds more civil. [01:56:40.700 --> 01:56:41.700] It's a fact. [01:56:41.700 --> 01:56:44.700] Yeah, that sounds civil. [01:56:44.700 --> 01:56:48.700] You can file a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction [01:56:48.700 --> 01:56:56.700] and claim that there has been no allegation made against you. [01:56:56.700 --> 01:57:00.700] And when they do something, sometimes young officers, [01:57:00.700 --> 01:57:07.700] you may get this one tossed because they want to teach you how to do its business. [01:57:07.700 --> 01:57:09.700] It's always best to fight them, [01:57:09.700 --> 01:57:18.700] but this one doesn't advise you of the nature and cause of the accusation. [01:57:18.700 --> 01:57:21.700] So do I request a trial, or what would I do? [01:57:21.700 --> 01:57:25.700] No, no, no, you're not requesting a trial. [01:57:25.700 --> 01:57:29.700] First thing is you're challenging the jurisdiction of the court. [01:57:29.700 --> 01:57:33.700] The court lacks jurisdiction for several reasons at this point. [01:57:33.700 --> 01:57:38.700] The ticket is not a valid complaint. [01:57:38.700 --> 01:57:43.700] You cannot enter a plea or go to trial on a non-complaint. [01:57:43.700 --> 01:57:47.700] You can't go to trial on a complaint at all. [01:57:47.700 --> 01:57:52.700] There has to be a charging instrument created in support of that complaint. [01:57:52.700 --> 01:57:57.700] And only that charging instrument grants jurisdiction to the court to hear the cause [01:57:57.700 --> 01:58:02.700] in any way, shape, or form other than to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, [01:58:02.700 --> 01:58:05.700] which is what you're going to challenge. [01:58:05.700 --> 01:58:07.700] But it sounds like we're about to go to break. [01:58:07.700 --> 01:58:10.700] There's an appearance date on here where I have to appear at court. [01:58:10.700 --> 01:58:12.700] You have to appear at court when? [01:58:12.700 --> 01:58:13.700] Okay. [01:58:13.700 --> 01:58:16.700] It says appearance date at court would be November 29, 2010. [01:58:16.700 --> 01:58:17.700] Okay, hang on just a second. [01:58:17.700 --> 01:58:18.700] We're going to go to break. [01:58:18.700 --> 01:58:19.700] Okay. [01:58:19.700 --> 01:58:23.700] Pick this up on the other side and we'll go from there. [01:58:23.700 --> 01:58:26.700] All right, folks, we're at our mid-show break. [01:58:26.700 --> 01:58:29.700] We've got two more hours on our Friday evening info marathon. [01:58:29.700 --> 01:58:33.700] We've got some callers on the line, Jeff, Anthony, Kenny, Mike, Don. [01:58:33.700 --> 01:58:36.700] We'll be getting to you all, so just hang in tight. [01:58:36.700 --> 01:58:40.700] This is The Rule of Law, ruleoflawradio.com. [01:58:40.700 --> 01:58:44.700] Please support our sponsors, Centrition, Jurisdictionary, [01:58:44.700 --> 01:58:48.700] The Mike Mears Method, Eddie's Traffic Seminar. [01:58:48.700 --> 01:58:59.700] We'll be right back, folks. [01:58:59.700 --> 01:59:03.700] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:59:03.700 --> 01:59:07.700] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:59:07.700 --> 01:59:11.700] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:11.700 --> 01:59:16.700] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. 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