[00:00.000 --> 00:07.720] Okay, sorry folks, you were listening to an archive, we had some issues but we've got [00:07.720 --> 00:13.080] that resolved and it turned out it was my ignorance, something I didn't know how to [00:13.080 --> 00:15.840] do and Deborah brought me up to speed on that. [00:15.840 --> 00:21.120] So we are actually back on the air live. [00:21.120 --> 00:30.640] What we spoke to earlier Olivier and probably the last caller from Georgia didn't go out [00:30.640 --> 00:32.880] on the air. [00:32.880 --> 00:37.440] So we had a few little glitches but I think we've got things back on sync now at least [00:37.440 --> 00:39.120] we can finish up the show. [00:39.120 --> 00:43.600] Okay Olivier, let's start back, start over because what we were talking about didn't [00:43.600 --> 00:44.600] go on the air. [00:44.600 --> 00:47.600] You were talking about the 9th and the 14th amendment. [00:47.600 --> 00:55.480] The 9th amendment states that the enumerations in the Constitution of certain rights shall [00:55.480 --> 01:02.360] not be construed to deny or discourage others retained by the people. [01:02.360 --> 01:08.520] So it's already signifying that the people have certain rights and it's saying that the [01:08.520 --> 01:15.680] enumerations in the Constitution of certain rights, those of certain rights, they're talking [01:15.680 --> 01:23.280] about the rights that they give the state and Congress which are trustees to the beneficiaries [01:23.280 --> 01:26.720] which are the people. [01:26.720 --> 01:31.120] Congress and the state have certain rights in the Constitution which are considered to [01:31.120 --> 01:34.600] be the enumerations in the Constitution. [01:34.600 --> 01:41.240] So what I thought it was saying was that the state cannot use the state or Congress or [01:41.240 --> 01:49.920] anybody who's a trustee of a beneficiary cannot use their power to, as a trustee, to violate [01:49.920 --> 01:59.560] the beneficiaries' rights as the beneficiaries. [01:59.560 --> 02:01.880] That's exactly the way I read it. [02:01.880 --> 02:02.880] Okay. [02:02.880 --> 02:08.200] I haven't figured out how to use it yet but I'm trying to close up, I'm trying to get [02:08.200 --> 02:10.080] this situation closed up. [02:10.080 --> 02:11.080] Okay. [02:11.080 --> 02:15.920] It essentially goes to due process. [02:15.920 --> 02:22.680] You have certain rights and they have to be provided those rights, the exercise of any [02:22.680 --> 02:32.880] right or the interference with the exercise of any right is a denial or due process. [02:32.880 --> 02:34.880] Okay. [02:34.880 --> 02:43.680] Then let me get you to clear up equal protection since you just did that because due process [02:43.680 --> 02:46.600] and equal protection is in the 14th Amendment. [02:46.600 --> 02:50.800] Can you clear up equal protection before we read it? [02:50.800 --> 02:51.800] No. [02:51.800 --> 02:55.600] Go ahead and read it and I'll speak to it. [02:55.600 --> 03:02.880] It says, all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction [03:02.880 --> 03:11.560] thereof are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. [03:11.560 --> 03:20.120] No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities [03:20.120 --> 03:28.680] of the citizens of the United States nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty [03:28.680 --> 03:36.560] or property without due process of law nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction [03:36.560 --> 03:40.840] the equal protections of the law. [03:40.840 --> 03:43.840] Okay. [03:43.840 --> 03:45.560] I think we're going to break. [03:45.560 --> 03:46.560] Yes. [03:46.560 --> 03:47.560] Hang on. [03:47.560 --> 03:48.560] We're about to go to break. [03:48.560 --> 03:49.920] We'll pick this up on the other side. [03:49.920 --> 03:59.120] We'll be right back. [03:59.120 --> 04:09.240] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [04:09.240 --> 04:13.640] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. 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[05:32.480 --> 05:39.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [05:39.080 --> 05:43.720] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [05:43.720 --> 05:48.080] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [05:48.080 --> 05:54.160] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [05:54.160 --> 05:56.840] prosa tactics, and much more. [05:56.840 --> 06:00.760] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [06:00.760 --> 06:26.760] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [06:26.760 --> 06:52.160] If you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what you should do for yourself. [06:52.160 --> 07:11.400] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Olivier in [07:11.400 --> 07:12.400] Tennessee. [07:12.400 --> 07:17.400] Okay, go ahead Olivier, you're reading the 14th Amendment. [07:17.400 --> 07:25.040] Okay, the main part about it was that no state shall make or enforce any law which [07:25.040 --> 07:31.240] shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States, nor shall [07:31.240 --> 07:38.840] any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law nor [07:38.840 --> 07:48.160] deny to any person within this jurisdiction the equal protections of the law. [07:48.160 --> 08:05.760] Okay, that goes to 3903 penal code, 18 U.S. Code 242 federal penal code, a class A misreader [08:05.760 --> 08:11.880] for public official acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity, exerts [08:11.880 --> 08:16.360] or purports to exert an authority due not expressed to have, or fails to perform a duty [08:16.360 --> 08:21.040] that required to perform in the process, denies the citizen in the full and pre-access to [08:21.040 --> 08:40.400] or enjoying the right goes right to 14th Amendment. [08:40.400 --> 08:56.440] Yes, and one of the things that will get you to the federal court is that when these traffic [08:56.440 --> 09:06.320] issues happen to you, you had a Virginia license and you were in Tennessee, and they cited [09:06.320 --> 09:12.920] you for having a revocation in North Carolina, so that involves three different states that [09:12.920 --> 09:20.800] goes to diversity that will bring you right to the federal court, even without the federal [09:20.800 --> 09:24.800] constitutional violations. [09:24.800 --> 09:41.160] Okay, wait a minute, you're having some difficulty, either you're moving the mic around or something [09:41.160 --> 09:43.720] because you're kind of fading in and out. [09:43.720 --> 09:49.720] Okay, well, I said that no, nor shall any state deprive you. [09:49.720 --> 09:54.200] One more thing, move the mic so it's not right in front of your mouth because your breath [09:54.200 --> 09:56.640] is really coming through loud. [09:56.640 --> 09:59.320] Can you hear me now? [09:59.320 --> 10:00.320] That's much better. [10:00.320 --> 10:08.000] Okay, it says that no, or shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty or property. [10:08.000 --> 10:13.840] Now without due process, I did some research and I'm coming to figure out, just because [10:13.840 --> 10:23.720] it says life in liberty and property, those are not the only things that they imply because [10:23.720 --> 10:31.160] I researched and I found out that there's many things that fall underneath liberty. [10:31.160 --> 10:36.800] The word liberty is just not exclusive to just the idea of it, but... [10:36.800 --> 10:44.680] Yes, when you read liberty earlier, I was thinking, I didn't want to interrupt, but I was thinking, [10:44.680 --> 10:49.800] just what does liberty mean? [10:49.800 --> 10:50.800] This is where you're going. [10:50.800 --> 10:55.440] liberty means a lot more than just being able to walk around up and down the street if you [10:55.440 --> 10:58.440] want to. [10:58.440 --> 11:00.440] Right. [11:00.440 --> 11:12.040] Right, so I found arguments which were, which from court cases about liberty and they talk [11:12.040 --> 11:17.040] that liberty consists, we under our rights of liberty, we had the right to use the public [11:17.040 --> 11:20.360] highways, the public streets and highways. [11:20.360 --> 11:26.280] We had the, underneath liberty, we have the right to use an automobile because it's a [11:26.280 --> 11:33.200] junction in life that is necessary as an ordinary means of locomotion. [11:33.200 --> 11:43.400] We have the right to use the roads without getting taxed or feed, or feed that we have. [11:43.400 --> 11:52.040] I think, I think the point of liberty is, is not that we have the right to do certain things. [11:52.040 --> 12:03.600] We have the right to do anything unless there is a specific statute that specifically forbids [12:03.600 --> 12:05.440] us to do a certain thing. [12:05.440 --> 12:09.960] For instance, I have been forbidden from shooting you. [12:09.960 --> 12:11.960] All right. [12:11.960 --> 12:19.960] Unless for certain circumstances, there are certain things that the people, certain areas [12:19.960 --> 12:27.760] of liberty that the people have agreed to limit, and those are for the most part found [12:27.760 --> 12:34.480] in the penal code, and then there are some in professional conduct codes. [12:34.480 --> 12:40.120] There are spaces, places in the codes where we have agreed to limit our liberty in certain [12:40.120 --> 12:48.640] areas, but if a specific liberty has not been limited by a statute that has been declared [12:48.640 --> 12:57.800] constitutional, then we can do any of those things enumerated or not. [12:57.800 --> 12:59.920] Okay. [12:59.920 --> 13:07.920] With that concept, wouldn't that be a faster route for me to, into the federal courts to [13:07.920 --> 13:12.120] argue, we have to put a faster route to the federal courts, but I haven't been terribly [13:12.120 --> 13:15.280] happy with the federal courts. [13:15.280 --> 13:20.840] I know the general rule says take the state to the fad and the fad to the state, but my [13:20.840 --> 13:26.200] experience in the federal courts has not been a great experience. [13:26.200 --> 13:31.040] The federal judges tend to hate prosaise. [13:31.040 --> 13:39.240] Someone even sent me a book on, written by judges on how to screw prosaise. [13:39.240 --> 13:46.920] Somewhere in my systems, we have a CD by federal judge explaining, I mean a federal appellate [13:46.920 --> 13:52.640] court judge explaining to federal judges how to screw prosaise and how the federal courts [13:52.640 --> 13:56.160] will, will assist them in screwing prosaise. [13:56.160 --> 14:02.840] So I'm not terribly happy with the federal courts. [14:02.840 --> 14:08.120] State court judges are not put in place for life. [14:08.120 --> 14:15.680] They tend to be more, somewhat more responsive to the public, but in your case, it may be [14:15.680 --> 14:21.440] that the state court judges are totally unresponsive and then you may have to get them to the federal [14:21.440 --> 14:22.440] court. [14:22.440 --> 14:28.560] But as, as my experience, I haven't been happy with the feds. [14:28.560 --> 14:36.720] Well, I mean, the, the thing is going state to constitutional arguments and hard facts. [14:36.720 --> 14:44.920] I couldn't get in and get an injunction to get them from continuing to violate my privileges [14:44.920 --> 14:45.920] and immunities. [14:45.920 --> 14:51.840] And you, you, you probably have a good case that needs to go to the feds because you have [14:51.840 --> 15:01.840] judges there that are just not just ignoring law, they're horribly breaching law. [15:01.840 --> 15:06.000] In Lee's case, he had a Virginia license. [15:06.000 --> 15:11.800] It was pulled over by a Tennessee police officer and he had a citation in North Carolina and [15:11.800 --> 15:17.720] he missed a court date and they filed a revocation in North Carolina. [15:17.720 --> 15:27.320] But under the driver's, the driver's license compact, a compact in which Virginia and North [15:27.320 --> 15:32.880] Carolina were engaged, but Tennessee was not. [15:32.880 --> 15:41.760] The revocation in North Carolina gave authority to Virginia to revoke Olivier's license. [15:41.760 --> 15:44.800] But Virginia didn't do that. [15:44.800 --> 15:48.960] So Tennessee comes in, they're not a part of this compact. [15:48.960 --> 15:55.440] And they find the revocation in North Carolina and they cite him for driving on a revoked [15:55.440 --> 15:56.440] license. [15:56.440 --> 15:59.840] Lee never had a license in North Carolina. [15:59.840 --> 16:05.800] So North Carolina could not revoke his Virginia license. [16:05.800 --> 16:13.080] That revocation was on the record so as to give Virginia the authority to revoke if they [16:13.080 --> 16:16.560] chose to, but they didn't. [16:16.560 --> 16:23.160] So Olivier goes to court and the judge threatened to witness with contempt if he revealed the [16:23.160 --> 16:29.520] fact of the valid Virginia license to the jury. [16:29.520 --> 16:33.400] That's pretty seriously criminal. [16:33.400 --> 16:41.560] And so Olivier certainly understand your concern that you can't get a fair adjudication in [16:41.560 --> 16:46.680] Tennessee. [16:46.680 --> 16:54.360] And I've even offered, Olivier is in Tennessee and he's rightly concerned about them coming [16:54.360 --> 16:55.360] back after him. [16:55.360 --> 17:03.200] So I would be glad to file criminal charges against that judge and against these officers. [17:03.200 --> 17:06.080] They don't have a shot at me. [17:06.080 --> 17:14.480] And if they try to take one, I'm a little more up to speed, Olivier is coming up to [17:14.480 --> 17:19.800] speed fast, but I'm a little more up to speed on them. [17:19.800 --> 17:21.800] I think I can hold them off. [17:21.800 --> 17:22.800] Okay. [17:22.800 --> 17:26.200] Can I ask you one more quick question? [17:26.200 --> 17:34.240] It says that the state shall make or enforce any law with shallabrige, deprivative and [17:34.240 --> 17:35.240] immunity. [17:35.240 --> 17:41.640] And it says the state, can we consider that the prosecutor represents the state? [17:41.640 --> 17:42.640] Absolutely. [17:42.640 --> 17:43.640] Okay. [17:43.640 --> 17:53.240] So now they're not allowed to prosecute me for crimes that haven't been committed. [17:53.240 --> 17:54.240] Exactly. [17:54.240 --> 18:03.480] So that means I could include the state of Tennessee and the county, I mean the county [18:03.480 --> 18:06.280] in the city, I don't know, I'm not sure about the county. [18:06.280 --> 18:07.280] Yes. [18:07.280 --> 18:12.680] And the individuals, they're not allowed, they don't have immunity for committing crimes [18:12.680 --> 18:13.680] in office. [18:13.680 --> 18:18.760] Committing crimes in office are not with scope. [18:18.760 --> 18:19.760] Hang on. [18:19.760 --> 18:20.760] About to go to break. [18:20.760 --> 18:21.760] Radio Kelton. [18:21.760 --> 18:22.760] Rue Valradio. [18:22.760 --> 18:26.640] I call in number 512-646-1984. [18:26.640 --> 18:33.440] We have had some issues today, but we, Deborah came through and saved the day for us. [18:33.440 --> 18:35.520] So we're back up and running. [18:35.520 --> 18:39.000] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call, we'll try to get to everybody. [18:39.000 --> 18:54.800] We'll be right back. [18:54.800 --> 18:58.920] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [18:58.920 --> 19:04.120] God's For America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [19:04.120 --> 19:05.440] can really help. [19:05.440 --> 19:09.800] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [19:09.800 --> 19:10.800] today. [19:10.800 --> 19:14.800] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [19:14.800 --> 19:17.920] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [19:17.920 --> 19:23.160] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [19:23.160 --> 19:27.440] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [19:27.440 --> 19:32.360] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [19:32.360 --> 19:37.400] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [19:37.400 --> 19:50.160] Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [19:50.160 --> 19:53.280] us online at bfa.org. [19:53.280 --> 20:07.320] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.glogosradionetwork.com. [20:07.320 --> 20:12.440] Following these flashes brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdowns. [20:12.440 --> 20:17.520] Markets for Monday, the 8th of January, 2018 opened with gold at $1,320.00 and two cents [20:17.520 --> 20:26.920] amounts, silver $17.20, Texas Crude $61.44 a barrel, Bitcoin $16,020.30, while Bitcoin [20:26.920 --> 20:36.880] cashes at $2,757.56, finally Dashcoins at $1,284.36, a crypto coin. [20:36.880 --> 20:45.160] Today in history, the year 1835, the United States government national debt is zero for [20:45.160 --> 20:49.720] the first time and presumably only time in the government's existence. [20:49.720 --> 20:54.920] Zero government debt today in history. [20:54.920 --> 20:58.800] In recent news, the president will undergo a two-hour physical exam which will include [20:58.800 --> 21:02.960] urine blood analysis, cardiac evaluation, and some more personal prying with sleeping [21:02.960 --> 21:07.360] habits and even his romantic life being discussed with the multi-administration presidential [21:07.360 --> 21:08.360] physician. [21:08.360 --> 21:12.600] It seems the president may be wanting to later rest the recent lineup of criticisms questioning [21:12.600 --> 21:16.440] his mental health and stability, apparently some of the president's more recent tweets [21:16.440 --> 21:21.320] directed towards North Korea's Kim Jong-un and the author of the book Fire and Fury, [21:21.320 --> 21:25.400] Michael Wolfe, has many thinking that the president should perhaps be more articulate [21:25.400 --> 21:30.440] and less rash with his tweets. [21:30.440 --> 21:35.040] U.S. District Court Judge Gloria Navarro dismissed cases against Nevada Rancher Cliven Bundy, [21:35.040 --> 21:38.200] his two sons and a Montana militiaman today. [21:38.200 --> 21:42.720] He's ruled that the government's lawyers suppressed footage from several cameras that were set [21:42.720 --> 21:47.200] up by the FBI around the Bundy's family home that would have been favorable in the defendant's [21:47.200 --> 21:48.200] case. [21:48.200 --> 21:52.160] When Mr. Bundy was released today, Monday, after leaving the courthouse, he told reporters [21:52.160 --> 21:54.760] that I've been a political prisoner for 700 days. [21:54.760 --> 21:59.360] He hadn't seen his wife for nearly two years due to the fact that he had refused any conditional [21:59.360 --> 22:05.720] release which required him to forfeit his trial by jury rights. [22:05.720 --> 22:10.040] Former Google engineer James D'Amore filed a class action lawsuit against the Alphabet [22:10.040 --> 22:14.800] Corporation on Monday claiming that it discriminates against white men and those with conservative [22:14.800 --> 22:16.240] leaning views. [22:16.240 --> 22:20.000] D'Amore was terminated for dismantling a memo essentially questioning the company's [22:20.000 --> 22:21.640] diversity policies. [22:21.640 --> 22:25.720] The suit is basically arguing that Google employees who express views deviating from [22:25.720 --> 22:31.960] corporate sentiments on politics and practices like diversity hiring policies by a sensitivity [22:31.960 --> 22:37.640] and social justice were singled out, mistreated, and systematically punished and terminated [22:37.640 --> 22:38.640] from Google. [22:38.640 --> 22:42.760] Google spokesman Tasha Parts said in response that we look forward to defending against [22:42.760 --> 23:08.760] Mr. D'Amore's lawsuit in court. [23:08.760 --> 23:25.480] D'Amore was terminated for musicians. [23:25.480 --> 23:33.480] I will lie in front of my father's house Till he returns [23:33.480 --> 23:41.480] I will lie in front of my father's house Till he has to be with his faith and with God [23:41.480 --> 23:47.480] I will hide my concerns I will lie in front of my father's house [23:47.480 --> 23:55.480] Till I will lie in front of my father's house I will lie in front of my father's house [23:55.480 --> 24:05.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. [24:05.480 --> 24:14.480] Okay, Olivier, if I stumble over Olivier in Tennessee, it's because it says Olivier in jail on my bridge. [24:14.480 --> 24:21.480] So you're going to be stuck with that forever. Okay. [24:21.480 --> 24:28.480] Okay, so you're probably a very good case for going to the Fed. [24:28.480 --> 24:36.480] Right. And I could do an injunction relief on that, correct? [24:36.480 --> 24:43.480] Not necessarily injunctive release. [24:43.480 --> 24:53.480] Okay, let me back up. Explain why you want to do injunctive relief. What do you want to enjoin? [24:53.480 --> 25:08.480] Oh, injunctive relief is where you ask the court to order someone to do something or not do something. [25:08.480 --> 25:12.480] Right. [25:12.480 --> 25:22.480] So request an injunction relief from them violating my right to liberty during the suit. [25:22.480 --> 25:32.480] Because with the research and everything that I've done, I've already confirmed that these rights that I'm arguing about are valid [25:32.480 --> 25:36.480] and other courts have already addressed it. [25:36.480 --> 25:43.480] Okay, this goes to an extraordinary writ, a writ of mandamus. [25:43.480 --> 25:46.480] That's how you would get this injunctive relief. [25:46.480 --> 26:01.480] If you file an action in the federal courts against the state of Tennessee for citing you for driving on an invalid North Carolina license when you never had one, [26:01.480 --> 26:14.480] then you could ask the federal court to issue a restraining order, restraining the state of Tennessee for the interim, [26:14.480 --> 26:26.480] from citing you for a revoked license in North Carolina when you have a valid license in another state. [26:26.480 --> 26:36.480] Because the law in Tennessee specifically authorizes you to drive in Tennessee on a valid driver's license from another state and you had one. [26:36.480 --> 26:45.480] And this should be relatively easy to get the courts to agree to. [26:45.480 --> 26:53.480] Especially since you can show seven of these citations. [26:53.480 --> 27:03.480] Well, I'm trying to get you the information to put together what I'm talking about because I know you probably go through a lot of things, [27:03.480 --> 27:10.480] but I'll try to get back with you once I figure out when you have some more time. [27:10.480 --> 27:24.480] Okay. [27:24.480 --> 27:36.480] Because this also goes against the city or the police department because the police department are allowing the employees to violate our rights. [27:36.480 --> 27:41.480] So if I could get the injunction relief, I wouldn't have to move. [27:41.480 --> 27:49.480] If you file a suit, you can almost certainly get a junk to release. [27:49.480 --> 27:50.480] Okay. [27:50.480 --> 27:53.480] But that was the track that I was on. [27:53.480 --> 27:57.480] So when you get some time and you're thinking about it, you think about it. [27:57.480 --> 28:07.480] And so when I, when I offer up what I'm going to do next, you could already have an idea of what I'm going because I know you understand everything the way I understand. [28:07.480 --> 28:09.480] Yeah. [28:09.480 --> 28:11.480] Okay, we can certainly do that. [28:11.480 --> 28:14.480] Do you have any more questions? [28:14.480 --> 28:16.480] No. [28:16.480 --> 28:18.480] Okay, we're in the last hour. [28:18.480 --> 28:19.480] So I have to move along. [28:19.480 --> 28:22.480] I still got a board full of callers. [28:22.480 --> 28:23.480] Okay. [28:23.480 --> 28:24.480] Thank you, Olivier. [28:24.480 --> 28:26.480] And we'll talk off the air. [28:26.480 --> 28:29.480] All right. [28:29.480 --> 28:33.480] Okay, now we're going to Troy in Ohio. Hello, Troy. [28:33.480 --> 28:38.480] What do you have for us today? [28:38.480 --> 28:40.480] Well, I wanted to ask you a question. [28:40.480 --> 28:49.480] You said last night show that you were in Austin talking to some people about a tax, taxes issues. [28:49.480 --> 28:53.480] And I was wondering, was that income tax? [28:53.480 --> 28:55.480] Yes, it is. [28:55.480 --> 29:12.480] And I got someone, if you want to pay zero taxes and I have two people that do this and I liked what most of them said, both of them said, do not fight with the IRS. [29:12.480 --> 29:20.480] Give the IRS what they need and they will sign off on your taxes. [29:20.480 --> 29:24.480] The problem is not that the IRS is trying to take your money. [29:24.480 --> 29:33.480] The problem is that the IRS has procedures they have to follow and there are certain things that they need. [29:33.480 --> 29:37.480] If you don't give them what they need, then they can't help you. [29:37.480 --> 29:41.480] And these guys, they don't fight with the IRS. [29:41.480 --> 29:49.480] They understand what the IRS needs in order to sign off on your taxes and they make that go away. [29:49.480 --> 29:58.480] One of them addresses the authority of the IRS to tax you in the first place. [29:58.480 --> 30:16.480] And the other one will give you a filing to give to the IRS and go to an audit with you if you want them to and can almost always eliminate 90 to 95% of any taxes they will claim you owe. [30:16.480 --> 30:21.480] Sometimes they had someone recently with a $14,000 tax bill. [30:21.480 --> 30:29.480] He went to an audit with them and they got 500 bucks back instead. [30:29.480 --> 30:32.480] But my suggestion is, pick your battles real careful. [30:32.480 --> 30:40.480] If you have a special issue with the IRS, then do like these guys did and study the code and learn how to beat them up. [30:40.480 --> 30:53.480] But if you have another life to live that doesn't include straightening out the IRS, then avoid getting in a fight with them, give them what they want, get them to sign off and you go away and don't give them any money. [30:53.480 --> 31:08.480] So if you want to contact these folks, send an email explaining what you need to Randy at ruleoflawradio.com and I will forward it to them and they'll contact you. [31:08.480 --> 31:14.480] Okay, now I have to ask you a question. [31:14.480 --> 31:16.480] Okay. [31:16.480 --> 31:19.480] Okay, I just heard what you said. [31:19.480 --> 31:30.480] So when a police pulls you over a city police in Texas and they give you a ticket, they're just following the procedure. [31:30.480 --> 31:38.480] We know there's a subject matter jurisdiction, first of all, they don't have authority to do it. [31:38.480 --> 31:40.480] And I want to ask this question. [31:40.480 --> 31:48.480] Title 26 plainly says that it is voluntary, but if you're driving in a car, it says you must wear a seatbelt. [31:48.480 --> 31:53.480] It uses the word must, but in Title 26 it says voluntary. [31:53.480 --> 31:59.480] So now you're kind of saying, well, we should just go ahead and do it anyway that they want. [31:59.480 --> 32:02.480] Now I need Barry on here for that argument. [32:02.480 --> 32:05.480] Barry takes on that argument. [32:05.480 --> 32:08.480] Barry Watson. [32:08.480 --> 32:11.480] David Lewis, he doesn't take on that argument. [32:11.480 --> 32:14.480] He just goes to the IRS and say, okay, this is what you need. [32:14.480 --> 32:15.480] This is what you need. [32:15.480 --> 32:16.480] Now you sign off. [32:16.480 --> 32:17.480] We don't owe any money. [32:17.480 --> 32:20.480] So it depends on how you want to take them on. [32:20.480 --> 32:25.480] That's why I wanted you to tell me what you needed so that I know which one to give you to. [32:25.480 --> 32:34.480] Barry will go in, the first thing he will ask the officer or the IRS agent is for their spot commission. [32:34.480 --> 32:38.480] And for the most part, they don't even know what it is. [32:38.480 --> 32:45.480] They have to have it in order to enforce and an IRS agent can't get one. [32:45.480 --> 32:49.480] Only an ATF agent can. [32:49.480 --> 32:55.480] And he takes them to authority to enforce. [32:55.480 --> 33:04.480] And that's what he demands that they show evidence that you have a duty to pay the tax. [33:04.480 --> 33:16.480] And he knows all of the issues they're going to bring to him and he's ready to refute them. [33:16.480 --> 33:28.480] So he takes, Barry would probably be the one who needs to send you to because he will take on exactly that issue. [33:28.480 --> 33:29.480] You still there? [33:29.480 --> 33:30.480] Yes. [33:30.480 --> 33:40.480] Yes, that sounds awesome because it just seems like that we're all living in security over this corrupt agency right here [33:40.480 --> 33:45.480] because nothing's in plain English to where an eighth grader could understand it. [33:45.480 --> 33:47.480] No, wait a minute. [33:47.480 --> 33:49.480] An eighth grader can understand it. [33:49.480 --> 33:54.480] There's only 35,000 pages. [33:54.480 --> 33:57.480] You could understand all of that. [33:57.480 --> 34:00.480] Yeah. [34:00.480 --> 34:04.480] Yeah, I see that. [34:04.480 --> 34:07.480] You don't have to understand all of it. [34:07.480 --> 34:16.480] You have to understand the part that gives them jurisdiction and know how to address that issue. [34:16.480 --> 34:21.480] And Barry knows how to address that issue so they can't get past it. [34:21.480 --> 34:25.480] And he doesn't have problems fighting with them. [34:25.480 --> 34:34.480] Once he takes the law to them and he has them trapped on the law, then they pretty well follow it. [34:34.480 --> 34:39.480] Will he come on your show and teach us how to do that? [34:39.480 --> 34:41.480] Absolutely, he will. [34:41.480 --> 34:44.480] And as a matter of fact, I need to get with him. [34:44.480 --> 34:51.480] We've been intending to schedule a show for a while, but the holidays got in the way and we were going to wait until they're over. [34:51.480 --> 34:54.480] So yeah, I need to talk to Barry anyway. [34:54.480 --> 34:58.480] So I will see if I can't get him back on the show. [34:58.480 --> 35:03.480] That would be great. [35:03.480 --> 35:06.480] Okay, do you have anything else for us? [35:06.480 --> 35:09.480] No, that will do it. I'll call next week. Thank you. [35:09.480 --> 35:11.480] Okay, thank you, Troy. [35:11.480 --> 35:18.480] Okay, we are going to, we got two minutes. We're going to go to Frank in New York. Hello, Frank. [35:18.480 --> 35:20.480] Hey, how are you doing, Randy? [35:20.480 --> 35:26.480] Doing good. What do you have for us today? [35:26.480 --> 35:33.480] I'm a, I got hit by a car on May, May of 16th. [35:33.480 --> 35:40.480] I mean, 2016 and screwed up my neck a bit. [35:40.480 --> 35:44.480] Went to the emergency room. They released me without X-rays. [35:44.480 --> 35:51.480] Retained a lawyer for a settlement with the state farm insurance. [35:51.480 --> 36:00.480] The lawyer set me through a chiropractor without X-rays or MRIs or anything. [36:00.480 --> 36:12.480] And I requested those tests before any manipulation of my spine because I was hurting in my neck. [36:12.480 --> 36:22.480] And he was in correspondence with the lawyer's assistant who dropped the ball and I, [36:22.480 --> 36:29.480] he didn't get his X-rays, but I still attended my appointment with the chiropractor, [36:29.480 --> 36:35.480] which he surprised me and wanted to manipulate my spine. [36:35.480 --> 36:42.480] Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute. This is taking way too long. [36:42.480 --> 36:46.480] We're about to go to break. When we come back on the other side, [36:46.480 --> 36:51.480] kind of sort out the point you want to go to so we know where you're going. [36:51.480 --> 36:54.480] And then these details that make more sense to us. [36:54.480 --> 37:04.480] Hang on. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, we'll be right back. [37:04.480 --> 37:09.480] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [37:09.480 --> 37:13.480] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. [37:13.480 --> 37:17.480] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [37:17.480 --> 37:20.480] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite [37:20.480 --> 37:24.480] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [37:24.480 --> 37:26.480] How can I help logos? [37:26.480 --> 37:28.480] Well, I'm glad you asked. [37:28.480 --> 37:31.480] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [37:31.480 --> 37:35.480] We're ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [37:35.480 --> 37:38.480] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [37:38.480 --> 37:41.480] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [37:41.480 --> 37:47.480] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [37:47.480 --> 37:48.480] Do I pay extra? [37:48.480 --> 37:49.480] No. [37:49.480 --> 37:51.480] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [37:51.480 --> 37:52.480] No. [37:52.480 --> 37:53.480] Can I use my Amazon pride? [37:53.480 --> 37:54.480] No. [37:54.480 --> 37:55.480] I mean, yes. [37:55.480 --> 37:59.480] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. [37:59.480 --> 38:00.480] Thank you so much. [38:00.480 --> 38:02.480] We are Logos. [38:02.480 --> 38:04.480] Happy holidays, Logos. [38:04.480 --> 38:09.480] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [38:09.480 --> 38:13.480] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [38:13.480 --> 38:18.480] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [38:18.480 --> 38:25.480] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [38:25.480 --> 38:28.480] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [38:28.480 --> 38:30.480] How to answer letters and phone calls? [38:30.480 --> 38:33.480] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [38:33.480 --> 38:38.480] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [38:38.480 --> 38:42.480] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [38:42.480 --> 38:45.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [38:45.480 --> 38:53.480] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, or email michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [38:53.480 --> 39:01.480] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [39:01.480 --> 39:04.480] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [39:04.480 --> 39:14.480] This is the Logos, Logos Radio Network. [39:14.480 --> 39:39.480] Oh, come on. [39:39.480 --> 39:45.480] If I can't get everything I want, [39:45.480 --> 39:51.480] I'll get a ranger. [39:51.480 --> 39:56.480] If I can't get everything I need, [39:56.480 --> 40:02.480] I'll get a ranger. [40:02.480 --> 40:07.480] If the people of the world can't get happiness and peace, [40:07.480 --> 40:17.480] I'll get a ranger. [40:17.480 --> 40:19.480] Okay, we are back. [40:19.480 --> 40:24.480] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Frank in New York. [40:24.480 --> 40:26.480] Okay, Frank. [40:26.480 --> 40:28.480] Let me get this thing to unmute. [40:28.480 --> 40:30.480] There we go. Okay. [40:30.480 --> 40:33.480] I just wanted to give you a short narrative. [40:33.480 --> 40:35.480] No, here was the issue. [40:35.480 --> 40:38.480] Whenever you're going to tell us a set of events, [40:38.480 --> 40:45.480] the first thing we need to know is where these events are leading us to. [40:45.480 --> 40:47.480] Now we've got Referential Index. [40:47.480 --> 40:51.480] Now we have a place to put each of the pieces so we can keep them. [40:51.480 --> 40:59.480] So, telling the story first, we're trying to hold all these pieces waiting for a place to put them. [40:59.480 --> 41:03.480] So, where are we going to put these pieces? [41:03.480 --> 41:08.480] Well, I was, I had to drop my lawyer. [41:08.480 --> 41:09.480] He wouldn't take the case. [41:09.480 --> 41:12.480] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You didn't get it. [41:12.480 --> 41:15.480] The chiropractor broke your neck. [41:15.480 --> 41:19.480] I want to go to the malpractice statutes. [41:19.480 --> 41:21.480] Wait a minute. You never did say that. [41:21.480 --> 41:23.480] The chiropractor broke my neck. [41:23.480 --> 41:25.480] Yeah, I talked about the broken neck. [41:25.480 --> 41:28.480] That should have been the first thing you said. [41:28.480 --> 41:31.480] Now we know where all these facts go. [41:31.480 --> 41:43.480] Okay, so the chiropractor did that and you had requested more extensive X-rays and MRIs and they decided not to. [41:43.480 --> 41:46.480] And I got them eventually after he panicked. [41:46.480 --> 41:49.480] The chiropractor panicked after he put me on the floor. [41:49.480 --> 41:52.480] I couldn't walk or move my arms. [41:52.480 --> 41:59.480] And he started yelling at the assistant because he didn't have his X-rays. [41:59.480 --> 42:01.480] He didn't know what he did. [42:01.480 --> 42:06.480] So I got scared. [42:06.480 --> 42:18.480] He put me on a table after that, after the rupture of the disc and rolled, you know, there's a little roller in there. [42:18.480 --> 42:23.480] You rolled my neck for like 20 minutes and I was able to get up again. [42:23.480 --> 42:35.480] But I called the attorney and I told him that I demand to be MRI'd and X-rayed. [42:35.480 --> 42:37.480] They set that up immediately. [42:37.480 --> 42:51.480] I got in there and they found the rupture of disc and an interruption in my spinal nervous system in between C4 or C3 or something like that in my neck. [42:51.480 --> 43:02.480] And so I didn't really realize that this was permanent. [43:02.480 --> 43:05.480] Did they go in and put in a shot? [43:05.480 --> 43:10.480] No, they didn't touch me because I didn't understand. [43:10.480 --> 43:21.480] I couldn't agree with the doctors because I didn't understand their terminology or anything that they were talking about. [43:21.480 --> 43:23.480] It was my neck. [43:23.480 --> 43:28.480] I mean, I didn't want to be paralyzed by any of their procedures because of course... [43:28.480 --> 43:29.480] Okay. [43:29.480 --> 43:31.480] Well, where are you going to? [43:31.480 --> 43:32.480] This is a long story. [43:32.480 --> 43:33.480] Where are you getting to? [43:33.480 --> 43:35.480] You have a question or something? [43:35.480 --> 43:41.480] This is a year and a half of the making and I didn't want to make it long, but I had to include those things. [43:41.480 --> 43:56.480] So I asked the lawyer to go after the chiropractor for malpractice or gross negligence because of his operating on me without any information about my condition. [43:56.480 --> 43:57.480] Right. [43:57.480 --> 44:00.480] He had X-rays and didn't even bother to look at him first. [44:00.480 --> 44:02.480] No, he never had them. [44:02.480 --> 44:03.480] He never had them. [44:03.480 --> 44:04.480] Oh, okay. [44:04.480 --> 44:08.480] And I was hit by a car. [44:08.480 --> 44:14.480] So, I mean, he didn't know anything about my neck. [44:14.480 --> 44:20.480] So I called some lawyers and I tried to get after that the other lawyer to go because he couldn't. [44:20.480 --> 44:27.480] He wouldn't help me and he tried to delay, delay, delay, which I want to talk about some other time. [44:27.480 --> 44:42.480] But the chiropractor is sheltered by the fact that there's a $250,000 cap on medical malpractice since 2003. [44:42.480 --> 44:59.480] And no lawyer in this area has deep enough pockets to put up $100,000 for experts and all the other rigamarole they have to go through now after that statute was passed. [44:59.480 --> 45:10.480] They know I have a case, but since the cap restricts my ability to recover any damages after expenses, [45:10.480 --> 45:13.480] they tell me it's not worth it. [45:13.480 --> 45:18.480] They tell me it's not, it's not economically viable. [45:18.480 --> 45:19.480] Okay. [45:19.480 --> 45:20.480] Nope. [45:20.480 --> 45:22.480] That must be unconstitutional in some way. [45:22.480 --> 45:29.480] And how could I start a fight, a proper fight? [45:29.480 --> 45:30.480] Okay. [45:30.480 --> 45:33.480] As far as I know, that's not in constitution. [45:33.480 --> 45:35.480] This is all civil. [45:35.480 --> 45:36.480] Civil. [45:36.480 --> 45:44.480] But doesn't, if that wouldn't have statute restrict my ability to recover damages after costs? [45:44.480 --> 45:45.480] No, that's all civil. [45:45.480 --> 45:46.480] Still all civil. [45:46.480 --> 45:52.480] And I don't know of any constitutional issues. [45:52.480 --> 45:58.480] The problem is not everything is fair. [45:58.480 --> 45:59.480] No, I know. [45:59.480 --> 46:03.480] And it's not possible to make everything fair. [46:03.480 --> 46:15.480] I have a friend whose sister is an allopathic physician and she got out of general practice [46:15.480 --> 46:19.480] because of the suits and insurance considerations. [46:19.480 --> 46:27.480] She could not adequately take care of her patients because the doctors were being sued for everything. [46:27.480 --> 46:36.480] And it's whether they're at fault or not, it costs them a fortune. [46:36.480 --> 46:38.480] And she just wasn't willing to do it anymore. [46:38.480 --> 46:40.480] And she got out of the business altogether. [46:40.480 --> 46:43.480] This is a real problem. [46:43.480 --> 46:46.480] It's a problem from your side where you're injured. [46:46.480 --> 46:53.480] It's also a problem from doctor's side where they can't effectively function. [46:53.480 --> 46:54.480] Right. [46:54.480 --> 46:56.480] And lawyers have done this. [46:56.480 --> 47:04.480] I know a lot of doctors left Texas because of the previous rules in place. [47:04.480 --> 47:07.480] Now they've come back. [47:07.480 --> 47:13.480] There was 25,000, an influx of 25,000 doctors now in this area. [47:13.480 --> 47:15.480] They came back. [47:15.480 --> 47:26.480] My point is some states ruled this type of cap unconstitutional or prohibited by the Constitution. [47:26.480 --> 47:43.480] Now, if they had protections in place that didn't exceed the Fed, why wouldn't Texas have prohibitions against this type of statute in place [47:43.480 --> 47:48.480] and not adhere to or circumvent it in some way? [47:48.480 --> 47:51.480] I'm not sure what you're asking. [47:51.480 --> 47:58.480] Well, some states prohibit caps on recoveries for injuries by physician. [47:58.480 --> 48:00.480] And some don't. [48:00.480 --> 48:04.480] You have to look at each state's Constitution to see if it was constitutional. [48:04.480 --> 48:05.480] Right. [48:05.480 --> 48:16.480] So, but I read the – I glossed over the comparisons of each state's caps or none at all. [48:16.480 --> 48:18.480] Some have none at all. [48:18.480 --> 48:19.480] Okay. [48:19.480 --> 48:25.480] Did you compare the state's cap position to their Constitution's? [48:25.480 --> 48:26.480] Yes. [48:26.480 --> 48:34.480] They did mention that a few states ruled that it was prohibited by the Constitution. [48:34.480 --> 48:39.480] What part of their Constitution – what was in the Constitution that prohibited that? [48:39.480 --> 48:46.480] I exhausted a lot of my time, so I didn't stick to that before the show. [48:46.480 --> 48:47.480] Okay. [48:47.480 --> 48:53.480] So, I don't know how to address that because this is a state-specific issue. [48:53.480 --> 48:54.480] Right. [48:54.480 --> 49:00.480] So, I'm going to have to dig into that now because it led me all down these different roads. [49:00.480 --> 49:05.480] I called you on your cell and I told you I would research it, but I didn't have quite enough time [49:05.480 --> 49:06.480] as I thought I would have. [49:06.480 --> 49:08.480] It's quite more complicated than I thought. [49:08.480 --> 49:09.480] Yeah. [49:09.480 --> 49:11.480] So, I'm sorry about that. [49:11.480 --> 49:12.480] Okay. [49:12.480 --> 49:17.480] And I'm sorry that I can't help you with it, but it's not my area of medical malpractice. [49:17.480 --> 49:20.480] It's not my area of study. [49:20.480 --> 49:21.480] Okay. [49:21.480 --> 49:27.480] So, let's talk about something maybe you do know something about, which is with my attorney, [49:27.480 --> 49:35.480] Derek, for not raising an issue, maybe reducing my medical bills or … [49:35.480 --> 49:36.480] Okay. [49:36.480 --> 49:42.480] Now, that's another thing that goes to the specifics of a medical malpractice suit. [49:42.480 --> 49:44.480] It is not my area. [49:44.480 --> 49:48.480] I don't know what the lawyer has to bring, what he doesn't have to bring. [49:48.480 --> 49:52.480] I really wouldn't know how to address that. [49:52.480 --> 49:57.480] Okay, hold on, we're about to go to break, Randy Kelton, the rule of our radio. [49:57.480 --> 50:01.480] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [50:01.480 --> 50:03.480] We'll be right back. [50:03.480 --> 50:12.480] You may have heard of whistling while you work, but how about walking while working at your cubicle? [50:12.480 --> 50:13.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright. [50:13.480 --> 50:18.480] In a moment, I'll tell you about the latest concept in health-conscious office furniture, [50:18.480 --> 50:20.480] treadmill desks. [50:20.480 --> 50:22.480] Privacy is under attack. [50:22.480 --> 50:25.480] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [50:25.480 --> 50:30.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [50:30.480 --> 50:32.480] So, protect your rights. [50:32.480 --> 50:36.480] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [50:36.480 --> 50:38.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [50:38.480 --> 50:45.480] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [50:45.480 --> 50:49.480] Start over with StartPage. [50:49.480 --> 50:53.480] Sitting all day can take years off your life, and standing is hard on your back. [50:53.480 --> 50:56.480] So, what's a desk-bound cubicle jockey to do? [50:56.480 --> 50:58.480] How about getting a treadmill desk? [50:58.480 --> 51:05.480] Invented by Dr. James Levine at the Mayo Clinic, the walk station is a slow-moving treadmill rigged up to a desk. [51:05.480 --> 51:08.480] Workers do their normal activities while slowly walking. [51:08.480 --> 51:15.480] Companies from Mutual of Omaha to Humana have signed on, buying these gizmos at $4,300 a pop. [51:15.480 --> 51:18.480] The goal is to lower healthcare costs by keeping people moving. [51:18.480 --> 51:21.480] They really work, and employees say they love them. [51:21.480 --> 51:27.480] But if you think your work day feels like a treadmill now, just wait till the boss cranks that dial up to high. [51:27.480 --> 51:35.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [51:35.480 --> 51:41.480] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [51:41.480 --> 51:43.480] The government says that fire brought it down. [51:43.480 --> 51:48.480] Over 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [51:48.480 --> 51:51.480] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [51:51.480 --> 51:54.480] And thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [51:54.480 --> 51:55.480] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [51:55.480 --> 51:56.480] I'm a structural engineer. [51:56.480 --> 51:58.480] I'm a New York City correction officer. [51:58.480 --> 51:59.480] I'm an Air Force pilot. [51:59.480 --> 52:00.480] I'm the father who lost his son. [52:00.480 --> 52:03.480] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [52:03.480 --> 52:13.480] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [52:33.480 --> 52:40.480] We're the first people to donate to the Logos Network to help continue this program. [52:40.480 --> 52:45.480] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [52:45.480 --> 52:51.480] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [52:51.480 --> 52:53.480] Discounts are based on full roofing plans. [52:53.480 --> 53:03.480] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [53:03.480 --> 53:29.480] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [53:33.480 --> 53:41.480] Okay, we are back. [53:41.480 --> 53:43.480] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. [53:43.480 --> 53:44.480] We need to move along, Frank. [53:44.480 --> 53:46.480] We've got two more callers. [53:46.480 --> 53:48.480] Where do you want to go? [53:48.480 --> 53:52.480] I need to get to some question I can answer. [53:52.480 --> 54:02.480] Can I go after the chiropractor personally without invoking his status as a healthcare provider? [54:02.480 --> 54:08.480] No, he was acting in his capacity as a healthcare provider. [54:08.480 --> 54:14.480] If he came to your house and you were buddies and you asked him to pop your neck, maybe. [54:14.480 --> 54:20.480] But if you went to him and secured his service, he falls under. [54:20.480 --> 54:26.480] Okay, Kent, let's forget about the malpractice because of its prohibitive infrastructure. [54:26.480 --> 54:34.480] What can I do to convince the insurance company to give me the maximum settlement for the car accident? [54:34.480 --> 54:36.480] I have no idea. [54:36.480 --> 54:39.480] This is way too specific. [54:39.480 --> 54:45.480] And even if I did, I wouldn't be qualified to make any of these medical determinations. [54:45.480 --> 54:52.480] This doesn't go to anything I do and I just wouldn't know how to address that. [54:52.480 --> 54:56.480] I had to ask, though. [54:56.480 --> 55:02.480] Okay, so I'll get on with the constitutionality because you're probably more familiar with that aspect. [55:02.480 --> 55:07.480] I'll come in next Thursday with some more information. [55:07.480 --> 55:08.480] Okay, thank you, Frank. [55:08.480 --> 55:10.480] Thank you so much. [55:10.480 --> 55:11.480] Thank you. [55:11.480 --> 55:14.480] Okay, now we're going to Shane in New York. [55:14.480 --> 55:15.480] Hello, Shane. [55:15.480 --> 55:18.480] Sorry, it took so long to get to you. [55:18.480 --> 55:20.480] Hey, Randy, how you doing? [55:20.480 --> 55:27.480] Doing good. We had some technical difficulties earlier in the show and we lost a portion of the show, so it kind of put us behind. [55:27.480 --> 55:30.480] Okay, what do you have for us today? [55:30.480 --> 55:37.480] Well, I'm not sure exactly if you had an opportunity to look at those transcripts that happened on January the 12th. [55:37.480 --> 55:40.480] I think they're about maybe four pages long. [55:40.480 --> 55:46.480] And then we were going to indicate a little about the statutory judgment regarding the power of attorney. [55:46.480 --> 55:53.480] Okay, hold on, hold on. Let's not do a private telephone conversation on the air. [55:53.480 --> 55:56.480] No, exactly. I just want to see if you got it. That's all. [55:56.480 --> 55:59.480] No, I wasn't able to get to read it. [55:59.480 --> 56:06.480] I am in the process of doing the final implementation of a 10-year project. [56:06.480 --> 56:15.480] So I've kind of been a little bit distracted and it is a very large project, but I do need to get to that. [56:15.480 --> 56:18.480] Well, let me have a question. [56:18.480 --> 56:21.480] Can you call me Sunday? [56:21.480 --> 56:26.480] Okay. Let me just ask one quick question and then I'll jump off. [56:26.480 --> 56:27.480] Okay. [56:27.480 --> 56:33.480] Regarding a regulatory judgment, just to focus on one issue. It could be anything. [56:33.480 --> 56:38.480] And the case is still moving forward with another state judge. [56:38.480 --> 56:46.480] Do they use res judicata if they just set on that case as the other one was proceeding into summary judgment? [56:46.480 --> 56:51.480] Wait a minute. You're using pronouns. That case, the other one. [56:51.480 --> 56:54.480] I don't know what that refers to. [56:54.480 --> 56:59.480] Well, the statutory judgment will be a separate case from the pending foreclosure action at the state court level. [56:59.480 --> 57:05.480] Exactly. That's the beauty of a declaratory judgment. [57:05.480 --> 57:13.480] Because in declaratory judgment, you don't get into the issue where a judge says, I'm not going to give someone a free property. [57:13.480 --> 57:19.480] And where the judge thinks we've got some two-bit deadbeat in here trying to put one over on the courts. [57:19.480 --> 57:23.480] You don't get into any of that kind of stuff. [57:23.480 --> 57:30.480] What judges like to do the most is rule on points of law. That's why they're there. [57:30.480 --> 57:36.480] It is the duty of the trial judge to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, [57:36.480 --> 57:41.480] then apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. And it's been my experience. [57:41.480 --> 57:50.480] When I bring a really well-crafted legal issue to judges, they like to deal with those. [57:50.480 --> 57:54.480] And this goes to declaratory judgment. [57:54.480 --> 58:01.480] You're not talking about parties that have been harmed and who deserves what and what's just and what's unjust. [58:01.480 --> 58:04.480] You're not getting into any of that kind of stuff. [58:04.480 --> 58:12.480] You're saying, this law says this. This document was filed under this law. [58:12.480 --> 58:18.480] Does this document meet the requirements of this statute? [58:18.480 --> 58:20.480] That's what the judge is there to do. [58:20.480 --> 58:26.480] Once he renders that ruling, it's a done deal. [58:26.480 --> 58:37.480] Then if you get that ruling in your favor, which is much easier to do in a declaratory judgment suit than in a suit for wrongful foreclosure, [58:37.480 --> 58:43.480] then you can bring that as res judicata into another court. [58:43.480 --> 58:48.480] And when you bring up the issue, the issue is settled. [58:48.480 --> 58:55.480] The second court cannot revisit the decision of the declaratory judgment court. [58:55.480 --> 58:57.480] That gets etched in stone. [58:57.480 --> 59:03.480] So now you come into the other court with the primary issues you needed already ruled on. [59:03.480 --> 59:12.480] And if the ruled in your favor, now you got a suit where it's not a matter of was the foreclosure wrongful. [59:12.480 --> 59:18.480] The foreclosure is based on a document the courts have ruled is void. [59:18.480 --> 59:28.480] Therefore, this court can't rule in any other way if this document is critical to the standing of the party. [59:28.480 --> 59:32.480] In foreclosure, that's where we want to go. [59:32.480 --> 59:35.480] We want to go to who's on first. [59:35.480 --> 59:38.480] I've got this who's on first argument. [59:38.480 --> 59:44.480] Who stands first in line with a valid claim against the property? [59:44.480 --> 59:51.480] And most of them, the guy who's on first is a dead guy. [59:51.480 --> 59:59.480] He was on first and he held the property and he died while he was holding the property. [59:59.480 --> 01:00:11.480] And then MERS comes along and says, oh, I'm an agent for that guy and takes that guy's property or his asset and assigns it to somebody else. [01:00:11.480 --> 01:00:13.480] Oh, wait a minute. [01:00:13.480 --> 01:00:23.480] Maybe MERS was the agent for the dead guy, but agency does not survive death. [01:00:23.480 --> 01:00:32.480] And with a legal fiction, death is never a surprise. [01:00:32.480 --> 01:00:38.480] It's not like the company had a heart attack and killed over dead one day. [01:00:38.480 --> 01:00:43.480] Going out of business or going bankrupt is a lengthy process. [01:00:43.480 --> 01:00:52.480] So this entity that held this asset had plenty of warning that it would cease to exist. [01:00:52.480 --> 01:00:59.480] And it chose not to transfer that asset to a third party. [01:00:59.480 --> 01:01:10.480] Now we can't have a used to be agent coming along and deciding to give that asset to somebody else. [01:01:10.480 --> 01:01:18.480] It's like I have a house here and I don't have a will and I pass away. [01:01:18.480 --> 01:01:26.480] A lawyer I used 10 years ago can't come along and say, okay, I'm his agent and I can take this property and give it to anybody I want to. [01:01:26.480 --> 01:01:28.480] How does that work? [01:01:28.480 --> 01:01:34.480] This is the argument we want to bring to the court. [01:01:34.480 --> 01:01:38.480] Most of these foreclosure cases, this is what I see. [01:01:38.480 --> 01:01:57.480] You've got a lender who issued a mortgage that the banks set up so they could use these mortgage companies to write these mortgages and then sell them to the Special Purpose Vehicle at a loss. [01:01:57.480 --> 01:02:11.480] So they could then bankrupt this company because they're selling all these at a loss and then the Special Purpose Vehicle gets the profitable mortgage and they bankrupted out all of the profits. [01:02:11.480 --> 01:02:13.480] So that was a nice scam. [01:02:13.480 --> 01:02:24.480] But it came back to buy them because they killed the company and didn't transfer all of the assets because it cost them $50 or $100 a piece to transfer the assets. [01:02:24.480 --> 01:02:32.480] So they're trying to save chump change, put them in a position to where they no longer have a proper claim. [01:02:32.480 --> 01:02:37.480] You've got to ask the right question to get the right answer. [01:02:37.480 --> 01:02:41.480] Does that make sense, Shane? [01:02:41.480 --> 01:02:43.480] Excellent. [01:02:43.480 --> 01:02:45.480] Excellent. [01:02:45.480 --> 01:02:51.480] Okay, that's where we're looking to go with declaratory judgments suits. [01:02:51.480 --> 01:02:55.480] Let me just say one thing, that's kind of like checkmate. [01:02:55.480 --> 01:03:10.480] If it's properly put together and properly, you know, presented to the court, then the other court that's moving forward kind of like is kind of what do you call it, idling, I guess, until they make a reason. [01:03:10.480 --> 01:03:12.480] Yeah, they're stuck. [01:03:12.480 --> 01:03:16.480] They've got res due to caught it. They can't step on that other judge. [01:03:16.480 --> 01:03:24.480] I think we could probably do maybe two, three, maybe no more than four pages and that should be good enough. It just matters, you know, filing it. [01:03:24.480 --> 01:03:27.480] And by the way, in New York, it's all e-filing now. [01:03:27.480 --> 01:03:30.480] Yeah, it is here in Texas, too. [01:03:30.480 --> 01:03:32.480] So that makes all this easier. [01:03:32.480 --> 01:03:34.480] Randy, this is checkmate. [01:03:34.480 --> 01:03:37.480] Now, one last question. [01:03:37.480 --> 01:03:40.480] Okay, hang on. We have to pick that up on the other side. [01:03:40.480 --> 01:03:44.480] This is Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. [01:03:44.480 --> 01:03:49.480] I don't give out the call in number, but we've talked about our e-book today. [01:03:49.480 --> 01:04:02.480] You might, if you're in one of these cases, you might want to go look at the e-book, the jurisdiction area, and it is a traffic seminar. [01:04:02.480 --> 01:04:15.480] Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:04:32.480 --> 01:04:58.480] We'll be right back. [01:04:58.480 --> 01:05:05.480] We'll see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you only at impusa.org. [01:05:28.480 --> 01:05:35.480] We'll see you next time. [01:05:58.480 --> 01:06:05.480] Go to logosradio network.com for details and donate today. [01:06:28.480 --> 01:06:54.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Shane in New York. [01:06:54.480 --> 01:06:57.480] Okay, go ahead, Shane. [01:06:57.480 --> 01:07:15.480] Randy, this is kind of like checkmate like I was saying earlier, but my question is, have you ever considered or anybody considered doing a class action lawsuit against a particular law firm if that holds to be true regarding the, you know, this issue would be the assignment? [01:07:15.480 --> 01:07:18.480] I'm sure they're all messed up. [01:07:18.480 --> 01:07:33.480] The class action suit would require counsel and my problem with class action suits, nobody in the class ever gets anything out of the class action suit. [01:07:33.480 --> 01:07:37.480] Only the lawyers. [01:07:37.480 --> 01:07:52.480] And when you have a class action, the first thing the other side's going to do is try to crack apart your class. They'll go after members of your class and try to break them out of the class and then they disrupt the class action. [01:07:52.480 --> 01:08:13.480] Class action is tough. And these for the most part are all individual issues. If you do a class action, the defendant gets to defend himself once against a lot of litigants. [01:08:13.480 --> 01:08:21.480] This is all about the money. I want him defending himself separately against a lot of litigants. [01:08:21.480 --> 01:08:36.480] It's all about the money. And, you know, we've heard the banks complaining about how much it's costing them in litigation. It should cost them a whole lot more. [01:08:36.480 --> 01:08:39.480] Okay. Do you have anything else for us? [01:08:39.480 --> 01:08:52.480] Brandy, I was just going to say that I just emailed you the authority on our declaration of judgment. CPLR 3001 here in the state of New York, but I still can't locate an actual specific fee for it. [01:08:52.480 --> 01:08:57.480] I guess all we have to do is get an index number. There's no real fee. [01:08:57.480 --> 01:09:10.480] I would say, I would imagine, I'm not sure if that's considered a petition or not, or it doesn't really say, but I'll do my research on that. And, you know, I'm not sure what it costs in the state of Texas. [01:09:10.480 --> 01:09:12.480] What's the fee down in Texas? [01:09:12.480 --> 01:09:15.480] For a declaration of judgment? [01:09:15.480 --> 01:09:16.480] Yes. [01:09:16.480 --> 01:09:19.480] $15. [01:09:19.480 --> 01:09:21.480] Oh, wow. Okay. [01:09:21.480 --> 01:09:30.480] I'm going to ask the clerk or whatever court this is filed in and ask the clerk what it costs to file a declaratory adjustment. [01:09:30.480 --> 01:09:44.480] Okay. All right. Thank you very much, Randy. And then I'll give you a call over the weekend and I'll save the rest for later. And, but I consider this kind of like a checkmate because that would, the other court can't really move. [01:09:44.480 --> 01:09:46.480] Right. Right. [01:09:46.480 --> 01:09:52.480] Thank you, Shane. Now we're going to go to Ken in New York. Hello, Ken. [01:09:52.480 --> 01:10:00.480] New Wave, New York. I'm glad you're back on the air. I was listening before and I said, Oh, no, not dead air. [01:10:00.480 --> 01:10:14.480] We had a little bit of an issue. We had one of our phone bridges went down and I didn't know how to bring it up, but Deb come in and save the day and she worked me through the phone bridges. [01:10:14.480 --> 01:10:22.480] I don't know how to bring them up. So if that happens again, I can fix it in 10 years and 10 years. That's the first time that's happened to me. [01:10:22.480 --> 01:10:30.480] Wow. Well, that's why you should always have a common or a 64 sitting around. Just in case. [01:10:30.480 --> 01:10:46.480] You know, some time ago, a little while ago, maybe a couple of weeks ago, you mentioned something about a Supreme Court case that says that a license and I think you were talking about call license and maybe that's something to do with Olivier or something like that. [01:10:46.480 --> 01:10:53.480] And if that's something about you can't take a license without due process. [01:10:53.480 --> 01:11:01.480] Do you remember that? Well, a license is effectively personal property. [01:11:01.480 --> 01:11:08.480] And it has it has value to it and they can't take that from you without due process. [01:11:08.480 --> 01:11:16.480] There are there are statutory provisions that allow an agency to revoke a license. [01:11:16.480 --> 01:11:22.480] And they have to follow those statutory provisions or they denied you in the due process. [01:11:22.480 --> 01:11:33.480] Well, what happened in this case was that somebody had tried to sign the license. This is actually a host on another show and she's pretty good with contract law. [01:11:33.480 --> 01:11:45.480] But she got surprised because she wanted to put without prejudice and sign the name under a license and the person, the bureaucrat wouldn't give it a license. [01:11:45.480 --> 01:11:50.480] And so essentially pull the license from her. [01:11:50.480 --> 01:12:06.480] I would have to look at the the what that meant if she's trying to put the condition on the contract, the license as a contract. [01:12:06.480 --> 01:12:07.480] I understand that. [01:12:07.480 --> 01:12:19.480] And if she's trying to say I agree to the tenants of the contract, but only if I'm not prejudiced by any of the tenants of the contract. [01:12:19.480 --> 01:12:24.480] Right. The other is they're right in case. [01:12:24.480 --> 01:12:35.480] And I can see why the other party would say you're attempting to add a covenant to the contract, a condition to the contract. [01:12:35.480 --> 01:12:45.480] And we don't want to add a condition to the contract. We're bound by statute as to what conditions we can include just by putting without prejudice. [01:12:45.480 --> 01:12:48.480] She's trying to change the contract. [01:12:48.480 --> 01:13:00.480] Well, how does that, how does that play to UCC if both sides are under UCC where theoretically under it or practically under it? [01:13:00.480 --> 01:13:15.480] Well, the if you and I want to enter into a contract and you want to enter into a contract by signing without prejudice, I can decide that I don't want to enter a contract under those conditions. [01:13:15.480 --> 01:13:36.480] And if this license can have the effect of prejudicing you if you don't follow the covenants of the license, putting in the condition that you're agreeing to the license without prejudice would negate the restrictions in the license. [01:13:36.480 --> 01:13:48.480] So it changes it. I wouldn't think the state would be bound to grant a license under a condition that doesn't meet the statutory conditions. [01:13:48.480 --> 01:14:15.480] The person said that since she was signing under prejudice, he could trust anything that she put on the license. But my understanding was that you are reserving rights according to what I read on 1-308 is that the idea is that it's to ensure that you're not agreeing to something that's not in front of you and not on the actual license. [01:14:15.480 --> 01:14:20.480] This was a renewal, by the way. But things change. [01:14:20.480 --> 01:14:37.480] Okay, so you're opposing any non-disclosure or any adhesion contracts that essentially this goes to anything non-disclosed. [01:14:37.480 --> 01:15:00.480] This goes to the specifics of what the contract is. I don't have to see the contract. If the renewal contract did not include a restatement of the entire contract, then... [01:15:00.480 --> 01:15:02.480] Which it typically doesn't. [01:15:02.480 --> 01:15:15.480] Yeah, so she's putting on there without prejudice so that would tend to limit her signature to the conditions that were in this renewal notice. [01:15:15.480 --> 01:15:22.480] And that could become an issue if she's held to the conditions in the original contract. [01:15:22.480 --> 01:15:36.480] But even then, I would have to see how those documents are written. And this kind of goes to National Crop Insurance v. Merrill. [01:15:36.480 --> 01:15:37.480] Is that where... [01:15:37.480 --> 01:15:45.480] In the case you might have been thinking about a couple of weeks ago when I thought I heard you say something about a Supreme Court case. [01:15:45.480 --> 01:15:54.480] I'm not sure what the context was. Supreme Court v. Merrill, I mean the National Crop Insurance v. Merrill. [01:15:54.480 --> 01:16:03.480] Guy plants summer wheat, ensures that the government was providing an insurance program. This is right after World War II. [01:16:03.480 --> 01:16:12.480] He plants summer wheat, ensures that he plants winter wheat, ensures that the winter wheat drought killed the winter wheat crop failed. [01:16:12.480 --> 01:16:24.480] He applied for the insurance. And the government said, the law prevents us from insuring winter wheat after summer wheat. [01:16:24.480 --> 01:16:34.480] And he said, but your government guy sold it to me. And they said, yes, and if this was a private insurance company, you would have a claim. [01:16:34.480 --> 01:16:40.480] But the government by statute is forbidden to do this certain thing. [01:16:40.480 --> 01:16:50.480] And even though one of our operatives allowed you to do this, when you deal with the government, you do so at your peril. [01:16:50.480 --> 01:16:59.480] You need to be sure of the authority of the operative to do what he does. [01:16:59.480 --> 01:17:10.480] Here we have a government official who's doing what he does. And whether you're aware of what he's doing or not. [01:17:10.480 --> 01:17:22.480] If you enter into a contract with him, you're going to be bound by the law that prescribes his behavior, whether he followed that behavior or not. [01:17:22.480 --> 01:17:32.480] And it sounds like she's signing this document saying, I don't want to be bound by that. And the guy said, not going to happen because you're bound by it. [01:17:32.480 --> 01:17:42.480] If you sign the contract, you're bound by it because it is law. It's statutorily required and he can't alter that contract. [01:17:42.480 --> 01:17:47.480] That's the best I could do just to guess not actually seeing what was signed. [01:17:47.480 --> 01:18:02.480] But the agency, she found later on, is a private agency under contract to the state and that they had a book published which had to use like the equivalent of authority to get a hold of it. [01:18:02.480 --> 01:18:14.480] And it did track those in there that had something to do with the Real ID Act. They're trying to merge Real ID and they said they wouldn't accept without prejudice, right in the booklet. [01:18:14.480 --> 01:18:20.480] But this is not a publicly available document. She had to use the authority to get a hold of it. [01:18:20.480 --> 01:18:31.480] Interesting. I'm not familiar enough with UCC to really understand the implications of without prejudice. [01:18:31.480 --> 01:18:41.480] Yeah, I've read several versions of it. The state version follows the feds and it doesn't seem to me that you're trying to integrate the contract. [01:18:41.480 --> 01:18:54.480] Okay, we are out of time. I'm sorry, Ken, but we've got about nine seconds. We'll be back next week. Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:18:54.480 --> 01:19:12.480] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. 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