[00:00.000 --> 00:07.800] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing your daily [00:07.800 --> 00:09.800] bulletins for the commodities market. [00:09.800 --> 00:23.080] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.080 --> 00:27.400] Markets for the 21st of May, 2015, gold opened up at $1,204.09. [00:27.400 --> 00:34.400] Silver, $17.12 now, Texas crude, $58.98 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently sitting [00:34.400 --> 00:42.400] at about $236 U.S. currency. [00:42.400 --> 00:47.640] Today in history, Saturday, May 21st, 1932, Amelia Earhart lands in the field completing [00:47.640 --> 00:50.440] the first transatlantic solo flight by a woman. [00:50.440 --> 00:53.720] She set off the day before from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, Canada. [00:53.720 --> 00:58.360] She was initially aiming for Paris in her single-engine Lockheed Vega 5B, but after [00:58.360 --> 01:03.360] encountering storms and a burnt exhaust pipe, she ended up landing in a pasture at Coolmore [01:03.360 --> 01:12.520] in Northern Ireland, ending her 14-hour, 56-minute flight. [01:12.520 --> 01:17.140] In recent news, Michael C. Ford, a State Department employee who has worked out of the U.S. Embassy [01:17.140 --> 01:22.260] in London since 2009, was arrested at Hartsfield, Jackson, Atlanta International Airport this [01:22.260 --> 01:26.720] past Sunday and appeared in a federal court today for apparently using government computers [01:26.720 --> 01:31.360] to extort college-age women into gathering sexually-explicit material for him. [01:31.360 --> 01:38.560] He is also being charged with computer hacking and cyber-stalking. [01:38.560 --> 01:42.400] Clean-up crews have been hard at work picking up patches of crude petroleum off the beach [01:42.400 --> 01:47.400] in offshore waters from a pipeline that ruptured spewing as much as 2,500 barrels into San [01:47.400 --> 01:52.400] Francisco's state beach and into the Pacific Ocean, west of Santa Barbara. [01:52.400 --> 01:55.400] This mess was caused when an underground pipeline running parallel to the coastal highway burst [01:55.400 --> 01:57.400] on Tuesday for no apparent reason. [01:57.400 --> 02:02.240] If estimates are correct, this makes it the biggest spill since the 1969 offshore oil [02:02.240 --> 02:07.480] well blowout that dumped 80,000 to 100,000 barrels of crude petroleum into the Santa [02:07.480 --> 02:13.720] Barbara Channel. [02:13.720 --> 02:17.720] Last night, 13 trillion electron bolts were created at the four collision points spaced [02:17.720 --> 02:19.920] around the Large Hydrogen Collider's tunnel. [02:19.920 --> 02:24.640] The collider has been through a planned two-year refurbishing after its first run in 2012, [02:24.640 --> 02:26.800] which only produced eight trillion electron bolts. [02:26.800 --> 02:31.160] In early April, after a slight delay, twin proton beams circulated the collider's seven-kilometer [02:31.160 --> 02:35.320] ring 30 stories below the Swiss-French border for the first time in two years. [02:35.320 --> 02:37.200] The first collisions began in early May. [02:37.200 --> 02:41.280] However, yesterday's collisions are treading into never-before-reached levels of energy, [02:41.280 --> 02:43.960] in effect setting a new energy record. [02:43.960 --> 02:45.960] The Lone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. [02:45.960 --> 02:49.560] They give a product or a service that you would like to advertise in the lowdown. [02:49.560 --> 02:52.560] Feel free to give us a call at 210-863-5617. [02:52.560 --> 03:22.480] This has been your lowdown for May 21, 2015. [03:52.560 --> 04:07.280] Okay, hey, howdy, howdy. [04:07.280 --> 04:16.280] This is Randy Kelsey on Wee Well Radio on this Friday, the 22nd day of May, 2015. [04:16.280 --> 04:23.400] And yesterday I misspoke, 21st day of May, it's not the beginning of summer, I don't [04:23.400 --> 04:25.680] know what I was thinking. [04:25.680 --> 04:32.680] Somebody corrected me on that, I don't know why I was thinking May when I know it's June. [04:32.680 --> 04:37.720] But I'm up here in North Texas at the moment, and I have my jacket on. [04:37.720 --> 04:45.480] It's toward the end of May, and this is generally the time we start cracking up around 100. [04:45.480 --> 04:49.520] And I have my jacket on because it's cool. [04:49.520 --> 04:56.040] And we've got a spot of rain, it's been raining off and on all day, it's been raining off [04:56.040 --> 04:59.600] and on for the last month and a half. [04:59.600 --> 05:10.400] We are at record pace now in rain for North Texas, so much for global warming. [05:10.400 --> 05:17.600] We just had the president on the air, on national television. [05:17.600 --> 05:24.960] He has absolutely declared now that the weather is an enemy to the United States. [05:24.960 --> 05:26.800] It's a threat to United States security. [05:26.800 --> 05:31.640] I guess he thinks the weather's going to invade the country. [05:31.640 --> 05:40.560] That global warming, he's saying, is not a question, but it's actually happening. [05:40.560 --> 05:49.560] And if you look at the evidence and the record, well, duh, yeah, we're going to have global [05:49.560 --> 06:00.200] warming because of things that have been happening naturally for the last 10,000 years. [06:00.200 --> 06:11.560] I know we sit on this rock and it feels relatively firm and permanent to us. [06:11.560 --> 06:16.000] But in the overall scheme of things, it is no such thing. [06:16.000 --> 06:26.160] This piece of rock we're sitting on floating around in the cosmos is relatively very volatile [06:26.160 --> 06:29.560] at the moment. [06:29.560 --> 06:39.720] Through history, they have a lot of epochs, a lot of geological periods, thoracic, Jurassic, [06:39.720 --> 06:48.800] all through and for the last four billion years, they separate time periods into very [06:48.800 --> 06:57.760] long periods of time where the earth will go along relatively stable for a long time [06:57.760 --> 07:02.800] and then something will change and they mark a different period, a period when all the [07:02.800 --> 07:06.960] vertebrates were pretty well wiped out. [07:06.960 --> 07:10.920] They mostly mark these things by extinction events. [07:10.920 --> 07:22.320] Well, the last archaeological epoch ended 12,000 years ago. [07:22.320 --> 07:23.520] Most people don't realize that. [07:23.520 --> 07:29.120] That was a period that was hundreds of millions of years long, it was 65 billion years long [07:29.120 --> 07:37.120] and it ended 12,000 years ago and it apparently ended with a cataclysm. [07:37.120 --> 07:46.920] It wasn't exactly an extinction event, but it was a world climate changing event. [07:46.920 --> 07:57.360] And these stories of the Great Flood, well, that traces back to, it's pretty well agreed [07:57.360 --> 08:04.280] upon that the time period of the Great Flood is 12,000 years ago, 11,600 years ago. [08:04.280 --> 08:13.760] There's all of this geological evidence to indicate that 12,000 years ago or between [08:13.760 --> 08:19.560] 12,000 and 13,000 years ago some things occurred. [08:19.560 --> 08:30.520] There was apparently a relatively large meteor storm because all of the ancient texts talk [08:30.520 --> 08:37.400] about things like fire and brimstone, about fire and brimstone falling from the sky. [08:37.400 --> 08:44.160] Well, the scientific community did not accept the fact that there could be such a thing [08:44.160 --> 08:52.160] as a meteorite until a meteor shower hit Paris, France in the late 1700s. [08:52.160 --> 08:57.880] Before that, the science said that it couldn't happen. [08:57.880 --> 09:01.800] And all this stuff we were reading about in the Bible and other ancient texts, well, I [09:01.800 --> 09:05.600] saw a bunch of hooey that can't happen. [09:05.600 --> 09:12.040] And then when they saw it with their own eyes, they had to accept that it could happen. [09:12.040 --> 09:20.640] And the evidence indicated that these meteor showers at that time could well have been [09:20.640 --> 09:25.800] the cause of the Great Flood because there was an impact crater off the east coast of [09:25.800 --> 09:34.160] Africa in the ocean, and I believe that would be the Indian Ocean if it's not too far south. [09:34.160 --> 09:45.720] 12 miles across, an impact crater 12 miles across would be enough to cause a pretty decent [09:45.720 --> 09:48.400] tidal wave. [09:48.400 --> 09:58.480] And part of the idea of how the flood occurred was that the ice shelf slid off of Antarctica [09:58.480 --> 09:59.480] into the ocean. [09:59.480 --> 10:06.560] And if the ice pack slid off, you know, the ice pack builds up in the mountains in Antarctica, [10:06.560 --> 10:10.800] and the weight of the ice gradually squeezes it down and pushes it out into the ocean, [10:10.800 --> 10:12.280] pushes out this huge ice shelf. [10:12.280 --> 10:17.760] Well, if something shook the whole thing and the ice shelf slid off in the ocean, they [10:17.760 --> 10:24.360] projected that would raise the seas about 60 feet, and it would take a long time for [10:24.360 --> 10:33.840] the rain, rain and snow on Antarctica and the North Pole to collect that water back [10:33.840 --> 10:36.800] out of the system back into a new ice pack. [10:36.800 --> 10:41.360] Well, we don't know if that actually happened or not, but something happened about that [10:41.360 --> 10:47.520] time that caused a Great Flood that caused the Clovis people of this country, of this [10:47.520 --> 10:50.040] continent to disappear. [10:50.040 --> 10:54.440] There were ancient peoples here prior to that time, but they disappeared about this time. [10:54.440 --> 10:59.440] So it appears that the extinction event occurred on this continent. [10:59.440 --> 11:06.040] Thirty species of large mammal went extinct right at this time. [11:06.040 --> 11:15.960] Camel, sloth, mammoth, mastodon, or we had mammoths, not mastodons, saber-toothed tiger, [11:15.960 --> 11:22.200] direwolves, 30 some odd species of large mammal disappeared, Clovis people disappeared, temperatures [11:22.200 --> 11:31.520] dropped dramatically, and then for about a thousand years the temperatures varied dramatically, [11:31.520 --> 11:40.400] and then they began to stabilize, and then there was what is known as the Younger Dryas. [11:40.400 --> 11:49.320] What the archaeologists believe was a time of an impact in the ice pack, in the North [11:49.320 --> 11:56.920] American continent that melted a good portion of the polar ice and drained it off the Atlantic [11:56.920 --> 12:06.840] Ocean and disrupted the thermocene, the ocean currents, the ocean beltway of which the Gulf [12:06.840 --> 12:14.360] Stream is apart, the Gulf Stream drawing water up from the equator up toward the north, heats [12:14.360 --> 12:23.560] up the east coast, heats up the northern continent, then it picks up cold water and rotates down [12:23.560 --> 12:28.280] the west coast of Europe, and then back. [12:28.280 --> 12:36.480] This is just a rotation that was disrupted at this time, it threw off the climates. [12:36.480 --> 12:42.120] The temperatures dropped dramatically, and then about 11,000 years ago the temperatures [12:42.120 --> 12:47.560] rose up and passed our current temperature about 11,000, I think three or four hundred [12:47.560 --> 12:54.000] years ago, and then they continued on up about five or six degrees, and then they dropped [12:54.000 --> 13:01.800] down five or six degrees, and then they rose up again in a cycle that has been recurring [13:01.800 --> 13:11.360] for the last 11,000 years, the cycle is approximately a 500-year period within that cycle. [13:11.360 --> 13:17.720] There are other cycles, a 70-year cycle, a 300-year cycle, there are other variations [13:17.720 --> 13:27.680] that tend to repeat themselves, but the predominant variation is a five to six degree variation [13:27.680 --> 13:32.160] that repeats itself every 500 years. [13:32.160 --> 13:39.120] If you look at the temperature graphs, we are, according to the pack ice, the Greenland [13:39.120 --> 13:49.960] ice, we are at the lowest point we've been at for 11,000 years, we're at the lowest temperature [13:49.960 --> 13:56.480] that we have reached since we crossed this temperature 11,000 years ago. [13:56.480 --> 14:03.000] Now, about 300 years ago there was a mini ice age, they call it, or the mini ice age, [14:03.000 --> 14:08.760] it got about as cold as it is now, the average warm temperatures, they're marked about the [14:08.760 --> 14:09.760] same. [14:09.760 --> 14:14.520] If you look on the graph, they're about the same thing, so all these guys start hopping [14:14.520 --> 14:22.360] up and down, waving their arms, and wailing about global warming, well, duh, we're going [14:22.360 --> 14:29.280] to be global warming, but the evidence is that this is not some local event. [14:29.280 --> 14:36.320] This is what their evidence tends to indicate, what they believe, these are some cycles causing [14:36.320 --> 14:39.400] this. [14:39.400 --> 14:46.000] Some cycles, and the amount of energy we're receiving has been varying, and what's been [14:46.000 --> 14:50.640] going on on this planet had nothing to do with it, so I'm not saying that all the carbon [14:50.640 --> 14:56.080] dioxide we're pumping in the air is not going to cause a problem, but to say that it's going [14:56.080 --> 15:03.320] to cause global warming, well, how do we separate that global warming from the global warming [15:03.320 --> 15:06.040] we know is going to happen? [15:06.040 --> 15:11.280] The next 250 years we can expect to rise 6 degrees, if we weren't even here we would [15:11.280 --> 15:15.000] rise 6 degrees. [15:15.000 --> 15:26.400] So if the extra carbon dioxide does what I was growing up, what all the scientists were [15:26.400 --> 15:33.440] saying would be the effect of extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would be the greenhouse [15:33.440 --> 15:41.280] effect, and the planet's been through the greenhouse effect before. [15:41.280 --> 15:48.000] The Jurassic period they believe was a period of greenhouse effect, and the Earth was far [15:48.000 --> 15:52.200] more productive than it is today. [15:52.200 --> 15:58.720] There is no way that this planet would support dinosaurs of the size that existed at that [15:58.720 --> 16:06.960] time, just wasn't productive enough, and at the time the oxygen content of the air was [16:06.960 --> 16:10.880] higher than it is, quite a bit higher than it is today. [16:10.880 --> 16:15.680] That may well be if we trigger a greenhouse effect, the net effect of the whole thing [16:15.680 --> 16:19.680] is the planet may become more habitable. [16:19.680 --> 16:24.040] Now that's my story and I'm sticking to it. [16:24.040 --> 16:28.960] We're going to keep the phone lines open all night, we'll be taking your calls, if you [16:28.960 --> 16:32.520] have a question or comment give us a call. [16:32.520 --> 16:37.480] I'd hope to have a lawyer on tonight, so we'll try to get it through on next week. [16:37.480 --> 16:45.080] I actually found a lawyer that seems like a real human being, I think you'll like it. [16:45.080 --> 16:46.440] We'll try to have her on next week. [16:46.440 --> 16:49.840] If you have a question or comment give us a call over the break. [16:49.840 --> 16:57.680] This is Randy Kelton, the Rue de la Radio, I call in number 512-646-1984, give us a call, [16:57.680 --> 17:00.680] we'll be right back. [17:00.680 --> 17:06.720] Through advances in technology our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. 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[18:28.760 --> 18:33.760] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:33.760 --> 18:38.760] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.760 --> 18:40.760] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.760 --> 18:46.760] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.760 --> 18:49.760] or email MichaelMears at Yahoo.com. [18:49.760 --> 18:57.760] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at Yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors. [18:57.760 --> 19:07.760] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:07.760 --> 19:23.760] Okay, we are back. [19:23.760 --> 19:27.760] Welcome to Rule Of Law Radio and I'm finished with my global warming rant. [19:27.760 --> 19:32.760] And before we go to the calls, there is one thing I want to talk about. [19:32.760 --> 19:41.760] And I wanted to see if I could get some folks who were interested in helping me with an experiment. [19:41.760 --> 19:45.760] I have a new invention. [19:45.760 --> 19:49.760] I call it my chiropractic. [19:49.760 --> 20:00.760] I used to do myotherapy, pressure point therapy, kind of an expanded form of shiatsu. [20:00.760 --> 20:09.760] And if anybody has ever seen these medicines or disciplines where they use pressure, [20:09.760 --> 20:19.760] like if you get a headache, if you grip the joint area between your thumb and forefinger, [20:19.760 --> 20:28.760] if you set your thumb against the first joint of, say you take your white thumb and place it on the left hand, [20:28.760 --> 20:35.760] right at the V between the thumb and the index finger, put your index finger underneath and squeeze. [20:35.760 --> 20:38.760] You'll feel a little pain in there. [20:38.760 --> 20:44.760] If you squeeze that when you have a headache and make headache, boy, this is acupressure. [20:44.760 --> 20:53.760] The Chinese have studied the body extensively and they have pressure points all over the body for all sorts of different things. [20:53.760 --> 21:06.760] There's also a foot reflexology where by finding sore places on your feet, they diagnose all sorts of illness. [21:06.760 --> 21:09.760] Well, then there's yoga. [21:09.760 --> 21:16.760] Yoga uses a technique called pressing against your threshold pain. [21:16.760 --> 21:20.760] In yoga, you stretch and extend the muscles. [21:20.760 --> 21:30.760] It's primarily about stretching and extension because your muscles, if you injure one, [21:30.760 --> 21:36.760] the body has a mechanism to lock that muscle down. [21:36.760 --> 21:38.760] They call it atrophy. [21:38.760 --> 21:46.760] The muscle will lock itself down and say you tear a spot in your bicep. [21:46.760 --> 21:51.760] The portion that's damaged will lock down and the muscle around it will take up that movement. [21:51.760 --> 21:53.760] It will tend to overextend. [21:53.760 --> 22:02.760] Then when that portion of the muscle heals, stretching and extending will tend to pull it back out. [22:02.760 --> 22:10.760] The problem is in your back and in your lower hips, you have very large muscles that barely move. [22:10.760 --> 22:18.760] If you damage one of those, it will tend to lock down or the damaged area will lock down. [22:18.760 --> 22:23.760] The rest of the muscle will overextend to take up the movement. [22:23.760 --> 22:29.760] You'll wind up damaging more and more of the muscle by overextending it. [22:29.760 --> 22:32.760] Then it will gradually move from one muscle to the other. [22:32.760 --> 22:37.760] You notice, oh people, that you see what's called a dowager's hump, [22:37.760 --> 22:42.760] where their shoulders begin to bend forward, their head tips forward somewhat. [22:42.760 --> 22:46.760] They get a sort of a hump in their back. [22:46.760 --> 22:53.760] It's called a dowager's hump and it's caused by nothing more than muscle tension. [22:53.760 --> 22:56.760] We damage a muscle, it locks down. [22:56.760 --> 22:59.760] We damage the next one because it's overextending. [22:59.760 --> 23:08.760] It tends to lock down and you gradually stiffen up and it reaches a point where it literally draws your shoulders forward. [23:08.760 --> 23:21.760] If anybody out there is above 45 or 50, you may notice that you don't feel as limber and able as you once were. [23:21.760 --> 23:23.760] I was working with my son. [23:23.760 --> 23:25.760] I had a truck trailer. [23:25.760 --> 23:30.760] The trailer was about three and a half feet off the ground, the bedwalk. [23:30.760 --> 23:32.760] My son was early 20s at the time. [23:32.760 --> 23:34.760] He was up on the trailer. [23:34.760 --> 23:42.760] He turned around and just stepped off of it, hit the ground, sprung on his knees and walked away. [23:42.760 --> 23:48.760] I stood there looking at him and I thought, I used to be able to do that, [23:48.760 --> 23:53.760] but I don't do that anymore because if I stepped off that truck from that height, [23:53.760 --> 23:58.760] it would feel like someone hit me in the back with a sledgehammer. [23:58.760 --> 24:05.760] So I went to work on it, trying to release those muscles that I damaged for a long time. [24:05.760 --> 24:18.760] And the way you do it is, if you can find a way to move that hurts, move that way to quit hurting, [24:18.760 --> 24:22.760] you have a mechanism to lock these muscles down. [24:22.760 --> 24:25.760] You have no mechanism to release it. [24:25.760 --> 24:30.760] Normal movement tends to do that, but in your hips and in your back, [24:30.760 --> 24:36.760] you don't have enough flex and extension to force those muscles to turn loose. [24:36.760 --> 24:43.760] You have another mechanism that lets the muscle know when it's holding itself too tight, [24:43.760 --> 24:46.760] and that mechanism is called pain. [24:46.760 --> 24:53.760] And then myotherapy technique and similarly, shiatsu and acupuncture. [24:53.760 --> 24:59.760] Shiatsu, they find a place that's sensitive to enter. [24:59.760 --> 25:04.760] Generally, all of these acupressure points that you see listed, [25:04.760 --> 25:10.760] if one of them is what they consider active, you just press on it and it hurts. [25:10.760 --> 25:17.760] And that tells them you should be able to press on any muscle in your body and it should not hurt. [25:17.760 --> 25:21.760] If it hurts, that means it's in spasm. [25:21.760 --> 25:26.760] Now, you can't tell it because you lock the muscle down, you get sensorimotor amnesia. [25:26.760 --> 25:30.760] So everything feels right to you, you just feel stiff. [25:30.760 --> 25:35.760] You realize that that's your own muscles holding like concrete, [25:35.760 --> 25:39.760] and it uses up a lot of energy to hold those muscles so tight. [25:39.760 --> 25:45.760] But if you reach in and press on one, it hurts, and you hold pressure on it. [25:45.760 --> 25:50.760] The mind says, holy crap, I'm holding that too tight, and it backs away. [25:50.760 --> 25:51.760] It'll release the muscle. [25:51.760 --> 26:00.760] That's what acupressure or there's a method called the Bonnie Pruden method or pain erasure, [26:00.760 --> 26:06.760] where they literally go in, you find a place in the muscle that hurts, and you press on it. [26:06.760 --> 26:17.760] If on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 would be the point at which you tended to react or cringe or tense up from the pain. [26:17.760 --> 26:21.760] Press to about a 7 and hold it for 7 seconds. [26:21.760 --> 26:30.760] That seems to be how long it takes to tell the mind or whatever controls the muscles that is holding the muscle too tight. [26:30.760 --> 26:35.760] Then you move away about an inch and press again, and another inch, press again. [26:35.760 --> 26:41.760] You start doing this, you'll be amazed at pain you can get rid of. [26:41.760 --> 26:47.760] I was stretching out my calf muscles the other day, and I was really stretching them, and I strained a muscle in my ankle. [26:47.760 --> 26:50.760] Got up the next morning, I could barely walk. [26:50.760 --> 26:54.760] Every step was just misery. [26:54.760 --> 26:58.760] I sat down with this tool that I made up to do the pressure pointing with. [26:58.760 --> 27:06.760] I pressure pointed that muscle for about 5 minutes, and in 30 minutes, it was completely gone. [27:06.760 --> 27:11.760] It'll make you want to go whack your doctor over the head with something. [27:11.760 --> 27:18.760] All this pain and misery we've put up with all our lives, they could have gotten rid of it, but instead they gave you dope. [27:18.760 --> 27:26.760] My father-in-law went to the doctor, and he was having problems with his pinky finger. [27:26.760 --> 27:28.760] The finger next to it would go numb. [27:28.760 --> 27:34.760] He had numbness radiating up his arm, up the bottom side of his arm. [27:34.760 --> 27:42.760] When I heard about it, they had put him in the hospital and went in and deadened the nerves to that area. [27:42.760 --> 27:45.760] I wanted to choke him. [27:45.760 --> 27:52.760] Any chiropractor would tell you, numbness in your pinky and the next finger and up the side of your arm, [27:52.760 --> 28:01.760] that means that your fifth cervical vertebrae is out of place, that the muscles holding your vertebrae in line, [28:01.760 --> 28:07.760] one of those muscles is in spasm, and it's drawing the vertebrae off to one side, [28:07.760 --> 28:13.760] and it's putting pressure on the nerve where it exits the spine, because that's where that nerve exits the spine. [28:13.760 --> 28:18.760] The first place you'll feel the pressure is the extension of the nerve, the end of your fingers. [28:18.760 --> 28:20.760] Your fingers are going numb. [28:20.760 --> 28:27.760] Go to a chiropractor, he'll put his hand between your shoulder blades, pop, numbness goes away instantly. [28:27.760 --> 28:33.760] Thumb and forefinger, thumb and forefinger, third cervical vertebrae. [28:33.760 --> 28:39.760] Two middle fingers, fourth, pinky and second finger, fifth cervical vertebrae. [28:39.760 --> 28:42.760] Chiropractors know this. [28:42.760 --> 28:50.760] Allopathic doctors seem to pay no attention to these kind of things, but a chiropractor, he don't have time. [28:50.760 --> 28:56.760] They go in there and he pulls you back in place and it pops like crazy, and you feel better for a little while, [28:56.760 --> 28:58.760] but you haven't released the muscle. [28:58.760 --> 29:01.760] It takes time and pressure to tell the muscle to quit doing that. [29:01.760 --> 29:08.760] You just jerk it back in place and you feel a lot better when you go away, but the next day is right back again. [29:08.760 --> 29:16.760] If you go in there and find a muscle that hurts to press on it and then press on it for seven seconds [29:16.760 --> 29:21.760] and move an inch in every direction around it, every place you can find that's sore, [29:21.760 --> 29:24.760] press on it for about seven seconds, it goes away. [29:24.760 --> 29:31.760] The next day you'll be so sore it will feel like somebody poured liquid fire on you. [29:31.760 --> 29:37.760] And then you just move that muscle for about two minutes, that soreness goes away and it never comes back. [29:37.760 --> 29:39.760] You don't want to choke it up. [29:39.760 --> 29:44.760] I built a tool, if anybody's interested, send me an email and I'll send you plans on how to build it. [29:44.760 --> 29:50.760] It's all made out of PVC pipe, costs about 12 bucks to build it, and it is like magic. [29:50.760 --> 29:56.760] Randy Kelton, Blue Wall Radio, we'll start taking calls when we come back. [29:56.760 --> 29:59.760] We'll be right back. [29:59.760 --> 30:05.760] Is your social security number and other personal information at risk? [30:05.760 --> 30:08.760] If it's stored in a database, the answer is yes. [30:08.760 --> 30:15.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you how to protect yourself from becoming a victim of a database breach in just a moment. [30:15.760 --> 30:17.760] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.760 --> 30:20.760] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.760 --> 30:25.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.760 --> 30:30.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.760 --> 30:33.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.760 --> 30:40.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.760 --> 30:44.760] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.760 --> 30:52.760] Virtually all Americans have personal information stored in at least one government or private database, and that information is always at risk. [30:52.760 --> 30:55.760] Here are some steps you can take to protect yourself. [30:55.760 --> 30:59.760] Watch your credit cards and bank statements carefully for any unusual charges. [30:59.760 --> 31:02.760] Report any unauthorized account activity quickly. [31:02.760 --> 31:05.760] Not only does this limit abuse, it limits your liability. [31:05.760 --> 31:13.760] If you suspect foul play, notify one of the three main credit bureaus, Experian, Equifax, or TransUnion, and request a fraud alert. [31:13.760 --> 31:16.760] And finally, monitor your credit reports. [31:16.760 --> 31:24.760] You get a free report when you request a fraud alert, and many states require the credit bureaus to give you a free report annually when you request it. [31:24.760 --> 31:44.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:54.760 --> 31:57.760] See what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [31:57.760 --> 32:01.760] Only at fifthusa.org. [32:01.760 --> 32:05.760] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.760 --> 32:07.760] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:07.760 --> 32:12.760] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.760 --> 32:19.760] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.760 --> 32:25.760] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.760 --> 32:35.760] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.760 --> 32:40.760] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.760 --> 32:47.760] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.760 --> 32:50.760] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.760 --> 32:54.760] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.760 --> 33:00.760] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:00.760 --> 33:14.760] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [33:14.760 --> 33:20.760] Okay, we are back. [33:20.760 --> 33:26.760] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to go to the phones now. [33:26.760 --> 33:39.760] But if you want one of these tools I put together, it's just a bunch of plastic fittings with some knobs on it that you can use to pressure your back. [33:39.760 --> 33:45.760] I can – I do pressure therapy on people when they have problems and they come to me. [33:45.760 --> 33:50.760] I can do pressure therapy on it and get rid of those problems. [33:50.760 --> 33:53.760] It takes a long time to do it right. [33:53.760 --> 33:55.760] You have to do it over and over and over. [33:55.760 --> 34:01.760] I can get rid of pain immediately, but it tends to come back unless you work at it to clear it up. [34:01.760 --> 34:05.760] And since it's in your back, I couldn't do it to myself. [34:05.760 --> 34:11.760] And I finally sat down and figured out a tool I could put together where I could pressure point my own back. [34:11.760 --> 34:25.760] And it turned out that doing it myself was much more effective than having someone else pressure point me because I could feel where the right place to press was. [34:25.760 --> 34:28.760] It's all about feeling. [34:28.760 --> 34:36.760] And I could feel just exactly how much pressure to put on it where when I do somebody, I'll press too hard or not hard enough. [34:36.760 --> 34:40.760] It has to be constant communication to keep the pressure right. [34:40.760 --> 34:45.760] And once you've done this a time or two, you'll figure it out. [34:45.760 --> 34:55.760] And it kind of gets addictive because sometimes you'll press point one of these places and it will hurt so good. [34:55.760 --> 34:59.760] You can really tell that it's getting rid of a tremendous amount of tension. [34:59.760 --> 35:04.760] I'm more limber now than I was when I was in my 20s. [35:04.760 --> 35:06.760] I just came in the house today. [35:06.760 --> 35:08.760] We put down some new flooring. [35:08.760 --> 35:13.760] We used to have carpet and it's all new, really slick hardwood flooring. [35:13.760 --> 35:18.760] And I took a step with those wet shoes and my feet went out from under me. [35:18.760 --> 35:24.760] I reached out with, I'm 65, I reached out with my right arm and caught my body weight. [35:24.760 --> 35:26.760] No injury at all. [35:26.760 --> 35:29.760] And I took a really hard fall. [35:29.760 --> 35:37.760] But my body caught myself because all my muscles moved and worked the way they were supposed to. [35:37.760 --> 35:40.760] If you're interested, send me an email, Randy at WheelbarrowRadio.com, [35:40.760 --> 35:45.760] and I'll send you plans on how to make this thing and some instruction on how to use it. [35:45.760 --> 35:50.760] I'd very much like to get some feedback on how well it works for you [35:50.760 --> 35:57.760] and any deficiencies it may have so that I could adjust my design to make it more effective. [35:57.760 --> 36:01.760] Okay, we are going to Steve in Washington. [36:01.760 --> 36:04.760] Steve, what do you have for us today? [36:04.760 --> 36:09.760] Hey, Randy. [36:09.760 --> 36:15.760] Jesse Poehler said once that pain is just weakness leaving the body. [36:15.760 --> 36:18.760] Wait, say that again? [36:18.760 --> 36:27.760] Jesse Poehler in the Marine Corps, he said that pain is just weakness leaving the body. [36:27.760 --> 36:28.760] No, no, no. [36:28.760 --> 36:33.760] Pain is an instruction. [36:33.760 --> 36:38.760] I went to this quickly because I didn't have time to get to this part. [36:38.760 --> 36:49.760] When you do pressure points, the best way to do it is pay real close attention to your pain. [36:49.760 --> 36:53.760] Let me give you a pain trick. [36:53.760 --> 36:59.760] Let's say you wake up in the morning and your sinuses are clogged. [36:59.760 --> 37:06.760] Before you get out of bed, before you move, just lay there and pay attention to your sinuses. [37:06.760 --> 37:09.760] Your system is trying to tell you something. [37:09.760 --> 37:13.760] So go inside mentally and pay attention to it. [37:13.760 --> 37:24.760] See if you can feel every spot in your sinuses where they're tense, where they feel uncomfortable. [37:24.760 --> 37:28.760] Five minutes, your sinuses are clear. [37:28.760 --> 37:41.760] If you get a headache, sit down and focus not on the headache in general, but specifically the exact places where your head is hurting. [37:41.760 --> 37:45.760] When you focus on a place that's hurting, it goes away. [37:45.760 --> 37:47.760] It just quits. [37:47.760 --> 37:52.760] It's almost crazy, but it really works. [37:52.760 --> 37:59.760] What it appears to be is your body is telling you something with pain. [37:59.760 --> 38:05.760] Mostly we feel pain and we feel bad about the pain, but we don't go back and ask ourselves, [38:05.760 --> 38:08.760] okay, Bubba, what are you trying to tell me? [38:08.760 --> 38:14.760] Go in, pay direct attention to it, and it goes away. [38:14.760 --> 38:17.760] That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. [38:17.760 --> 38:18.760] Okay, go ahead, Steve. [38:18.760 --> 38:20.760] Sounds good. [38:20.760 --> 38:28.760] This whole deal on global warming is really just a pretext for massive taxes. [38:28.760 --> 38:41.760] I can say that because I took geology in college, and one of the three things that I learned was that this period in history, [38:41.760 --> 38:51.760] the Holocene period, is the most quiet period of time in geologic history. [38:51.760 --> 38:55.760] This is very unusually quiet during the Holocene. [38:55.760 --> 39:02.760] The Holocene started approximately 12,600 years ago. [39:02.760 --> 39:08.760] That first 2,000 years of the Holocene was tough. [39:08.760 --> 39:17.760] After that, yeah, we've now been in 11,000 years of the temperatures just barely varying three degrees. [39:17.760 --> 39:27.760] If you look at the charts in the beginning of the Holocene, what was it, the Pleistocene that ended before this one? [39:27.760 --> 39:28.760] Yeah. [39:28.760 --> 39:33.760] Anyway, the end of the Pleistocene, the end of the last ice age, [39:33.760 --> 39:38.760] we believe that it was a major meteor strike that caused the end of the last ice age. [39:38.760 --> 39:44.760] The temperatures went crazy, 50 degrees up and down, back and forth for 2,000 years. [39:44.760 --> 39:47.760] Bam, they flattened out. [39:47.760 --> 39:55.760] If you look real close, they move six degrees back and forth, but if you back up, it's almost flat line. [39:55.760 --> 39:56.760] You're right. [39:56.760 --> 39:57.760] You look through history. [39:57.760 --> 40:07.760] We've had 10,000 years of temperatures varying six degrees every 500 years, and you don't see that coming up in the history of mankind. [40:07.760 --> 40:11.760] You don't hear all these horrible catastrophes and all this other nonsense. [40:11.760 --> 40:15.760] It's kind of like normal. [40:15.760 --> 40:16.760] Okay, go ahead. [40:16.760 --> 40:18.760] I interrupted you. [40:18.760 --> 40:25.760] Well, and plus our carbon dioxide level is just about the lowest it has ever been. [40:25.760 --> 40:35.760] It was quite a bit higher, almost 50% during the age when we had large, extremely large mammals like dinosaurs. [40:35.760 --> 40:38.760] The Jurassic. [40:38.760 --> 40:40.760] Yeah, and the Jurassic. [40:40.760 --> 40:48.760] It was extremely high, but one of the problems with low carbon dioxide is low plant growth. [40:48.760 --> 41:01.760] I'd say 99.9% of all the carbon dioxide that we have is locked up in the form of stone called limestone. [41:01.760 --> 41:07.760] So we're not having a carbon dioxide problem. [41:07.760 --> 41:14.760] We're actually very low in carbon dioxide, and sea level is actually very low. [41:14.760 --> 41:20.760] But we're in the calmest period of geologic history. [41:20.760 --> 41:29.760] So I mean, what that says to me is that it could be a whole lot more worse. [41:29.760 --> 41:31.760] I mean, a whole lot worse. [41:31.760 --> 41:40.760] I mean, we do have volcanoes that are overdue like Yellowstone and Tambora. [41:40.760 --> 41:49.760] You know, we don't know what's going to happen with those, and if anything does, it'll change the weather dramatically. [41:49.760 --> 41:55.760] And we have other geologic features that are overdue. [41:55.760 --> 42:02.760] The Canary Islands, we're going through a public shift. [42:02.760 --> 42:07.760] Then there is the Big Mama of all volcanoes. [42:07.760 --> 42:13.760] The biggest, baddest volcano on planet Earth. [42:13.760 --> 42:16.760] It's called Yellowstone. [42:16.760 --> 42:18.760] Oh, yeah, Yellowstone. [42:18.760 --> 42:20.760] That's what I was saying was Yellowstone. [42:20.760 --> 42:30.760] And now they're finding out that we have a huge magma, huge channels of magma underneath it. [42:30.760 --> 42:32.760] And that's been overdue. [42:32.760 --> 42:39.760] Well, the magma pool that heats Yellowstone is relatively close to the surface. [42:39.760 --> 42:46.760] And with all this fracking they've been doing, they've been able to weed deeper down in. [42:46.760 --> 42:50.760] And they found a monster down there. [42:50.760 --> 42:54.760] Yeah, even bigger than the one they found before. [42:54.760 --> 42:57.760] Yeah, but they think the last time Yellowstone went off. [42:57.760 --> 43:02.760] If you go to Yellowstone, it's in a basin, a 25-mile basin. It looks like a basin. [43:02.760 --> 43:04.760] It's really not a basin. [43:04.760 --> 43:10.760] It's a caldera 25 miles across. [43:10.760 --> 43:14.760] That happened 300 million years ago. [43:14.760 --> 43:17.760] I'm sorry, yeah, 300 million years ago. [43:17.760 --> 43:21.760] And they think that for Yellowstone was really the biggie. [43:21.760 --> 43:24.760] And they don't expect anything like that again. [43:24.760 --> 43:33.760] But even so, that's potentially an extinction event with volcano. [43:33.760 --> 43:44.760] Yeah, and we also have the one in Canary Islands and then we have the one in Canberra and Krakatoa. [43:44.760 --> 43:46.760] Hang on, hang on. We're about to go to break. [43:46.760 --> 43:48.760] Randy Kelton, Rue of La Radio. [43:48.760 --> 43:52.760] I called his number, 512-646-1984. [43:52.760 --> 43:54.760] And we're going to try not to blow up on the break. [43:54.760 --> 44:22.760] We'll be right back. [44:22.760 --> 44:46.760] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:46.760 --> 45:00.760] Nature is pure, organics.com. [45:00.760 --> 45:03.760] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.760 --> 45:07.760] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, [45:07.760 --> 45:14.760] easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.760 --> 45:18.760] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.760 --> 45:22.760] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.760 --> 45:27.760] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.760 --> 45:33.760] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.760 --> 45:38.760] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.760 --> 45:42.760] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.760 --> 45:48.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:48.760 --> 46:14.760] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.760 --> 46:41.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Steve in Washington. [46:41.760 --> 46:45.760] Okay, Steve, where were we? [46:45.760 --> 46:53.760] We're talking about the global warming, and I think we're going to come back and we'll see slow cycles, [46:53.760 --> 47:04.760] but we're talking about geologic time, and none of us are going to live to see the whole cycle. [47:04.760 --> 47:14.760] There's a lot that we do know, and you notice that in the media they never ask the universities, [47:14.760 --> 47:19.760] which have all the information, the university departments to weigh in on this, [47:19.760 --> 47:27.760] because they don't want the truth. They want to make it a tax issue and apply more taxes. [47:27.760 --> 47:39.760] Look, we're the third highest tax country in the world behind Korea and Japan, and they'll never get enough. [47:39.760 --> 47:45.760] You look at the newspaper or the media, and there's nothing in there that isn't propaganda [47:45.760 --> 47:50.760] and grooming us for more taxes and more taxes and more taxes. [47:50.760 --> 47:57.760] So what are they doing about this, or what are we going to do about it? Nothing. [47:57.760 --> 48:04.760] Leave it alone. I agree. Most countries have a 200-year life cycle. [48:04.760 --> 48:13.760] It takes them 200 years to tax the public into revolt. It's just common through history. [48:13.760 --> 48:22.760] A tax country in the world. Most countries, like even the crown countries, don't even have a state [48:22.760 --> 48:31.760] and death taxes, inheritance taxes. Why do we have it? Well, because money. [48:31.760 --> 48:38.760] We've got 200 years of politicians looking for more ways to levy tax against Americans, [48:38.760 --> 48:48.760] and that'll keep happening until we stand up and break the union apart and eliminate the federal union [48:48.760 --> 48:56.760] and reform the union. We'll get some of these taxes back in line, and then start all over again. [48:56.760 --> 49:03.760] Yeah, I see probably more balkanization. It'll probably happen through balkanization [49:03.760 --> 49:09.760] rather than an outright effort, because people are going to vote with their feet, [49:09.760 --> 49:19.760] and you have people moving to where there can be a free stay, quote unquote, in our lifetime. [49:19.760 --> 49:25.760] We're not a free country. We're a commercial enterprise. We started out as a commercial enterprise [49:25.760 --> 49:32.760] under the king, and that's fine. But the thing is, though, is you've got to separate your private life [49:32.760 --> 49:43.760] from your business life. You can't mix business with pleasure, and people are saying, [49:43.760 --> 49:50.760] oh, I'm going to retire on my deeded property. You don't want to retire on a deeded property. [49:50.760 --> 49:57.760] That's just a convenient way of selling something. Get something and fee simple and retire on it [49:57.760 --> 50:02.760] if you're not going to do anything. But everybody wants to get a license. [50:02.760 --> 50:09.760] They want to get a tax, a permit, a license. They want all of that stuff. [50:09.760 --> 50:14.760] They run a treadmill, and then they go into bankruptcy. [50:14.760 --> 50:19.760] Okay, hold on. Is that necessarily a bad thing? [50:19.760 --> 50:27.760] No, it's not. We need to have what they call commercial intercourse. [50:27.760 --> 50:35.760] We need to have what, in the beginning of the colonies, they said amity and commercial intercourse. [50:35.760 --> 50:42.760] I mean, we need to be able to do business, have equitable arrangements, [50:42.760 --> 50:50.760] rather than just resorting to the gun all the time, although that's a business, too. [50:50.760 --> 50:58.760] But what I was getting at is people want more and more protections. [50:58.760 --> 51:04.760] They want to be protected from everything, and they're being taxed to pay for it. [51:04.760 --> 51:09.760] Is that necessarily a bad thing? [51:09.760 --> 51:17.760] No, but there's not a lot that, I mean, we can have equity court rather than roll them all into one. [51:17.760 --> 51:23.760] People want to have their diapers changed. [51:23.760 --> 51:30.760] We have the police doing jobs that they were never meant to do. [51:30.760 --> 51:38.760] Never meant to do any of that stuff. There's a lot of problems, and that creates a lot of problems. [51:38.760 --> 51:43.760] And, you know, nobody cares a little bit. [51:43.760 --> 51:51.760] Okay, the reason I ask that question is you and I, for the most part, are part of the legal reform movement. [51:51.760 --> 51:57.760] And we tend to bristle at more government. [51:57.760 --> 52:04.760] But we are a small percentage of the population in general. [52:04.760 --> 52:18.760] Is it necessarily a bad thing that you don't have to be a hunter and a gatherer and a warrior and a politician? [52:18.760 --> 52:25.760] This is a new world we're living in, and it's getting so complex we can't be everything. [52:25.760 --> 52:32.760] Right, we can't. But we can't have the government be all in the end all, you know? [52:32.760 --> 52:36.760] The government can't be all. [52:36.760 --> 52:42.760] So where do we find that happy middle ground? [52:42.760 --> 52:45.760] I know there are a lot of people that want to get out of the system. [52:45.760 --> 52:53.760] Well, you know, a hundred years ago, maybe you could do that. [52:53.760 --> 52:59.760] Not an option anymore. We have people that are complaining about losing their privacy. [52:59.760 --> 53:05.760] Guys, that is something you should have brought up 30 years ago. [53:05.760 --> 53:13.760] That boat has already sailed. We ain't going to win that battle. [53:13.760 --> 53:27.760] So with the reality of a future where we are required to do less and less of those medial things [53:27.760 --> 53:35.760] and we're relegated more and more to cerebral things, how do we find a balance? [53:35.760 --> 53:40.760] I've been watching some programs lately that are disturbing. [53:40.760 --> 53:50.760] One was about the auto industry and how, for the most part, in the manufacture of automobiles, [53:50.760 --> 54:00.760] human beings service the robots. They do the things that robots are not yet able to do. [54:00.760 --> 54:08.760] One of the primary places where they weren't using robots up until now was loading and unloading trucks [54:08.760 --> 54:18.760] because a robot didn't have the visual acuity to look at a stack of boxes that were stacked all askew [54:18.760 --> 54:27.760] and understand how to pick up one of these boxes that may be twisted to the side and rotated away from him. [54:27.760 --> 54:34.760] Only human beings could do that. But now they're developing robots that have that visual acuity, [54:34.760 --> 54:45.760] and that was one of the primary things that was a roadblock to robots doing most everything we do. [54:45.760 --> 54:56.760] Freightliner just released their first autonomous truck, but they have a computer operator on board [54:56.760 --> 55:03.760] that the truck drives and operates itself. Mercedes just released theirs this week. [55:03.760 --> 55:07.760] Drivers won't have to drive anywhere. [55:07.760 --> 55:09.760] Okay, you and I, we're going to hate that. [55:09.760 --> 55:13.760] You won't have to operate the vehicle anymore. [55:13.760 --> 55:20.760] The first vehicle I have that drives itself, I'm going to name it JIP. [55:20.760 --> 55:26.760] The reason I'm going to name it JIP is we're going full circle. [55:26.760 --> 55:32.760] When I was about five years old, we lived in Tennessee in a place called Scrouge Horn, [55:32.760 --> 55:35.760] and it was right in the middle of the Coley government. [55:35.760 --> 55:39.760] Please tell everybody I was five years old before I knew a shoe was something that went on your foot [55:39.760 --> 55:43.760] and not something Daddy used to throw at the dogs. [55:43.760 --> 55:48.760] We were hillbillies, and Daddy would throw us all up in the buckboard, [55:48.760 --> 55:52.760] and he'd jump up there and he had old Red and JIP. [55:52.760 --> 55:56.760] Now Red was dumb as a post, but JIP wasn't. [55:56.760 --> 56:01.760] He'd pick up the range and snap the range and say, JIP, take us home. [56:01.760 --> 56:06.760] Drop the range, and that wagon would drive itself. [56:06.760 --> 56:10.760] That's what I'll name my first car that drives itself. [56:10.760 --> 56:15.760] That was the one that said that the computers were going to do all the menial tasks, [56:15.760 --> 56:17.760] and we wouldn't have to do anything. [56:17.760 --> 56:21.760] So what are we going to do to get tape? [56:21.760 --> 56:31.760] That's what I'm thinking, because even though our technology is coming up to date and progressing, [56:31.760 --> 56:34.760] the government system has not. [56:34.760 --> 56:37.760] It's like ancient. [56:37.760 --> 56:41.760] I think the population is ancient. [56:41.760 --> 56:46.760] I'm beginning to be concerned that we are all ancient, [56:46.760 --> 56:55.760] that we have a looming issue that far outstrips everything we're paying attention to, [56:55.760 --> 57:00.760] and everybody's trying not to look at it. [57:00.760 --> 57:08.760] We may well be on the verge of creating our replacement. [57:08.760 --> 57:11.760] I talk about this electronic lawyer I'm trying to build [57:11.760 --> 57:19.760] and how I intend to get rid of the profession of lawyer and get lawyers to pay me to do it. [57:19.760 --> 57:24.760] Well, the lawyer can look at it and say, yeah, that's going to end my career. [57:24.760 --> 57:26.760] It's going to end the need for me. [57:26.760 --> 57:30.760] However, in order for me to compete with all these other lawyers in the meantime, [57:30.760 --> 57:35.760] I have to use it or I'm going to go out of business now. [57:35.760 --> 57:42.760] Or we could go back to the Virginia colonial law where the practice of law was punishable by death. [57:42.760 --> 57:47.760] Well, we're going to have machines doing this. [57:47.760 --> 57:54.760] We're going to have machines doing things that we've been doing, most everything we've been doing. [57:54.760 --> 57:57.760] And we like the convenience. [57:57.760 --> 58:04.760] We like the lower prices of products these machines can produce. [58:04.760 --> 58:09.760] I think we're missing the leading threat that comes along with it. [58:09.760 --> 58:11.760] This is Randy Kelton. [58:11.760 --> 58:14.760] We will already call in numbers. [58:14.760 --> 58:17.760] Oh, I've got 30 seconds. [58:17.760 --> 58:21.760] At this time of the hour, that's why my sound came in a little quicker. [58:21.760 --> 58:26.760] Okay, Steve, I guess we need to get back to the real topic when we come back in [58:26.760 --> 58:27.760] because we have a bunch of callers, [58:27.760 --> 58:32.760] and I don't think they all want to talk about moving into the world. [58:32.760 --> 58:34.760] Hang on, Randy Kelton. [58:34.760 --> 58:36.760] We'll move our radio. [58:36.760 --> 58:39.760] And this is the top of the hour break, so we have a little more time. [58:39.760 --> 58:46.760] If you're inclined, will you go to logosradio.com and look over our sponsors? [58:46.760 --> 58:48.760] Help us support this network. [58:48.760 --> 58:51.760] We'll be right back. [59:18.760 --> 59:22.760] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents [59:22.760 --> 59:27.760] God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.760 --> 59:30.760] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version [59:30.760 --> 59:33.760] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.760 --> 59:40.760] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.760 --> 59:44.760] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.760 --> 59:50.760] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.760 --> 01:00:02.760] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.760 --> 01:00:06.760] Following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, [01:00:06.760 --> 01:00:09.760] providing your daily bulletins for the commodities market, [01:00:09.760 --> 01:00:22.760] today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:22.760 --> 01:00:27.760] Markets for the 21st of May, 2015, gold opened up at $1,204.09 now, [01:00:27.760 --> 01:00:32.760] silver $17.12 now, Texas crude $58.98 a barrel, [01:00:32.760 --> 01:00:41.760] and Bitcoin is currently sitting at about $236 U.S. currency. [01:00:41.760 --> 01:00:44.760] Today in history, Saturday, May 21st, 1932, [01:00:44.760 --> 01:00:49.760] Amelia Earhart lands in the field completing the first transatlantic solo flight by a woman. [01:00:49.760 --> 01:00:52.760] She set off the day before from Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, Canada. [01:00:52.760 --> 01:00:57.760] She was initially aiming for Paris in her single-engine Lockheed Vega 5B, [01:00:57.760 --> 01:01:00.760] but after encountering storms and a burnt exhaust pipe, [01:01:00.760 --> 01:01:04.760] she ended up landing in a pasture at Coolmore in Northern Ireland, [01:01:04.760 --> 01:01:12.760] ending her 14-hour, 56-minute flight. [01:01:12.760 --> 01:01:15.760] In recent news, Michael C. Ford, a State Department employee [01:01:15.760 --> 01:01:18.760] who has worked out of the U.S. Embassy in London since 2009, [01:01:18.760 --> 01:01:22.760] was arrested at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport this past Sunday [01:01:22.760 --> 01:01:26.760] and appeared in a federal court today for apparently using government computers [01:01:26.760 --> 01:01:30.760] to extort college-age women into gathering sexually explicit material for him. [01:01:30.760 --> 01:01:37.760] He's also being charged with computer hacking and cyber-stalking. [01:01:37.760 --> 01:01:41.760] Clean-up crews have been hard at work picking up patches of crude petroleum [01:01:41.760 --> 01:01:46.760] off the beach and offshore waters from a pipeline that ruptured spewing as much as 2,500 barrels [01:01:46.760 --> 01:01:50.760] into San Francisco State Beach and into the Pacific Ocean west of Santa Barbara. [01:01:50.760 --> 01:01:54.760] This mess was caused when an underground pipeline running parallel to the coastal highway [01:01:54.760 --> 01:01:56.760] burst on Tuesday for no apparent reason. [01:01:56.760 --> 01:02:02.760] If estimates are correct, this makes it the biggest spill since the 1969 offshore oil well blowout [01:02:02.760 --> 01:02:12.760] that dumped 80,000 to 100,000 barrels of crude petroleum into the Santa Barbara Channel. [01:02:12.760 --> 01:02:16.760] Last night, 13 trillion electron volts were created at the four collision points [01:02:16.760 --> 01:02:19.760] spaced around the Large Hydrogen Collider's tunnel. [01:02:19.760 --> 01:02:23.760] The collider has been through a planned two-year refurbishing after its first run in 2012, [01:02:23.760 --> 01:02:26.760] which only produced eight trillion electron volts. [01:02:26.760 --> 01:02:30.760] In early April, after a slight delay, twin proton beams circulated the collider's seven-kilometer ring [01:02:30.760 --> 01:02:34.760] 30 stories below the Swiss-French border for the first time in two years. [01:02:34.760 --> 01:02:36.760] The first collisions began in early May. [01:02:36.760 --> 01:02:40.760] However, yesterday's collisions are treading into never-before-reached levels of energy, [01:02:40.760 --> 01:02:43.760] in effect setting a new energy record. [01:02:43.760 --> 01:02:45.760] The Lone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. [01:02:45.760 --> 01:02:48.760] They give a product or a service that you would like to advertise on the lowdown. [01:02:48.760 --> 01:02:53.760] Feel free to give us a call at 210-863-5617. [01:02:53.760 --> 01:03:21.760] This has been your Lowdown for May 21, 2015. [01:03:23.760 --> 01:03:34.760] OK. [01:03:34.760 --> 01:03:35.760] We are back. [01:03:35.760 --> 01:03:38.760] Randy Kelton, who was already killed. [01:03:38.760 --> 01:03:45.760] And we were talking to... [01:03:45.760 --> 01:03:46.760] Who were we talking to? [01:03:46.760 --> 01:03:48.760] I forgot who we were talking to. [01:03:48.760 --> 01:03:51.760] In Washington, he's gone. [01:03:51.760 --> 01:03:54.760] Maybe I ran him off talking about the end of the world. [01:03:54.760 --> 01:03:56.760] Terrence in Florida. [01:03:56.760 --> 01:03:57.760] Hello, Terrence. [01:03:57.760 --> 01:03:59.760] What do you have for us today? [01:03:59.760 --> 01:04:03.760] Hey, good evening, Randy. [01:04:03.760 --> 01:04:08.760] I got a main question, but before I get to that, I wanted to ask you about the pain management. [01:04:08.760 --> 01:04:10.760] What about cramps? [01:04:10.760 --> 01:04:15.760] You wake up in the morning and you stretch, and next thing you know, your foot wants to fall down. [01:04:15.760 --> 01:04:16.760] OK. [01:04:16.760 --> 01:04:27.760] One primary cause of cramps, and I'm not a medical professional by any means, but it's low in potassium. [01:04:27.760 --> 01:04:32.760] And bananas got potassium in them, but you can't get it out. [01:04:32.760 --> 01:04:47.760] Apples have potassium. Go to the health food store and get a vinegar with the mother in it, a unfiltered live vinegar. [01:04:47.760 --> 01:04:52.760] And then get you a gallon jug. [01:04:52.760 --> 01:04:59.760] Take a pineapple, a whole pineapple, cut it into quarters, drop it in that jug, pour in the vinegar, [01:04:59.760 --> 01:05:10.760] top it off with water, let it sit a month or so, and it will make, best put it in a dark place, and it will grow live vinegar. [01:05:10.760 --> 01:05:23.760] Take a cup of that vinegar, a cup of water, a gallon of sugar, a cup of vinegar, and a gallon of water. [01:05:23.760 --> 01:05:26.760] You won't believe how good it is. [01:05:26.760 --> 01:05:32.760] It makes a nice, you know, I use it during the summer, because when I'm out working in the heat in the summer, [01:05:32.760 --> 01:05:37.760] I use that in my cooler. The heat does not bother me. [01:05:37.760 --> 01:05:42.760] My energy level goes through the roof, but they call that a vinegar sprite. [01:05:42.760 --> 01:05:44.760] You can do that with strawberries. [01:05:44.760 --> 01:05:49.760] Cherries is my favorite, and they're real cheap right now. [01:05:49.760 --> 01:05:50.760] Anything but peaches. [01:05:50.760 --> 01:05:58.760] Peaches makes a little bit of a bitter vinegar, but you use that as a drink and put a little salt in it to keep the, you know, vinegar tends to be acid. [01:05:58.760 --> 01:06:01.760] So a little salt takes the sharpness off of it. [01:06:01.760 --> 01:06:05.760] It's kind of like a sweet and sour drink, but it gives you lots of potassium. [01:06:05.760 --> 01:06:09.760] That's your best source of potassium. [01:06:09.760 --> 01:06:12.760] That sounds really good, too. [01:06:12.760 --> 01:06:15.760] Sounds really, really good. [01:06:15.760 --> 01:06:23.760] So my main question is, the arresting and the murder of the man in New York, [01:06:23.760 --> 01:06:28.760] and they have indicted six police officers on several different charges. [01:06:28.760 --> 01:06:30.760] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Okay. [01:06:30.760 --> 01:06:33.760] That's not the Baltimore issue? [01:06:33.760 --> 01:06:34.760] No, maybe it's Baltimore. [01:06:34.760 --> 01:06:40.760] This is the guy where they sat on his chest until he suffocated? [01:06:40.760 --> 01:06:43.760] Yeah, or broke his back or snapped his neck or something like that. [01:06:43.760 --> 01:06:46.760] The one they broke his back, that's Baltimore. [01:06:46.760 --> 01:06:48.760] Okay. [01:06:48.760 --> 01:06:50.760] Okay. I want to make sure which one it was. [01:06:50.760 --> 01:06:54.760] I had thought I heard that they had indicted. [01:06:54.760 --> 01:06:56.760] Right. [01:06:56.760 --> 01:07:04.760] The one charge that they dropped against every officer was false imprisonment. [01:07:04.760 --> 01:07:13.760] And it seems to me that if they didn't have a warrant for him in the first place and locked him up [01:07:13.760 --> 01:07:16.760] or whether they cornered him in a corner, it's imprisonment. [01:07:16.760 --> 01:07:18.760] Pulling you over is imprisonment. [01:07:18.760 --> 01:07:25.760] So the most basic offense was dropped against every one of them. [01:07:25.760 --> 01:07:28.760] And I wonder if you had any thoughts on that. [01:07:28.760 --> 01:07:32.760] Yes, the false imprisonment. [01:07:32.760 --> 01:07:35.760] Oh, wait, wait. [01:07:35.760 --> 01:07:46.760] If it's like Texas, there is no false imprisonment statute in Texas. [01:07:46.760 --> 01:07:50.760] The claim against them would not be false imprisonment. [01:07:50.760 --> 01:07:55.760] False imprisonment in Texas is a cause of action. [01:07:55.760 --> 01:08:06.760] The claim would be official oppression, exerting or purporting to exert an authority they do not especially have. [01:08:06.760 --> 01:08:11.760] So false imprisonment is a special kind of abuse of power. [01:08:11.760 --> 01:08:16.760] But we don't need the separate crime of false imprisonment. [01:08:16.760 --> 01:08:24.760] The only thing, I'm sorry, the closest thing to a false imprisonment charge is kidnapping. [01:08:24.760 --> 01:08:26.760] That's what I was thinking. [01:08:26.760 --> 01:08:33.760] So it may be, I haven't seen the law in Pennsylvania in that regard, [01:08:33.760 --> 01:08:43.760] but I suspect that the false imprisonment charge by its nature was covered by other things. [01:08:43.760 --> 01:08:51.760] And even if it wasn't, if you charge these guys with every possible thing you could charge them with, [01:08:51.760 --> 01:08:57.760] they're going to call that stacking and the courts will tend to throw it out anyway. [01:08:57.760 --> 01:09:02.760] And of all of the things it appears that they're charged with, [01:09:02.760 --> 01:09:09.760] that is probably the least of the accusations. [01:09:09.760 --> 01:09:16.760] At this point, I certainly wouldn't complain about the things they didn't indict them for [01:09:16.760 --> 01:09:20.760] and be thrilled about the things they did indict them for. [01:09:20.760 --> 01:09:25.760] The fact that they got indicted at all. [01:09:25.760 --> 01:09:30.760] This will change everything. [01:09:30.760 --> 01:09:36.760] Every policeman around the country is looking at this. [01:09:36.760 --> 01:09:42.760] And even if their superiors tell them to do this stupid stuff, [01:09:42.760 --> 01:09:46.760] they're looking at this and saying, hold on, guys, [01:09:46.760 --> 01:09:50.760] we're going to have to change our behavior, at least that's my opinion. [01:09:50.760 --> 01:09:51.760] Go ahead, Terrence. [01:09:51.760 --> 01:09:52.760] Oh, I got it. [01:09:52.760 --> 01:09:54.760] You mentioned stacking. [01:09:54.760 --> 01:10:00.760] Isn't that what they do when the police officer arrests you [01:10:00.760 --> 01:10:04.760] and then they charge you with resistant arrests and basically... [01:10:04.760 --> 01:10:11.760] Interfering with a public servant and cursing in public and littering. [01:10:11.760 --> 01:10:14.760] Everything they can think of. [01:10:14.760 --> 01:10:19.760] Yeah, so they seem to like to stack on us, but not on themselves. [01:10:19.760 --> 01:10:20.760] But I was just... [01:10:20.760 --> 01:10:28.760] Well, no, they tend not to stack when they have something really serious. [01:10:28.760 --> 01:10:35.760] They always want enough so they have something to negotiate with. [01:10:35.760 --> 01:10:40.760] The average conviction rate in the state of Texas for all crimes across the board, [01:10:40.760 --> 01:10:43.760] do you know what it is? [01:10:43.760 --> 01:10:46.760] Yeah, you said 99%. [01:10:46.760 --> 01:10:52.760] Yeah, 99.6, and that's because everybody takes a deal. [01:10:52.760 --> 01:10:58.760] And the way you get them to take a deal is you turn your lights on [01:10:58.760 --> 01:11:01.760] and the guy doesn't slam on the brakes and come to a screeching halt [01:11:01.760 --> 01:11:05.760] in the middle of the street and cause you to smash into the back of him, [01:11:05.760 --> 01:11:08.760] so you charge him with evading. [01:11:08.760 --> 01:11:12.760] Or you tell him to do something and he doesn't do it quick enough, [01:11:12.760 --> 01:11:16.760] so you're charging with interfering with a public servant, [01:11:16.760 --> 01:11:19.760] interfering with the duties of an officer. [01:11:19.760 --> 01:11:23.760] And then you charge him with speeding, and then the prosecutor goes to him [01:11:23.760 --> 01:11:28.760] and says, well, you see, bubba, it's like this. [01:11:28.760 --> 01:11:33.760] We got you for this glass-aid misdemeanor or this third-degree felony, [01:11:33.760 --> 01:11:36.760] but if you plead guilty to this speeding charge, [01:11:36.760 --> 01:11:40.760] well, we'll just drop that felony. [01:11:40.760 --> 01:11:43.760] It's all about the money. [01:11:43.760 --> 01:11:49.760] It's about forcing you to take a deal in this case. [01:11:49.760 --> 01:11:56.760] They have enough charges against them that they have all they need [01:11:56.760 --> 01:12:02.760] to negotiate with, and you watch what plays out. [01:12:02.760 --> 01:12:09.760] You can be almost absolutely certain this will never go to trial. [01:12:09.760 --> 01:12:13.760] All these guys will plead out before they get there. [01:12:13.760 --> 01:12:16.760] And this should be fair warning to all of the police [01:12:16.760 --> 01:12:22.760] who are following policies that are in variance with law. [01:12:22.760 --> 01:12:26.760] When it gets right down to it, they'll throw your behind under the bus [01:12:26.760 --> 01:12:29.760] in a heartbeat. [01:12:29.760 --> 01:12:33.760] When the issue gets past the police department into the hands [01:12:33.760 --> 01:12:36.760] of the politicians, they will throw you under the bus. [01:12:36.760 --> 01:12:39.760] You are nothing but cannon fodder. [01:12:39.760 --> 01:12:42.760] You can scooch up behind that thin blue line all you want to, [01:12:42.760 --> 01:12:46.760] and it will not help. [01:12:46.760 --> 01:12:51.760] I'm about to take a set of criminal charges against some bailiffs [01:12:51.760 --> 01:12:55.760] to the Tarrant County District Attorney, [01:12:55.760 --> 01:12:58.760] where these bailiffs drug me out of the courthouse [01:12:58.760 --> 01:13:05.760] and smash my face in the concrete the third time I call 911 on them. [01:13:05.760 --> 01:13:10.760] And these guys should be very worried. [01:13:10.760 --> 01:13:15.760] They should be very worried that the prosecuting attorney [01:13:15.760 --> 01:13:22.760] will see these complaints as politically advantageous [01:13:22.760 --> 01:13:27.760] in this particular time, [01:13:27.760 --> 01:13:36.760] and may throw these guys under the bus to make herself look better. [01:13:36.760 --> 01:13:39.760] They will definitely do that. [01:13:39.760 --> 01:13:42.760] Throw them something anyway. [01:13:42.760 --> 01:13:44.760] It's good for the police to be in the same position [01:13:44.760 --> 01:13:48.760] that we've been in all this time. [01:13:48.760 --> 01:13:51.760] I call that comeuppance. [01:13:51.760 --> 01:13:53.760] See, guys, it's how you like it. [01:13:53.760 --> 01:13:59.760] How does it feel when you're on the other end of this? [01:13:59.760 --> 01:14:02.760] Well, thank you for your analysis. [01:14:02.760 --> 01:14:05.760] That really makes a lot of sense that explains it to you really well. [01:14:05.760 --> 01:14:07.760] I appreciate it. [01:14:07.760 --> 01:14:09.760] Okay. Thank you, Terrence. [01:14:09.760 --> 01:14:15.760] Okay. Now we're going to go to the truth raider in Oregon. [01:14:15.760 --> 01:14:17.760] Thank you very much, Randy. [01:14:17.760 --> 01:14:20.760] Do I call you truth or do I call you raider? [01:14:20.760 --> 01:14:21.760] You can call me both. [01:14:21.760 --> 01:14:24.760] Actually, let me preface it this way correctly. [01:14:24.760 --> 01:14:27.760] I am Carl the truth raider. [01:14:27.760 --> 01:14:28.760] Carl? [01:14:28.760 --> 01:14:29.760] Okay. [01:14:29.760 --> 01:14:31.760] Terrence calls himself truth raider, [01:14:31.760 --> 01:14:34.760] and he's got a website called truthraider.com, [01:14:34.760 --> 01:14:37.760] and he's a truth person, and he does research and stuff [01:14:37.760 --> 01:14:39.760] and puts videos and post videos on the Internet. [01:14:39.760 --> 01:14:40.760] So that's wonderful. [01:14:40.760 --> 01:14:41.760] So anybody doing anything like that? [01:14:41.760 --> 01:14:43.760] Well, they're my hero, too. [01:14:43.760 --> 01:14:47.760] So good for him, and I uplift him. [01:14:47.760 --> 01:14:50.760] But I don't know who came first, myself or... [01:14:50.760 --> 01:14:52.760] That is very magnimonious. [01:14:52.760 --> 01:14:55.760] Yeah. You can say that again. [01:14:55.760 --> 01:14:58.760] Now, Randy, I don't know what to do here. [01:14:58.760 --> 01:15:00.760] I'm kind of in a quandary. [01:15:00.760 --> 01:15:04.760] I'm in a situation here where I rented an apartment, [01:15:04.760 --> 01:15:08.760] and I've been here for about two and a half years, [01:15:08.760 --> 01:15:11.760] and I just can't get into all the details about it [01:15:11.760 --> 01:15:14.760] because it would just take too long and it would bore you. [01:15:14.760 --> 01:15:20.760] What's going on is I'm now being non-renewed for my lease. [01:15:20.760 --> 01:15:24.760] So what's going on is they're allowing my lease to run out, [01:15:24.760 --> 01:15:27.760] and they're not offering a renewal. [01:15:27.760 --> 01:15:33.760] And it's done by the manager that left about a couple months ago [01:15:33.760 --> 01:15:36.760] and went to another property. [01:15:36.760 --> 01:15:39.760] And what she did is she conspired with her supervisor [01:15:39.760 --> 01:15:42.760] of this company that owns this property. [01:15:42.760 --> 01:15:47.760] It's 164-unit property up here in Oregon. [01:15:47.760 --> 01:15:53.760] And so, you know, it's major, what you would say, commercial property, [01:15:53.760 --> 01:15:58.760] apartment property, and it's equal housing opportunity kind of stuff. [01:15:58.760 --> 01:16:03.760] It's fair housing and multi-family housing type of a place. [01:16:03.760 --> 01:16:06.760] And, you know, so there's no purpose. [01:16:06.760 --> 01:16:15.760] I mean, there's nothing honorable about what this person did [01:16:15.760 --> 01:16:19.760] in conspiring with her supervisor and the company [01:16:19.760 --> 01:16:26.760] to go ahead and put a non-renewal order against me. [01:16:26.760 --> 01:16:28.760] And then she leaves like a coward. [01:16:28.760 --> 01:16:32.760] She leaves a couple months, you know, just before, you know, [01:16:32.760 --> 01:16:36.760] before I can find out about it and then it's presented to me by then. [01:16:36.760 --> 01:16:37.760] Okay, hang on. [01:16:37.760 --> 01:16:42.760] I will have a nice solution, elegant solution before we come back. [01:16:42.760 --> 01:16:44.760] This is Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. [01:16:44.760 --> 01:16:48.760] Our call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:48.760 --> 01:16:50.760] We'll have the call lines open all night. [01:16:50.760 --> 01:16:53.760] Give us a call if you have a question or a comment. 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[01:19:41.760 --> 01:19:49.760] Randy Kelton with the radio and we're talking to Truth Raider in Oregon. [01:19:49.760 --> 01:20:04.760] OK, you're in a housing complex and you got some local manager that has an issue with you [01:20:04.760 --> 01:20:11.760] and this local manager is going to cost the company a good tenant. [01:20:11.760 --> 01:20:13.760] Yes. [01:20:13.760 --> 01:20:16.760] OK, I have ran my own business for about 40 years. [01:20:16.760 --> 01:20:19.760] First of all, I'm a researcher for one thing. [01:20:19.760 --> 01:20:22.760] I like to expose conspiracies. [01:20:22.760 --> 01:20:26.760] I like to expose corruption and this particular manager knew that. [01:20:26.760 --> 01:20:33.760] So she was concerned, you know, just what I could possibly do. [01:20:33.760 --> 01:20:39.760] And as a matter of fact, I was in the process of exposing her incompetence [01:20:39.760 --> 01:20:43.760] and her negligence as a manager. [01:20:43.760 --> 01:20:47.760] And she felt that she was going to take a little revenge. [01:20:47.760 --> 01:20:49.760] OK, OK, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:20:49.760 --> 01:20:54.760] You're forgetting something very, very basic. [01:20:54.760 --> 01:20:58.760] We live in a republic, not a democracy. [01:20:58.760 --> 01:20:59.760] Right. [01:20:59.760 --> 01:21:01.760] We are the masters in this. [01:21:01.760 --> 01:21:09.760] We're the kings without, sir, without. [01:21:09.760 --> 01:21:12.760] I hate it when I lose a term. [01:21:12.760 --> 01:21:20.760] We're the king without the people that pay attention to us. [01:21:20.760 --> 01:21:24.760] Anyway, we forget that. [01:21:24.760 --> 01:21:31.760] You see, I ran my own business and the one thing that was hardest for me to get [01:21:31.760 --> 01:21:35.760] was good information about my employees. [01:21:35.760 --> 01:21:37.760] Tell you a quick little story. [01:21:37.760 --> 01:21:40.760] A friend of mine moved down to Texas from Colorado. [01:21:40.760 --> 01:21:43.760] This is a number of years ago. [01:21:43.760 --> 01:21:48.760] And we lived out in the country and we still had party lines. [01:21:48.760 --> 01:21:51.760] Well, he was running, he was setting up a business, so he needed a private line. [01:21:51.760 --> 01:21:54.760] They had to pay 200 extra to get a private line. [01:21:54.760 --> 01:21:57.760] We had to put in a couple hundred feet of underground cable before they'd come out [01:21:57.760 --> 01:21:58.760] and hook it up. [01:21:58.760 --> 01:22:02.760] They came out and hooked it up and he put it on a six party line. [01:22:02.760 --> 01:22:05.760] He was furious. [01:22:05.760 --> 01:22:10.760] So I happened to know that the headquarters with Syntel, who was the phone company [01:22:10.760 --> 01:22:13.760] at the time, was not in Colleen like everybody told us. [01:22:13.760 --> 01:22:16.760] It was actually in Chicago. [01:22:16.760 --> 01:22:23.760] So I got on the phone and I called Syntel in Chicago and asked who the president was. [01:22:23.760 --> 01:22:25.760] And they said, well, sir, is there a problem? [01:22:25.760 --> 01:22:27.760] Yeah, there's a problem. [01:22:27.760 --> 01:22:29.760] I don't know who the president is. [01:22:29.760 --> 01:22:32.760] Well, is there an issue that we can help you with? [01:22:32.760 --> 01:22:34.760] Yeah, the issue is I don't know who the president is. [01:22:34.760 --> 01:22:40.760] My daughter is doing a paper in high school on corporate executives, [01:22:40.760 --> 01:22:42.760] and she wanted to do one on the president of Syntel. [01:22:42.760 --> 01:22:44.760] Oh, well, yeah, well, here's his name. [01:22:44.760 --> 01:22:45.760] They gave me his name. [01:22:45.760 --> 01:22:46.760] I hung up. [01:22:46.760 --> 01:22:50.760] I called right back and I asked for the president by name. [01:22:50.760 --> 01:22:54.760] And I acted like I was somebody more important than him. [01:22:54.760 --> 01:22:56.760] I demanded to talk to him. [01:22:56.760 --> 01:22:58.760] Hello, Synt's out here. [01:22:58.760 --> 01:23:00.760] Well, he's not here. [01:23:00.760 --> 01:23:02.760] Well, is anybody else there? [01:23:02.760 --> 01:23:04.760] I said, well, Mr. Rice is here. [01:23:04.760 --> 01:23:05.760] Well, who is he? [01:23:05.760 --> 01:23:06.760] What? [01:23:06.760 --> 01:23:08.760] He's the chairman of the board. [01:23:08.760 --> 01:23:11.760] Oh, he was due. [01:23:11.760 --> 01:23:12.760] And he had turned to Mark. [01:23:12.760 --> 01:23:14.760] I said, Mark, this guy's name's Rice. [01:23:14.760 --> 01:23:15.760] He's in Chicago. [01:23:15.760 --> 01:23:16.760] He can help you. [01:23:16.760 --> 01:23:18.760] And Mark is furious. [01:23:18.760 --> 01:23:19.760] He grabs the phone. [01:23:19.760 --> 01:23:21.760] Hello, Rice. [01:23:21.760 --> 01:23:23.760] Look, you're SOB. [01:23:23.760 --> 01:23:25.760] I paid you guys for a private line. [01:23:25.760 --> 01:23:27.760] You put me on a six-party line. [01:23:27.760 --> 01:23:32.760] I'll get my private line if I have to come up to Chicago and kick your behind to get it. [01:23:32.760 --> 01:23:36.760] Slammed the phone down. [01:23:36.760 --> 01:23:39.760] I said, Mark, you know who that was? [01:23:39.760 --> 01:23:40.760] I don't know. [01:23:40.760 --> 01:23:42.760] Some Rice SOB. [01:23:42.760 --> 01:23:45.760] I was the chairman of the board. [01:23:45.760 --> 01:23:46.760] Oh, no. [01:23:46.760 --> 01:23:47.760] I'll never get a phone. [01:23:47.760 --> 01:23:56.760] I came out there the next day and I bet there were 200 guys out there on backhoes, up poles, [01:23:56.760 --> 01:23:58.760] guys everywhere. [01:23:58.760 --> 01:24:01.760] A year later, I was in front of my house. [01:24:01.760 --> 01:24:03.760] We'd had three tornadoes in town in one day. [01:24:03.760 --> 01:24:07.760] And the guy from the phone company was out there, Roy Stone. [01:24:07.760 --> 01:24:11.760] And he said, he called me over, hey, hey, I got somebody I want you to meet. [01:24:11.760 --> 01:24:13.760] He calls this other guy over. [01:24:13.760 --> 01:24:14.760] He said, this guy's down from Jacksboro. [01:24:14.760 --> 01:24:16.760] That's about 60 miles away helping us. [01:24:16.760 --> 01:24:20.760] And he pointed to me and he said, you know who this is? [01:24:20.760 --> 01:24:24.760] The guy said, no, this is the guy that called the chairman of the board. [01:24:24.760 --> 01:24:28.760] And this other dude just cringed and backed up. [01:24:28.760 --> 01:24:37.760] A year later, we got a call from the executive vice president, Syntel, Mr. Whitney. [01:24:37.760 --> 01:24:43.760] When they got his private line in, he said, Mr. Maserolle, how's your private line working? [01:24:43.760 --> 01:24:44.760] Oh, it's working great. [01:24:44.760 --> 01:24:46.760] Are you happy? [01:24:46.760 --> 01:24:47.760] I'm happy. [01:24:47.760 --> 01:24:49.760] Do you have any other problems? [01:24:49.760 --> 01:24:50.760] I don't have any other problems. [01:24:50.760 --> 01:24:55.760] He said, Mr. Maserolle, I am the executive vice president of this five state area. [01:24:55.760 --> 01:24:57.760] If you have any problems, call me. [01:24:57.760 --> 01:24:58.760] Here's my number. [01:24:58.760 --> 01:25:00.760] Here's my home number. [01:25:00.760 --> 01:25:02.760] If it's at night, call me. [01:25:02.760 --> 01:25:05.760] If any of your neighbors have a problem, call me. [01:25:05.760 --> 01:25:11.760] Please, Mr. Maserolle, don't call the chairman of the board. [01:25:11.760 --> 01:25:13.760] Get my point? [01:25:13.760 --> 01:25:21.760] I almost guarantee you that the guy who actually has his money invested in this housing complex [01:25:21.760 --> 01:25:31.760] doesn't know that his manager is acting over some personal vendetta and costing him a good tenant. [01:25:31.760 --> 01:25:34.760] Yeah, that's what it seems to be. [01:25:34.760 --> 01:25:36.760] Have you ever been in the military? [01:25:36.760 --> 01:25:38.760] Yes. [01:25:38.760 --> 01:25:40.760] You know how that works. [01:25:40.760 --> 01:25:46.760] When I walk on an air base now, now the general may be bad news, [01:25:46.760 --> 01:25:51.760] but he's nothing compared to me because I'm a civilian. [01:25:51.760 --> 01:25:55.760] I can walk into the commander's office and chew him out like an errant stepchild. [01:25:55.760 --> 01:26:00.760] And what's going to happen if I chew out the commander? [01:26:00.760 --> 01:26:05.760] He's going to get the guy below him and chew him out, and that one's going to get the one below him. [01:26:05.760 --> 01:26:11.760] And when it gets down to you, they don't care what you did. [01:26:11.760 --> 01:26:13.760] If they got in trouble, you're in worse trouble. [01:26:13.760 --> 01:26:22.760] I suggest that you stop messing with these guys at the bottom and give the owner of the company, [01:26:22.760 --> 01:26:30.760] give the people who reached in their pocket, took out their money to buy or build these buildings, [01:26:30.760 --> 01:26:37.760] risked their investment, talked to them about these issues that are going on to the bottom, [01:26:37.760 --> 01:26:39.760] and I can guarantee you they don't know anything about that, [01:26:39.760 --> 01:26:43.760] but once you've talked to them, they're going to find out about it. [01:26:43.760 --> 01:26:47.760] This is going to start rolling downhill, and by the time it gets to you, [01:26:47.760 --> 01:26:52.760] they're likely to want to give you a lower rate. [01:26:52.760 --> 01:26:56.760] Well, that would be nice, but this is the pickle I'm in right now, Randy. [01:26:56.760 --> 01:27:04.760] They've apparently upheld what the manager did, apparently. [01:27:04.760 --> 01:27:07.760] I don't know if they've taken her side or whatever she told them. [01:27:07.760 --> 01:27:10.760] Lower management's all going to do that. [01:27:10.760 --> 01:27:12.760] Go to the top. [01:27:12.760 --> 01:27:15.760] Don't go to management. [01:27:15.760 --> 01:27:17.760] Heck with management. [01:27:17.760 --> 01:27:21.760] Just call up and ask for the president of the company, [01:27:21.760 --> 01:27:26.760] and give them some song and dance story about why you want it. [01:27:26.760 --> 01:27:31.760] Once you have his name, or if you can find it in Standard and Poor's or something, [01:27:31.760 --> 01:27:38.760] you call up and ask for him by name, and act important. [01:27:38.760 --> 01:27:42.760] If somebody asks you why you need to talk to him, I need to talk to him. [01:27:42.760 --> 01:27:46.760] His business, my business, not your business. [01:27:46.760 --> 01:27:51.760] If you're a secretary for that company, and somebody tells you that about your boss, [01:27:51.760 --> 01:27:55.760] are you going to hang up on them? [01:27:55.760 --> 01:28:05.760] Get to the president, or the most powerful person in any large organization is not the president. [01:28:05.760 --> 01:28:09.760] It is the president's secretary. [01:28:09.760 --> 01:28:12.760] The president has to be political. [01:28:12.760 --> 01:28:20.760] He cannot walk down the line stomping his feet, but his secretary can. [01:28:20.760 --> 01:28:24.760] She takes care of all of this kind of stuff for him. [01:28:24.760 --> 01:28:28.760] She'll go to the executive vice president of this section and say, [01:28:28.760 --> 01:28:33.760] guys, I got people calling my boss wanting to chew him out [01:28:33.760 --> 01:28:37.760] because your people down there can't keep their act straight. [01:28:37.760 --> 01:28:40.760] It's going to start this ball rolling downhill. [01:28:40.760 --> 01:28:45.760] In order to keep you from climbing down the throat of the president of that company, [01:28:45.760 --> 01:28:50.760] they're going to jump through some hoops. [01:28:50.760 --> 01:28:58.760] In the meantime, I have about 30 or something days to get out of here, and it's an order. [01:28:58.760 --> 01:29:02.760] It's a permanence of my tenancy. [01:29:02.760 --> 01:29:04.760] Okay, what is the... [01:29:04.760 --> 01:29:06.760] I'm going to reverse it. [01:29:06.760 --> 01:29:15.760] What laws do you have in Oregon concerning tenancy? [01:29:15.760 --> 01:29:21.760] Well, it's at will, so without cause is what the notice says. [01:29:21.760 --> 01:29:26.760] Notice of termination of tenancy without stated cause. [01:29:26.760 --> 01:29:28.760] Okay, this would be great. [01:29:28.760 --> 01:29:30.760] At will state. [01:29:30.760 --> 01:29:33.760] You've been in this place how long? [01:29:33.760 --> 01:29:35.760] About two and a half years. [01:29:35.760 --> 01:29:39.760] Okay, two and a half years, paying your bills, good tenant. [01:29:39.760 --> 01:29:43.760] If I have a building and I have a good tenant, I'll bend over backwards to keep it. [01:29:43.760 --> 01:29:44.760] Hang on. [01:29:44.760 --> 01:29:48.760] I'm going to suggest your only real option is going up to the top. [01:29:48.760 --> 01:29:49.760] Hang on. [01:29:49.760 --> 01:29:50.760] We'll finish this on the other side. [01:29:50.760 --> 01:29:55.760] Randy Kelton, we'll do a radio or call at number 512-646-1984. [01:29:55.760 --> 01:30:01.760] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.760 --> 01:30:05.760] Jacob Boscov dreamed up the most sinister weapon he could think of. [01:30:05.760 --> 01:30:09.760] Then he built a prototype and tried to sell it in an international weapons trade show. [01:30:09.760 --> 01:30:11.760] The results were surprising. [01:30:11.760 --> 01:30:15.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [01:30:15.760 --> 01:30:17.760] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.760 --> 01:30:20.760] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.760 --> 01:30:25.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.760 --> 01:30:30.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.760 --> 01:30:33.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.760 --> 01:30:36.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:36.760 --> 01:30:40.760] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:40.760 --> 01:30:44.760] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:44.760 --> 01:30:46.760] Governments can't be trusted with weapons. [01:30:46.760 --> 01:30:53.760] That's what Danish artist Jacob Boscov discovered when he marketed a fake weapon called the ID sniper rifle. [01:30:53.760 --> 01:30:58.760] He claimed it would allow government agents to shoot microchip implants into people from a distance [01:30:58.760 --> 01:31:00.760] and then secretly track them by satellite. [01:31:00.760 --> 01:31:04.760] The chip was supposed to feel like a mosquito bite and leave no obvious marks. [01:31:04.760 --> 01:31:10.760] It's a ridiculous notion, but government representatives from around the world bought the concept hook, line and sinker. [01:31:10.760 --> 01:31:16.760] Reportedly, Chinese police were extremely interested, as were representatives from several other countries. [01:31:16.760 --> 01:31:19.760] Governments, they're always looking for new ways to stick it to you. [01:31:19.760 --> 01:31:29.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.760 --> 01:31:35.760] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.760 --> 01:31:37.760] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.760 --> 01:31:42.760] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.760 --> 01:31:45.760] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.760 --> 01:31:48.760] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.760 --> 01:31:52.760] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.760 --> 01:31:54.760] I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.760 --> 01:31:57.760] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.760 --> 01:32:00.760] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.760 --> 01:32:02.760] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:02.760 --> 01:32:05.760] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:05.760 --> 01:32:10.760] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:10.760 --> 01:32:13.760] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:13.760 --> 01:32:20.760] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.760 --> 01:32:25.760] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:25.760 --> 01:32:31.760] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.760 --> 01:32:37.760] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:37.760 --> 01:32:44.760] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:44.760 --> 01:32:49.760] So let those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:49.760 --> 01:32:55.760] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:55.760 --> 01:32:57.760] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:57.760 --> 01:33:00.760] Me and I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:00.760 --> 01:33:10.760] Looking for some truth? You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:30.760 --> 01:33:40.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with the Radio. We're talking to the truth raider in Oregon. [01:33:40.760 --> 01:33:49.760] Since you're under contract and they're at will, I don't see where you have a legal ground. [01:33:49.760 --> 01:33:52.760] Now we go to the politics. [01:33:52.760 --> 01:33:53.760] Right. [01:33:53.760 --> 01:34:03.760] I'm going to bet you call down, you get to find out where, you might look in the public record [01:34:03.760 --> 01:34:11.760] and look up this property in the public record and see who the holding company is, see what name the title is in. [01:34:11.760 --> 01:34:18.760] Yeah, well I know the real estate company name goes by C&R Real Estate Services Company is what it goes by. [01:34:18.760 --> 01:34:21.760] They're just a management company. [01:34:21.760 --> 01:34:22.760] Okay. [01:34:22.760 --> 01:34:25.760] They're not the one that owns the property. [01:34:25.760 --> 01:34:33.760] That's even better because if you find, if you go to the public record and see who and whose name the title is in [01:34:33.760 --> 01:34:40.760] and you call that company and you call the head of that company and start up a stink in that company, [01:34:40.760 --> 01:34:45.760] that company don't have anything to do with this and they're not going to like having to deal with problems [01:34:45.760 --> 01:34:48.760] that the real estate management company should have handled. [01:34:48.760 --> 01:34:52.760] So the head of the real estate management company is going to get a call about this, [01:34:52.760 --> 01:35:03.760] that his client is unhappy with them because they got somebody down here complaining about your lack of management, fix this. [01:35:03.760 --> 01:35:06.760] This is such great fun. [01:35:06.760 --> 01:35:12.760] If you've never done this, if I'm chuckling, it's because I think back on all the times I did this [01:35:12.760 --> 01:35:16.760] and how much fun I've had doing it. [01:35:16.760 --> 01:35:19.760] But it's ethical and it's proper. [01:35:19.760 --> 01:35:20.760] Yeah. [01:35:20.760 --> 01:35:22.760] These guys don't get good feedback. [01:35:22.760 --> 01:35:24.760] Let me explain something, Randy, a little bit here. [01:35:24.760 --> 01:35:31.760] What's going on, and I feel this may also be an alternative conspiracy to what they're doing to me. [01:35:31.760 --> 01:35:35.760] I'm an individual renting a two-bedroom apartment with a certain amount of space, [01:35:35.760 --> 01:35:39.760] a good 750 to maybe 800-something square feet apartment. [01:35:39.760 --> 01:35:44.760] What's going on is what I heard over the years, Alex Jones and others have been talking about this, [01:35:44.760 --> 01:35:51.760] is they're trying to squeeze the individual or just people into smaller spaces in charge of more money [01:35:51.760 --> 01:35:53.760] and trying to preserve it. [01:35:53.760 --> 01:35:54.760] I had this problem in California too as well. [01:35:54.760 --> 01:35:58.760] I heard that in California, and it might be coming here to Oregon as well, [01:35:58.760 --> 01:36:01.760] that they want to have a two-bedroom apartment. [01:36:01.760 --> 01:36:04.760] They want to exclusively have those for the families, [01:36:04.760 --> 01:36:08.760] and they don't want individuals renting two-bedroom apartments for themselves. [01:36:08.760 --> 01:36:13.760] It takes up the space that an immigrant family or somebody else could be taking [01:36:13.760 --> 01:36:15.760] for a housing program. [01:36:15.760 --> 01:36:17.760] That's nonsense. [01:36:17.760 --> 01:36:19.760] They want somebody who can pay for the apartment. [01:36:19.760 --> 01:36:27.760] That's all they care about, and if you go in and you take up a space that a family could use, [01:36:27.760 --> 01:36:29.760] you just make the space more valuable. [01:36:29.760 --> 01:36:30.760] They gave me a two-bedroom apartment. [01:36:30.760 --> 01:36:32.760] They said, I don't know how you got this two-bedroom apartment, [01:36:32.760 --> 01:36:39.760] but these are supposed to be for families, and that's what one manager said at one other place. [01:36:39.760 --> 01:36:47.760] That's just going to be some corporate policy that they post to make themselves look better in the media. [01:36:47.760 --> 01:36:52.760] The owner of the company, he cares about making money. [01:36:52.760 --> 01:36:55.760] You don't have those moral qualms. [01:36:55.760 --> 01:37:00.760] It's all about money, and you're filling up a space that three people could use. [01:37:00.760 --> 01:37:04.760] Now you've got three people willing to pay for space. [01:37:04.760 --> 01:37:12.760] The idea that the guy who's putting his money in the property cares about how many people are in the space, [01:37:12.760 --> 01:37:14.760] that's nonsense. [01:37:14.760 --> 01:37:21.760] Yeah, you would think because one individual is less likely to tear up and damage his property. [01:37:21.760 --> 01:37:26.760] Yeah, the more people in there, the more it costs him in water, utilities. [01:37:26.760 --> 01:37:30.760] He gets one guy in a bigger space paying the same amount. [01:37:30.760 --> 01:37:32.760] He makes more profit. [01:37:32.760 --> 01:37:35.760] Yeah, you would think so. [01:37:35.760 --> 01:37:37.760] In the end, it's all about profit. [01:37:37.760 --> 01:37:41.760] What these managers tell you, they're a horse manure. [01:37:41.760 --> 01:37:43.760] You can't pay attention to anything they say. [01:37:43.760 --> 01:37:44.760] Right. [01:37:44.760 --> 01:37:46.760] Get up above them. [01:37:46.760 --> 01:37:57.760] You'll be surprised how well you're treated, and how they appreciate your information, [01:37:57.760 --> 01:38:00.760] because they don't get good information. [01:38:00.760 --> 01:38:01.760] Well, I couldn't get to the top. [01:38:01.760 --> 01:38:08.760] I called that company, and I was diverted to their supervisor, and their supervisor is on it. [01:38:08.760 --> 01:38:13.760] You've got to step into a different role. [01:38:13.760 --> 01:38:18.760] You're not there to complain so much about what they've done to you. [01:38:18.760 --> 01:38:25.760] You're there to give good information to corporate about how their management is mismanaging their property. [01:38:25.760 --> 01:38:31.760] You call in as the CEO of your own business. [01:38:31.760 --> 01:38:35.760] I don't explain myself to underlings. [01:38:35.760 --> 01:38:36.760] I don't argue. [01:38:36.760 --> 01:38:40.760] I don't negotiate with underlings. [01:38:40.760 --> 01:38:41.760] I call in. [01:38:41.760 --> 01:38:45.760] I want the president's name. [01:38:45.760 --> 01:38:47.760] I don't want to talk to you. [01:38:47.760 --> 01:38:50.760] I don't want to explain to you why I want his name. [01:38:50.760 --> 01:38:55.760] Why I want his name is not in your business. [01:38:55.760 --> 01:38:59.760] Don't let them hook you in to negotiate with them. [01:38:59.760 --> 01:39:05.760] Well, Randy, they make it seem that the buck stops at the office and with the manager there, [01:39:05.760 --> 01:39:08.760] and they don't want to really bother with you. [01:39:08.760 --> 01:39:09.760] Here's the thing. [01:39:09.760 --> 01:39:11.760] You're the CEO. [01:39:11.760 --> 01:39:17.760] You don't care what they want. [01:39:17.760 --> 01:39:22.760] I do this quite a bit, and I have people not want to give it to me. [01:39:22.760 --> 01:39:25.760] When I do get a hold of the president of the company, [01:39:25.760 --> 01:39:30.760] I'm supposed to tell him that his people at the bottom don't even know who the heck he is. [01:39:30.760 --> 01:39:35.760] I don't think he's going to be happy about this. [01:39:35.760 --> 01:39:43.760] You come to the company as an equal, and all these people are just employees. [01:39:43.760 --> 01:39:48.760] They're all trying to cover their own behinds. [01:39:48.760 --> 01:39:51.760] So I don't negotiate with these people. [01:39:51.760 --> 01:39:52.760] Give me your name. [01:39:52.760 --> 01:39:58.760] When I get to the president, I'll have him explain to you why you should give me the information I need, [01:39:58.760 --> 01:40:01.760] not give me this pain in the butt. [01:40:01.760 --> 01:40:04.760] Well, not only that, it's just an underling, but she's also a coward. [01:40:04.760 --> 01:40:10.760] She took off and had the new manager do the dirty work and deliver the note to my door. [01:40:10.760 --> 01:40:15.760] If you're going to beat these guys, you have to shift gears. [01:40:15.760 --> 01:40:20.760] You're feeling like you were betrayed. [01:40:20.760 --> 01:40:23.760] I already counseled with one tenant and landlord attorney. [01:40:23.760 --> 01:40:29.760] He says, well, this is over 60 days, and you've got to get out in 60 days. [01:40:29.760 --> 01:40:30.760] That's the legal order. [01:40:30.760 --> 01:40:35.760] Okay, we'll see how that works for you, Bubba. [01:40:35.760 --> 01:40:38.760] It just says you have to get out. [01:40:38.760 --> 01:40:40.760] Wait, wait, you can't stop. [01:40:40.760 --> 01:40:42.760] You can't stop fighting. [01:40:42.760 --> 01:40:46.760] You've got to get out of the fight. [01:40:46.760 --> 01:40:51.760] You keep telling me how they're mistreating you and how they're holding you down and how they won't let you. [01:40:51.760 --> 01:40:54.760] What is going on here? [01:40:54.760 --> 01:40:59.760] Well, the deal is now I don't think I can get out of being evicted here. [01:40:59.760 --> 01:41:00.760] I mean, it's done. [01:41:00.760 --> 01:41:01.760] Wait, you're being a victim. [01:41:01.760 --> 01:41:03.760] The cow is out of the barn. [01:41:03.760 --> 01:41:04.760] It's done. [01:41:04.760 --> 01:41:07.760] Then why did you even call? [01:41:07.760 --> 01:41:12.760] Because I want to see if I've got a case against retaliation against these people. [01:41:12.760 --> 01:41:14.760] If I can prove a case, then who can? [01:41:14.760 --> 01:41:19.760] It doesn't sound like you do. [01:41:19.760 --> 01:41:26.760] If they're within their rights, you don't have that case. [01:41:26.760 --> 01:41:29.760] They don't have the case for me that I have to postpone work. [01:41:29.760 --> 01:41:31.760] You know, I have to cancel plans. [01:41:31.760 --> 01:41:33.760] I'm going to lose assignments to work. [01:41:33.760 --> 01:41:34.760] I'm going to have to do... [01:41:34.760 --> 01:41:39.760] Wait, justice is inconvenient. [01:41:39.760 --> 01:41:41.760] Yeah, and that's the way it is. [01:41:41.760 --> 01:41:44.760] We have to, if we want justice, we have to pay for it. [01:41:44.760 --> 01:41:51.760] One thing that freedom is not, and that's free. [01:41:51.760 --> 01:41:53.760] You have to go to some trouble. [01:41:53.760 --> 01:41:57.760] The world is not here to cater to us. [01:41:57.760 --> 01:41:58.760] They're just not going to. [01:41:58.760 --> 01:42:02.760] The world don't care about us. [01:42:02.760 --> 01:42:10.760] If we're going to have justice, there's one case that says whites belong to the belligerent litigant. [01:42:10.760 --> 01:42:13.760] If you want your whites, you're going to have to take them in. [01:42:13.760 --> 01:42:14.760] Yes, it's inconvenient. [01:42:14.760 --> 01:42:18.760] Yes, it causes time. [01:42:18.760 --> 01:42:20.760] You've got to be willing to pay it. [01:42:20.760 --> 01:42:24.760] I was sent to a year in jail, spent 30 days. [01:42:24.760 --> 01:42:27.760] He's at 27 days in solitary confinement. [01:42:27.760 --> 01:42:35.760] I've got three dislocated ribs, two broken collarbones, two knocked out, a chipped elbow. [01:42:35.760 --> 01:42:37.760] It's costly. [01:42:37.760 --> 01:42:43.760] Yeah, but that's a multi-million dollar case. [01:42:43.760 --> 01:42:49.760] You don't have much of a case because they're within their rights. [01:42:49.760 --> 01:42:51.760] But you've got politics. [01:42:51.760 --> 01:42:56.760] Politics is oftentimes far more powerful than law. [01:42:56.760 --> 01:42:58.760] You go up to them. [01:42:58.760 --> 01:43:02.760] And you have witnesses, and you have those damages. [01:43:02.760 --> 01:43:09.760] That's a clear-cut case of civil rights violations, and you're entitled to quite a bit. [01:43:09.760 --> 01:43:12.760] You're telling me, okay. [01:43:12.760 --> 01:43:15.760] Point, all my witnesses were lying SOBs. [01:43:15.760 --> 01:43:17.760] They lied with the truth to do better. [01:43:17.760 --> 01:43:23.760] So what? [01:43:23.760 --> 01:43:27.760] You're telling me why you're already lost. [01:43:27.760 --> 01:43:32.760] You're making excuses for not doing what will actually get this done. [01:43:32.760 --> 01:43:39.760] Am I missing something here? [01:43:39.760 --> 01:43:44.760] First thing you do is stop feeling helpless. [01:43:44.760 --> 01:43:47.760] Stand up, call the president, crawl down his throat, [01:43:47.760 --> 01:43:53.760] and this 50-day thing's going to go out the window. [01:43:53.760 --> 01:43:54.760] Give it a try. [01:43:54.760 --> 01:43:59.760] We'll be right back. [01:43:59.760 --> 01:44:03.760] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.760 --> 01:44:04.760] Boring! [01:44:04.760 --> 01:44:07.760] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.760 --> 01:44:08.760] What? [01:44:08.760 --> 01:44:12.760] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.760 --> 01:44:15.760] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:15.760 --> 01:44:18.760] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:18.760 --> 01:44:21.760] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease [01:44:21.760 --> 01:44:24.760] is found in almost every home in America, the television. [01:44:24.760 --> 01:44:28.760] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity. [01:44:28.760 --> 01:44:29.760] But there is hope. [01:44:29.760 --> 01:44:31.760] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me [01:44:31.760 --> 01:44:35.760] and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports-zombieism recover. [01:44:35.760 --> 01:44:38.760] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading [01:44:38.760 --> 01:44:42.760] and watching educational documentaries without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:42.760 --> 01:44:45.760] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:45.760 --> 01:44:49.760] then you need to call 512-480-2503 [01:44:49.760 --> 01:44:54.760] or visit them at 1904Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.760 --> 01:44:56.760] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include [01:44:56.760 --> 01:45:00.760] discernment and enlarged vocabulary and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:00.760 --> 01:45:03.760] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.760 --> 01:45:06.760] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:06.760 --> 01:45:10.760] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4CD course [01:45:10.760 --> 01:45:14.760] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.760 --> 01:45:18.760] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.760 --> 01:45:22.760] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.760 --> 01:45:27.760] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.760 --> 01:45:30.760] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:30.760 --> 01:45:33.760] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.760 --> 01:45:38.760] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.760 --> 01:45:43.760] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.760 --> 01:45:47.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:47.760 --> 01:45:52.760] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.760 --> 01:45:56.760] Please visit lulavlawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:56.760 --> 01:46:01.760] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.760 --> 01:46:12.760] When the karma's lurking around the corner You better watch, baby, get ready to take [01:46:12.760 --> 01:46:26.760] The bad news in front of you Yeah, baby, Jerry, it's in reality [01:46:26.760 --> 01:46:31.760] Oh, yeah, the karma's lurking around the corner, baby, Jerry, come on [01:46:31.760 --> 01:46:36.760] As we so, so shall we be [01:46:36.760 --> 01:46:41.760] We are back, we ran the film, we moved our radio, [01:46:41.760 --> 01:46:44.760] and I don't mean to be difficult to you, [01:46:44.760 --> 01:46:49.760] but there is something you can do. [01:46:49.760 --> 01:46:54.760] You're probably, there's this saying that says, [01:46:54.760 --> 01:47:04.760] God give me the wisdom to, or the courage to change the things I can, [01:47:04.760 --> 01:47:10.760] the, what is it, the patience to accept the things I can't [01:47:10.760 --> 01:47:12.760] and the wisdom to know the difference. [01:47:12.760 --> 01:47:15.760] There are things you can't change here. [01:47:15.760 --> 01:47:19.760] So what? There are things you can change. [01:47:19.760 --> 01:47:23.760] Let's forget about the things you can't change and go after the things you can. [01:47:23.760 --> 01:47:26.760] You can change upper management. [01:47:26.760 --> 01:47:30.760] You can change you. [01:47:30.760 --> 01:47:35.760] When you become the master instead of the servant, [01:47:35.760 --> 01:47:37.760] everything will change. [01:47:37.760 --> 01:47:42.760] You got 30 days or 40 days? That's a long time. [01:47:42.760 --> 01:47:45.760] I'm going to bet you can get these guys [01:47:45.760 --> 01:47:52.760] come in wanting to make a deal with you within two or three days. [01:47:52.760 --> 01:47:59.760] Monday, get on the phone. Do not explain yourself to anyone. [01:47:59.760 --> 01:48:04.760] Have you ever done any acting? [01:48:04.760 --> 01:48:05.760] Well. [01:48:05.760 --> 01:48:08.760] This is a good time to learn how to be an actor. [01:48:08.760 --> 01:48:11.760] I've had the most fun doing this. [01:48:11.760 --> 01:48:15.760] I called a judge in Minnesota once, [01:48:15.760 --> 01:48:20.760] and I fed him this line of crap only you wouldn't believe. [01:48:20.760 --> 01:48:25.760] I got his clerk or controller that I was a radio talk show host out of Texas, [01:48:25.760 --> 01:48:30.760] and we're going up to Michigan to do some videos, [01:48:30.760 --> 01:48:36.760] and I hear that you have a judge there that's forcing a woman who's dying of cancer [01:48:36.760 --> 01:48:41.760] to represent herself in the courtroom against her rich husband [01:48:41.760 --> 01:48:47.760] so that she'll die and he'll get all the money. [01:48:47.760 --> 01:48:50.760] She bought that story. [01:48:50.760 --> 01:48:52.760] I want to come up there and interview the judge. [01:48:52.760 --> 01:48:57.760] I want to do about a 60-second interview. [01:48:57.760 --> 01:48:59.760] We're doing a bunch of YouTube videos, [01:48:59.760 --> 01:49:02.760] and we just want to do just 60 seconds with the judge. [01:49:02.760 --> 01:49:05.760] I'll see what the judge has to say. [01:49:05.760 --> 01:49:09.760] She was trying to get a continuous, and the judge refused to give one. [01:49:09.760 --> 01:49:12.760] This was a Friday. They come in Monday morning. [01:49:12.760 --> 01:49:15.760] The judge walked in the courtroom, walked up behind the bench, [01:49:15.760 --> 01:49:17.760] grabbed the gavel, said, [01:49:17.760 --> 01:49:21.760] 60-second continuous, you, will you come back and have a lawyer? [01:49:21.760 --> 01:49:26.760] Slammed the gavel down, stormed out of the courtroom. [01:49:26.760 --> 01:49:31.760] That was so much fun. [01:49:31.760 --> 01:49:35.760] Now, for somebody, they have that magical touch just trying things there. [01:49:35.760 --> 01:49:42.760] Well, I will give it a shot for sure, but here's the obstacle that I have, Randy. [01:49:42.760 --> 01:49:48.760] They have this apartment, I understand, already rented to a couple already. [01:49:48.760 --> 01:49:55.760] They can give them another apartment. [01:49:55.760 --> 01:49:59.760] You absolutely have nothing to lose. [01:49:59.760 --> 01:50:00.760] All right. [01:50:00.760 --> 01:50:02.760] It won't take long, won't cost anything. [01:50:02.760 --> 01:50:04.760] You want me to, let's see. [01:50:04.760 --> 01:50:09.760] As far as I know, this company has a, yeah, it has a landlord owner, [01:50:09.760 --> 01:50:14.760] the person who is the owner of the property. [01:50:14.760 --> 01:50:17.760] I found that out, and this company, [01:50:17.760 --> 01:50:23.760] CNR Real Estate Services Company is the management company, [01:50:23.760 --> 01:50:28.760] but I don't know his name, but they do have an owner. [01:50:28.760 --> 01:50:31.760] You don't care about the management company. [01:50:31.760 --> 01:50:35.760] You care about the company that actually owns the property. [01:50:35.760 --> 01:50:42.760] And the president of that company gets somebody crawling down his throat. [01:50:42.760 --> 01:50:46.760] This management company is a client of that company, [01:50:46.760 --> 01:50:50.760] and they could be replaced by somebody else. [01:50:50.760 --> 01:50:56.760] They are not going to like the president of the company even knowing their name, [01:50:56.760 --> 01:50:59.760] much less being upset at them. [01:50:59.760 --> 01:51:01.760] Right. [01:51:01.760 --> 01:51:04.760] So this is all politics. [01:51:04.760 --> 01:51:06.760] Yeah, yeah, sure. [01:51:06.760 --> 01:51:07.760] Okay. [01:51:07.760 --> 01:51:08.760] I do need to move on. [01:51:08.760 --> 01:51:10.760] We've got a board full of callers. [01:51:10.760 --> 01:51:11.760] Okay, great. [01:51:11.760 --> 01:51:12.760] Call it. [01:51:12.760 --> 01:51:17.760] I call to try to find out who the owner or, as you said, or the president. [01:51:17.760 --> 01:51:23.760] Go to the public record first and see who's on the title. [01:51:23.760 --> 01:51:29.760] And then call that company and tell them that your daughter's doing a paper [01:51:29.760 --> 01:51:32.760] for high school on something. [01:51:32.760 --> 01:51:33.760] Okay. [01:51:33.760 --> 01:51:37.760] And your son's doing a master's dissertation. [01:51:37.760 --> 01:51:38.760] Right. [01:51:38.760 --> 01:51:42.760] And feed them a lot of hooey. [01:51:42.760 --> 01:51:44.760] Okay, I'll turn your mode off here. [01:51:44.760 --> 01:51:45.760] All right. [01:51:45.760 --> 01:51:46.760] Yeah, that's great fun. [01:51:46.760 --> 01:51:51.760] And give them a good reason to give it to you. [01:51:51.760 --> 01:51:52.760] I have a good one. [01:51:52.760 --> 01:51:54.760] Then call in and ask for him by name. [01:51:54.760 --> 01:51:57.760] And somebody asks, you know, what you need. [01:51:57.760 --> 01:51:58.760] It's not your business. [01:51:58.760 --> 01:52:01.760] I have business with this person. [01:52:01.760 --> 01:52:04.760] It's my business and his business, not your business. [01:52:04.760 --> 01:52:05.760] All right. [01:52:05.760 --> 01:52:10.760] And when you get short with them, they get very cautious and they do their job. [01:52:10.760 --> 01:52:11.760] They're short with them. [01:52:11.760 --> 01:52:12.760] All right. [01:52:12.760 --> 01:52:13.760] All right. [01:52:13.760 --> 01:52:16.760] I'll do some rehearsing and practicing and see what I can do. [01:52:16.760 --> 01:52:18.760] And I'll give you a call back, Randy, and see if it works. [01:52:18.760 --> 01:52:19.760] Okay. [01:52:19.760 --> 01:52:20.760] I'll let you know. [01:52:20.760 --> 01:52:21.760] Okay. [01:52:21.760 --> 01:52:22.760] Have fun with it. [01:52:22.760 --> 01:52:25.760] I'll try to. [01:52:25.760 --> 01:52:26.760] Okay. [01:52:26.760 --> 01:52:29.760] Now we're going to Will in New York. [01:52:29.760 --> 01:52:30.760] Hello, Will. [01:52:30.760 --> 01:52:32.760] What are you going to do for us today? [01:52:32.760 --> 01:52:33.760] Hey, Randy. [01:52:33.760 --> 01:52:34.760] It's Walt. [01:52:34.760 --> 01:52:36.760] Oh, okay. [01:52:36.760 --> 01:52:39.760] Haven't heard from you in a while. [01:52:39.760 --> 01:52:40.760] Yeah. [01:52:40.760 --> 01:52:43.760] I want to make a comment about what you started off the program, [01:52:43.760 --> 01:52:45.760] learning about the global warming issue. [01:52:45.760 --> 01:52:49.760] And I've got a couple of other issues to answer real quick. [01:52:49.760 --> 01:52:56.760] There's a scientist who was an advisor to the White House, an astronomer also. [01:52:56.760 --> 01:53:00.760] He's also an advisor to the NASA space shuttle team. [01:53:00.760 --> 01:53:04.760] And I heard about him about two and a half years ago. [01:53:04.760 --> 01:53:05.760] And he's done a lot of research. [01:53:05.760 --> 01:53:09.760] He's very knowledgeable about the weather, Randy. [01:53:09.760 --> 01:53:12.760] And everybody's running from him, and they keep him off the mainstream media [01:53:12.760 --> 01:53:15.760] because of what he's found out, the real truth about global warming. [01:53:15.760 --> 01:53:17.760] He says it's nonsense. [01:53:17.760 --> 01:53:23.760] And he says the last time the situation happened, you have to go by the evidence. [01:53:23.760 --> 01:53:24.760] And he has a lot of it. [01:53:24.760 --> 01:53:25.760] You know, Randy, it's cooler. [01:53:25.760 --> 01:53:27.760] I have a friend in Las Vegas. [01:53:27.760 --> 01:53:29.760] I talked to him quite often. [01:53:29.760 --> 01:53:33.760] He told me the whole month of May has been very, very cool. [01:53:33.760 --> 01:53:42.760] I'm in north of Fort Worth toward the end of May. [01:53:42.760 --> 01:53:47.760] And when the show started, I was sitting here with a jacket on. [01:53:47.760 --> 01:53:50.760] That's never happened since I've been in Texas. [01:53:50.760 --> 01:53:51.760] Right. [01:53:51.760 --> 01:53:57.760] So let me tell you what, the scientist's name is John Casey, C-A-S-E-Y. [01:53:57.760 --> 01:53:59.760] Very knowledgeable. [01:53:59.760 --> 01:54:02.760] He's been doing this research for many years. [01:54:02.760 --> 01:54:07.760] He says what we've entered, Randy, the last couple of years, [01:54:07.760 --> 01:54:13.760] he actually entered a mini ice age, the same thing that happened 200 years ago. [01:54:13.760 --> 01:54:14.760] It's in the records. [01:54:14.760 --> 01:54:16.760] You can look it up. [01:54:16.760 --> 01:54:18.760] You look up John Casey, you'll see it. [01:54:18.760 --> 01:54:21.760] That's the mini ice age I spoke of. [01:54:21.760 --> 01:54:27.760] If you look in the temperatures, the ice core temperatures in Iceland, [01:54:27.760 --> 01:54:32.760] for the last 11,000 years, the temperatures have been varying up and down. [01:54:32.760 --> 01:54:38.760] And 11,000 years ago, the temperatures passed our current temperature. [01:54:38.760 --> 01:54:41.760] And it got down to our current temperature about, I think, [01:54:41.760 --> 01:54:45.760] 250, 300 years ago in that mini ice age. [01:54:45.760 --> 01:54:52.760] And then it went back up and it came back down again to this temperature. [01:54:52.760 --> 01:54:57.760] This is the lowest it's been in 11,000 years. [01:54:57.760 --> 01:55:01.760] And I'm not talking about it's cool here in North Texas today. [01:55:01.760 --> 01:55:06.760] I'm talking about average global temperatures worldwide [01:55:06.760 --> 01:55:09.760] are the coolest they've been in 11,000 years. [01:55:09.760 --> 01:55:12.760] Just look up the Younger Dryas. [01:55:12.760 --> 01:55:16.760] You'll get several hits and you'll get one with a graph of the temperatures. [01:55:16.760 --> 01:55:19.760] One look at that graph and you'll say, holy crap. [01:55:19.760 --> 01:55:22.760] Randy, here's what he's saying the cause is right now. [01:55:22.760 --> 01:55:24.760] It's not rocket science, very simple. [01:55:24.760 --> 01:55:28.760] Like 200 years ago, the sun, we have a solar problem. [01:55:28.760 --> 01:55:34.760] The sun has dropped dramatically from 200 sunspots to 50 right today. [01:55:34.760 --> 01:55:37.760] It's been going up and like that for the last two and a half years. [01:55:37.760 --> 01:55:43.760] It's his work going downhill temperature-wise. It's going to last for another 28 years. [01:55:43.760 --> 01:55:47.760] But now the Russian scientist team has come out to back him up. [01:55:47.760 --> 01:55:50.760] And they're saying, no, he's incorrect in one area. [01:55:50.760 --> 01:55:52.760] The length of this is going to last. [01:55:52.760 --> 01:55:54.760] They're saying it's not going to last 28 more years. [01:55:54.760 --> 01:55:56.760] It's going to last 50 years. [01:55:56.760 --> 01:55:58.760] And it's all over the Internet. [01:55:58.760 --> 01:56:02.760] And I'll tell you who doesn't want the people to know about it. [01:56:02.760 --> 01:56:05.760] We're talking about Vice President Al Gore. [01:56:05.760 --> 01:56:08.760] And his banker buddies have already made $105 billion, Randy, [01:56:08.760 --> 01:56:10.760] researching global warming. [01:56:10.760 --> 01:56:13.760] They're using our taxpayer money to make a profit. [01:56:13.760 --> 01:56:18.760] So that's why they don't want John Casey on the mainstream to tell the truth. [01:56:18.760 --> 01:56:24.760] Exactly. That's all political scam. [01:56:24.760 --> 01:56:33.760] And if there was global warming, the implication is the net effect would be positive. [01:56:33.760 --> 01:56:36.760] All right. The next thing I'd like to ask you real quick, Randy, [01:56:36.760 --> 01:56:42.760] I got a criminal complaint sent certified return receipt back in January [01:56:42.760 --> 01:56:45.760] to the U.S. Attorney's Office here in Rochester, New York. [01:56:45.760 --> 01:56:48.760] I live in Webster about five miles outside of Rochester. [01:56:48.760 --> 01:56:51.760] And that's near Buffalo Syracuse area, Western New York. [01:56:51.760 --> 01:56:53.760] And they didn't answer. [01:56:53.760 --> 01:56:57.760] So I finally called them. [01:56:57.760 --> 01:57:01.760] And, well, I didn't call them. [01:57:01.760 --> 01:57:04.760] Something very interesting happened, Randy. [01:57:04.760 --> 01:57:08.760] I got a letter from a newly elected state senator. [01:57:08.760 --> 01:57:11.760] He's been a weatherman for 20 years here in the Rochester area. [01:57:11.760 --> 01:57:14.760] And he says, well, he says, you know, just generic letters. [01:57:14.760 --> 01:57:17.760] He says, give me a call if you have any problems. [01:57:17.760 --> 01:57:20.760] Then a couple days later, he sends me a birthday card. [01:57:20.760 --> 01:57:23.760] I don't know how he found that out, but it was my birthday within a few days. [01:57:23.760 --> 01:57:26.760] He says, well, please give me a call if you need anything. [01:57:26.760 --> 01:57:27.760] So I did. [01:57:27.760 --> 01:57:32.760] I talked to a staff member there. His name is Funky. [01:57:32.760 --> 01:57:36.760] And the staff member is a senator, Funky. [01:57:36.760 --> 01:57:42.760] And well-known weatherman all over Western New York, Randy, for years. [01:57:42.760 --> 01:57:44.760] And also the staff member's name is Jerry. [01:57:44.760 --> 01:57:45.760] I found the story. [01:57:45.760 --> 01:57:48.760] I won't get into all the details with the complaints about right now. [01:57:48.760 --> 01:57:53.760] But he says he would call over there and find out why I haven't got any response [01:57:53.760 --> 01:57:57.760] from the U.S. Department of Justice in months. [01:57:57.760 --> 01:58:00.760] So he calls me back and he says, well, he took my name and everything. [01:58:00.760 --> 01:58:02.760] He says, they have no record of it, Randy, [01:58:02.760 --> 01:58:05.760] but I got my green card back certified, so they're lying. [01:58:05.760 --> 01:58:13.760] So he says, also, well, they don't handle criminal complaints. [01:58:13.760 --> 01:58:16.760] They only handle bankruptcies involving fraud. [01:58:16.760 --> 01:58:18.760] So I talked to him. [01:58:18.760 --> 01:58:24.760] And I said, Jerry, I said, that person lied to you, representing the U.S. government. [01:58:24.760 --> 01:58:28.760] I said, now you're a witness. We went round and round over this, Randy. [01:58:28.760 --> 01:58:31.760] He actually admitted to me on the phone. I recorded it. [01:58:31.760 --> 01:58:34.760] He says, yes, well, I'm a witness to this. [01:58:34.760 --> 01:58:37.760] They should be giving false information to him. [01:58:37.760 --> 01:58:39.760] OK, hold on, hold on. [01:58:39.760 --> 01:58:40.760] We're about to go to break. [01:58:40.760 --> 01:58:42.760] We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:58:42.760 --> 01:58:44.760] Randy, we'll move our radio. [01:58:44.760 --> 01:58:49.760] We'll be right back. [01:59:14.760 --> 01:59:19.760] We'll be right back. [01:59:44.760 --> 01:59:59.760] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com.