[00:00.000 --> 00:05.000] This news brief brought to you by the International Newsnet. [00:05.000 --> 00:09.320] Strikes brought Athens to a standstill Thursday as the Greek government announced further cuts [00:09.320 --> 00:12.240] to public sector jobs and pensions. [00:12.240 --> 00:17.240] Greeks already hit by tax increases, price rises, wage cuts and pension reductions in [00:17.240 --> 00:22.920] a 20-month austerity drive have seen average household income drop by 50%. [00:22.920 --> 00:27.080] The nation's Congress of Trade unions pledged to wage war against the government and the [00:27.080 --> 00:32.040] troika of international lenders for as long as it takes. [00:32.040 --> 00:37.440] One in four children under the age of six in the U.S. now lives in poverty. [00:37.440 --> 00:42.080] Research from the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire also finds the [00:42.080 --> 00:48.160] number has increased by 2.6 million since the recession began in 2007, bringing the [00:48.160 --> 00:55.080] total to an estimated 15.7 million poor children in 2010. [00:55.080 --> 00:59.840] On Thursday's Republican presidential debate, Fox News picked the Federation of American [00:59.840 --> 01:05.400] Immigration Reform designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center to ask, [01:05.400 --> 01:11.080] do you support legislation to require all employers to use e-verify to ensure that the people [01:11.080 --> 01:15.080] they hire are legally authorized to work in the U.S.? [01:15.080 --> 01:19.720] Candidate Newt Kingrich replied the country ought to outsource the e-verify program to [01:19.720 --> 01:23.600] credit card companies. [01:23.600 --> 01:29.840] Live for Barack Obama among African Americans, his strongest backers, has dropped sharply. [01:29.840 --> 01:35.480] Five months ago, 83% of African Americans held, quote, strongly favorable views of Obama, [01:35.480 --> 01:41.160] but in a new Washington Post-APC news poll, that number has dropped to 58%. [01:41.160 --> 01:45.760] The White House has been sharply criticized in recent months by black political leaders [01:45.760 --> 01:49.920] who argue Obama has not done enough to help blacks. [01:49.920 --> 01:54.440] African Americans have historically correlated approval ratings of the president to black [01:54.440 --> 02:00.240] unemployment, which this summer hit 16%, the highest since 1984. [02:00.240 --> 02:05.280] Clyde McQueen, an African American who runs a job placement firm in Kansas City, said, [02:05.280 --> 02:09.720] quote, masses of young people, first-time voters, and entry-level workers are being [02:09.720 --> 02:14.360] adversely impacted through downsizing. [02:14.360 --> 02:18.800] Analysts say Palestine's bid for statehood has been bolstered by the international boycott, [02:18.800 --> 02:21.800] the diverse and sanctions movement against Israel. [02:21.800 --> 02:26.960] A new BDS campaign was launched this summer by the United Church of Canada, which is trying [02:26.960 --> 02:32.160] to persuade companies operating in Canada to stop supporting the Israeli occupation. [02:32.160 --> 02:36.520] The campaign follows similar moves by the U.S. Presbyterian Church and the New England [02:36.520 --> 02:38.920] Conference of the United Methodist Church. [02:38.920 --> 02:44.160] Britain's Trade Union Congress voted recently to reconsider its ties with Israel's National [02:44.160 --> 02:50.080] Trade Union Federation and reaffirmed its policy of encouraging affiliates, employers, and [02:50.080 --> 02:56.120] pension funds to disinvest from and boycott companies profiting from illegal settlements [02:56.120 --> 03:25.120] and construction of Israel's West Bank wall. [03:26.120 --> 03:49.680] Well, I received my remedy today, came in a box just like the state I accepted for value [03:49.680 --> 03:50.680] right away. [03:50.680 --> 03:57.680] Okay, folks, we are back. [03:57.680 --> 04:27.400] Harman is staying with us and we've got some callers on the board for Harman and we've [04:27.400 --> 04:28.400] got Steve in Missouri. [04:28.400 --> 04:29.400] Steve, thank you for calling in. [04:29.400 --> 04:30.400] What is your question for Harman Taylor? [04:30.400 --> 04:31.400] Thank you. [04:31.400 --> 04:32.400] How's everybody tonight? [04:32.400 --> 04:33.400] Pretty good. [04:33.400 --> 04:34.400] Going back to the beginning of the conversation, talking about commerce and funny money versus [04:34.400 --> 04:35.400] barter and silver. [04:35.400 --> 04:51.200] And my question is, I got a bunch of these silver coins that were worth 40 bucks on Monday [04:51.200 --> 04:57.640] and now they're worth 30 bucks, but they say one dollar on them. [04:57.640 --> 05:01.840] So are they dollars or are they silver? [05:01.840 --> 05:06.640] And now we've got a very good question, okay? [05:06.640 --> 05:10.280] You can answer that on your own. [05:10.280 --> 05:15.440] You may not realize that, but you can answer that on your own and here's the question to [05:15.440 --> 05:17.800] answer your question. [05:17.800 --> 05:21.600] What is a dollar? [05:21.600 --> 05:26.800] A dollar is 17 points, something grams of silver according to the coinage act. [05:26.800 --> 05:27.800] 371.25. [05:27.800 --> 05:28.800] Okay. [05:28.800 --> 05:33.800] But that's a commercial use that's not, Harman will explain, it's not exactly the same. [05:33.800 --> 05:34.800] Let's look at the coinage act. [05:34.800 --> 05:36.800] Do you have a date on that? [05:36.800 --> 05:43.960] Was it 18 or 1789 or something like that? [05:43.960 --> 05:45.360] That's where I would go first. [05:45.360 --> 05:46.800] So we're in the ballpark. [05:46.800 --> 05:47.800] Okay. [05:47.800 --> 05:52.800] What's the difference between 1789 and 2011? [05:52.800 --> 05:55.800] Let me break this up a little bit. [05:55.800 --> 06:00.800] What's the difference between 1789 and 1963? [06:00.800 --> 06:07.800] And what's the difference between 1789 and 2011? [06:07.800 --> 06:15.800] Well, the silver was Nixon detached silver from the monetary system, didn't he? [06:15.800 --> 06:20.800] Nixon did more on the gold than the silver. [06:20.800 --> 06:28.800] LBJ would have been the one at the helm of that ship at the time silver got clobbered. [06:28.800 --> 06:29.800] But you're close. [06:29.800 --> 06:30.800] You're close. [06:30.800 --> 06:36.800] To answer the question, we totally changed worlds when silver was no longer in general [06:36.800 --> 06:37.800] circulation. [06:37.800 --> 06:39.800] So what am I saying? [06:39.800 --> 06:49.800] And the coinage act may still be there, but we went from world A to world B about 1965. [06:49.800 --> 06:56.800] It was formally recognized as different when the UCC started coming in. [06:56.800 --> 07:01.800] We've got two different layers of commercial law to deal with. [07:01.800 --> 07:04.800] The national layer and the state layer. [07:04.800 --> 07:08.800] The national layer does not define dollar. [07:08.800 --> 07:10.800] It does, but it's very circular. [07:10.800 --> 07:14.800] So it's a confession that there is no definition of dollar at the national level. [07:14.800 --> 07:21.800] It says a hundred cents and then divine cent is one one hundredth of a dollar. [07:21.800 --> 07:23.800] Okay, that's nothing. [07:23.800 --> 07:33.800] Where you went is to a standard that does not apply right now. [07:33.800 --> 07:38.800] Where you went is to a law of the land based standard. [07:38.800 --> 07:45.800] A law of the land based standard would be terrific to have, but we're not in a law of the land [07:45.800 --> 07:47.800] based system right now. [07:47.800 --> 07:50.800] We are in a law of the sea based system. [07:50.800 --> 07:55.800] You know that because funny money circulates generally. [07:55.800 --> 08:02.800] If we had a system in which dollar was defined in terms of grains of fine silver, what is [08:02.800 --> 08:07.800] dollar is a weight like a pound or an ounce or a gram or a ton. [08:07.800 --> 08:10.800] Dollar defines a weight. [08:10.800 --> 08:13.800] Dollar happens to be a unique weight. [08:13.800 --> 08:18.800] It happens to be a unit of account associated weight. [08:18.800 --> 08:24.800] For us to have a legitimate system, dollar would be defined in terms of grains of fine silver. [08:24.800 --> 08:28.800] Okay, where you went is to a spot where that happened. [08:28.800 --> 08:31.800] We don't have that system in play right now. [08:31.800 --> 08:39.800] So foundationally, to answer the question, we've got to decide which frame of reference we're going to use. [08:39.800 --> 08:49.800] The common thing for government today, pick a level from the PTA on up to the national system. [08:49.800 --> 08:56.800] All of that system functions in a law of the sea circumstance. [08:56.800 --> 09:06.800] A law of the sea forum, a law of the sea platform, a law of the sea choice of law, which is [09:06.800 --> 09:10.800] confessed by the general circulation of funny money. [09:10.800 --> 09:15.800] Okay, because we've got funny money, that's the confession that dollar is not defined. [09:15.800 --> 09:18.800] At the national level, they clobbered the term dollar. [09:18.800 --> 09:26.800] At the state level, the UCC came in, I think formally those started being accepted about 1968. [09:26.800 --> 09:27.800] You could go back and check. [09:27.800 --> 09:31.800] There may have been one that was adopted before then, but that's in the ballpark. [09:31.800 --> 09:33.800] We can split hairs over the dates. [09:33.800 --> 09:36.800] It's not going to change the concept. [09:36.800 --> 09:39.800] At the national level, dollar is bushwhacked. [09:39.800 --> 09:43.800] At the state level, it took the UCC to do it. [09:43.800 --> 09:46.800] UCC defines money. [09:46.800 --> 09:49.800] Federal Reserve note is recognized as money. [09:49.800 --> 09:54.800] The UCC does not define the term dollar. [09:54.800 --> 10:01.800] And so when you say you're looking at the silver round, it's got this thing printed on it that says dollar. [10:01.800 --> 10:03.800] Is this a dollar or what? [10:03.800 --> 10:09.800] The answer is, in this state, there is no such thing. [10:09.800 --> 10:19.800] Especially when we equate it to the concept of a weight in terms of silver, grains of fine silver. [10:19.800 --> 10:26.800] Now, if you take that coin to the bank, they're going to give you credit for $1. [10:26.800 --> 10:33.800] And unless you go to the bank in Utah, at which points, they will give you credit for $30. [10:33.800 --> 10:40.800] And what you're telling me is silver got clobbered again, and that's probably another indication to buy. [10:40.800 --> 10:47.800] But that's not the point of this show, is to talk about commodities and investments. [10:47.800 --> 10:57.800] The point about silver is, silver is, well, in gold, too, and you get the coins that say dollar on it. [10:57.800 --> 11:01.800] The treasury gets to say that, and no one else does. [11:01.800 --> 11:04.800] That's what Von Nothaus ran into. [11:04.800 --> 11:12.800] He tried to associate weight in silver with the concept of dollar, and they got clobbered with it for counterfeiting. [11:12.800 --> 11:17.800] Okay, so is your silver coin a dollar? [11:17.800 --> 11:22.800] The answer is, it depends upon which choice of law we're talking about. [11:22.800 --> 11:30.800] In the place called this state, the only place you're going to get market value for that right now, anywhere close as Utah, [11:30.800 --> 11:36.800] they'll recognize it at market value and will trade with you at that level. [11:36.800 --> 11:40.800] Right now, I don't think anybody else will do that. [11:40.800 --> 11:42.800] So what am I saying? [11:42.800 --> 11:51.800] I'm saying in Utah, you'll get $30 for it, and everywhere else, you'll get one if you were to trade it into the bank for something. [11:51.800 --> 11:52.800] Absolutely. [11:52.800 --> 11:56.800] Well, I know it's still constitutional money in Missouri, silver. [11:56.800 --> 12:05.800] But I was mostly asking in terms of when the dollars go away and all I have is that silver to take my taxi ride or whatever. [12:05.800 --> 12:11.800] I just thought it would be an interesting angle to curveball to bring into the conversation. [12:11.800 --> 12:12.800] I appreciate your answer. [12:12.800 --> 12:14.800] Appreciate the call. [12:14.800 --> 12:15.800] All right. [12:15.800 --> 12:16.800] Thank you. [12:16.800 --> 12:17.800] Thank you, Steve. [12:17.800 --> 12:26.800] Okay, well, we had Matt from Texas that we were going to go to next, but Matt just this instant dropped off the line. [12:26.800 --> 12:29.800] So Matt, if you're out there listening, please call back in. [12:29.800 --> 12:30.800] You were next. [12:30.800 --> 12:33.800] We've got Roger in Washington now. [12:33.800 --> 12:34.800] Roger, thank you for calling. [12:34.800 --> 12:36.800] What is your question for Harmon Taylor? [12:36.800 --> 12:39.800] Well, I have a couple of questions. [12:39.800 --> 12:52.800] I wanted to run by a definition vehicle in the state of Washington and also had a question about silver again. [12:52.800 --> 12:55.800] First, the vehicle. [12:55.800 --> 12:58.800] This went to effect July 1 of this year. [12:58.800 --> 13:19.800] So this vehicle includes every device capable of being moved upon a public highway and in upon or by which any person or property is or may be transported or drawn upon a public highway including bicycles. [13:19.800 --> 13:25.800] And it goes on to exclude other things like wheelchairs, et cetera, power wheelchairs. [13:25.800 --> 13:28.800] But that's the basic definition that I read. [13:28.800 --> 13:34.800] So they really, they seem to kind of avoid all the terms you mentioned. [13:34.800 --> 13:38.800] Now, transported isn't really transportation. [13:38.800 --> 13:46.800] This is used as a verb and transportation defines a noun. [13:46.800 --> 13:54.800] Could you make that leap with the word transported, which means nothing more than to move from one place to the other? [13:54.800 --> 14:04.800] It makes no mention of commerce, trade, for hire, carrier, nothing. [14:04.800 --> 14:22.800] So right now what you're saying is the term transport in the definition of vehicle suggests to you that the transportation code covers all forms of use of a conveyance. [14:22.800 --> 14:29.800] In other words, you read that and you freaked out and said, oh, that covers absolutely everything, which is how it is designed. [14:29.800 --> 14:32.800] That is its intended purpose. [14:32.800 --> 14:33.800] Okay. [14:33.800 --> 14:35.800] So is that where you're starting? [14:35.800 --> 14:41.800] Intended purpose meaning to mislead you, not to actually encompass everything, but to make you think that it does. [14:41.800 --> 14:43.800] I have a question for you. [14:43.800 --> 14:51.800] You said they changed the definition or they instituted this definition. [14:51.800 --> 15:00.800] Do you know what their intent or purpose was in making this statutory definition? [15:00.800 --> 15:01.800] I don't. [15:01.800 --> 15:05.800] I can read the previous one. [15:05.800 --> 15:24.800] If you want to hear that, it says vehicle includes every device capable of being moved upon a public highway and in a comma upon comma or by which any person or property is or may be transported or drawn upon a public highway including bicycles. [15:24.800 --> 15:30.800] I don't think there's any difference in the definition of vehicle there. [15:30.800 --> 15:36.800] I think probably in some of the exclusions there might be a difference like power. [15:36.800 --> 15:42.800] Okay, so they did not substantially change the definition of the term. [15:42.800 --> 15:49.800] Yeah, the definition of vehicle doesn't appear to have changed in the definition other than maybe. [15:49.800 --> 15:57.800] So they're not changing the term around to get it to encompass a more jurisdiction than it did. [15:57.800 --> 16:02.800] So you're just trying to determine what the overall definition is generally. [16:02.800 --> 16:07.800] Well, my thing is around the word transported. [16:07.800 --> 16:10.800] That's the correct focus. [16:10.800 --> 16:26.800] So we've got to understand what transport is and whether we use it as the verb which of course is the action or is the noun or the verbal noun, the noun that takes the form of putting that verb into action. [16:26.800 --> 16:42.800] Transport, transportation, to transport is to remove people and or property from here to there for profit or hire under the choice of law the place called this state. [16:42.800 --> 16:53.800] So we talk about it in the noun form, we talk about it in the verb form where we're still absolutely positively talking about a specific form of commerce called transportation. [16:53.800 --> 16:57.800] Okay, folks, we'll be right back. We're going to break. [17:23.800 --> 17:26.800] Good strong and true. [17:26.800 --> 17:32.800] Voting against every tax increase, every unbalanced budget, every time. [17:32.800 --> 17:37.800] Standing up to the Washington machine, guided by principle. [17:37.800 --> 17:41.800] Ron Paul, the one who will stop the spending. [17:41.800 --> 17:49.800] Save the dollar, create jobs, bring peace, the one who will restore liberty. [17:49.800 --> 17:56.800] Ron Paul, the one who can beat Obama and restore America now. [17:56.800 --> 17:59.800] I'm Ron Paul and I approve this message. [17:59.800 --> 18:04.800] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? 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[18:46.800 --> 18:49.800] Or email Michael Meares at yahoo.com. [18:49.800 --> 18:56.800] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:56.800 --> 19:00.800] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:00.800 --> 19:03.800] Well don't let nothing get to you. [19:03.800 --> 19:06.800] Only the father can deliver you. [19:06.800 --> 19:12.800] So don't let my people hurt you until they can get behind you. [19:12.800 --> 19:14.800] Know what I mean? [19:14.800 --> 19:16.800] My friend. [19:16.800 --> 19:42.800] Okay folks we are back. [19:42.800 --> 19:47.800] Okay we are talking to Roger about the word transportation and transport. [19:47.800 --> 19:54.800] And before that harm and finish I wanted to just put my comment in here also. [19:54.800 --> 19:59.800] Roger if you look up the word transportation in Black's law dictionary. [19:59.800 --> 20:05.800] Because that word is not really defined in any of the state transportation codes. [20:05.800 --> 20:13.800] And when a word is not defined you go to Black's or Bouvier's depending on the circumstance or both to get the legal definition. [20:13.800 --> 20:18.800] And in Black's it lists a ton of Supreme Court case law. [20:18.800 --> 20:21.800] That's where they get the definitions from. [20:21.800 --> 20:26.800] And in every single instance transportation is defined as a commercial activity. [20:26.800 --> 20:32.800] And so that's why we are saying if the word transportation is used it necessarily implies commercial activity. [20:32.800 --> 20:39.800] And so the difference between transport and transportation, I mean that's a minor semantics issue. [20:39.800 --> 20:41.800] Because it's the same thing. [20:41.800 --> 20:43.800] It's just one's the noun and one's the verb. [20:43.800 --> 20:48.800] But Harman did you have anything else to comment on as far as my comment? [20:48.800 --> 20:51.800] I essentially did. [20:51.800 --> 20:53.800] Appreciate the call. [20:53.800 --> 20:56.800] Roger did you have anything else? [20:56.800 --> 21:05.800] Anything about funny money, silver and guns? I spoke to you once before about Second Amendment and guns and so forth. [21:05.800 --> 21:12.800] And how you can avoid the ATF's craziness. [21:12.800 --> 21:17.800] And you said last time that was a tough nut to crack. [21:17.800 --> 21:30.800] And I guess my question now is is it because of the in the state thing with funny money that they regulate it? [21:30.800 --> 21:39.800] Yes. Everything that's regulable will have a basis in the money system. [21:39.800 --> 21:48.800] That's what I'm saying. I'm saying they can regulate it where there's a commercial nexus that ties it into the place called this state. [21:48.800 --> 22:01.800] So yes, the whole gun thing will change when there's an understanding that includes as part of the understanding. [22:01.800 --> 22:03.800] This isn't the whole answer. [22:03.800 --> 22:06.800] It's why it's such a tough nut to crack. [22:06.800 --> 22:12.800] We've been on the radio for a month worth of Sundays of shows. [22:12.800 --> 22:18.800] We could talk about this concept every show between now and this time next year. [22:18.800 --> 22:22.800] And that probably wouldn't be sufficient to cover it. [22:22.800 --> 22:37.800] There's some things that need to be combined together in the study to get one's mind around where the limit is on the regulation of firearms. [22:37.800 --> 22:48.800] Part of what will happen as those in that market start to say this is really nuts and I really don't want to volunteer to be regulated anymore. [22:48.800 --> 22:55.800] One of the things that will change is the medium of exchange for those transactions. [22:55.800 --> 23:00.800] Where is the license, for example, going to be used? [23:00.800 --> 23:07.800] The license is going to be used in the location where the activity is regulated, which is where, in this state. [23:07.800 --> 23:10.800] That's a funny money-based transaction. [23:10.800 --> 23:17.800] If we're basing the transaction of the firearm, et cetera, on silver, [23:17.800 --> 23:21.800] I've got a very foundational choice of law question. [23:21.800 --> 23:26.800] Medium of exchange is not the only indicia of choice of law. [23:26.800 --> 23:28.800] There are others. [23:28.800 --> 23:35.800] So this is why I'm saying it's a tough nut to crack because we've got to understand what constitutes indicia of choice of law. [23:35.800 --> 23:41.800] And we could go through those, but it's a soap time problem. [23:41.800 --> 23:50.800] What I mean by that is the concepts, just because they've been kicked around on a radio program, don't necessarily make sense by the people that really need to use them. [23:50.800 --> 23:57.800] The people that really need to use them need to focus on that and concentrate on that long enough for it to start to become second nature. [23:57.800 --> 24:02.800] There's a paradigm shift involved in that, and that's why it's a soap time problem. [24:02.800 --> 24:04.800] It is not going to happen overnight. [24:04.800 --> 24:14.800] The people that can make changes very promptly because the reason for the change and the abstract nature of the concepts for the change instantly makes sense. [24:14.800 --> 24:18.800] The other 99% of the people need to mull it over for a while because why? [24:18.800 --> 24:27.800] Because they've grown up in a legal atmosphere that makes what they really need to understand a foreign language to them. [24:27.800 --> 24:41.800] So, yeah, the money makes a huge difference on what is and is not regulable in that line of commerce, in the firearms activity. [24:41.800 --> 24:49.800] The fact that silver would be the basis for the transaction is one thing that's going to have to be changed. [24:49.800 --> 24:53.800] It's not the only thing, but it's certainly one of them. [24:53.800 --> 25:01.800] Do you know of any laws now that forbid an FFL from taking silver and trade for a firearm? [25:01.800 --> 25:08.800] Well, you just mixed and matched worlds, and this is the problem. [25:08.800 --> 25:20.800] And so your question is very understandable, and I'm doing a little soft shoe here to pause long enough for me to get my mind around how it is I want to try to answer this. [25:20.800 --> 25:38.800] Let's try this. The license holder has a license to do that line of activity in the hover zone, in the place called this state. [25:38.800 --> 25:44.800] The hover zone, you may have heard those conversations before. [25:44.800 --> 25:55.800] It's an abstract place. It's not something that we can see physically, but to get our mind around it, I describe it as an acrylic layer. [25:55.800 --> 25:58.800] No, I understand that. I've heard these people. [25:58.800 --> 26:00.800] Okay, you've heard all that before. [26:00.800 --> 26:08.800] Okay, the license allows people to walk around in the hover zone and trade firearms for funny money. [26:08.800 --> 26:18.800] Okay, if we're not in the hover zone intending to trade firearms for funny money, of what relevance then is the license? [26:18.800 --> 26:22.800] We've got to be real careful here because the license can still be relevant. [26:22.800 --> 26:29.800] Why? Because silver is only one indicia of choice of law. [26:29.800 --> 26:34.800] It's only one indicia, but let's presume we got all the others fixed. [26:34.800 --> 26:43.800] Let's presume we knew exactly what we needed to do in the written agreement to have evidence that this transaction is beyond the hover zone. [26:43.800 --> 26:52.800] In other words, the two parties are transacting on the land, not in the hover zone, per the law land rather than per the law of the sea. [26:52.800 --> 26:57.800] Okay, now we've got a huge question of how much regulatory authority can apply at all. [26:57.800 --> 27:02.800] Why? Because the regulators are in the hover zone. [27:02.800 --> 27:06.800] Right, and the transaction would take place on the land. [27:06.800 --> 27:09.800] Correct, rather than up in the hover zone. [27:09.800 --> 27:17.800] So there's nothing licensed under the law of the land, that which is licensed is in the law of the sea system in the hover zone. [27:17.800 --> 27:21.800] That's why they created it. They created it so they could regulate it. [27:21.800 --> 27:26.800] It's no different a circumstance than it being a wartime circumstance. [27:26.800 --> 27:30.800] And this is where the War Powers Act confuses a lot of people. [27:30.800 --> 27:34.800] The War Powers Act exists in the hover zone. [27:34.800 --> 27:40.800] It's the cover story for the consequences of what happens when we use funny money. [27:40.800 --> 27:42.800] It's the cover story. [27:42.800 --> 27:44.800] It's a brilliantly done cover story. [27:44.800 --> 27:49.800] They've done a magnificent job of putting a lot of octopus ink in the water. [27:49.800 --> 27:59.800] But at the end of the day, if we're trading in silver and we have all the rest of the choice of law in mind, we're not dealing with licenseable activity at all. [27:59.800 --> 28:01.800] This is the point. [28:01.800 --> 28:03.800] So, I mean, the question is excellent. [28:03.800 --> 28:06.800] The perspective that you have on this is excellent. [28:06.800 --> 28:12.800] I'm hearing in your mind the chewing through this, and it's a soap time deal. [28:12.800 --> 28:21.800] There will come a time when you'll wake up, bolt upright in bed 2.30 in the morning and say, oh, this is really simple. [28:21.800 --> 28:24.800] And I'm going to say yes, it's very simple. [28:24.800 --> 28:27.800] It's just a wicked paradigm shift. [28:27.800 --> 28:34.800] Well, I've been meaning to contact you because I spoke to you on the show in the past about this same issue. [28:34.800 --> 28:36.800] Sir, glad you brought it up again. [28:36.800 --> 28:38.800] It's a huge one. [28:38.800 --> 28:46.800] It's one I hadn't really focused on yet because there's enough other irons in the fire to get some of these other preliminary matters ironed out. [28:46.800 --> 28:51.800] It's on the back burner, but it's one that we have to address. [28:51.800 --> 29:02.800] Well, it's kind of on one of my burners because I've been studying some past cases on it and so forth and ATF law and so forth. [29:02.800 --> 29:05.800] Sir, it's good to be familiar with it. [29:05.800 --> 29:18.800] Yeah, I wanted to get very familiar with it before I contacted you on it, but I think it would put a chink in their armor if we crack through that. [29:18.800 --> 29:25.800] Praise be to God when that day comes, and it may be a lot sooner than they're ready for. [29:25.800 --> 29:27.800] Yeah, it has to happen. [29:27.800 --> 29:28.800] It has to happen. [29:28.800 --> 29:33.800] What they wanted to do, the International Banking Cartel, is try to mope. [29:33.800 --> 29:34.800] Is that music? [29:34.800 --> 29:36.800] Yes, it is. [29:36.800 --> 29:38.800] We're going to break now. [29:38.800 --> 29:40.800] OK, Roger, thank you so much for the call. [29:40.800 --> 29:41.800] OK, thank you. [29:41.800 --> 29:42.800] OK. [29:42.800 --> 29:43.800] Bye. [29:43.800 --> 29:44.800] Bye-bye. [29:44.800 --> 29:54.800] OK, when we get back, Harmon's going to finish up with his thoughts on the International Banking Cartel, and we will continue to take your calls. [29:54.800 --> 29:55.800] Matt, Joe, and Tony. [29:55.800 --> 29:59.800] We'll be right back. [29:59.800 --> 30:05.800] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [30:05.800 --> 30:07.800] The government says that fire brought it down. [30:07.800 --> 30:12.800] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [30:12.800 --> 30:15.800] 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [30:15.800 --> 30:17.800] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [30:17.800 --> 30:19.800] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [30:19.800 --> 30:20.800] I'm a structural engineer. [30:20.800 --> 30:21.800] I'm a New York City correction officer. [30:21.800 --> 30:22.800] I'm an Air Force pilot. [30:22.800 --> 30:24.800] I'm a father who lost his son. [30:24.800 --> 30:26.800] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [30:26.800 --> 30:31.800] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [30:31.800 --> 30:38.800] OK, take a right turn at the gas station, and go two blocks, turn left on Main, and it's the third house. [30:38.800 --> 30:42.800] Oh, hi. Katherine Albrecht here, giving driving directions that involve left turns. [30:42.800 --> 30:44.800] Well, I still can. [30:44.800 --> 30:46.800] Details coming up. [30:46.800 --> 30:48.800] Privacy is under attack. [30:48.800 --> 30:51.800] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:51.800 --> 30:56.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:56.800 --> 30:58.800] So protect your rights. [30:58.800 --> 31:01.800] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [31:01.800 --> 31:02.800] Privacy. [31:02.800 --> 31:04.800] It's worth hanging on to. [31:04.800 --> 31:07.800] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. [31:07.800 --> 31:11.800] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [31:11.800 --> 31:14.800] Start over with StartPage. [31:14.800 --> 31:18.800] A super street is a road where the left-hand turns are rerouted. [31:18.800 --> 31:23.800] Drivers instead have to make a right turn and then make a U-turn around a broad median. [31:23.800 --> 31:25.800] Well, this may seem silly and time-consuming. [31:25.800 --> 31:31.800] Research shows a 20% overall reduction in travel time compared to conventional intersections. [31:31.800 --> 31:37.800] What's more, super street intersections have nearly 50% fewer reported automobile collisions [31:37.800 --> 31:40.800] and 63% fewer cases of personal injury. [31:40.800 --> 31:44.800] The super street concept has been around for over 20 years. [31:44.800 --> 31:49.800] But until now, little research had been done to assess its effectiveness under real-world conditions. [31:49.800 --> 31:54.800] Given the latest data, left turns may soon become an endangered species. [31:54.800 --> 31:56.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:56.800 --> 32:01.800] Information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [32:27.800 --> 32:31.800] Oh, I won't [32:31.800 --> 32:39.800] I won't let you put the world over my eyes [32:39.800 --> 32:46.800] You must refuse your noose, also come in life [32:46.800 --> 32:49.800] It seems you like to say [32:49.800 --> 32:54.800] But please take some words to the wise [32:54.800 --> 33:05.800] I'm trying to pull the world over my eyes [33:05.800 --> 33:08.800] Okay, folks, we are back with a very special guest, Harmon Taylor. [33:08.800 --> 33:13.800] He's agreed to stay up late with us so we can continue to take your calls. [33:13.800 --> 33:18.800] Okay, so before we go to the next call, Harmon, you're about to launch into a tirade [33:18.800 --> 33:20.800] against the international banking cabal. [33:20.800 --> 33:28.800] Their mechanism is one of taking over the choice of law. [33:28.800 --> 33:36.800] And they've done that by clobbering the money system. [33:36.800 --> 33:42.800] The two types of money cannot coexist peacefully. [33:42.800 --> 33:51.800] The funding money system is technically and literally at war with the honest system awaits in measures. [33:51.800 --> 33:55.800] Those two systems cannot coexist simultaneously. [33:55.800 --> 34:01.800] One or the other will be the evidence of the type of system running. [34:01.800 --> 34:08.800] Where funding money circulates generally, the system is based on the law of the sea. [34:08.800 --> 34:16.800] It's a commercial system, everything functions on Monty Hall's Let's Make a Deal, everything. [34:16.800 --> 34:22.800] Now, if we had a legitimate system, if we had a law of the land-based system, [34:22.800 --> 34:28.800] there would still be in the current mindset an awful lot of Monty Hall's Let's Make a Deal. [34:28.800 --> 34:30.800] They would still be there. [34:30.800 --> 34:37.800] It's just that the difference, when we come back to this, the difference between the two systems is the evaluation standard. [34:37.800 --> 34:43.800] We get to ask a lot more embarrassing questions under the common law standard, the subjective standard. [34:43.800 --> 34:48.800] Then we get to ask under the law of the sea standard, which is the objective standard. [34:48.800 --> 34:52.800] Under the objective standard, there's one question that the judge needs an answer to. [34:52.800 --> 34:55.800] Is that your signature? [34:55.800 --> 34:57.800] Everything else after that follows. [34:57.800 --> 35:08.800] Under the subjective standard, under the law of the land standard, then there's a whole lot more at issue rather than just the question of, is that your signature? [35:08.800 --> 35:17.800] The meaning of the minds and understanding of the deal, the scope of the deal and all of this start to become relevant questions. [35:17.800 --> 35:24.800] So we might still have commercial things to deal with, which is why it matters that we understand where that comes from. [35:24.800 --> 35:48.800] So it's determinated under any choice of law, but under the current regulatory mechanism, the key thing, not the only one, but the key thing that makes this system function as under the appearance of law, when it's all Monty Hall's Let's Make a Deal, is the use of funny money. [35:48.800 --> 36:01.800] And so the question in about the difference between the funny money and the silver when it comes to gun regulation is a huge, and it's just, it's extremely important. [36:01.800 --> 36:12.800] It's a hugely important place to start to understand how we peel back regulatory authority in that particular area of commerce. [36:12.800 --> 36:23.800] And what they're trying to do, of course, is disarm us, and this is where it was headed. The objective has been that way for a long time, in the statute in the District of Columbia, you can't have a gun in your house. [36:23.800 --> 36:44.800] Well, that's psychotic. I mean, I could call it insane, and it's a commonly used term. I use the term psychotic to try to communicate exactly how seriously mentally deficient these people are in the sense of their relationship to us, their evil, evil, evil, evil, evil people. [36:44.800 --> 36:55.800] I could say that for five minutes and not quite express how evil these people are. They want to disarm and therefore to be able to take over without having to put up much of a fight. [36:55.800 --> 37:04.800] The police state is extremely expensive to run. Okay, it's a little less expensive to run when the victims out there cannot defend themselves. [37:04.800 --> 37:15.800] So what has kept America different from all these other places taken over is this concept of the Second Amendment doctrine. [37:15.800 --> 37:23.800] And the Supreme Court has recently recognized the Second Amendment doctrine and said, yeah, that even applies to the states. [37:23.800 --> 37:44.800] And so there's all kinds of mechanisms that are in place now to try to bypass that, and none of it's going to work. But in the same time period, they're trying to run all of these disarmament concepts through this and that type of mechanism. [37:44.800 --> 37:54.800] I mean, they're trying to use treaties now. And the reason this Pennsylvania poisoning case is so important, B-O-N-D is the defendant's last name, Bond. [37:54.800 --> 38:11.800] The reason that case is so important is when that gets shut down under a 10th Amendment theory, which is actually a structural due process theory, where the states have a particular role in this dual authority system. [38:11.800 --> 38:16.800] What that's going to do then is kick in the head, this treaty-based concept of disarmament. [38:16.800 --> 38:30.800] So it was the Bond case, not necessarily because the treaty-based statutes going to get clobbered for chemical weapons regulation, but because it's the exact same mechanism that's in play right now, trying to get rid of the guns. [38:30.800 --> 38:43.800] So anyway, that's enough, that's enough, Tyra. That could go on and on and on and on about these people. But the point to make is the effort is international to disarm the American people, and it's come scarily close to that. [38:43.800 --> 38:58.800] And because they themselves have set up this commercial marketplace, they're stuck with it. And it's just the most hilarious thing to watch them get hoist themselves by their own petard, I guess, is the best way to put it. [38:58.800 --> 39:07.800] They're giving themselves wedgies and putting themselves on the second bunk bed post on the summer camp, and it's just too funny to watch this happen. [39:07.800 --> 39:09.800] Okay, that's enough. [39:09.800 --> 39:16.800] Yeah, and Harman, you're hilarious. And I loved your impersonation of IRS age, generally, that was good too. [39:16.800 --> 39:29.800] But yeah, you know, Harman, I mean, they're going to have a really hard time disarming the American people because their problem is we already have guns, okay? [39:29.800 --> 39:34.800] You can't take them away from us once we already have them. We've got them. It's too late. [39:34.800 --> 39:45.800] All they can do is try to make it more difficult for people to get them in the future or jump through all these hoops and this sort of thing, but I mean, people are not going to give them up. [39:45.800 --> 39:58.800] I mean, millions and millions and millions of people have guns and there's no way they're going to forcibly try to confiscate them house to house, door to door, because that's just too messy. [39:58.800 --> 40:08.800] That's not their style. They want, what they want to do is they want to brainwash people into begging for their own slavery. [40:08.800 --> 40:18.800] Okay, they want to do a mental slavery thing and try to get people to voluntarily give up their freedom, but forcibly going around trying to confiscate firearms. [40:18.800 --> 40:25.800] It would be a bloody revolution. It's not their style. They won't do that. I don't think they would do that. I really don't. What's that, Eddie? [40:25.800 --> 40:40.800] Well, they also tend to forget that if they did manage to even begin to take away the guns, then it wouldn't be long before somebody would be doing in America the exact same thing the Americans did for the French when they were invaded by the Nazis. [40:40.800 --> 40:41.800] There you go. [40:41.800 --> 41:00.800] They'd drop all these little single shot 45 caliber guns into France and they would use these to sneak up in close proximity to German soldiers, shoot them and take the guns they were carrying till finally the revolutionaries had enough of the Nazis own weapons to use against them. [41:00.800 --> 41:12.800] So even if they tried to take them away from us, that plan would fall short when someone devised the idea of doing exactly what we did in the world war to help France. [41:12.800 --> 41:25.800] There you go. Okay, enough tirading. We're on a tirade. I love it. We have to. We have to talk about these things. We have to do things. We have to talk about this so that we can figure out what to do about it and we are doing something about it right now. [41:25.800 --> 41:34.800] Okay, we're going to go now to Matt in Texas, patiently holding. Matt, thank you for calling in. Thank you for calling back. You dropped off earlier. What is your question for Harman? [41:34.800 --> 41:42.800] Oh, wait. Hold on. I thought I punched him in. Matt, okay, go ahead. You weren't on the air. What is your question for Harman? [41:42.800 --> 41:46.800] Real simple. Harman, do you have a driver's license? [41:46.800 --> 41:47.800] No. [41:47.800 --> 41:48.800] You don't? [41:48.800 --> 42:04.800] I didn't know. I have no need for one. I don't do transportation. I'm not in the business of removing people and or property from here to there for profit or hire under any choice of laws, especially the choice of law, the place called this state. [42:04.800 --> 42:06.800] So no, I do not have one. [42:06.800 --> 42:12.800] No, he may not claim any other relation to me, at least in that one particular area he and I are exactly alike. [42:12.800 --> 42:13.800] There we are. [42:13.800 --> 42:18.800] So you had a follow-up? [42:18.800 --> 42:37.800] Well, I just wanted to comment a little bit. I mean, I'm familiar with what Eddie's doing. In fact, I've actually got a traffic ticket right now and I'm using his methodology, but I'm in the position where I've got my own business and it doesn't make sense for me to be traveling to work [42:37.800 --> 42:47.800] and to go through the process of getting arrested and then I can't open up my business that day and I've got to go through all the loss of that and that just creates a big mess. [42:47.800 --> 42:56.800] So for matters of practicality, I actually choose to get a driver or at least keep a driver's license on hand even if it's expired. [42:56.800 --> 43:13.800] Okay, let me interject. I have one. I have fights that I'm engaged in. That particular fight is not my fight. I have other issues I'm fighting and we all need to pick our battles carefully. [43:13.800 --> 43:28.800] Yeah, Randy pays into the protection racket and so do I. And the reason I pay into the protection racket is because I have a lot of other fights on my plate too and also because I'm a female and it is very common for cops to rape women when they pull them over [43:28.800 --> 43:43.800] and I'm not going to let that happen to me and I'm also, so I do what I have to do to not get pulled over and I don't want to be put in a position of having to defend my life against a police officer and possibly go down as a cop killer. [43:43.800 --> 43:59.800] So I have a driver's license. I pay in the protection racket. Some people choose to pay the mobsters. Some people don't. That's me and Randy's choice. But Matt, stay right there. We're about to go to break. We'll be right back. [43:59.800 --> 44:14.800] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [44:14.800 --> 44:33.800] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:33.800 --> 44:51.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [44:51.800 --> 45:08.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [45:08.800 --> 45:23.800] On the day of the bombing, nearly all of the witnesses that saw Tim McVeigh and the Ryder truck report that he was accompanied by other perpetrators. The FBI and federal prosecutors insist that Tim McVeigh alone delivered the Ryder truck bomb to the Murray building and detonated it. [45:23.800 --> 45:38.800] The only witness the government produced to place McVeigh at the building that morning, Dana Bradley, who lost her children and one of her legs in the bombing, testified that she saw McVeigh with another man, the fable John Doe number two exiting the Ryder truck. [45:38.800 --> 45:56.800] While at least 15 other witnesses claim to have seen McVeigh with other perpetrators the day of the bombing, no less than 226 witnesses placed him with other men in the days before the bombing, including when he rented the Ryder truck, and in some cases had positively identified the other perpetrators. [45:56.800 --> 46:11.800] For more information, please visit okcbombingtruth.com. [46:26.800 --> 46:41.800] Thank you for watching. [46:56.800 --> 47:15.800] Okay, folks, we are back. We're talking with our very special guest, Harman Taylor. We're taking your calls and we're speaking with Matt in Texas. Okay, Matt, go ahead. You had another point you wanted to make or another question? [47:15.800 --> 47:30.800] I was just wondering, so you said that you'd maintain your driver's license, Randy and Deb, and you're doing basically what I'm doing as far as that goes. Would you guys actually fight the ticket? Because it looks like, I mean, Maya. [47:30.800 --> 47:54.800] I would still fight the ticket because I'm not engaged in transportation just because I have a license. Now here's what Randy does, and we've kind of incorporated this into our plan if I ever get pulled over. I haven't been pulled over for years, but if the police ask me for my license, I'm going to tell them, well, I'm not using it right now because I'm in transportation and I'll offer an ID card instead. [47:54.800 --> 48:14.800] And only under threat of arrest will I hand over the driver's license. I'll make it very clear I'm not in transportation. I'm not driving. This is not a vehicle. I don't need to give you my driver's license right now because I'm not driving, but I will offer my ID just to be polite. [48:14.800 --> 48:28.800] But honestly, I don't have to do that either. This isn't a show your papers. The statute regarding failure to identify only applies to someone who's already been arrested for something else, and then they fail to identify. [48:28.800 --> 48:45.800] I would give my ID just to be nice because, again, the protection racket issue, and I would push it to the limit and force the police officer to tell me, yes, I will arrest you if you don't give me your driver's license right now. [48:45.800 --> 49:00.800] I would have all of that recorded, and then when I go to fight the ticket, it will be very obvious that I had to hand it over under coercion, under threat of physical assault and kidnapping. [49:00.800 --> 49:15.800] And that way the prima facie evidence is on my side that I've made it very clear I'm not in commerce. I'm not in transportation. I'm not driving, et cetera, all these things. Because if you just hand it over when he asks for it, that's prima facie evidence that you are in transportation. [49:15.800 --> 49:25.800] And so I would get the prima facie evidence on my side. So that's my plan. If it ever is necessary, which I hope it's not. [49:25.800 --> 49:34.800] Is it your estimation on these kinds of cases that the cases are typically one on merits or due process? [49:34.800 --> 49:35.800] Eddie? [49:35.800 --> 49:43.800] You will hardly ever win one of these cases on merits at the trial level. [49:43.800 --> 49:53.800] Now, I can tell you right now, I have yet to find a single trial court in Texas that does due process correctly. [49:53.800 --> 50:08.800] All you have to do, and that's what we're doing in my classes, teach the people how to make the written record for appeal to prove that the trial court and everybody involved never followed the law regarding what they were supposed to do to begin with. [50:08.800 --> 50:30.800] Now, that may or may not be as successful as we hope, but at least we've made the record we'll need later if and when we manage to get into a federal lawsuit, we can show documented evidence of the issues were made known, they were ignored, rights were violated, and we have causes of action because of it. [50:30.800 --> 50:38.800] Okay, well, that takes care of my question in the comment. [50:38.800 --> 50:40.800] I appreciate the call. [50:40.800 --> 50:41.800] All right, thank you. [50:41.800 --> 50:43.800] Yes, thank you, Matt. We appreciate it. [50:43.800 --> 50:51.800] Okay, we are going now to Joe in Texas. Joe, thank you for calling in. What is your question for Harman Taylor? [50:51.800 --> 51:06.800] Hello, salutations and blessings to one and all. Thank you. Listeners and hosts alike. I've called in several times to different shows on GNC. We're 90.1 here in Austin. [51:06.800 --> 51:27.800] Hold on. Before you go any further, I need to make clarification. GCN and 90.1 are not the same thing. GCN is a network like ABC or NBC or NPR. GCN is a network and 90.1 is an affiliate of GCN and we are not part of GCN. [51:27.800 --> 51:42.800] This is rule of law radio network. We are a separate network and this network is carried on about 15 AM and FM affiliate stations throughout the country and 90.1 is one of my affiliates. [51:42.800 --> 51:57.800] I just wanted to clarify that. People all the time get confused. They think that I'm part of GCN or that this is 90.1 is the same thing. No, we are not the same thing. We do not broadcast our show on 90.1. [51:57.800 --> 52:03.800] 90.1 is a separate entity and they have chosen to carry this network. I hope that's clear. [52:03.800 --> 52:25.800] That being stated, thank you for clearing up the confusion because I think that should be cleared up. To my mind, the only radio show that makes any sense on what I was thinking was GNC was Y'all's show. Y'all's show is the best show on 90.1. [52:25.800 --> 52:39.800] Well, thank you. I do try to clarify that, Joe. I say that a lot on my show and that's also why we have the network liners. If you listen at the top of every hour, right after the news, you'll hear a little 15 seconds. [52:39.800 --> 52:48.800] It's called a network liner where you hear my voice over some hip-hop music and it says, you are listening to rule of law radio network. [52:48.800 --> 52:58.800] That's why we use the network liners and then GCN, they have their own network liners. Let's say you are listening to the GCN radio network and so that lets people know what network they're listening to. [52:58.800 --> 53:04.800] We do try to clarify but a lot of times people still don't quite get it. Anyway, go ahead. [53:04.800 --> 53:07.800] Okay. Well, there's no comparison then between Y'all. [53:07.800 --> 53:09.800] Well, thank you. That's sweet. [53:09.800 --> 53:21.800] Onward through the fog here, I'll make a couple statements and all of this is going to be in regards to Section 1 Article 8 of the United States Constitution. [53:21.800 --> 53:36.800] And first off, I'm just going to start off with a bit of type of a prose here and it's going to state that to my mind, the Federal Reserve note should symbolically be represented not only by the pyramid [53:36.800 --> 53:51.800] and the all seeing eye but as well the Jolly Roger should be on that Federal Reserve note because that shows the piracy and everything that you guys make so clear. [53:51.800 --> 54:04.800] And every time that I try to bring up monetary policy with anybody on GNC, GCN, they completely refuse to discuss it. [54:04.800 --> 54:31.800] And I say take, and this is my question to y'all learned, law people, is under Article 1 Section 8 did not on a state blanket use that article and its statement to refuse incredible interest rates from the Bank of London to win the Civil War [54:31.800 --> 54:37.800] and get materials and labor for the Army of the Potomac. [54:37.800 --> 55:04.800] Now was not Greenback's a tremendous advance and boom for this nation and is not going back to the Greenback anything other than a wonderful idea of debt free currency and I'm going to leave it to y'all after that and can I listen? [55:04.800 --> 55:07.800] Yeah, can I make a comment here? [55:07.800 --> 55:16.800] Calling Abe Lincoln honest is like calling Buddha, Jenny Craig's best client. [55:16.800 --> 55:19.800] That's his nickname. [55:19.800 --> 55:27.800] Okay, as Jack Nugerson said, how can a guy that weighs 600lbs be an expert on self-control and restraint? [55:27.800 --> 55:47.800] But the point being, Lincoln did a lot of things, none of which were honest as president and most of which was to declare war on the southern states because they wouldn't go along with the scheme they were trying to put in place to begin with. [55:47.800 --> 55:49.800] Now we're coming out. [55:49.800 --> 56:13.800] Lincoln was one of the first ones that tried to put fiat money into place and an income tax to boot because he knew just like in what we're seeing now, the funding money system cannot operate without an income tax because you've got a spigot bringing water into the tub, you've got to have a drain taking it out. [56:13.800 --> 56:28.800] And that is one of the mechanisms of the income tax, how to get that overflow out so the system doesn't drown itself or everybody using it in inflation, which is exactly what would happen if the tub couldn't drain. [56:28.800 --> 56:30.800] Yeah, and here's something else that Abe Lincoln did too. [56:30.800 --> 56:35.800] He shut down all the newspapers during the time of the Civil War that were reporting on the truth. [56:35.800 --> 56:40.800] He wasn't such a good guy, you know. [56:40.800 --> 56:48.800] In terms of Article 1 Section 8 of the United States Constitution where he printed greenbacks, my point is greenbacks. [56:48.800 --> 57:16.800] All the other stuff is really to my mind as far as monetary policy, just his individual pursuit, it wasn't just individual, but his pursuit to impose the northern economies and its standards and labor practices upon the south. [57:16.800 --> 57:36.800] I get all that, but hey, I'm a southern man and all that, a laborer and I own a small business and I see incredible problems on the horizon. [57:36.800 --> 57:46.800] My point is that it's not monetary policy, the most important issue that we face as a nation. [57:46.800 --> 57:49.800] Okay, Harmon, you want to comment on that? [57:49.800 --> 57:57.800] The two different things, yes, monetary policy is what governs the entire marketplace. [57:57.800 --> 58:11.800] If we're not using anonymous system of weights and measures, we're stuck with the dishonest system of weights and measures, and it's not just the money that's at issue, it's the choice of law that goes with it. [58:11.800 --> 58:13.800] I'm hearing music and stuff. [58:13.800 --> 58:21.800] Yes, we've got music again. You have about another 30 seconds if you want to say anything else before we get a break, Harmon. [58:21.800 --> 58:30.800] Of course, the premise of Article 1, 6 and 8 is one where I just try to grit my teeth. We do not now have and have never had a constitution. [58:30.800 --> 58:33.800] That doesn't mean the monetary system is any less important. [58:33.800 --> 58:40.800] It's just that we have the problems we have today because that document was never admissible evidence of law. [58:40.800 --> 58:44.800] All right, very good. Harmon, you're welcome to say some more. [58:44.800 --> 58:52.800] We've got a couple more callers for you, and I want to hear more about your take on the monetary policy and greenbacks and constitution on the other side. [58:52.800 --> 59:18.800] We'll be right back, folks, 512-646-1984. [59:18.800 --> 59:27.800] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:27.800 --> 59:37.800] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:37.800 --> 59:42.800] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:42.800 --> 59:56.800] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:56.800 --> 01:00:22.800] That's freestudybible.com. [01:00:22.800 --> 01:00:30.800] As I said, News Corp's now defunct paper broke not only British law, but potentially U.S. law as well. [01:00:30.800 --> 01:00:39.800] A West Bank man was killed Friday as Palestinians calling for UN recognition of a Palestinian state were attacked by Israeli soldiers and settlers. [01:00:39.800 --> 01:00:45.800] The violence came just hours before President Mahmoud Abbas delivered the statehood request to the world body. [01:00:45.800 --> 01:00:53.800] 200 settlers burned and uprooted trees near the village of Kusra. Israeli troops arrived and fired tear gas, then live rounds. [01:00:53.800 --> 01:00:57.800] Settlers also fired weapons. [01:00:57.800 --> 01:01:13.800] Karen Piper, an innocent bystander who suffered permanent hearing loss after Pittsburgh police deployed a long range acoustic device against protesters during the 2009 G20 summit as filed a federal lawsuit against the city. [01:01:13.800 --> 01:01:26.800] While Piper was trying to leave the protest, police activated a sonic bomb a short distance away. She immediately became nauseous and dizzy and felt fluid flowing from her ear. [01:01:26.800 --> 01:01:46.800] The FBI this week promised a comprehensive review of training and reference materials after Wired magazine revealed a series of bureau presentations that tarred average Muslims as radical and violent. [01:01:46.800 --> 01:02:00.800] There was widespread Islamophobia in the bureau. The FBI library at Quantico carries books from authors who claim Islam and democracy are totally incompatible and one book that claims Barack Obama was once a practicing Muslim. [01:02:00.800 --> 01:02:07.800] The bureau's intranet recently featured presentations that claim to demonstrate the inherently violent nature of Islam. [01:02:07.800 --> 01:02:26.800] This year the bureau's Washington field office hosted a speaker who claimed Islamic law prevents Muslims from being loyal Americans. Last week online orientation material for the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Forces included claims that Sunni Islam seeks, quote, domination of the world. [01:02:26.800 --> 01:02:39.800] The electronic frontier foundation published documents this week showing the U.S. Army tried to investigate participants at a conference on Islamic law and illegally issued national security letters to telecom providers. [01:02:39.800 --> 01:02:53.800] The rights group, which obtained the documents through a freedom of information lawsuit, said two Army lawyers attended a 2004 conference on Islamic law at the University of Texas Law School without disclosing their military affiliation. [01:02:53.800 --> 01:03:01.800] Also in 2004 an Army Special Agent issued three national security letters for customer phone records to a telecom company. [01:03:54.800 --> 01:04:01.800] Okay folks, we are back. Harman Taylor has agreed to stay with us for a little while longer. I'm so happy. [01:04:01.800 --> 01:04:11.800] And we are going to continue to take your call. So if you want to call and ask Harman a question, get in now because you might let him go early if there's no one left. [01:04:11.800 --> 01:04:21.800] So get while the getting is good, 512-646-1984. We're going to go now to Tony in Illinois. We see Paula and Julius up there. Just sit tight. [01:04:21.800 --> 01:04:24.800] Tony, what is your question for Harman Taylor? [01:04:24.800 --> 01:04:29.800] All the things I'd like to touch on keep piling up while I was on hold, but I'll start with my question. [01:04:29.800 --> 01:04:30.800] Okay, that's all right. [01:04:30.800 --> 01:04:43.800] Do you huge place this alternate legal reality at all back to the alleged bankruptcy or bankrupt fees during the FDR administration? [01:04:43.800 --> 01:04:55.800] Not really. The question has to do with the relevance of the alleged bankruptcy and of course that's a technical term. I'll get semantical with you here. [01:04:55.800 --> 01:05:01.800] The government can't go into bankruptcy unless there's an entity that has authority over it. [01:05:01.800 --> 01:05:15.800] So if we see that system, United States or United States of America as a commercial entity subject to or operating within a larger sovereign area, then the entity could get bankruptcy. [01:05:15.800 --> 01:05:30.800] So I shun away from the concept of bankruptcy as a practical matter and just not to split that hair too thinly. We're talking about an insolvency, but the insolvency is what takes us to this funny money thing. [01:05:30.800 --> 01:05:45.800] And so the changeover in 33 really wasn't the final changeover. It took gold out of circulation, but you have an honest system of weights and measures in full force when silver is the mechanism. [01:05:45.800 --> 01:05:52.800] In fact, silver is money in all terms of scripture. That was the medium of exchange. [01:05:52.800 --> 01:06:04.800] The legal reality, yeah, it's related to that. I don't really talk much about bankruptcy because it doesn't really have much to do with the change in choice of law. [01:06:04.800 --> 01:06:16.800] The change in choice of law happened, of course, when silver got taken out of circulation. And so that would be 65, 66 somewhere in there. [01:06:16.800 --> 01:06:22.800] Did that address your question or do you want to try a different angle on that? [01:06:22.800 --> 01:06:33.800] Well, I think what people allege is that it basically turned the country over to the international bankers and that the president is somehow the caretaker of the bankers. [01:06:33.800 --> 01:06:46.800] There's something like that, not that I'm really giving a lot of freedom to that, but we can move on. Yeah, you were discussing the Second Amendment. [01:06:46.800 --> 01:07:10.800] I think they'll get around the gun ownership hurdle by mass poisoning and they can give people the move out of different regions and that makes it a little easier to deal with people if they're on the move and they're not just defending their property. [01:07:10.800 --> 01:07:20.800] And of course that's ongoing anyway, but as far as the Second Amendment goes, it's not really applicable here in my state yet. [01:07:20.800 --> 01:07:34.800] We have a requirement for a firearm owner's identification to possess a firearm. And of course we're the only state that has that. [01:07:34.800 --> 01:07:53.800] Also, Deborah said that transportation is defined in the state and the state code is actually defined in our code as the actual movement of property or passengers by motor vehicle together with unloading, [01:07:53.800 --> 01:08:05.800] unloading, and any other accessorial or ancillary service provided by the carrier in connection with movement by motor vehicle. [01:08:05.800 --> 01:08:07.800] Now look up carrier. [01:08:07.800 --> 01:08:12.800] I know that. That's clearly commercial. [01:08:12.800 --> 01:08:16.800] You've got a definition for transportation in Illinois? [01:08:16.800 --> 01:08:25.800] Yeah, section 1.210. Yeah, but as he just showed us that it specifically relates to a carrier. [01:08:25.800 --> 01:08:32.800] Yeah, that's fine, but the fact that it's defined at all is amazing. I'll have to go back and recheck that. [01:08:32.800 --> 01:08:40.800] It's been a while since I've done a 50 state survey on that, but I appreciate that information that it's defined at all anywhere is amazing. [01:08:40.800 --> 01:08:47.800] Okay, that's pretty close. I mean, it clearly what Eddie's saying is it's all commercial. But anyway, you were saying? [01:08:47.800 --> 01:08:52.800] Yeah, it says passengers and service and all that. [01:08:52.800 --> 01:08:59.800] Sorry, that was section 1-209.5. It says transporters, actually 1-210. [01:08:59.800 --> 01:09:11.800] And you had a caller from Washington, and this might help him out a little bit. International Motor Transit Company versus Seattle. [01:09:11.800 --> 01:09:23.800] A motor vehicle or automobile for hire is a motor vehicle other than an automobile stage used for the transportation of persons to which remuneration is received. [01:09:23.800 --> 01:09:29.800] Sounds like transportation again. [01:09:29.800 --> 01:09:33.800] What was that? [01:09:33.800 --> 01:09:36.800] He said it sounds like transportation again. [01:09:36.800 --> 01:09:44.800] Right, that's pretty clear. It's as clear as you can get. I think I had a couple other ones here too. [01:09:44.800 --> 01:09:57.800] Robertson versus Department of Public Works at the Washington case. Complete freedom of the highways is so old and well-established in blessing that we have forgotten the days of the Robert Barron and Paul Rhodes and yet under an act like this. [01:09:57.800 --> 01:10:06.800] And arbitrarily administered, the highways may be completely monopolized if, through lack of interest that people submit, then they may look to see the most sacred of their liberties taken from... [01:10:06.800 --> 01:10:09.800] That's not really clear, actually. [01:10:09.800 --> 01:10:16.800] But I also had Phil versus Linda, but I'm going to read on there. I'll let you go and share about the colors. [01:10:16.800 --> 01:10:18.800] Thank you. [01:10:18.800 --> 01:10:26.800] That's fantastic information. I have to go read the Illinois code now and get the definition. 1-2-9-5. [01:10:26.800 --> 01:10:35.800] It actually rang a bell for me when that driving and transporting are basically the mountainous. [01:10:35.800 --> 01:10:38.800] There you go. [01:10:38.800 --> 01:10:51.800] Because when I had read the code before in my state, I thought that they basically wheeze around it until that bell struck and then surprisingly they actually had transportation in the code. [01:10:51.800 --> 01:11:02.800] And then you have to go from driver to motor vehicle and then to transportation to get it all clear. But I'll let you guys go. Bye. [01:11:02.800 --> 01:11:04.800] All right. Thank you. [01:11:04.800 --> 01:11:10.800] That's fascinating that they're that open in the state of Illinois with it. Everyone else tries to hide it. [01:11:10.800 --> 01:11:18.800] We may find more states put in the definition in there just to save face from radio programs like this. [01:11:18.800 --> 01:11:21.800] See, we are having an effect, Harmon. [01:11:21.800 --> 01:11:23.800] They defined it in Illinois. [01:11:23.800 --> 01:11:24.800] Amazing. [01:11:24.800 --> 01:11:25.800] That's fantastic. [01:11:25.800 --> 01:11:26.800] Amazing. [01:11:26.800 --> 01:11:34.800] Okay. Callers, if you'd like to call in, we've got Harmon for a little while longer. 512-646-1984 is the call in number. [01:11:34.800 --> 01:11:42.800] And we've got Paula from Maine and then Julius. Paula, what is your question for Harmon Taylor? [01:11:42.800 --> 01:12:03.800] Okay. Well, I'm not sure if it's a question. I couldn't limit just one if I did that, but I want to share some information at my website, 30decision.com, regarding gun cases, Supreme Court cases. [01:12:03.800 --> 01:12:20.800] In Smith v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that trading an automatic weapon for cocaine constituted use of a weapon, okay, use of a firearm. [01:12:20.800 --> 01:12:35.800] But in Watson v. United States, it was the other way around, somebody was trading drugs for a gun, and they said that did not constitute use. [01:12:35.800 --> 01:12:42.800] I thought it was interesting that Justice Ginsburg said she would overrule the first decision, Smith. [01:12:42.800 --> 01:13:00.800] Okay. Obviously, using a weapon is, in my opinion, trading is not use of a weapon in the manner it was probably originally meant, the statutes were meant to be construed. [01:13:00.800 --> 01:13:14.800] And also, I like the fact that the case, the bond case was mentioned. I blogged about that a while back. I just posted the information about those two gun cases, by the way. [01:13:14.800 --> 01:13:19.800] And it's a Wikipedia entry that I got that information from. [01:13:19.800 --> 01:13:41.800] I'd like to know more about this Illinois statute regarding firearms, the identification card. Probably if my husband had tried to get an identification card years ago, when he purchased his gun, this would have been a red flag, because he is a felon from 30 years ago. [01:13:41.800 --> 01:13:55.800] And the state never picked up on that, allowed him to have hunting licenses all these years, and now they've confiscated my husband's and my son's gun. [01:13:55.800 --> 01:14:12.800] And it's doubtful that my husband will get his back, especially after reading a case in Maine that I just came upon, and I just posted about that too, whereas the state confiscated 88 firearms. [01:14:12.800 --> 01:14:30.800] However, in that case, 87 of the firearms actually belonged to the son. Okay, so they were returned because he was a third-party intervener, and I've been researching those statutes, and I just wanted to let people know about that. [01:14:30.800 --> 01:14:31.800] Thank you, Paula. [01:14:31.800 --> 01:14:45.800] Other issues, but I'd like to get help on the guns issue, because, you know, any law that violates the Constitution cannot be enforced, or it's not supposed to be. [01:14:45.800 --> 01:14:48.800] Well, Harmon would say differently. Harmon, you want to comment on that? [01:14:48.800 --> 01:14:57.800] Just really briefly. Really appreciate the information about all that. It's an issue you're obviously putting some time in on, and the nation needs that. [01:14:57.800 --> 01:15:14.800] Of course, we do not now have and have never had a Constitution, so the gun control mechanism exists. It might exist even if we had it, but it's all in the nature of whether we consent to being regulated or not. [01:15:14.800 --> 01:15:23.800] You raise a fascinating issue with the restriction on felons, and that's a tough one when it's a nonviolent crime. [01:15:23.800 --> 01:15:34.800] I mean, that's just, that's a tough one for me just on the policy level, but again, it's just the disarmament concept and policy that we're into. [01:15:34.800 --> 01:15:49.800] But yeah, we've got the Second Amendment, it's a big constitutional deal, and that's where everybody starts with that, and of course, if we had a Constitution, then we wouldn't have the funny money mechanism possible to run against us. [01:15:49.800 --> 01:16:04.800] But at any rate, more than appreciate your commitment to that issue, and yeah, when I get time to do more on that, of course, I'll be working on a book in that area, and in the event that should happen. [01:16:04.800 --> 01:16:12.800] That's not going to happen anytime soon. In the event that should happen, of course, I'm sure we'll have another program and talk about it. [01:16:12.800 --> 01:16:14.800] Can I ask one question now? [01:16:14.800 --> 01:16:15.800] Fire. [01:16:15.800 --> 01:16:28.800] Okay. Does the 1902 Dick Act carry any force? Because that says that all gun control laws are invalid. [01:16:28.800 --> 01:16:33.800] In 1902, there's music. [01:16:33.800 --> 01:16:40.800] There's the music. Okay, we'll comment on that on the other side. Thank you for calling, Paula. [01:16:40.800 --> 01:16:53.800] All right, we get back. Harmon's going to comment on this firearms act that Paula was referring to, which would make, apparently, all other gun regulation acts invalid. [01:16:53.800 --> 01:16:57.800] We're going to talk about that on the other side, and we've got Julius and Jim. We'll be right back. [01:16:57.800 --> 01:17:09.800] Capital Corn and Bullion is a family-owned and operated business that has helped many families and friends in protecting their assets, and we would like to do the same for you. [01:17:09.800 --> 01:17:23.800] In addition to coins and bullion, we now offer Patriot safes, ammunition, Berkey water products, gift certificates, wristbands, and our new Silver Pool, a new way to guarantee silver by prepaying at a locked price. [01:17:23.800 --> 01:17:32.800] We can even help you set up a metals IRA account. Call us at 512-646-6440 for more details. [01:17:32.800 --> 01:17:39.800] As always, we buy, sell, and trade precious metals and cater to those with all sizes of coin collection. [01:17:39.800 --> 01:17:49.800] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half a mile north of Canaan, next to the Ikiban Sushi and the Genie Car Wash. [01:17:49.800 --> 01:18:00.800] We're open Monday through Friday, 10-6, Saturdays, 10-5. Visit us at CapitalCornandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:18:00.800 --> 01:18:09.800] If you entered into a mortgage agreement after the year 2000, you were subjected to the largest fraud ever perpetrated on the American public. [01:18:09.800 --> 01:18:18.800] The banks plotted not only to steal the equity in your home, they also planned to scam you out of your retirement funds and leave you homeless and pingless. [01:18:18.800 --> 01:18:27.800] The money changers have used what they stole from you to buy your legislators, government oversight agencies, and most unfortunately, the courts. [01:18:27.800 --> 01:18:36.800] You have been foreclosed on, are facing foreclosure, or are up to date on your payments. There is something you can do to set things to right. [01:18:36.800 --> 01:18:45.800] Call 855-588-8501 and we will show you how to force the corrupt courts to do their jobs. [01:18:45.800 --> 01:18:55.800] You can stop these thieving bankers from destroying this country and from forcing your children and grandchildren onto the streets as slaves to them. [01:18:55.800 --> 01:19:02.800] Call 855-588-8501 now. [01:19:25.800 --> 01:19:32.800] Call 855-588-8501 now. [01:19:55.800 --> 01:20:00.800] Okay, Harmon, you are answering Paula's question in 1902. [01:20:00.800 --> 01:20:15.800] In 1902, the statute she's talking about has language that says, essentially, if you people at any time ever get the wild hair to regulate weapons, we're telling you right now it ain't going to work, so forget it. [01:20:15.800 --> 01:20:20.800] So they saw something coming that they just couldn't stop. [01:20:20.800 --> 01:20:33.800] The language that's out there today in the funny money scheme of things functions on Monty Hall's Let's Make a Deal format. [01:20:33.800 --> 01:20:46.800] The language doesn't apply because it's printed. It applies because it's commercially agreed to, and this is one of the byproducts of the funny money system. [01:20:46.800 --> 01:20:56.800] So the 1902, anything in 1902 is going to come from the law of the land point of view. [01:20:56.800 --> 01:21:02.800] And from about 1965 forward, it's a good place to start. [01:21:02.800 --> 01:21:23.800] 1964, we're in the Hover Zone. So it is as if a law of Great Britain from 1902 is trying to be applied in Nazi Germany in the Hover Zone from 1965 and afterwards. [01:21:23.800 --> 01:21:29.800] And I've described it that way to connote the distinction between the two places. [01:21:29.800 --> 01:21:33.800] The Hover Zone is its own place. It's a separate place. [01:21:33.800 --> 01:21:43.800] So the relevance of anything that might exist under the law of the land in 1902 just simply doesn't necessarily apply in the Hover Zone. [01:21:43.800 --> 01:21:54.800] The Hover Zone being the separate place in the same way that Nazi Germany is separate from Great Britain, law of Germany is separate from Great Britain all the way around. [01:21:54.800 --> 01:22:05.800] So if the people in Germany go through all the codes and say, yeah, we like this thing that France is doing, and we like this thing that Italy's doing, and we like this thing that Great Britain's doing, and make it their own, okay, that's fine. [01:22:05.800 --> 01:22:16.800] But they'd have to do that. And so, of course, we're not going to find anything like that in the Hover Zone that they can't regulate rights into oblivion. [01:22:16.800 --> 01:22:25.800] So it's not that the language isn't there. It's there. What's confusing is the change in choice of law that happened with the change in the money. [01:22:25.800 --> 01:22:37.800] And it is a major, major, major change. Some of the concepts jump that gap just fine. Some things relevant in 1838 are relevant in 2011. [01:22:37.800 --> 01:22:49.800] Okay, some of the things in 1838, I'm just pulling a number out of the hat to use one, had nothing to do with 2011, nothing whatsoever to do with it. [01:22:49.800 --> 01:22:57.800] And where that's the case, the difference is one depends on the law of the land and the other on the law of the sea. [01:22:57.800 --> 01:23:13.800] So we've got to be real careful with the time periods here. We see the same thing in the Transportation Code. We've got cases in Texas from 40s, 30s, 50s that say this driver's license stuff is nuts. [01:23:13.800 --> 01:23:19.800] Okay, why are those cases irrelevant? They're irrelevant because the money changed after that. [01:23:19.800 --> 01:23:30.800] The money changed after that. So the choice of law changed after that. So the entire mechanism changed. And whether one is subject to transportation isn't an issue of statute. [01:23:30.800 --> 01:23:40.800] It's an issue of commercial consent. So going back to the gun thing, if we're regulated under the funding money scam, it's because we volunteer to be regulated. [01:23:40.800 --> 01:23:46.800] We volunteer to be regulated. Okay, that's the thing about the 1902 statute. [01:23:46.800 --> 01:24:07.800] Yeah, and I was going to make a comment about the Constitution issue, which you addressed a little bit earlier, Harmon, which has to do with the fact that the statute's not necessarily invalid or just a hypothetical statute isn't necessarily invalid because it may violate the Constitution. [01:24:07.800 --> 01:24:21.800] The Constitution doesn't matter. What matters is, do we have any gotcha agreements with the bad guys? And if we do, then the statute applies to us, whether or not it's in compliance with the Constitution. [01:24:21.800 --> 01:24:30.800] It doesn't matter. If you've agreed to be regulated, it's all by commercial agreement. Like Harmon says, if you've agreed to be regulated, the statute applies. [01:24:30.800 --> 01:24:42.800] If you do not agree to be regulated, the statute does not apply, even if it is quote-unquote constitutional. So that's the short version of Harmon's school. Is that right, Harmon? [01:24:42.800 --> 01:24:43.800] That's very good. [01:24:43.800 --> 01:24:54.800] Okay. All right. We are going to continue to take your calls. Now we've got Julius from Texas has called back in. Julius, what else do you have for Harmon? What's your other question? [01:24:54.800 --> 01:25:13.800] Well, I just wanted to add to how you were speaking about, you know, the money system, monetary system, because I worked on Wall Street for a dozen years, and I'm very familiar with the Federal Reserve System and how it operates. [01:25:13.800 --> 01:25:31.800] And I'm just going to say that basically our money system operates on debt to where the government writes up these IOUs and pretty much prints them up in the form of Treasury securities or bonds, and then sells them either on the open market, [01:25:31.800 --> 01:25:47.800] but most of them they sell to the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve System supposedly writes this check for these bonds, but there's nothing in the checking account for the Federal Reserve System that just writes the check for these bonds, [01:25:47.800 --> 01:26:03.800] to receive the bonds. Now once the Federal Reserve receives the bonds, they go and put the bonds up as collateral against the Treasury and say, and I'm going to use an absolute number. [01:26:03.800 --> 01:26:19.800] I'm just going to say there's some more bonds being created for export, and it's $40 billion that the government needs to raise. So they make up these $40 billion worth of bonds and they sell them to the Federal Reserve System. [01:26:19.800 --> 01:26:33.800] The Federal Reserve System writes the check for $40 billion. The government cashes that check against the U.S. Treasury. U.S. Treasury prints $40 billion worth of Federal Reserve notes, gives it to the government, [01:26:33.800 --> 01:26:43.800] and then the Federal Reserve System is sitting there with $40 billion worth of government bonds and says, well, what do we do with this? [01:26:43.800 --> 01:26:55.800] Well, let's go and put that up as collateral with the U.S. Treasury and see if that's edible. They'll knock it on the door of the U.S. Treasury and say, hey, I got $40 billion worth of government bonds. [01:26:55.800 --> 01:27:02.800] Is that worth anything? Treasury says, absolutely, it's backed by the U.S. government. What can I do for you? [01:27:02.800 --> 01:27:22.800] Can you put on that $40 billion worth of Federal Reserve notes? Absolutely. I have the security backed by the U.S. government. Sure, no problem. Now what you have is a problem that, out of nothing, you've just created not $30 billion, which the government received [01:27:22.800 --> 01:27:39.800] Federal Reserve notes. You've created $80 billion because now the Federal Reserve System has gone and hawked those bonds, which they don't theoretically own because they wrote a check from nothing. [01:27:39.800 --> 01:27:57.800] That's how it operates and it's quite a crazy scheme because for every dollar that's borrowed by the U.S. government, in fact, almost. I say almost because it's really the Federal Reserve System is supposed to keep 10% on reserve. [01:27:57.800 --> 01:27:59.800] That's how the system operates. [01:27:59.800 --> 01:28:05.800] All right. Well, that's a pretty bleak picture there. Did you have a question for Harmon? [01:28:05.800 --> 01:28:24.800] Yeah. As this relates to this Federal Reserve System and how it operates and how money is created and the more that we create, the rest of our dollars are worth in our pocket or how the value of the dollar changes in our pocket. [01:28:24.800 --> 01:28:42.800] Does this have anything to do with the maritime law, meaning that, is that somehow, if we got back to a balance or a monetary system that would say the gold standard or the silver standard, that we could get back to the law of the land? [01:28:42.800 --> 01:28:47.800] Would that be a possibility? Something like that. [01:28:47.800 --> 01:29:05.800] Yeah. The mechanism of banking, of course, is why and how we talk about that as being a Ponzi scheme. The existence of the Ponzi scheme is separate from the one you're asking here about choice of law. [01:29:05.800 --> 01:29:29.800] And the choice of law one is excellent. The thing about that is we, how do I try to say this? The money is everything. The money is the best evidence of that system's platform choice of law. [01:29:29.800 --> 01:29:40.800] There's a concept that's attributed to one of the Rothschilds. The statement goes to this effect. I don't care. It makes the laws as long as I get to make the money. [01:29:40.800 --> 01:29:50.800] And either that is taken completely out of context or it's a moronic statement and not even understanding what they're doing. [01:29:50.800 --> 01:29:59.800] What you're asking about is do we get back to the law of the land by changing out the money and the answer is absolutely, foundationally? [01:29:59.800 --> 01:30:05.800] Top 10 reasons to question the official story of the Oklahoma City bombing. Reason number 10. What is on the surveillance tapes? [01:30:05.800 --> 01:30:13.800] There were many video surveillance cameras that recorded the morning of the bombing. Yet the few of these that have been released do not show what transpired with the Ryder truck at the Murrow Building. [01:30:13.800 --> 01:30:22.800] Recently, the government has claimed that all of the cameras that were in different buildings and maintained by different businesses were all having their tapes changed at the exact same time. 902 a.m. [01:30:22.800 --> 01:30:32.800] This is insulting to the memory of those who perished in the bombing. What is being hidden from us? For more information, please go to okcbombingtruth.com. [01:30:32.800 --> 01:30:43.800] Did books soon be a thing of the past? Apparently a lot of kids these days are exchanging book pages for web pages. I'm Dr. Gaffer in Albright and I'll be back to tell you what's happening to literacy. [01:31:02.800 --> 01:31:13.800] Our daily service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Start Page. [01:31:13.800 --> 01:31:25.800] Forget books and magazines. A recent study by the UK's National Literacy Trust found that text messages are the number one reading material for kids today, and numbers two and three are e-mail and Facebook. [01:31:25.800 --> 01:31:33.800] That's not surprising since cell phones and computers outnumber novels in most homes. We adults are obviously not setting a very good example. [01:31:33.800 --> 01:31:42.800] Of course, text messages are not known for their literary quality or for their outstanding spelling and grammar. In fact, there's some of the worst writing around. [01:31:42.800 --> 01:31:50.800] So if you want your kids to develop basic English skills, tell them to unplug from Facebook and turn off Twitter, then hand them an old-fashioned book. [01:31:50.800 --> 01:32:00.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright. More news and information at CatherineAlbright.com. [01:32:20.800 --> 01:32:48.800] Okay, folks, we are back. [01:32:48.800 --> 01:33:08.800] Hi, Harman. You are answering Julius' question, which I think is a good question. I've asked you this before, that if we return to a legitimate money standard like gold or silver, especially silver, would we be able to return to law of the land? [01:33:08.800 --> 01:33:18.800] And you were explaining on that right before the bill. [01:33:39.800 --> 01:33:50.800] So anyway, the point there is the way the bank functions is just, it's part and parcel of the fact that they're running a funny money scam. [01:33:50.800 --> 01:33:59.800] How the bank functions doesn't really affect the choice of law. The choice of law comes in with the definition of the unit of account. [01:33:59.800 --> 01:34:22.800] So in America, the unit of account is a dollar. When it is established that dollar for commercial purposes, not just the standards, but for commercial purposes, when dollar is defined as a weight measured in terms of grains of fine silver, [01:34:22.800 --> 01:34:33.800] then that which follows that is an honest system of weights and measures. So first comes the law that defines the unit of account on which all commerce is based. [01:34:33.800 --> 01:34:40.800] And then comes the medium of exchange by which that unit of account is traded in the marketplace. [01:34:40.800 --> 01:35:01.800] So yes, where we have an honest system of weights and measures, that is the best evidence that the system has now reverted back to the law of the land, we will know by watching the statutes when that happens because the term dollar will in fact be defined as a weight in terms of grains of fine silver. [01:35:01.800 --> 01:35:11.800] Now, sequence, critical concept here. The legislature, state, and national cannot tomorrow up and change the definition of dollar. [01:35:11.800 --> 01:35:27.800] It will not happen. Why? Because there is no money, capital in money. There's no honest weights and measures in the marketplace able to pick up the volume of the transactions. [01:35:27.800 --> 01:35:39.800] So to change the definition of dollar today would be to turn the entire marketplace into an illegal marketplace. Everyone would literally be engaging in treason. [01:35:39.800 --> 01:35:56.800] So what must be the mechanism? The mechanism must be our adoption by the, of course we'll start with the mom and pop shops, our adoption of honest weights and measures as the acceptable medium of exchange for goods and services. [01:35:56.800 --> 01:36:00.800] In other words, one more time, small business is going to have to lead the way. [01:36:00.800 --> 01:36:21.800] Small business is going to have to start accepting honest weights and measures. In other words, just about anything but funny money in trade for goods and services and when the marketplace is saturated with honest system of weights and measures, then the definition can be changed. [01:36:21.800 --> 01:36:37.800] And what will happen then is the concept of funny money will just simply never rise again. It just won't happen. There will be too much education and history about the consequences of doing it that way that it won't return. [01:36:37.800 --> 01:36:52.800] But first the marketplace must operate. I'm going to exaggerate, but 99% of the transactions are going to have to go on a, on a system of weights and measures before the law can be changed. It really doesn't have to be that. [01:36:52.800 --> 01:37:07.800] But picture whatever that percentage is. That percentage is what is going to be compelled basically compelled to change or face charges of fraud and possibly treason. [01:37:07.800 --> 01:37:22.800] So the question has to do with can we get back to the law of land? Yes, we can do that individually on a transaction by transaction basis today. We don't have to wait on a legislature. We wait on the legislature. It will never happen. [01:37:22.800 --> 01:37:32.800] The legislature is bought and paid for by the international banking cartel or we wouldn't be in the mess we're in. If the people's voice mattered, we would not have this Obama death health scare thing. [01:37:32.800 --> 01:37:41.800] And I just use that as one example. It's a tax bill under the guise of health care and it wouldn't exist if the voice of the people mattered. It wouldn't. [01:37:41.800 --> 01:37:59.800] So the people are not part of the process. The system is broken. The people in a position to do something about it are not interested in fixing it. They like their lifestyles and they wouldn't have the jobs if they could think independently anyway. [01:37:59.800 --> 01:38:11.800] And that's a topic for a whole nother time. I don't have any very much positive to say about legislation anywhere except perhaps Utah which is kind of odd. They recognize market value silver and gold. [01:38:11.800 --> 01:38:23.800] But what's my point? My point is that the common law is available today. We don't need legislation. It's up to the parties to pick the choice of law. [01:38:23.800 --> 01:38:36.800] So this takes us then back to what we're talking about with the cabbie in the transportation code and with the transactions with firearms. We pick the choice of law in every transaction we engage today. [01:38:36.800 --> 01:38:48.800] One indicia of that choice of law is the medium of exchange. Once we start using an on a system of weights and measures, the judicial system is going to pick up on it immediately. [01:38:48.800 --> 01:39:00.800] They're just sort of waiting on us to do this for 40, 50 years now anyway. And it's obviously going to have to get a lot worse before people are going to abandon the funding money system. [01:39:00.800 --> 01:39:20.800] But we've got common law available today if we'll just realize that we've got a choice and vote in our commercial activities with use of real money instead of a funny money. So it's an excellent question, excellent question. [01:39:20.800 --> 01:39:28.800] And that's why, yes, appreciate the call, Julius. And that's why if you're going to hire Harman Taylor, you must pay him in silver. [01:39:28.800 --> 01:39:33.800] He does not accept Federal Reserve notes. [01:39:33.800 --> 01:39:44.800] Okay. We are going to move on now. We've got a couple more callers left. Folks, if you want to sneak in at the last minute to talk to Harman 512-646-1984, we're going to go now to Michael in Texas. [01:39:44.800 --> 01:39:47.800] Michael, thank you for calling. What is your question for Harman? [01:39:47.800 --> 01:40:03.800] Hello. I guess like most people, I kind of got fed up recently, I guess in the last two years, you know, with the revenue officer being on every corner. So recently, we had a history of one of the local police forces being pretty violent. [01:40:03.800 --> 01:40:23.800] So I had a case where they tried to use a false warrant, you know, a fraudulent warrant on me for not wearing a seatbelt and all that stuff. And I put the court into fault, the municipal court moved it into the federal venue. [01:40:23.800 --> 01:40:40.800] And what had happened was the case now sits at the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. But the police force had retaliated against me. And I guess what I want, I heard somebody last week speaking about third-party criminal complaints. [01:40:40.800 --> 01:40:52.800] And I was wondering if you could talk about that a little bit, if like, for example, my neighbors can file criminal complaints. [01:40:52.800 --> 01:41:05.800] Well, okay, on the third-party thing, you'll have to get someone that actually takes that approach to address that. That's not anything that has ever made sense to me as a thing to do. [01:41:05.800 --> 01:41:28.800] And a criminal complaint, as a part of the current process, is in some sense ancient. There's a change now, because everything is in the law of the sea and maritime system, regarding the mechanism of getting a criminal case started. [01:41:28.800 --> 01:41:41.800] A criminal complaint in today's system is, of course, sufficient. In other words, the information and the indictment are both irrelevant for some cases. [01:41:41.800 --> 01:42:00.800] O.J. Simpson, for example, out of California, was charged with a felony complaint on two counts of murder. So around Texas, that would be anathema. If you're going to get charged with murder, you're going to be presented to the grand jury. [01:42:00.800 --> 01:42:17.800] But on the complaint, on the complaint, anybody can file a complaint. I'd call it a probable cause after David, if it were me. But as far as getting criminal charges started, a sworn statement that alleges the facts of what happened, [01:42:17.800 --> 01:42:35.800] and if one's real good, one include the statute and a little bit of discussion about the statute, how it's violated, is sufficient. Now, there's a lot of change in where things used to be and where they are now is about who's going to do what regarding that complaint [01:42:35.800 --> 01:42:51.800] and the procedures about who's supposed to do what, something that Randy and Eddie have both invested quite a bit of time in. And they may be the better ones to go through the procedure, at least from a point of view of the Texas code of procedure. [01:42:51.800 --> 01:43:06.800] But as far as getting a criminal thing started, it's going to have to start with some kind of sworn statement. So the victim or someone that has evidence to the events is the best one in a position to get that started. [01:43:06.800 --> 01:43:09.800] Having said all that, does that address your question? [01:43:09.800 --> 01:43:24.800] Yeah, I mean, I went to because, you know, I moved it into federal court and I countersued their municipal court. Those municipal courts have nothing to stand on. It's just unbelievable. [01:43:24.800 --> 01:43:29.800] So what happened with your removal? [01:43:29.800 --> 01:43:44.800] Well, basically I asked a lot of questions, put them into court when they didn't answer and moved it into federal court. I basically countersued their court and the federal judge. [01:43:44.800 --> 01:43:59.800] Okay, wait one second, Michael, we're about to go to break. Okay, you can finish up on the other side. We've got Brian from Minnesota is next after we finish with Michael. Folks, 512-646-1984, last segment. [01:44:14.800 --> 01:44:27.800] Our micro plant powder is rich in silica and probiotics to help rebuild the immune system and to create a healthy stomach flora. Micro plant powder is excellent for daily intake and is perfect to add to your storage shelter. [01:44:27.800 --> 01:44:44.800] We urge our listeners to please visit us at hempusa.org and remember all of our products are chemical free and healthy to eat. We constantly strive to give you the best service, highest quality and rapid shipping anywhere and we offer free shipping on orders over $95 in the U.S. [01:44:44.800 --> 01:44:59.800] Please visit us at hempusa.org or call 908-6912-608. That's 908-6912-608. See what our powder seeds and oil can do for you at hempusa.org. [01:45:14.800 --> 01:45:22.800] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.800 --> 01:45:33.800] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:33.800 --> 01:45:51.800] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics and much more. [01:45:51.800 --> 01:46:04.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.800 --> 01:46:47.800] Thank you. [01:46:47.800 --> 01:46:57.800] Okay folks, we are back. [01:46:57.800 --> 01:47:07.800] We're speaking with Michael from Texas. By the way, I just saw an email from a listener asking about our bumper music. [01:47:07.800 --> 01:47:19.800] Yes, that bumper music is my husband and myself, our band. We actually have two musical projects, Route 1 and 3 Shoes Posse. That was some Route 1 music right there. [01:47:19.800 --> 01:47:28.800] So folks, if you like the music, another way you can support the network is to buy our CDs. You can buy the CDs right off the website. [01:47:28.800 --> 01:47:42.800] We did a double CD release of a few months ago. Route 1 and 3 Shoes Posse, both of the musical acts, did a CD release at the same time. So you can get some of the bumper music by purchasing the CDs and those links are on the website. [01:47:42.800 --> 01:47:53.800] Okay, talking to Michael in Texas. Okay, Michael, please continue. Okay, so there was a case against you by the municipality and then you sued the municipality and federal court. Is that what you were saying? [01:47:53.800 --> 01:48:05.800] Basically, I asked them several questions. Was this a traffic ticket issue? Yeah. Okay. Well, they arrested me for not wearing a seatbelt. They said there was a warrant out of another city. Couldn't produce the warrant and all that. [01:48:05.800 --> 01:48:17.800] So I put them into the fall, moved it into the federal court, filed a civil action, countersuing them. And of course, for anybody who lives in Fort Worth and Northern Division, you'll never get anywhere. So expect to have to appeal it. [01:48:17.800 --> 01:48:32.800] Well, wait a minute. Okay, we were just discussing on the break that you can't countersuit in a criminal case. So was this really a counter-complaint or was this just an original petition civil lawsuit against the municipality? [01:48:32.800 --> 01:48:38.800] Well, I used the writ of mandamus and I removed it to the federal court. [01:48:38.800 --> 01:48:41.800] You removed what's the federal court? The traffic ticket case? [01:48:41.800 --> 01:48:57.800] Yeah. And I became the plaintiff. I don't believe in paying any fees or any of that stuff. Of course, the Northern District has the federal court considered the removal yet. [01:48:57.800 --> 01:49:23.800] Yes. And Terry Means tried to remand the case back down to the state and wouldn't accept the non-payment of fees. However, the appellate court gave me direct access to their court and has put my case on docket. [01:49:23.800 --> 01:49:32.800] Okay. Basically, at this point, what I'm going to do is, you know, I have to write a brief countering of the Northern District's decision. [01:49:32.800 --> 01:49:38.800] Okay, wait a minute. You're not telling us what the decision was. Did they remand? [01:49:38.800 --> 01:49:42.800] They did not remand the case back down to the state and all. [01:49:42.800 --> 01:49:45.800] Okay. What was their decision? [01:49:45.800 --> 01:49:51.800] Their decision was basically not to let me proceed and form a proper status. [01:49:51.800 --> 01:49:54.800] Oh, so that's the only issue that's before them at the moment? [01:49:54.800 --> 01:50:01.800] Yeah. And so the appellate court gave me direct access to their court. [01:50:01.800 --> 01:50:15.800] Basically, what you do is you give them the decision by the lower court and then fill out their form of proper status document, which I always put in A, and give them my own affidavit, and they accepted that. [01:50:15.800 --> 01:50:19.800] And so now I have to fill out a brief. [01:50:19.800 --> 01:50:22.800] Okay. So you've had a question? [01:50:22.800 --> 01:50:34.800] Yeah. I guess the question is, I mean, I think in this state, it's very hard to get, you know, any criminal complaints against law enforcement activated, you know, I guess that's not the proper term. [01:50:34.800 --> 01:50:46.800] Okay. We have a whole routine for how to do that and how to use the criminal process to create political pressure. [01:50:46.800 --> 01:50:58.800] If you listen to our show on a regular basis, I don't have time to go through it tonight, but we'll go through how to do this and specifically how to keep the police from retaliating against you. [01:50:58.800 --> 01:51:08.800] Yeah. Michael, if you go to the archives page on the rule of law radio website, there's a little search window in the upper right hand corner and type in do process. [01:51:08.800 --> 01:51:20.800] Those two words, do space process, and you'll come up with the links to the different shows where Randy has gone through Texas due process. [01:51:20.800 --> 01:51:24.800] We've done several four-hour shows on it, so that would be your best bet. [01:51:24.800 --> 01:51:26.800] Because like he says, we've only got seven minutes left in the show. [01:51:26.800 --> 01:51:29.800] We've got one more caller we need to take, so we can't go through it now. [01:51:29.800 --> 01:51:37.800] Quickly to answer your question, can someone else file a criminal complaint? Absolutely. [01:51:37.800 --> 01:51:43.800] If you have knowledge that a crime has been committed and you don't report that knowledge, you can be prosecuted. [01:51:43.800 --> 01:51:50.800] So if you can be prosecuted for not reporting a crime, you absolutely can always report crime. [01:51:50.800 --> 01:51:52.800] Okay. Thank you. [01:51:52.800 --> 01:51:53.800] Okay. Thank you, Michael. [01:51:53.800 --> 01:51:56.800] Okay. Harmon, any comments? [01:51:56.800 --> 01:51:58.800] No, but someone covered it. [01:51:58.800 --> 01:52:00.800] Okay. Great. All right. We have another caller on the line. [01:52:00.800 --> 01:52:03.800] We've got Brian from Minnesota has called back in. [01:52:03.800 --> 01:52:06.800] Brian, thank you for calling back in. We're glad you like the show so much. [01:52:06.800 --> 01:52:09.800] What is your question for Harmon? [01:52:09.800 --> 01:52:13.800] Hi again. I'm just, let's see, I have like an inner struggle trying. [01:52:13.800 --> 01:52:15.800] I'm like, I've been listening. [01:52:15.800 --> 01:52:18.800] Are you familiar with George Gordon's work? [01:52:18.800 --> 01:52:19.800] Yes. [01:52:19.800 --> 01:52:20.800] Okay. [01:52:20.800 --> 01:52:21.800] Yes. [01:52:21.800 --> 01:52:32.800] So I get the whole where the law applies and when, and I believe what you're saying is that one can... [01:52:32.800 --> 01:52:41.800] I guess my ultimate question is, I guess I need somebody to pay me in gold or silver and that's kind of one of the toughest issues to handle. [01:52:41.800 --> 01:52:45.800] But I'm also dealing with, you know, what about these... [01:52:45.800 --> 01:52:58.800] How would you suggest we go about these daily necessities where we have to use federal reserve notes for transactions such as gas and food and things like that? [01:52:58.800 --> 01:53:00.800] We're stuck. [01:53:00.800 --> 01:53:14.800] I mean, you're on the practical side of this until the gas station allows us to show up with money and to trade for the goods and services they provide. [01:53:14.800 --> 01:53:16.800] And we're stuck. [01:53:16.800 --> 01:53:26.800] When we're talking about that sort of thing, we're talking about the big players and the big players are addicted to the fine money. [01:53:26.800 --> 01:53:38.800] So until there's enough activity in the auto system awaits and measures area for some small oil company to start off somewhere, say Minnesota, say West Texas, [01:53:38.800 --> 01:53:47.800] and start pumping gas and trade for silver the way it used to be, then we're just stuck. [01:53:47.800 --> 01:53:49.800] And so you've got a good point. [01:53:49.800 --> 01:53:55.800] We're not going to be rid of it just like that. [01:53:55.800 --> 01:54:07.800] Someone called in a while back about a proposal in the Georgia legislature to declare a golden silver legal tender valued at the rate of the species. [01:54:07.800 --> 01:54:09.800] They've done that in Utah. [01:54:09.800 --> 01:54:10.800] Yes, in Utah. [01:54:10.800 --> 01:54:13.800] And I've heard that it's been proposed in a number of states. [01:54:13.800 --> 01:54:15.800] Yes, 14 or 15, I think. [01:54:15.800 --> 01:54:28.800] Looking at the condition of the dollar at this point, that would seem like absolutely the most powerful thing the states could do. [01:54:28.800 --> 01:54:35.800] Because then they could turn to the federal government with their funny money and say hit the road jacked. [01:54:35.800 --> 01:54:48.800] There's also other ways, there's a company called KB that refines and mines gold and puts them in tiny, itty bitty teeny tiny portions, [01:54:48.800 --> 01:54:52.800] quarter gram, half gram, and gram, and even two grams. [01:54:52.800 --> 01:55:06.800] And they put it, and it's certified by a third party Swiss assayer from another government certifying that it's exactly what it says, 24 karat kind of bar, kind of bar gold. [01:55:06.800 --> 01:55:12.800] And they put it, they embed it in a like a credit card sized piece of plastic. [01:55:12.800 --> 01:55:20.800] And this is already commonplace in Europe where you'll have, they operate in Europe right now. [01:55:20.800 --> 01:55:26.800] And what they do, they have merchants set up that will accept it as payments. [01:55:26.800 --> 01:55:32.800] And so say, for example, you've got a restaurant, like you go to dinner and your dinner is 30 euros or whatever. [01:55:32.800 --> 01:55:45.800] Well, you give them one of these cards, like say, you know, whatever the going rate is for Kennebar at the time, Kennebar gold, and say it's worth 50 euros or whatever, 40 euros. [01:55:45.800 --> 01:55:50.800] So you give them the card and they take that as payment and then they give you change in euros. [01:55:50.800 --> 01:55:59.800] They advertise this, this very thing you're talking about was being advertised openly when I was in Australia. [01:55:59.800 --> 01:56:00.800] Yes, exactly. [01:56:00.800 --> 01:56:07.800] In fact, I'm already set up as a distributor and so folks that are interested in this please contact me because that's another way to generate revenue to support this network. [01:56:07.800 --> 01:56:10.800] We're about to launch on that pretty soon. [01:56:10.800 --> 01:56:16.800] But now Brian, concerning the whole funny money system and Harman, maybe you could expound on this. [01:56:16.800 --> 01:56:27.800] Just because you use some funny money in your daily transactions of your life, that doesn't necessarily mean that you've agreed to the bad guy's choice of law in any particular statute. [01:56:27.800 --> 01:56:38.800] Like say, for example, the driver's license statute, okay, just because you buy a gas for your car, that doesn't mean that you've agreed to the transportation code funny money system. [01:56:38.800 --> 01:56:39.800] Is that correct, Harman? [01:56:39.800 --> 01:56:40.800] Yes. [01:56:40.800 --> 01:56:49.800] Okay, so you don't have to totally back out of the funny money system altogether in order to not agree to their choice of law. [01:56:49.800 --> 01:56:54.800] That's going to be on a statute by statute, case by case basis. [01:56:54.800 --> 01:56:57.800] You follow me, Brian? [01:56:57.800 --> 01:57:00.800] So what you... [01:57:00.800 --> 01:57:09.800] You just don't set up a commercial agreement with the state concerning that issue, like say, for example, Harman and Eddie. [01:57:09.800 --> 01:57:11.800] They don't have driver's licenses. [01:57:11.800 --> 01:57:17.800] They have no commercial nexus with the state regarding the transportation code. [01:57:17.800 --> 01:57:20.800] So it's not even a question. [01:57:20.800 --> 01:57:34.800] And I would argue that even if you do have a driver's license, if you're not using it, in other words, you're not engaged in transportation, you still haven't established a commercial nexus with the system. [01:57:34.800 --> 01:57:49.800] But it's very tricky because like I said earlier, Harman is saying that if you present the driver's license when the police ask for it, that's prima facie evidence that you are in transportation, and then it's very hard to get out of that pitfall once you get into it. [01:57:49.800 --> 01:57:51.800] Harman, you want to expound on that? [01:57:51.800 --> 01:57:53.800] You're doing fine. [01:57:53.800 --> 01:57:55.800] Okay. [01:57:55.800 --> 01:58:00.800] Well, I would kind of relate this more to like trade in private properties. [01:58:00.800 --> 01:58:06.800] A lot of times I'll deal with certain farmers in private fashion for my food source. [01:58:06.800 --> 01:58:14.800] And that's kind of where I get confused is if they can regulate that or not just because I use a better reserve note. [01:58:14.800 --> 01:58:22.800] It's better to do what you can in silver. [01:58:22.800 --> 01:58:32.800] If you're not going through all of their regulatory thing, then it may depend just on what you and the farmer decide. [01:58:32.800 --> 01:58:42.800] But what you're doing is where we may have to go nationally for a while to flush the system of the rest of what's happening there. [01:58:42.800 --> 01:58:47.800] Yeah, for all milk dealers really want to be safe, they should sell in silver. [01:58:47.800 --> 01:58:49.800] All right, we're at the end of the show. [01:58:49.800 --> 01:58:51.800] Thank you, Brian and Harman. [01:58:51.800 --> 01:58:53.800] Thank you very much for staying up so late with us tonight. [01:58:53.800 --> 01:58:55.800] We really appreciate it. [01:58:55.800 --> 01:58:56.800] I think it's a great show. [01:58:56.800 --> 01:58:57.800] Thanks for having me. [01:58:57.800 --> 01:58:59.800] All right, we'll be back Monday. [01:58:59.800 --> 01:59:17.800] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:59:17.800 --> 01:59:29.800] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:29.800 --> 01:59:39.800] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:39.800 --> 01:59:41.800] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:41.800 --> 01:59:50.800] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:50.800 --> 02:00:12.800] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.