[00:00.000 --> 00:06.880] The following news flashes brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.880 --> 00:15.560] Markets for Monday 22 July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver $16.45.00, [00:15.560 --> 00:24.640] Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63.00, Brent Crude $62.47.00, and Crypto is an order [00:24.640 --> 00:34.100] of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, [00:34.100 --> 00:41.440] Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a Crypto Coin. [00:41.440 --> 00:52.560] In history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on [00:52.560 --> 00:58.320] Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and [00:58.320 --> 01:08.440] entering 40. Today in history. And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, [01:08.440 --> 01:12.680] legalizing Hemp and Attacks's law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:12.680 --> 01:17.080] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges, [01:17.080 --> 01:21.160] and even refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time [01:21.160 --> 01:26.880] or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District [01:26.880 --> 01:31.280] Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery [01:31.280 --> 01:36.120] of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the [01:36.120 --> 01:40.200] Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that [01:40.200 --> 01:45.600] marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:45.600 --> 01:52.040] of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the district attorney in El Paso, [01:52.040 --> 01:57.400] Cayma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:57.400 --> 02:02.240] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, [02:02.240 --> 02:06.920] the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in [02:06.920 --> 02:11.280] Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something [02:11.280 --> 02:15.800] illegal based on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, [02:15.800 --> 02:25.120] the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five [02:25.120 --> 02:29.800] and a half inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [02:29.800 --> 02:35.600] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [02:35.600 --> 02:40.520] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, [02:40.520 --> 02:46.360] the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins. For the purpose, [02:46.360 --> 03:02.760] it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Ruff Rody with your [03:02.760 --> 03:25.880] name. Well, I received my remedy today. Came in the box just like they say. I accepted [03:25.880 --> 03:40.160] it. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Mountain Roodleball Radio. We're talking to [03:40.160 --> 03:46.640] Chris in Colorado. And, you know, I get kind of excited when I do these things because I've [03:46.640 --> 03:54.120] been to these suits so many times. People who haven't been through them, they think there are all [03:54.120 --> 04:02.640] of these doors that slam in your face. It doesn't work that way. No matter what the other guy does, [04:02.640 --> 04:15.240] there are things you can do. Now lawyers, they're restricted by what the judge likes you to do and [04:15.240 --> 04:22.200] what he doesn't like for you to do. Yeah, I've noticed that too. They're obsessed about that. [04:22.200 --> 04:34.320] Yeah, but we're not lawyers. We don't care. I had a lawyer, I was in a judge Richie's court in [04:34.320 --> 04:40.200] South Side of Fort Worth. And she is furious because where were you bar-greeped her? Mr. Kelton, [04:40.200 --> 04:46.000] are you an attorney? Oh, no. I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. Thank you [04:46.000 --> 04:54.160] very much. And just so you know. And then I turned and looked straight at the judge. I'm not here [04:54.160 --> 05:03.400] dangling by my bar card. That wasn't for the lawyer. That was for the judge. So you want to [05:03.400 --> 05:12.080] mess with me, Bubba. I'll give you a romp through the legal system you won't believe. Chris, you have [05:12.080 --> 05:21.160] that power. One thing you will find in the federal courts as opposed to the state courts is the federal [05:21.160 --> 05:30.320] courts are required, the federal clerks are required to assist prosaic litigants. The federal [05:30.320 --> 05:36.520] courts are accustomed to dealing with more serious issues and more highly trained, highly paid [05:36.520 --> 05:43.880] professional lawyers. So you don't get the kind of trashy garbage you do in the state courts. They [05:43.880 --> 05:50.680] treat you with dignity and respect and pleasant. They're civil. And it's a lot easier to work in [05:50.680 --> 06:04.000] the federal courts. And all of the judges are terrified of the federal judges. I once filed [06:04.000 --> 06:10.160] criminal charges against a federal judge for ruling against me on a petition for declaratory [06:10.160 --> 06:19.520] judgment. Never heard one peep about it. No lawyer in his right professional mind would [06:19.520 --> 06:31.720] ever imagine such a thing. Point is, as a knowledgeable prosaic litigant, you're just like [06:31.720 --> 06:39.520] a civilian on a military base. You can stomp through these guys. You don't care what the judge [06:39.520 --> 06:45.640] likes, what he don't like. Chris, have you ever stood in court and asked the bailiff to arrest [06:45.640 --> 06:55.120] the judge? No, I haven't. Not yet. I've done that seven times. I did it two times in one, [06:55.120 --> 07:02.600] either two or three times, in Bell County, in Temple, Texas. I asked the bailiff, did you hear [07:02.600 --> 07:08.320] that? Yes, Mr. Colton, I did. Arrest that judge. And the judge jumps up, clear the jury, clear the [07:08.320 --> 07:14.000] jury. And while the jury is filing out, I'm arguing with the bailiff about arresting the judge. [07:14.000 --> 07:19.560] And the judge said, Mr. Colton, you can't do that. You need to be quiet. Yes, I can do that. And [07:19.560 --> 07:30.560] you get over there and arrest that judge. The problem is, once I've asked the bailiff to [07:30.560 --> 07:39.840] arrest the judge, anything the judge says now becomes witness tampering and obstruction. You [07:39.840 --> 07:46.400] are the most powerful guy in the courtroom. You're the only one in there, you and the other [07:46.400 --> 07:54.360] litigant are the only one in there that has any rights. Everybody else only has professional [07:54.360 --> 08:03.680] privileges. The judge has two duties. Determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence. [08:03.680 --> 08:09.000] Apply the laws that comes to him to the facts in the case. He fails to do that. You get to [08:09.000 --> 08:15.960] hammer him. The judge says anything to you that you can construe as intimidating or threatening. [08:15.960 --> 08:29.240] That's debated for arresting. That'll get that kind of stuff fixed. I just got a call from a [08:29.240 --> 08:36.720] friend of mine named Ken Magnuson. I guess he forgot that I'm doing a radio show. And I forgot [08:36.720 --> 08:45.000] to mute my phone that turned the sound off on my phone. My bad. I thought I had it off. Okay, [08:45.000 --> 08:51.000] I just hung up on him. I did that so he could hear me talking so he's being chastised. Okay, [08:51.000 --> 08:57.360] but you are the most powerful guy in there. Once you realize that, they do not want to see it. [08:57.360 --> 09:05.600] When I do that kind of stuff, I don't just do it just to be annoying. Everything I do is about [09:05.600 --> 09:16.040] how do I push these guys into a position to where they want to make a deal with me. If I got a judge [09:16.040 --> 09:23.440] with a real bad attitude, I love those guys. I'll have so much fun with them. I'm barred [09:23.440 --> 09:28.760] grievous every time they squeak. Now, if I get a judge that conducts himself with dignity and [09:28.760 --> 09:39.720] respect, that is a warning to me to be careful. You're dealing with a pro here. I was in Denton [09:39.720 --> 09:48.400] County and I've told the story about telling the head of the criminal intake section in Denton [09:48.400 --> 09:54.200] County District Attorney's Office. If you'll just bend over while pulling that while head, [09:54.200 --> 09:58.880] you're behind for you so we can go back and treat one another like mature and responsible adults. [09:58.880 --> 10:07.840] Well, I told him that and he kind of froze in his tracks and then this investigator named Mr. [10:07.840 --> 10:15.040] Cox stepped out the door to the side. The first time I saw Mr. Cox, I said to myself, [10:15.040 --> 10:25.920] self, don't mess with this guy. His demeanor tells me that he's a pro. Don't mess with a pro. You [10:25.920 --> 10:32.320] can work with a pro and I worked with him really well, but I never messed with him. If you've got [10:32.320 --> 10:39.480] a judge who's conducting himself appropriately and with dignity and respect, don't mess with him. [10:39.480 --> 10:48.720] But if you've got a judge who has an attitude, show him what an attitude is. You're the civilian on [10:48.720 --> 10:55.560] the military base. You are the baddest motor scooter in the building. When you walk into a [10:55.560 --> 10:59.600] courthouse, you're the baddest motor scooter in the building because all of these guys in there [10:59.600 --> 11:09.280] and guys and girls are all public servants. They're the servants. You're the master. I know it's [11:09.280 --> 11:17.080] easy to say that. When you hear that, you want to say, yeah, it's easy for you to say that, [11:17.080 --> 11:27.040] but that's not so easy for me to actually practice that. I want to say yes, it is. It's just not so [11:27.040 --> 11:36.400] easy for you to think that. Once you've asked the bailiff to arrest the judge the first time, [11:36.400 --> 11:48.480] everything changes. Brett, you've been there. Yes, it's amazing how when you just step up and [11:48.480 --> 11:57.400] stand up, they have to shift and shuffle and change their positions. When Brett first started [11:57.400 --> 12:06.560] taking them on, I talked this stuff. When you first started this, could you have done that? [12:06.560 --> 12:12.360] Could you have asked the bailiff to arrest the judge? I don't think I would have thought that [12:12.360 --> 12:21.320] I'd get out alive saying something like that. What about now? Now they just need to follow the [12:21.320 --> 12:32.440] law and that's all there is to it. The greatest power they have over you is perception. They [12:32.440 --> 12:36.320] will do everything they can to give you the perception that they are the boss and they [12:36.320 --> 12:48.240] control. When you step right up in the middle of the judge, everything changes. I went into [12:48.240 --> 12:53.440] court once and I wanted to challenge the grand jury pool. I gave him notice of us coming. [12:53.440 --> 12:58.080] I went and sat in the courtroom, the judge and panel of the grand jury. The grand jury [12:58.080 --> 13:03.160] started out and I told the judge, I stood up and I said, after he adjourned the court, [13:03.160 --> 13:08.800] so now he's not the judge anymore. He's just an administrator. I said, Your Honor, [13:08.800 --> 13:14.840] you need to call that panel back in here. Reconvene the panel. Give me opportunity to [13:14.840 --> 13:23.400] challenge the panel. They did select another grand jury. You're going to have to do that [13:23.400 --> 13:29.400] according to the rules. There are no rules. Since there are no rules, you have to ensure [13:29.400 --> 13:39.560] that my rights are protected. You'll just have to follow the proper procedure. I forgot [13:39.560 --> 13:44.920] what else I said to him. He said, Mr. Beliff, arrest Mr. Kelton. The bailiff walked over [13:44.920 --> 13:51.680] and put his hand on my arm. I looked down at his hand and I said, Mr. Beliff, I see [13:51.680 --> 13:57.120] you're wearing a pistol. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I am. Tell me, Mr. Beliff, is that pistol [13:57.120 --> 14:04.200] loaded? Yes, Mr. Kelton, it is. I'm sorry. In this case, I said, Mr. Beliff, is that [14:04.200 --> 14:09.520] pistol loaded? And before the bailiff could say yes, it is, the judge said, Mr. Beliff, [14:09.520 --> 14:19.040] you can stand down. Sorry, bubba. That bail has already been rung. I went to the prosecuting [14:19.040 --> 14:24.440] attorney and gave him a criminal complaint against the judge for first degree felony [14:24.440 --> 14:32.920] aggravated assault. Want to dance, bad boy? We'll see how this works for you. You can [14:32.920 --> 14:41.960] do this. This is the power you have. The judge says anything that you can in any way take [14:41.960 --> 14:50.440] as a threat. And they do that all the time. That's the bailiff to arrest him. In Montgomery [14:50.440 --> 15:00.240] County, when the bailiff refused to take my writ of habeas corpus because I wasn't a lawyer, [15:00.240 --> 15:06.880] they had stopped a murder trial to hear my habeas. And the judge said, well, are you [15:06.880 --> 15:11.560] Mr. Kelton? Yes, I am. Are you the one to file this habeas? Yes, in fact, I am. Are [15:11.560 --> 15:16.360] you an attorney? Oh, no, judge. I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. [15:16.360 --> 15:20.840] Thank you very much. And the judge said, well, Mr. Kelton, since you're not an attorney, [15:20.840 --> 15:31.360] I'm not going to accept this habeas. And I followed the rules. Never give fair warning. [15:31.360 --> 15:38.280] If you ever give fair warning, they'll treat you as if you are agitated and they'll take [15:38.280 --> 15:44.200] it as a threat. Even though you can't threaten to do something that's legal, you can only [15:44.200 --> 15:48.520] threaten to do something that's not illegal. If you tell them you're going to do something [15:48.520 --> 15:53.520] that's legal, that's giving fair warning. But they'll treat it as a threat. So I didn't [15:53.520 --> 15:56.440] threaten. I just turned to the bailiff. I said, Mr. Bailiff, do you hear that? Yes, [15:56.440 --> 16:03.320] Mr. Kelton, I did. Arrest that judge. And when I did that, that judge shut his mouth. [16:03.320 --> 16:10.360] And he kept his mouth shut until the bailiff absolutely refused. Then he picked up the [16:10.360 --> 16:16.480] gavel and said, Mr. Bailiff, Mr. Kelton doesn't leave my courtroom. You're to arrest him. [16:16.480 --> 16:22.120] I said, with all due respect, Your Honor, that's cheating. Yes, Mr. Kelton, but I got [16:22.120 --> 16:28.600] the gavel. Good point. Turn to the bailiff. You, come with me. He's stormed out of the [16:28.600 --> 16:33.240] courtroom. Chris, you can do these kind of things. [16:33.240 --> 16:40.240] Well, I'm not sure we have to because I really just want to bury the lawyer under the bridge. [16:40.240 --> 16:50.320] Oh, you file a petition in intervention and you definitely have a standing in the court. [16:50.320 --> 16:56.320] The judge denies it. Who cares? Hang on. We'll pick this up on the other side. Randy Kelton, [16:56.320 --> 17:02.400] Brett Fountain, Real Law Radio. 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Order [18:54.600 --> 19:01.600] your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:24.600 --> 19:38.920] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 20th [19:38.920 --> 19:48.920] day of March, 2020. And Chris, I guess I kind of owe you an apology. I used you. I sometimes [19:48.920 --> 19:55.600] use my listener, my caller, to talk to the listeners. And this is something we haven't [19:55.600 --> 20:00.760] spoke to in a long time. And you kind of led into it. So I got to talk about how powerful [20:00.760 --> 20:05.760] the individual is. And I'd like to go through that sometime. So now I'm going to focus back [20:05.760 --> 20:15.920] on your issue. You have the standing to intervene in the case. That will give you, that'll get [20:15.920 --> 20:21.560] you into the case. Once you're back, you are, you have standing in the case. What do you [20:21.560 --> 20:29.760] want to do? Well, the original part of this was a mess. And had I known more, I would [20:29.760 --> 20:34.520] have done a lot more. But they got lawyers involved. Some of them were friends. I did [20:34.520 --> 20:38.000] it kind of as a favor because it wasn't federal court. And apparently there's also a rule [20:38.000 --> 20:44.640] that an LLC cannot be represented by anything but a lawyer. I don't understand that. But [20:44.640 --> 20:54.440] now that rule has changed, you know. Let me explain that. An LLC is a legal fiction. [20:54.440 --> 21:02.840] It's not a human being. A human being can represent themselves. But a legal fiction [21:02.840 --> 21:13.040] does not have the same rights as a human being. A legal fiction has standing. They are construed [21:13.040 --> 21:23.680] as a person under law for the purpose of certain rights. But the right to represent themselves [21:23.680 --> 21:31.760] in court is not one of those rights. So if you're an LLC or a corporation or any of the [21:31.760 --> 21:41.920] legal fictions other than a trust, in a trust, a trustee can represent the trust, per se. [21:41.920 --> 21:53.840] In certain circumstances. So if your company has been sued, then you should have a lawyer [21:53.840 --> 21:57.280] representing your company. Do you have that in the lawsuit? [21:57.280 --> 22:06.480] We have that. We have that. But there's no more money to pay them. They had to back out. [22:06.480 --> 22:12.280] So they've resigned. And now it's just out there. And she pretty quickly afterwards [22:12.280 --> 22:18.320] tried to get the motion for a judgment against the company. [22:18.320 --> 22:27.520] Okay. Ask the petition in the court for court upon a counsel. You have a right to counsel. [22:27.520 --> 22:36.640] But the litigation has been so costly that you can no longer afford counsel and ask the [22:36.640 --> 22:42.280] court to appoint counsel for you. Okay. So we have that right? [22:42.280 --> 22:48.200] You have that right. You have a right to counsel even in a civil action. And it's a common [22:48.200 --> 22:54.680] tactic for lawyers to use up all your funds and then they get a default judgment against [22:54.680 --> 23:00.360] you. Because you can't afford a lawyer to fight them. [23:00.360 --> 23:07.680] But start bar-grieving the lawyer once a week. Okay. So I can motion to intervene then [23:07.680 --> 23:11.680] because I'm involved because it's that technique of my company. I can also motion to have them [23:11.680 --> 23:15.240] sign a attorney and then I can put you back out of her. [23:15.240 --> 23:22.640] Okay. The fact that you have, what type of legal fiction is your company? Is it a corporation? [23:22.640 --> 23:36.520] LLC. LLC. I'm not intimately familiar with the rules concerning an LLC. So I can't really [23:36.520 --> 23:44.080] address whether or not you can come in in your individual capacity. You can test it [23:44.080 --> 23:51.600] with a motion and intervention and you'll get the other side to create a pleading. But [23:51.600 --> 24:00.520] probably the best thing you can do is file an action and they'll object and you file [24:00.520 --> 24:08.640] an appeal and just keep hammering them and from your personal perspective and cost them [24:08.640 --> 24:14.920] more money. You may run the complainant out of money. [24:14.920 --> 24:18.800] They ran out a while ago. I don't know where the money's coming from, but she's paid for [24:18.800 --> 24:22.880] deposition. She's paid for video deposition. She's been doing this for two years. I think [24:22.880 --> 24:28.360] she's doing this for pride. The reason I was asking, Randy, if this aggravated perjury [24:28.360 --> 24:34.800] could be used, because she's on all kinds of boards of ethics within the bar association [24:34.800 --> 24:39.680] and all this kind of thing. And she's known though as a pretty sleazy game player, but [24:39.680 --> 24:44.480] no other lawyers really have any respect for it. Judges have commented that her tactics [24:44.480 --> 24:56.280] are questionable. Did Sue her personally? I would like to, but my partner, I don't know [24:56.280 --> 25:01.160] what he's doing, to be honest. I don't know what the angle he's coming from, but he's [25:01.160 --> 25:05.880] always been costuming me to just stand back and that keeps saying, this is crazy. I tell [25:05.880 --> 25:10.680] the story and it's over. The judge and the jury hear the real story. That's the other [25:10.680 --> 25:17.400] part. She's lied about everything. There is no fraud. They've accused him and the company [25:17.400 --> 25:23.360] of... Okay. If she's committed perjury, then go after [25:23.360 --> 25:32.440] her criminally. That's not something your partner would have any standing to address. [25:32.440 --> 25:38.280] That is your civic duty. If you have knowledge that a crime has been committed and you don't [25:38.280 --> 25:49.160] report that crime, you can potentially be prosecuted yourself. 18 U.S. code for misprison [25:49.160 --> 25:54.920] of felony. In the Fed, if you have knowledge that a felony has been committed and you don't [25:54.920 --> 26:03.160] report that felony, you can be prosecuted. Most states, let's say some states have statutes [26:03.160 --> 26:12.960] that make it a crime not to report crime. Most of them only go to felony, but if you [26:12.960 --> 26:20.440] report a felony, no one... You have the same immunity from suit or any kind of retribution [26:20.440 --> 26:27.840] that a judge has. You have a duty to report crimes, start reporting crime. When a prosecutor [26:27.840 --> 26:37.120] doesn't act, then you can pursue the prosecutor. At the end of the day, it's all political. [26:37.120 --> 26:45.560] If nobody likes this lawyer, you start giving prosecutors political cannon fodder to get [26:45.560 --> 26:55.000] rid of this lawyer. The lawyer is likely to change your tactics and come to the table. [26:55.000 --> 27:02.200] So making a false accusation that's considered criminal behavior? [27:02.200 --> 27:12.720] If she has made a material statement of fact under oath, that is false. And you can prove [27:12.720 --> 27:23.360] it's false. Or she has made two material statements of fact, one contradictory to the other. [27:23.360 --> 27:28.840] If one is true, the other one must be false. If that's the case, it doesn't matter which [27:28.840 --> 27:34.560] one is perjurious. If one has to be, you don't have to prove that it's perjurious. If one [27:34.560 --> 27:42.320] has to be for the other one to be true, then you don't have to prove it. You just have [27:42.320 --> 27:49.800] to say there's mutually exclusive testimony or statements and you don't have to prove [27:49.800 --> 27:59.440] which one's perjurious isn't one of them has to be. I didn't speak that very articulately. [27:59.440 --> 28:07.360] If there are two statements, one of which has to be false for the other to be true, [28:07.360 --> 28:13.360] and she's made them both in the case, you don't have to show which one is false. Just [28:13.360 --> 28:19.640] that one of them must be for the other one to be true. That's sufficient to charge her [28:19.640 --> 28:27.240] with aggravated perjury. That's sufficient for a conviction. So charge, and when the [28:27.240 --> 28:32.340] prosecuting attorney doesn't want to act, then you go after the prosecuting attorney. [28:32.340 --> 28:42.680] You create political cannon fodder. If this lawyer is already not well liked or well trusted, [28:42.680 --> 28:49.440] then you will give the prosecutor political cannon fodder to get rid of her. They will [28:49.440 --> 28:55.920] never be afraid of you. What they'll be afraid of is the political cannon fodder you can [28:55.920 --> 29:01.600] give their political enemies. So if you have judges and prosecutors who don't like this [29:01.600 --> 29:06.040] lawyer, don't trust this lawyer, you may give them what they need to get rid of this [29:06.040 --> 29:14.800] lawyer. And even if they don't, this lawyer is likely to see that as a potential outcome [29:14.800 --> 29:21.440] and give her a political reason to get off the dime. Make sense? [29:21.440 --> 29:27.560] I think so, yeah. Okay. I do need to move on. I've got a whole board [29:27.560 --> 29:33.760] for the callers. We're going to our sponsors. This is Randy Kelton, Brent Fountain, Wheel [29:33.760 --> 29:42.120] of Our Radio. I call it number 512-646-1984. This is a good time to go to our, to Logos [29:42.120 --> 29:48.960] Radio Network and check out our sponsors. And on there we have sponsors that will help [29:48.960 --> 29:57.520] you secure the kinds of remedy we talk about on this radio show. And taking advantage of [29:57.520 --> 30:04.520] those sponsors will help us keep this radio show. [30:27.520 --> 30:36.120] It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:36.120 --> 30:43.680] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [30:43.680 --> 30:48.120] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. The [30:48.120 --> 30:52.680] Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter [30:52.680 --> 30:57.960] per second or faster live longer than expected. In case you're wondering, one meter per second [30:57.960 --> 31:02.800] is about two and a quarter miles per hour. A senior's age, gender, and walking speed [31:02.800 --> 31:07.360] were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.360 --> 31:13.160] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [31:13.160 --> 31:17.560] It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. Researchers say it could [31:17.560 --> 31:21.680] help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.680 --> 31:28.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.680 --> 32:06.640] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. Scripture Talk [32:06.640 --> 32:12.720] with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. Our goal is [32:12.720 --> 32:18.160] in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your [32:18.160 --> 32:23.640] good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's light [32:23.640 --> 32:28.880] and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by [32:28.880 --> 32:35.400] verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:35.400 --> 32:39.800] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [32:39.800 --> 32:45.480] one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound [32:45.480 --> 32:51.280] doctrine as well as Christian character development. So mark your calendar and join us live on [32:51.280 --> 32:58.000] LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring [32:58.000 --> 33:23.000] and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:23.000 --> 33:48.000] Thank you very much for joining us on Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [33:48.000 --> 33:55.000] Thank you very much for joining us on Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [34:18.000 --> 34:36.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruevlar Radio. If I seem to be chuckling, [34:36.000 --> 34:41.680] I'm looking at my collar board and I just got someone called in from Hicksville, New [34:41.680 --> 34:49.680] York. That should be interesting. Okay, we're going to... Wait a minute, that's unmuted. [34:49.680 --> 34:54.920] We're going to someone in Bastrop, Texas. If you're from Bastrop, Texas, I don't have [34:54.920 --> 35:02.680] you in my database. So give me a first name and what do you have for us? [35:02.680 --> 35:20.680] Hello. Hello, Bastrop. Speak to me, Bastrop. Well, that's not working else so good. Okay. [35:20.680 --> 35:27.680] We are somebody there. Yeah, but I can't hear them. If you're trying to speak and we can't [35:27.680 --> 35:32.680] hear you and you're from Bastrop, try hanging up and calling back because we're not getting [35:32.680 --> 35:40.680] anything from you. Okay, we are going to go to Tina in California. Hello, Ms. Tina. [35:40.680 --> 35:48.680] Hello, Mr. Randy. And Brett, how are you? [35:48.680 --> 35:52.680] Oh, you are not on your new headset. You sound horrible. [35:52.680 --> 35:59.680] Hold on, but I will. Hold on, but I will be in... Is that better? [35:59.680 --> 36:02.680] No. I'm off the headset. [36:02.680 --> 36:06.680] Okay, now that's better. Now that's better. Looking plainer. Yeah. [36:06.680 --> 36:10.680] Okay, what do you have for us today? [36:10.680 --> 36:19.680] I'm cooking dinner, so if I can actually do something. Anyway, I've got a question for [36:19.680 --> 36:34.680] my friend, the one who's facing the foreclosure issues. And I wanted to ask how to address... [36:34.680 --> 36:41.680] He's got this motion in the nominee that's trying to file. And one of the things that [36:41.680 --> 36:52.680] they said addresses all the correspondence and everything else. Most of them say they [36:52.680 --> 36:58.680] want to object to the exhibit on the grounds that it is not relevant to the claim. All [36:58.680 --> 37:05.680] defenses in this action is immaterial, vague, overbroad, ambiguous, unduly burdensome, [37:05.680 --> 37:12.680] and constituted... Okay, hold on. I think we have things mixed up. You started out with [37:12.680 --> 37:23.680] motion in limony. And then there are objections to discovery. These are presented [37:23.680 --> 37:33.680] differently. Motion in limony requires a hearing where you ask the judge to restrict [37:33.680 --> 37:41.680] the other side from asking certain questions in court. Motion in limony doesn't [37:41.680 --> 37:48.680] really have anything to do with discovery. Okay, this is the title of it. Plaintiff [37:48.680 --> 38:02.680] Omnibus Motion in Limony to Strike or Proclude Testimony and Exhibit. [38:02.680 --> 38:10.680] Okay. That'll work. It doesn't go to discovery, but it goes to what can be presented [38:10.680 --> 38:18.680] in court. Yeah. And so they're objecting to everything my friend has put in, saying [38:18.680 --> 38:24.680] it's immaterial, vague, overbroad, ambiguous, and unduly burdensome. I mean [38:24.680 --> 38:30.680] everything. There's probably 40 things here. There's one particular thing I want to [38:30.680 --> 38:36.680] ask you about in a minute, but what would you answer to where they say everything [38:36.680 --> 38:42.680] is immaterial, vague, overbroad? I mean, this is the standard... Objection. [38:42.680 --> 38:48.680] Opposing counsel's objections are overbroad. [38:48.680 --> 38:56.680] Yes, that's what I want to put. And without support, frivolous. [38:56.680 --> 39:05.680] Opposing counsel's objections are overbroad. [39:05.680 --> 39:12.680] I would move the court to request clarification from opposing counsel. [39:12.680 --> 39:17.680] Okay. To request clarification. Okay. [39:17.680 --> 39:24.680] They have objected to a request being overbroad. Ask them to ask the court to [39:24.680 --> 39:31.680] order the other side to explain what they mean by overbroad. The term overbroad [39:31.680 --> 39:42.680] is by its very nature overbroad. And what's irrelevant, what specifically is irrelevant, [39:42.680 --> 39:48.680] and why specifically is that irrelevant? [39:48.680 --> 39:59.680] What specifically is irrelevant, and why? And then the ambiguous? [39:59.680 --> 40:03.680] They once used that with me. They said it was ambiguous. They didn't understand the [40:03.680 --> 40:06.680] term debt. [40:06.680 --> 40:14.680] They didn't define it. They'd look up a definition of debt and file that in the [40:14.680 --> 40:19.680] leading. Here's the definition of debt we're using here. And this is an issue that [40:19.680 --> 40:25.680] I bring. I have a motion when you go to my traffic ticket site. One of the motions [40:25.680 --> 40:33.680] in there, ask the court to order opposing counsel. When they use a term that has a [40:33.680 --> 40:39.680] special meaning, please provide that special meaning. So that's what they're [40:39.680 --> 40:50.680] saying. They're asking you to define what you mean by a term. That. Okay. Give them [40:50.680 --> 40:55.680] one. It doesn't matter. You can pull it out of the thin air if you want to. Just [40:55.680 --> 41:03.680] give them one. It doesn't have to be Webster. It doesn't have to be blacks. It [41:03.680 --> 41:10.680] doesn't have to be out of case law. When I use the term debt in this context, this [41:10.680 --> 41:15.680] is what I mean. There you go. Deal with that, guys. [41:15.680 --> 41:21.680] I like that. When they say it's unduly burdensome, after a big form of [41:21.680 --> 41:25.680] attorneys, why would it be unduly burdensome? [41:25.680 --> 41:32.680] That would depend on the nature of the request. And all you need to do is [41:32.680 --> 41:38.680] demonstrate why the request is necessary. The fact that it's burdensome is [41:38.680 --> 41:45.680] irrelevant if it's necessary. Yeah. One thing I like to do when they say that [41:45.680 --> 41:51.680] about records request is to just say it's your job. That is your job [41:51.680 --> 41:59.680] description. I like that. Your job. One of the things they say here, I'm just [41:59.680 --> 42:05.680] taking one out of this. Miami Dade judges order, we detect criminal [42:05.680 --> 42:11.680] contempt charge because he has detects within there. And it says federal [42:11.680 --> 42:16.680] home loan mortgage corporation objects to this exhibit on the grounds that it is [42:16.680 --> 42:23.680] not relevant to the claim, but he's a federal home loan mortgage or defences [42:23.680 --> 42:30.680] in this action is immaterial, vague, overboard, highly prejudicial, ambiguous, [42:30.680 --> 42:35.680] unduly burdensome and constitute inadmissible hearsay. Why would a [42:35.680 --> 42:41.680] judge's order read detects criminal behavior be inadmissible hearsay? [42:41.680 --> 42:50.680] It's a judge's order. He's got detect within his chain of whatever. [42:50.680 --> 42:59.680] They're saying a judge's order is inadmissible hearsay. Yes. [42:59.680 --> 43:06.680] And then just to raise the objection, you know, you claim that the judge's [43:06.680 --> 43:15.680] order, it is the ask for clarification. It's unclear how a judge's order could [43:15.680 --> 43:20.680] be construed hearsay. Is it a judge's order in the current, in the instant [43:20.680 --> 43:26.680] case? No, it's in a different case, but it's regarding the criminal, the [43:26.680 --> 43:32.680] contempt charge against detect, so it's in his thing, you know, in his case [43:32.680 --> 43:38.680] because they claim that they would use the payment from the mortgage and when [43:38.680 --> 43:43.680] he sends them, they send them back. Okay. Is the criminal contempt charge a [43:43.680 --> 43:50.680] matter of public record? Yes. Okay. Then it can't be construed as hearsay. [43:50.680 --> 43:57.680] You can ask the court to take judicial notice of it. If you ask that it be [43:57.680 --> 44:02.680] presented, we'll be right back. Through advances in technology, our lives [44:02.680 --> 44:07.680] have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets [44:07.680 --> 44:11.680] better than they feed themselves. And it's time we changed all that. 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Order now. [45:00.680 --> 45:05.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney [45:05.680 --> 45:10.680] with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that [45:10.680 --> 45:16.680] will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. If you have a lawyer, know what [45:16.680 --> 45:21.680] your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do [45:21.680 --> 45:26.680] for yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can [45:26.680 --> 45:31.680] too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of [45:31.680 --> 45:36.680] case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what [45:36.680 --> 45:41.680] everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control [45:41.680 --> 45:46.680] our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, [45:46.680 --> 45:52.680] tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit [45:52.680 --> 46:02.680] ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:22.680 --> 46:31.680] Yeah, always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. When I'm hungry, I like to [46:31.680 --> 46:38.680] know just what I'm wishing for. I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be [46:38.680 --> 46:47.680] no blood. I'm just here making my living pushing button. I'll give my message [46:47.680 --> 46:54.680] or I'll do anyone in the shot and distance. Hope for bravery and against [46:54.680 --> 47:01.680] slavery showing resistance. First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start [47:01.680 --> 47:07.680] strutting. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio on [47:07.680 --> 47:15.680] this Friday, the 20th day of March, 2020, and we're talking to Tina in California. [47:15.680 --> 47:29.680] Okay, Tina, this sounds like a complex subject. Can you send me the documents in [47:29.680 --> 47:37.680] the case? I will send you it, but one thing, two things I'd like you to sort of [47:37.680 --> 47:42.680] address here, because actually one of them is quite funny, and one will really go [47:42.680 --> 47:48.680] to what you're always telling us to do. The one that says they're objecting to a [47:48.680 --> 47:57.680] case called Bruniger, the direct financial case, the blank room attorney. Oh, no, [47:57.680 --> 48:04.680] no, all filings by blank room for direct case number. Now, this is blank room of [48:04.680 --> 48:09.680] the attorneys that are going after him in court, but they object to this exhibit on [48:09.680 --> 48:15.680] the grounds that it is not relevant to the claims or dispenses in this action is [48:15.680 --> 48:21.680] immaterial, vague, overbroad, ambiguous, and unduly burdensome. Now, this is all [48:21.680 --> 48:27.680] their filings for a different case against direct, but they're ambiguous and [48:27.680 --> 48:35.680] overbroad and vague. This is way too complex, and it's all contextual. I'd have [48:35.680 --> 48:40.680] to see what's being claimed in the context in which it's being claimed. So the [48:40.680 --> 48:45.680] only way I can do this is if I'm looking at the documents. I would hate to say [48:45.680 --> 48:50.680] you should do one thing or the other without being able to see the entire [48:50.680 --> 48:56.680] context of what's going on here. Okay, I will send it to you, but take a look at [48:56.680 --> 49:01.680] this one. They are saying that all Florida law complaints, which we've written [49:01.680 --> 49:07.680] a few of them, they object to this exhibit about all the bar complaints on the [49:07.680 --> 49:12.680] grounds that it is not relevant to the claims or dispenses in this action. They [49:12.680 --> 49:17.680] further objects on the grounds that the exhibit is being used solely for the [49:17.680 --> 49:24.680] purpose of harassment and embarrassment and is highly prejudicial. They are [49:24.680 --> 49:33.680] exactly right. I thought you'd love that one. Yeah, so they're exactly right. [49:33.680 --> 49:41.680] That's exactly what you're doing with it. It is irrelevant and stipulate. It's [49:41.680 --> 49:46.680] already before the court. You can say, oh, judge, ignore the fact that there were [49:46.680 --> 49:51.680] all of those bar grievances, and the judge will say, sure, I'll ignore that. [49:51.680 --> 49:56.680] You know how that's going to work? We watched these movies where the judge [49:56.680 --> 50:01.680] said the jury will ignore that. The latest outburst. Yeah, how's that going to [50:01.680 --> 50:08.680] work out for you? Yeah, so they're right in that case. Bar grievances being brought [50:08.680 --> 50:16.680] up in court is a no-no. What about if it's brought up for the purpose of [50:16.680 --> 50:21.680] demonstrating character or demonstrating a pattern? It's not necessarily [50:21.680 --> 50:26.680] something relevant to this case other than these are the people in that case, [50:26.680 --> 50:29.680] and that's their character and their pattern. Establishing a pattern and [50:29.680 --> 50:35.680] bad behavior. Yes, in that case, it's still iffy because what the bar claims [50:35.680 --> 50:42.680] is that a violation of a standard does not create a cause of action. Now, while [50:42.680 --> 50:47.680] it doesn't create a cause of action, it does show a pattern of conduct. If you [50:47.680 --> 50:52.680] address it as showing a pattern of conduct, I have accused these guys of [50:52.680 --> 50:59.680] doing this, and ordinarily a professional ethical lawyer would never do a [50:59.680 --> 51:05.680] thing like this. So to demonstrate why you should accept that I say that the [51:05.680 --> 51:11.680] lawyer did this, we have these bar grievances and these other evidence [51:11.680 --> 51:20.680] to this statement. You have to be careful how you craft things. They will [51:20.680 --> 51:26.680] still raise the same objection, but reasonable person of ordinary prudence. [51:26.680 --> 51:31.680] You've got a judge who is reading these documents, and he sees all these [51:31.680 --> 51:36.680] bar grievances, and yeah, they're not exactly relevant to the case, but it [51:36.680 --> 51:45.680] does go to the character of the witness. Just be careful to craft it that way. [51:45.680 --> 51:50.680] I've written those words down, but why would they, it's not the purpose of [51:50.680 --> 51:54.680] harassment. I mean, these are genuine bar complaints about their... [51:54.680 --> 52:04.680] Yes, it is. Okay. You owe it to your fellow citizens to give notice of bad [52:04.680 --> 52:10.680] behavior by lawyers. If lawyers consider it harassment, then perhaps they're [52:10.680 --> 52:18.680] in the wrong profession. Okay. Don't do things that get you bar grievances. [52:18.680 --> 52:25.680] You won't be harassed. Any of those, we can find a way to argue it. [52:25.680 --> 52:31.680] At the end of the day, that kind of thing will have no technical probative [52:31.680 --> 52:37.680] value, but it will affect the mind of the listener. The best thing the lawyer [52:37.680 --> 52:44.680] could do is shut his mouth, showing that the lawyer is not the sharpest knife [52:44.680 --> 52:50.680] in the drawer. If you notice the court that you filed a bar grievance against [52:50.680 --> 52:55.680] this lawyer, and this lawyer got all these bar grievances, the best thing the [52:55.680 --> 53:01.680] lawyer could do is ignore it and go on to other things. Rather than saying to [53:01.680 --> 53:05.680] the judge, I got bar grieved, I got bar grieved, I got bar grieved, I got [53:05.680 --> 53:10.680] bar grieved. Why would he do a thing like that? Just shut up about it. [53:10.680 --> 53:17.680] Don't give it life. Yeah. So it's not a smart move on the lawyer to raise that [53:17.680 --> 53:22.680] issue, but that's just telling the judge that the lawyer is sensitive to this [53:22.680 --> 53:27.680] and if he's sensitive to it, it's probably because it's true. The lawyer is [53:27.680 --> 53:32.680] not saying it's not true. They're just saying it's annoying him. The best thing [53:32.680 --> 53:37.680] if you do is shut up. And if the lawyer wants to bring it up, then drag [53:37.680 --> 53:44.680] glad on him a little bit. And like Brett said, ghost of character of the [53:44.680 --> 53:55.680] witness. It also shows, I think, Randy, that at least in Florida, the bar [53:55.680 --> 54:02.680] grievances work. Oh, bar grievances work in Florida. Florida carries insurance [54:02.680 --> 54:09.680] for all of their lawyers. And all the money the lawyers pay in go into this [54:09.680 --> 54:15.680] pool. And if one of them gets sued, they pull the money out of the pool to pay [54:15.680 --> 54:21.680] the cost. Well, while the pool is sitting there, the bar gets to use this pool [54:21.680 --> 54:28.680] for various different projects. You mess with their mad money. They are not [54:28.680 --> 54:34.680] going to be happy with you. So yeah, they work well in Florida. [54:34.680 --> 54:40.680] Well, we're going to keep doing them. He's just got another one. That's [54:40.680 --> 54:48.680] probably why he's all upset. And I just, can I file a bar grievance for this? [54:48.680 --> 54:58.680] The lawyer sent him an email yesterday saying he expects James to agree to [54:58.680 --> 55:06.680] a pre-trial conference by telephonic appearance because of the COVID virus [55:06.680 --> 55:14.680] for May 28. And the conference is to go over the fact that he, the other [55:14.680 --> 55:22.680] attorneys, are requesting that all James' defenses, witness statements, [55:22.680 --> 55:28.680] everything is broken and a few other things. And they wanted an answer [55:28.680 --> 55:34.680] today. So I wrote him an email back for him to send. And I put, in light of [55:34.680 --> 55:39.680] the current emergency situation, I will not be able to properly respond by [55:39.680 --> 55:43.680] end of business day to day. I'm trying to get my emergency license. I can [55:43.680 --> 55:45.680] comply with the government. [55:45.680 --> 55:48.680] Oh, okay. Don't worry about that. If the lawyer wants something by a certain [55:48.680 --> 55:52.680] time, don't worry about that. If the lawyer doesn't get what he wants by [55:52.680 --> 55:57.680] the time he wants it, he can always go to the court and ask the court to [55:57.680 --> 56:03.680] order it. So you're not bound by what the lawyer wants. [56:03.680 --> 56:08.680] That's what I thought. You don't have to submit to the bullying taxes. You [56:08.680 --> 56:12.680] get this to us in 24 hours or else we'll go to the court and tell them [56:12.680 --> 56:19.680] that you won't comply. Yes, sir. Okay. Go to the court. We'll argue this. [56:19.680 --> 56:23.680] I'll argue my position before the court. And we'll see how this works out [56:23.680 --> 56:28.680] for you. That'll work. Okay. Well, that's pretty much what I said. I said [56:28.680 --> 56:32.680] I'm sure the courts will understand that personal safety and that of [56:32.680 --> 56:35.680] everyone around is more important than rushing to file something without [56:35.680 --> 56:42.680] due care and attention. You may submit the email to the court if you would. [56:42.680 --> 56:46.680] So that's easy enough. Just use the reasonable person of ordinary prudent [56:46.680 --> 56:53.680] standard. The judge is required to consider all of these issues on that [56:53.680 --> 56:57.680] premise, reasonable person of ordinary prudent [56:57.680 --> 57:05.680] standard. If the lawyer is making unreasonable requests, the judge will [57:05.680 --> 57:09.680] recognize it as that. Okay. I like that wording. I'll use that. And that's [57:09.680 --> 57:13.680] it. So I'll send you this phone document so you can take a look. It's [57:13.680 --> 57:17.680] kind of interesting. Okay. And then you can go on to someone here. [57:17.680 --> 57:22.680] Okay. Thank you very much, Tina. Okay. Now we're going to go back to this [57:22.680 --> 57:30.680] Bastrop County character. I look at this Bastrop County in my [57:30.680 --> 57:38.680] callboard and I can't help but think jarhead. Well, you're probably right. [57:38.680 --> 57:45.680] Hello, David. How are you doing, Randy? I am doing good. This is David Lewis. [57:45.680 --> 57:55.680] One of my jarhead buddies. He's my tax go-to guy. What do you have for us [57:55.680 --> 58:01.680] today, David? Actually, that's what I've been messing with for the last two [58:01.680 --> 58:11.680] days is taxes. And I heard on the news where because of this virus, they're [58:11.680 --> 58:16.680] talking about trying to send everybody in the country $1,200 on two [58:16.680 --> 58:20.680] different occasions. And I got to thinking, well, that's real nice of [58:20.680 --> 58:26.680] them. I remember when Obama tried to send $200 out. I never could get it. [58:26.680 --> 58:31.680] And I was wondering why. So I dug a little deeper and found out that you [58:31.680 --> 58:38.680] have to have filed, I think, you have to have filed a 2018 tax return to [58:38.680 --> 58:43.680] qualify for this. Have you heard anything about that? [58:43.680 --> 58:49.680] No, I haven't. So I'm going back and telling you. [58:49.680 --> 58:53.680] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.680 --> 58:58.680] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free [58:58.680 --> 59:02.680] Christian books that can really help. The New Testament recovery version is [59:02.680 --> 59:06.680] one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. It's an [59:06.680 --> 59:10.680] accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help [59:10.680 --> 59:14.680] you to know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a [59:14.680 --> 59:18.680] three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by [59:18.680 --> 59:22.680] chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of [59:22.680 --> 59:27.680] salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. To order your [59:27.680 --> 59:32.680] free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.680 --> 59:44.680] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.680 --> 59:49.680] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.680 --> 59:58.680] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:58.680 --> 01:00:05.680] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:05.680 --> 01:00:10.680] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold [01:00:10.680 --> 01:00:16.680] $1,429 an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, [01:00:16.680 --> 01:00:23.680] oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and [01:00:23.680 --> 01:00:31.680] cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, [01:00:31.680 --> 01:00:39.680] XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a [01:00:39.680 --> 01:00:45.680] crypto coin. [01:00:45.680 --> 01:00:51.680] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase [01:00:51.680 --> 01:00:55.680] bomb was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I [01:00:55.680 --> 01:00:59.680] preparedness day parade, killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:00:59.680 --> 01:01:04.680] Today in history. [01:01:04.680 --> 01:01:08.680] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House bill 1325, legalizing [01:01:08.680 --> 01:01:12.680] Hepin attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:01:12.680 --> 01:01:15.680] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana [01:01:15.680 --> 01:01:18.680] possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, since they are [01:01:18.680 --> 01:01:22.680] stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test [01:01:22.680 --> 01:01:26.680] the earth for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney [01:01:26.680 --> 01:01:30.680] announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and [01:01:30.680 --> 01:01:33.680] delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:33.680 --> 01:01:36.680] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, [01:01:36.680 --> 01:01:39.680] stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that [01:01:39.680 --> 01:01:43.680] marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, and that these actions [01:01:43.680 --> 01:01:47.680] demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other [01:01:47.680 --> 01:01:52.680] cities, too, like the District Attorney and El Paso, Kyma Esparza, [01:01:52.680 --> 01:01:56.680] a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:01:56.680 --> 01:02:00.680] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:00.680 --> 01:02:04.680] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an [01:02:04.680 --> 01:02:07.680] assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, [01:02:07.680 --> 01:02:11.680] the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its [01:02:11.680 --> 01:02:14.680] chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, [01:02:14.680 --> 01:02:17.680] the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:21.680 --> 01:02:25.680] A paper by Tulane University identified a 5-1-1-1 inch American [01:02:25.680 --> 01:02:29.680] pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the [01:02:29.680 --> 01:02:33.680] specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded [01:02:33.680 --> 01:02:38.680] with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:38.680 --> 01:02:42.680] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from [01:02:42.680 --> 01:02:47.680] a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and [01:02:47.680 --> 01:02:50.680] prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.680 --> 01:03:10.680] This is Book Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:21.680 --> 01:03:46.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Pountain, [01:03:46.680 --> 01:03:51.680] Reelva Radio, and we're talking to David in Texas. [01:03:51.680 --> 01:03:55.680] Okay, David, sorry, we kind of dropped off the cliff there. [01:03:55.680 --> 01:03:58.680] That's all right. No problem. [01:03:58.680 --> 01:04:01.680] Am I still showing up from Bastrop? [01:04:01.680 --> 01:04:06.680] Yes. I didn't look at the number. [01:04:06.680 --> 01:04:08.680] I should have recognized the number. [01:04:08.680 --> 01:04:11.680] I don't know why you're not showing up. [01:04:11.680 --> 01:04:19.680] Actually, I can put you in the database. [01:04:19.680 --> 01:04:21.680] Yes, I just did. [01:04:21.680 --> 01:04:23.680] Okay, so now you should start. [01:04:23.680 --> 01:04:27.680] Let me try a refresh and see if you... [01:04:27.680 --> 01:04:30.680] No, I'm still showing up where my screen is. [01:04:30.680 --> 01:04:33.680] It won't take until he calls back another time. [01:04:33.680 --> 01:04:35.680] Okay, so... [01:04:35.680 --> 01:04:42.680] Okay, that's good. So what do you have for us? [01:04:42.680 --> 01:04:46.680] I'm doing a little studying on these changed over short forms [01:04:46.680 --> 01:04:55.680] for violent taxes and stuff, and seeing a simple way to get [01:04:55.680 --> 01:05:00.680] through them and been working with some people who hadn't [01:05:00.680 --> 01:05:03.680] filed for a while and they're wanting to get back into it, [01:05:03.680 --> 01:05:11.680] but I found out for all this money that they're trying to [01:05:11.680 --> 01:05:13.680] give away to everyone in here, they're claiming they're going [01:05:13.680 --> 01:05:17.680] to give away $1,200 to everyone in America twice, [01:05:17.680 --> 01:05:22.680] but I think you have to have filed a 2018 return. [01:05:22.680 --> 01:05:29.680] And if you didn't, I was showing people how to get that done [01:05:29.680 --> 01:05:32.680] on just the little short forms as quick as possible [01:05:32.680 --> 01:05:36.680] kind of thing, but I didn't know if you had heard anything [01:05:36.680 --> 01:05:38.680] about that or not, and I was going to picture your brain [01:05:38.680 --> 01:05:40.680] about that too. [01:05:40.680 --> 01:05:42.680] No, I haven't heard anything about that. [01:05:42.680 --> 01:05:47.680] And taxes is one thing that is not my area, [01:05:47.680 --> 01:05:51.680] and anytime I get someone with a tax issue, [01:05:51.680 --> 01:05:54.680] I always send them to David because David knows [01:05:54.680 --> 01:05:58.680] way more about it than I do, and I especially like David's [01:05:58.680 --> 01:06:03.680] approach because even though the show is about fighting [01:06:03.680 --> 01:06:08.680] the system, what David says is don't fight the IRS, [01:06:08.680 --> 01:06:10.680] give them what they want, and go where you leave [01:06:10.680 --> 01:06:11.680] your loans. [01:06:11.680 --> 01:06:13.680] Is that right, David? [01:06:13.680 --> 01:06:14.680] Absolutely. [01:06:14.680 --> 01:06:17.680] Just don't give them any money, just do what they want [01:06:17.680 --> 01:06:20.680] as long as they give you all your money back, [01:06:20.680 --> 01:06:24.680] and I'll show you how to do that. [01:06:24.680 --> 01:06:27.680] David, I was telling Randy that you made a comment [01:06:27.680 --> 01:06:29.680] that changed my life about that. [01:06:29.680 --> 01:06:31.680] The way I was thinking about all of that, [01:06:31.680 --> 01:06:34.680] you said, Brett, you're not dealing with people, [01:06:34.680 --> 01:06:37.680] you're dealing with a computer. [01:06:37.680 --> 01:06:38.680] Absolutely. [01:06:38.680 --> 01:06:41.680] And that made me realize the law doesn't matter. [01:06:41.680 --> 01:06:46.680] The responses that the computer wants, oh, okay, [01:06:46.680 --> 01:06:49.680] that was a shift for me. [01:06:49.680 --> 01:06:51.680] Good, good, good. [01:06:51.680 --> 01:06:55.680] Yes, all of those people who hate the IRS [01:06:55.680 --> 01:06:59.680] and want to beat them up, forget all that nonsense [01:06:59.680 --> 01:07:01.680] because if you beat up the computer, [01:07:01.680 --> 01:07:03.680] the computer won't care. [01:07:03.680 --> 01:07:05.680] And next time you come after them, [01:07:05.680 --> 01:07:06.680] they won't even remember. [01:07:06.680 --> 01:07:08.680] It'll do the same things. [01:07:08.680 --> 01:07:13.680] Figure out how things work, do them that way. [01:07:13.680 --> 01:07:17.680] So David, I've got a question for you about what [01:07:17.680 --> 01:07:19.680] you were just mentioning there. [01:07:19.680 --> 01:07:22.680] If somebody is trying to get into the good graces [01:07:22.680 --> 01:07:26.680] of this computer and hurry up and file a 2018, [01:07:26.680 --> 01:07:33.680] does this, does the person need to put on to that short form, [01:07:33.680 --> 01:07:37.680] I guess you're talking about the easy, the 1040 easy, [01:07:37.680 --> 01:07:44.680] does the person need to put on there the withheld, [01:07:44.680 --> 01:07:47.680] all the taxes that were withheld, [01:07:47.680 --> 01:07:50.680] does that go into somewhere on the easy [01:07:50.680 --> 01:07:54.680] or is that one of these extra schedules? [01:07:54.680 --> 01:07:55.680] It's an extra schedule. [01:07:55.680 --> 01:07:58.680] They don't know why it was the easy thing to do [01:07:58.680 --> 01:08:01.680] and just made it 1040 short form. [01:08:01.680 --> 01:08:04.680] But then there's six different schedules. [01:08:04.680 --> 01:08:08.680] Schedule one, there's the next that can be depending on, [01:08:08.680 --> 01:08:12.680] you know, put your money where your money is. [01:08:12.680 --> 01:08:18.680] What I've done is I can get taxes done. [01:08:18.680 --> 01:08:23.680] David, we are having a terrible time understanding. [01:08:23.680 --> 01:08:27.680] I think we're having an internet issue with you. [01:08:27.680 --> 01:08:35.680] Do you have a cell phone you can call us back on? [01:08:35.680 --> 01:08:37.680] Hello, David. [01:08:37.680 --> 01:08:40.680] I've been to David's house a number of times [01:08:40.680 --> 01:08:46.680] and where he's at, he doesn't have a great internet reception. [01:08:46.680 --> 01:08:48.680] Can you hear me, David? [01:08:48.680 --> 01:08:49.680] Can you hear me there, Randy? [01:08:49.680 --> 01:08:50.680] Yes. [01:08:50.680 --> 01:08:53.680] Do you have a cell phone you can call us back on? [01:08:53.680 --> 01:08:54.680] Yes. [01:08:54.680 --> 01:08:55.680] Do you want me to do that? [01:08:55.680 --> 01:09:00.680] Yes, because you're this internet's flaking in and out. [01:09:00.680 --> 01:09:01.680] Okay. [01:09:01.680 --> 01:09:02.680] I'll hang up, call you right back. [01:09:02.680 --> 01:09:04.680] Okay. [01:09:04.680 --> 01:09:06.680] Bye-bye, too. [01:09:06.680 --> 01:09:07.680] Okay. [01:09:07.680 --> 01:09:09.680] I understood if I heard him correctly, [01:09:09.680 --> 01:09:13.680] he was saying that they've done away with the easy [01:09:13.680 --> 01:09:18.680] and that there are now six schedules, [01:09:18.680 --> 01:09:22.680] one through six, depending on where your money is. [01:09:22.680 --> 01:09:24.680] Is that what you were hearing? [01:09:24.680 --> 01:09:27.680] That's as much as I heard. [01:09:27.680 --> 01:09:30.680] After that, I've lost all of it. [01:09:30.680 --> 01:09:34.680] Yeah. [01:09:34.680 --> 01:09:35.680] But he should be back in. [01:09:35.680 --> 01:09:37.680] I've dealt with David for a long time. [01:09:37.680 --> 01:09:43.680] We used to do foreclosures together for quite a while, [01:09:43.680 --> 01:09:47.680] and I really enjoyed working with David, [01:09:47.680 --> 01:09:52.680] because he's real pragmatic. [01:09:52.680 --> 01:09:56.680] He doesn't have all of these high ideals, [01:09:56.680 --> 01:09:59.680] and he doesn't go into righteous indignation. [01:09:59.680 --> 01:10:06.680] He's practical, and he'll help you deal with the IRS, [01:10:06.680 --> 01:10:10.680] and he helped me change my perspective on the IRS. [01:10:10.680 --> 01:10:13.680] Is it not the ogres that a lot of these people [01:10:13.680 --> 01:10:15.680] want to present them to be? [01:10:15.680 --> 01:10:17.680] They're trying to get their job done. [01:10:17.680 --> 01:10:19.680] David, are you there? [01:10:19.680 --> 01:10:20.680] Yes, I'm here. [01:10:20.680 --> 01:10:21.680] Can you hear me? [01:10:21.680 --> 01:10:23.680] Oh, much, much better. [01:10:23.680 --> 01:10:26.680] Wow, that's nice and clean. [01:10:26.680 --> 01:10:28.680] While you were calling back in, [01:10:28.680 --> 01:10:31.680] I was just saying all kinds of bad things about you. [01:10:31.680 --> 01:10:32.680] Good. [01:10:32.680 --> 01:10:33.680] Good. [01:10:33.680 --> 01:10:39.680] At least you can tell the truth sometimes. [01:10:39.680 --> 01:10:45.680] Yeah, David's an old ex-marine pilot. [01:10:45.680 --> 01:10:49.680] So if you have an aircraft carrier that needs a lot to be landed on, [01:10:49.680 --> 01:10:51.680] he can handle that for you. [01:10:51.680 --> 01:10:54.680] Or if you have a tax issue. [01:10:54.680 --> 01:10:59.680] Okay, when you hang up and call back in, [01:10:59.680 --> 01:11:04.680] you were talking about what form was that, Brett? [01:11:04.680 --> 01:11:09.680] I think he was saying that they've done away with the EZ and 40 EZ. [01:11:09.680 --> 01:11:12.680] I don't know if that was 28 or 2019, [01:11:12.680 --> 01:11:15.680] but when there's six forms, six schedule forms, [01:11:15.680 --> 01:11:18.680] I think you were saying depending on where your money is, [01:11:18.680 --> 01:11:21.680] you use those six forms? [01:11:21.680 --> 01:11:30.680] Yes, you end up, it sounds like they revamped the whole filing system, [01:11:30.680 --> 01:11:35.680] but they talk about now you can do it on half a page and everything. [01:11:35.680 --> 01:11:39.680] But use the same forms that you always did. [01:11:39.680 --> 01:11:44.680] Before, I simplified everybody's taxes down into two forms. [01:11:44.680 --> 01:11:46.680] I only used two forms. [01:11:46.680 --> 01:11:49.680] A 1040, which is what everybody uses, [01:11:49.680 --> 01:11:53.680] front and back of 1040 and that compiles everybody's information. [01:11:53.680 --> 01:11:57.680] And a schedule C, which is a profit or loss from business, [01:11:57.680 --> 01:12:01.680] and what that does is gives everybody, [01:12:01.680 --> 01:12:06.680] even a minimum wage worker down here at Waterburger, [01:12:06.680 --> 01:12:10.680] gives him all the tax breaks that a millionaire has yet, [01:12:10.680 --> 01:12:13.680] all these big corporations get. [01:12:13.680 --> 01:12:19.680] So the schedule C ends up coming through what's called, [01:12:19.680 --> 01:12:22.680] now then, the short form and schedule three. [01:12:22.680 --> 01:12:25.680] You put the bottom line information from the schedule C on it [01:12:25.680 --> 01:12:30.680] and you get all your deductions that wipe out all your income [01:12:30.680 --> 01:12:33.680] and you end up getting all the money back that you filed in. [01:12:33.680 --> 01:12:37.680] And so you end up using the little short form they've got now. [01:12:37.680 --> 01:12:41.680] It's just that you use exactly the same information you always did. [01:12:41.680 --> 01:12:44.680] It's just you got to do it on a couple of different forms [01:12:44.680 --> 01:12:47.680] rather than the others. [01:12:47.680 --> 01:12:49.680] And I'll tell you how it simplifies. [01:12:49.680 --> 01:12:53.680] I did some taxes for someone a while back on TurboTax [01:12:53.680 --> 01:12:57.680] with my two forms, two simple forms, [01:12:57.680 --> 01:13:01.680] 1040 and a schedule C and we did it on TurboTax [01:13:01.680 --> 01:13:05.680] and at the end of it, we printed out the return [01:13:05.680 --> 01:13:10.680] and TurboTax made it into 109 pages long. [01:13:10.680 --> 01:13:15.680] 109 pages. [01:13:15.680 --> 01:13:18.680] Wow, how did they do that? [01:13:18.680 --> 01:13:20.680] Well, it just does. [01:13:20.680 --> 01:13:25.680] They ask you all the questions that whether you need them [01:13:25.680 --> 01:13:28.680] or you don't need them to fill out a form [01:13:28.680 --> 01:13:31.680] since I'll claim everybody has their own business [01:13:31.680 --> 01:13:33.680] so you can get all your deductions. [01:13:33.680 --> 01:13:35.680] They ask you all these business questions [01:13:35.680 --> 01:13:39.680] and good grief every time you ask a different question [01:13:39.680 --> 01:13:42.680] and they want to add a different form to their return. [01:13:42.680 --> 01:13:45.680] So you'll have a two-page tax return to start with [01:13:45.680 --> 01:13:47.680] but if you put it on TurboTax [01:13:47.680 --> 01:13:49.680] and then you turn around and want to e-file [01:13:49.680 --> 01:13:51.680] and get a quick refund, [01:13:51.680 --> 01:13:57.680] I did one last night that was a very simple return [01:13:57.680 --> 01:14:00.680] and finished it up about midnight [01:14:00.680 --> 01:14:03.680] and it said that they would have their money in their bank account [01:14:03.680 --> 01:14:05.680] by tomorrow morning. [01:14:05.680 --> 01:14:09.680] So it's a quick program, still working real good [01:14:09.680 --> 01:14:13.680] but it just, TurboTax is real good [01:14:13.680 --> 01:14:16.680] even though it turns it into 109 pages long [01:14:16.680 --> 01:14:19.680] for the IRS to look at. [01:14:19.680 --> 01:14:21.680] What it does for you is, [01:14:21.680 --> 01:14:24.680] IRS looks down to, Jesus, it's 109 pages long. [01:14:24.680 --> 01:14:27.680] We're never going to audit this guy [01:14:27.680 --> 01:14:30.680] because that's exactly what TurboTax has done. [01:14:30.680 --> 01:14:32.680] They've asked you all the audit questions [01:14:32.680 --> 01:14:36.680] all the way through getting my two pages filled out [01:14:36.680 --> 01:14:39.680] and converted it to 109 pages long. [01:14:39.680 --> 01:14:42.680] It's just crazy. It's crazy how it does that. [01:14:42.680 --> 01:14:48.680] TurboTax sounds like someone after my own heart. [01:14:48.680 --> 01:14:50.680] Oh, absolutely. [01:14:50.680 --> 01:14:55.680] We use the computer to amass all this complexity [01:14:55.680 --> 01:14:58.680] and let the auditor deal with all that complexity. [01:14:58.680 --> 01:15:02.680] All we have to do is answer a few questions. [01:15:02.680 --> 01:15:05.680] Absolutely. Yeah, that's right. [01:15:05.680 --> 01:15:10.680] And it works good. [01:15:10.680 --> 01:15:19.680] So, David, if people need assistance with their tax issues, [01:15:19.680 --> 01:15:26.680] what is the profile of the person who should come to you [01:15:26.680 --> 01:15:30.680] as opposed to going to H&R Block or something else? [01:15:30.680 --> 01:15:35.680] Who should come to you for your services [01:15:35.680 --> 01:15:39.680] where you could do them the most good? [01:15:39.680 --> 01:15:43.680] Well, I've been surprised in the last couple of years [01:15:43.680 --> 01:15:47.680] doing taxes for people that made way more money [01:15:47.680 --> 01:15:49.680] than I thought I could help [01:15:49.680 --> 01:15:51.680] because I thought if I was going to do [01:15:51.680 --> 01:15:53.680] a little simple two-page tax return, [01:15:53.680 --> 01:15:58.680] I would only apply it to low-income people. [01:15:58.680 --> 01:16:01.680] So, I started with people, for instance, [01:16:01.680 --> 01:16:08.680] that made $100,000 a year and below [01:16:08.680 --> 01:16:11.680] and figured that I'd put a generic return together, [01:16:11.680 --> 01:16:13.680] and I think I probably should have, [01:16:13.680 --> 01:16:16.680] Brad, I might have showed you this one or sent a copy. [01:16:16.680 --> 01:16:18.680] Just picked a figure out of the air of a person [01:16:18.680 --> 01:16:20.680] that makes $50,000 a year [01:16:20.680 --> 01:16:23.680] and showed them how to use that two pages [01:16:23.680 --> 01:16:26.680] to get all the money back that they'd spent in all year [01:16:26.680 --> 01:16:30.680] so they'd end up paying zero taxes. [01:16:30.680 --> 01:16:36.680] And my form is HowToPayNoTaxes.com [01:16:36.680 --> 01:16:39.680] or my business card. [01:16:39.680 --> 01:16:42.680] That's what it says, HowToPayNoTaxes.com. [01:16:42.680 --> 01:16:46.680] But then all of a sudden, I got the thinking, [01:16:46.680 --> 01:16:49.680] well, you know, these college kids [01:16:49.680 --> 01:16:52.680] and these kids at the fast food restaurant, [01:16:52.680 --> 01:16:54.680] they're being paid minimum wage. [01:16:54.680 --> 01:16:56.680] Hold on, David. [01:16:56.680 --> 01:16:58.680] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:16:58.680 --> 01:16:59.680] We'll be right back. [01:16:59.680 --> 01:17:01.680] Are you being harassed by debt collectors [01:17:01.680 --> 01:17:04.680] with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.680 --> 01:17:06.680] Stop debt collectors now [01:17:06.680 --> 01:17:08.680] with the Michael Mirris proven method. [01:17:08.680 --> 01:17:10.680] Michael Mirris has won six cases [01:17:10.680 --> 01:17:12.680] in federal court against debt collectors, [01:17:12.680 --> 01:17:14.680] and now you can win two. 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[01:17:40.680 --> 01:17:43.680] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:17:43.680 --> 01:17:46.680] and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner [01:17:46.680 --> 01:17:49.680] or email Michael Mirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.680 --> 01:17:51.680] That's ruleoflawradio.com [01:17:51.680 --> 01:17:56.680] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:17:56.680 --> 01:17:59.680] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.680 --> 01:18:00.680] I love logos. [01:18:00.680 --> 01:18:02.680] Without the shows on this network, [01:18:02.680 --> 01:18:04.680] I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.680 --> 01:18:07.680] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.680 --> 01:18:08.680] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.680 --> 01:18:10.680] I'd be lost without logos, [01:18:10.680 --> 01:18:12.680] and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.680 --> 01:18:14.680] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, [01:18:14.680 --> 01:18:15.680] but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:15.680 --> 01:18:17.680] and I really don't have any money to give [01:18:17.680 --> 01:18:19.680] because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:19.680 --> 01:18:21.680] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.680 --> 01:18:23.680] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.680 --> 01:18:25.680] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, [01:18:25.680 --> 01:18:27.680] you can help logos with ordering your supplies [01:18:27.680 --> 01:18:28.680] or holiday gifts. [01:18:28.680 --> 01:18:30.680] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:30.680 --> 01:18:34.680] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:18:34.680 --> 01:18:37.680] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.680 --> 01:18:39.680] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, [01:18:39.680 --> 01:18:42.680] you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:42.680 --> 01:18:43.680] Do I pay extra? [01:18:43.680 --> 01:18:44.680] No. [01:18:44.680 --> 01:18:46.680] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:46.680 --> 01:18:47.680] No. [01:18:47.680 --> 01:18:48.680] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:48.680 --> 01:18:49.680] No. [01:18:49.680 --> 01:18:50.680] I mean, yes. [01:18:50.680 --> 01:18:51.680] Wow. [01:18:51.680 --> 01:18:53.680] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:53.680 --> 01:18:54.680] This is perfect. [01:18:54.680 --> 01:18:56.680] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.680 --> 01:18:57.680] We are Logos. [01:18:57.680 --> 01:18:59.680] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:18:59.680 --> 01:19:09.680] Logos, Logos, RadioNet, RadioNet, RadioNet. [01:19:29.680 --> 01:19:58.680] Okay, we are back. [01:19:58.680 --> 01:19:59.680] Andy Kelton. [01:19:59.680 --> 01:20:00.680] Brett Falton. [01:20:00.680 --> 01:20:01.680] Rubella Radio. [01:20:01.680 --> 01:20:05.680] And we're talking to David in Texas. [01:20:05.680 --> 01:20:09.680] David, Brett had a question for you. [01:20:09.680 --> 01:20:10.680] Brett? [01:20:10.680 --> 01:20:11.680] Okay. [01:20:11.680 --> 01:20:21.680] Well, on this short form where we were filling out, [01:20:21.680 --> 01:20:25.680] I'm wanting to follow your lead on filling out the short form [01:20:25.680 --> 01:20:27.680] to catch up on something. [01:20:27.680 --> 01:20:30.680] There's something that I don't know how to get the numbers for. [01:20:30.680 --> 01:20:36.680] It is all of the interest, taxable interest, [01:20:36.680 --> 01:20:38.680] I think they called it. [01:20:38.680 --> 01:20:43.680] It's a line item on the EZ form that rolls up things like if you [01:20:43.680 --> 01:20:47.680] have a savings account and you earn three bucks and you're [01:20:47.680 --> 01:20:49.680] supposed to add these numbers up together. [01:20:49.680 --> 01:20:51.680] I don't know where do you get those? [01:20:51.680 --> 01:20:55.680] How do you figure that out? [01:20:55.680 --> 01:20:59.680] Every bank that you have a savings account in would have [01:20:59.680 --> 01:21:03.680] sent you a 1099 interest, showing how much interest you [01:21:03.680 --> 01:21:05.680] made at that time. [01:21:05.680 --> 01:21:10.680] And if you don't know what it is, and it's a few bucks, [01:21:10.680 --> 01:21:13.680] either guess at it and put it on there and just leave it [01:21:13.680 --> 01:21:16.680] off and make any difference. [01:21:16.680 --> 01:21:20.680] The amount is okay, but they will know and they'll look at it [01:21:20.680 --> 01:21:23.680] and say, well, that's not worth messing with. [01:21:23.680 --> 01:21:26.680] So if you're not really sure where you can find it, [01:21:26.680 --> 01:21:28.680] but you know there was something in there, [01:21:28.680 --> 01:21:31.680] then you can just guess at it and stick it on there. [01:21:31.680 --> 01:21:37.680] And then the, do you have a 1040 EZ? [01:21:37.680 --> 01:21:39.680] Yes. [01:21:39.680 --> 01:21:41.680] For what year? [01:21:41.680 --> 01:21:45.680] It's a 2013 is the one I'm trying to do right now to overcome [01:21:45.680 --> 01:21:48.680] a substitute for return. [01:21:48.680 --> 01:21:53.680] Okay, okay, that's why I didn't know which one you were [01:21:53.680 --> 01:21:57.680] talking about because the new forms, the short forms, [01:21:57.680 --> 01:21:59.680] you wouldn't use that. [01:21:59.680 --> 01:22:02.680] But if you're dealing with the 2013 return, [01:22:02.680 --> 01:22:04.680] you have to use that form. [01:22:04.680 --> 01:22:07.680] If, let me ask you a quick question. [01:22:07.680 --> 01:22:14.680] You only use that form, Rhett, if you've never filed before. [01:22:14.680 --> 01:22:19.680] Okay, if you actually back in 2013, [01:22:19.680 --> 01:22:23.680] then you've already filed and to correct that filing, [01:22:23.680 --> 01:22:28.680] you have to use what's called a 1040 X. [01:22:28.680 --> 01:22:30.680] Okay. [01:22:30.680 --> 01:22:36.680] And the 1040 X will show you all the figures on your original return [01:22:36.680 --> 01:22:39.680] and then all the new figures that you're correcting them to [01:22:39.680 --> 01:22:41.680] and then the difference. [01:22:41.680 --> 01:22:44.680] That's three lines. It's a one page form. [01:22:44.680 --> 01:22:49.680] And that's how you correct the return. [01:22:49.680 --> 01:22:51.680] Okay, very good. [01:22:51.680 --> 01:22:53.680] Yeah, this is, I have not filed. [01:22:53.680 --> 01:22:56.680] So, I mean, that's good for the listeners to hear as well, [01:22:56.680 --> 01:22:58.680] but I didn't file for 2013. [01:22:58.680 --> 01:23:02.680] And I'm trying to get back, get things set up where they're [01:23:02.680 --> 01:23:05.680] not running off of their bogus numbers. [01:23:05.680 --> 01:23:09.680] So I'm trying to give them some numbers and this is one line item [01:23:09.680 --> 01:23:11.680] that I couldn't figure out how to, [01:23:11.680 --> 01:23:17.680] that's just the one sticking point left. [01:23:17.680 --> 01:23:19.680] Again, if it's a small amount, [01:23:19.680 --> 01:23:22.680] just guess that and stick it in there and, [01:23:22.680 --> 01:23:28.680] or give me a call later and I'll walk you through it. [01:23:28.680 --> 01:23:29.680] How to do that. [01:23:29.680 --> 01:23:31.680] Okay. [01:23:31.680 --> 01:23:33.680] Brandon can tell you how to get hold of me. [01:23:33.680 --> 01:23:35.680] Thank you. [01:23:35.680 --> 01:23:38.680] Yeah. [01:23:38.680 --> 01:23:42.680] David, do you have something else you want to address here? [01:23:42.680 --> 01:23:49.680] What, what do with what's happening now with these changes [01:23:49.680 --> 01:23:54.680] based on the effect of the coronavirus problem? [01:23:54.680 --> 01:24:03.680] What should people know about taxes in this particular environment? [01:24:03.680 --> 01:24:09.680] Really, the taxes have not changed any under Trump. [01:24:09.680 --> 01:24:14.680] He has made it to where it's much easier to get all your money back. [01:24:14.680 --> 01:24:24.680] You've got a lot more deductions and you've got the refunds [01:24:24.680 --> 01:24:32.680] that he put together and the different offsets to income. [01:24:32.680 --> 01:24:36.680] So it's simplified, but really nothing's changed. [01:24:36.680 --> 01:24:40.680] What I use to get people our money back is the Schedule C, [01:24:40.680 --> 01:24:45.680] the proper loss from business and you still have to use that form [01:24:45.680 --> 01:24:51.680] even though it doesn't sound like it when they talk about all the forms that change. [01:24:51.680 --> 01:24:56.680] The only difference is the bottom line figures from the Schedule C [01:24:56.680 --> 01:25:00.680] where you get all your deductions off your income. [01:25:00.680 --> 01:25:05.680] That information goes to what's now called the Short Form Schedule 1 [01:25:05.680 --> 01:25:10.680] which is Line 3, Business Income or Loss from Schedule C [01:25:10.680 --> 01:25:15.680] and then that changes over to the Short 1040 form [01:25:15.680 --> 01:25:22.680] and it ends up going back on one line of the 1040. [01:25:22.680 --> 01:25:25.680] So really now the whole lot has changed. [01:25:25.680 --> 01:25:30.680] I mean they're giving you more deductions, they're giving you more time. [01:25:30.680 --> 01:25:36.680] I heard today that this year they have moved the filing date three months out. [01:25:36.680 --> 01:25:44.680] So instead of having to file by April 15, now then you've got until July 15. [01:25:44.680 --> 01:25:49.680] So that's probably the major change that there is. [01:25:49.680 --> 01:25:57.680] Do you have any specific questions about how the coronavirus affects it? [01:25:57.680 --> 01:26:07.680] Well, I'm curious, when they move that filing date, that doesn't change the paying date, does it? [01:26:07.680 --> 01:26:15.680] Yes, you don't have to even file until July 15 this year. [01:26:15.680 --> 01:26:21.680] What I generally have people do if they didn't think they owed any taxes or they were low income [01:26:21.680 --> 01:26:28.680] is there's a form called 4868 where you ask for an extension of time. [01:26:28.680 --> 01:26:33.680] It gives you an automatic six month extension of time [01:26:33.680 --> 01:26:37.680] and there's nothing to fill out that you don't even sign it. [01:26:37.680 --> 01:26:41.680] It's just got four blanks on there and you put a zero on each one of them [01:26:41.680 --> 01:26:45.680] showing that you don't owe any taxes and send that in [01:26:45.680 --> 01:26:51.680] and that gives you a six month extension where you don't even have to file until October. [01:26:51.680 --> 01:26:55.680] Of course now if you're in a position where you can get a refund back from [01:26:55.680 --> 01:26:58.680] and get your money back, you'd want to file as soon as possible [01:26:58.680 --> 01:27:04.680] because that puts money back in your pocket as quick as possible. [01:27:04.680 --> 01:27:11.680] So then the extension wouldn't help you at all, you wouldn't want to go ahead and get it filed, that's why. [01:27:11.680 --> 01:27:21.680] The guy last night wanted me to get his in the mail right now because he's got $1,700 coming back today. [01:27:21.680 --> 01:27:29.680] Well, I have a question that I suspect the underlying parameters have changed over the years. [01:27:29.680 --> 01:27:37.680] We used to say, wait until the last minute to file your returns because then the IRS is so busy [01:27:37.680 --> 01:27:42.680] going through everything they won't have time to get yours to audit it. [01:27:42.680 --> 01:27:52.680] Is that still the same or are the processes automated to the point that the IRS can actually keep up? [01:27:52.680 --> 01:27:56.680] No, that's still the same. It's still the same. [01:27:56.680 --> 01:28:05.680] What I generally tell people, and this is what happens, your normal scheduled filing date is April 15. [01:28:05.680 --> 01:28:19.680] If you fill out that little extension of time form, it extends your filing date until August 15 or October 15. [01:28:19.680 --> 01:28:26.680] Now what people don't understand is that would be your normal new filing date. [01:28:26.680 --> 01:28:40.680] However, once you file a return or even if you haven't filed a return, you have three years from that date to correct your return. [01:28:40.680 --> 01:28:50.680] Okay, so from April 15, you have six months and then from that six months, you've got another three years to correct the return. [01:28:50.680 --> 01:28:55.680] So if you haven't filed a return, nobody's going to say anything about it. [01:28:55.680 --> 01:29:00.680] The computer may send you a couple of letters saying, hey, you haven't filed, you need to do it. [01:29:00.680 --> 01:29:06.680] But IRS is not going to do anything about it whatsoever for at least three years. [01:29:06.680 --> 01:29:13.680] So I have a lot of friends who don't even file their original return for three years. [01:29:13.680 --> 01:29:17.680] I know that sounds kind of crazy, but... [01:29:17.680 --> 01:29:22.680] I take it these are friends who won't be getting any money back. [01:29:22.680 --> 01:29:27.680] That's right. They won't get their money back. If you've got money to get back, then you can file as soon as you want to. [01:29:27.680 --> 01:29:35.680] As soon as you get your W-2s or 1099s in the mail and they'll get your refund back out to you. [01:29:35.680 --> 01:29:40.680] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:29:40.680 --> 01:29:51.680] We live on our radio and we've got two more callers and two segments left, so we're not going to give out the call in number. [01:29:51.680 --> 01:30:01.680] Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:30:01.680 --> 01:30:05.680] That top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:05.680 --> 01:30:11.680] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.680 --> 01:30:15.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.680 --> 01:30:21.680] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.680 --> 01:30:26.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.680 --> 01:30:31.680] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.680 --> 01:30:37.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.680 --> 01:30:45.680] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.680 --> 01:30:52.680] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.680 --> 01:30:59.680] They're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.680 --> 01:31:06.680] But cybersecurity expert David Chox says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:06.680 --> 01:31:12.680] hackers will have a field day. Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [01:31:12.680 --> 01:31:18.680] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. I'd want to pose smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.680 --> 01:31:23.680] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.680 --> 01:31:30.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.680 --> 01:31:36.680] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.680 --> 01:31:43.680] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.680 --> 01:31:48.680] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives to thousands of my fellow force responders. [01:31:48.680 --> 01:31:52.680] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction office. [01:31:52.680 --> 01:31:55.680] I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.680 --> 01:32:01.680] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.680 --> 01:32:05.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:05.680 --> 01:32:10.680] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.680 --> 01:32:13.680] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.680 --> 01:32:17.680] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:17.680 --> 01:32:20.680] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.680 --> 01:32:25.680] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:25.680 --> 01:32:31.680] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.680 --> 01:32:35.680] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.680 --> 01:32:40.680] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.680 --> 01:32:45.680] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:45.680 --> 01:32:50.680] a video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.680 --> 01:32:54.680] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. [01:32:54.680 --> 01:32:59.680] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:59.680 --> 01:33:04.680] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.680 --> 01:33:39.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:33:39.680 --> 01:34:08.680] Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to David in Austin. Okay, David, go ahead, you were... [01:34:08.680 --> 01:34:18.680] Okay, what I was mentioning was that you had asked the point about wait until the last minute to file, [01:34:18.680 --> 01:34:23.680] because then they probably would not have any audit money available to file, [01:34:23.680 --> 01:34:30.680] and that is generally how the thing works. You know, people don't really have to file for three years after their deadline, [01:34:30.680 --> 01:34:34.680] especially if they've got any money coming back. [01:34:34.680 --> 01:34:39.680] The reason everyone is scared of filing late is because of penalties and interest. [01:34:39.680 --> 01:34:43.680] Penalties and interest will eat you alive if you owe a bunch of money. [01:34:43.680 --> 01:34:50.680] Yep, but if you file a tax return, even if it's no matter how late it is, three years later, whatever, [01:34:50.680 --> 01:34:56.680] but you're getting a $1 refund back, if you're getting money back, [01:34:56.680 --> 01:35:01.680] that wipes out all the penalties and interest that would have been there. [01:35:01.680 --> 01:35:05.680] Now that's interesting. [01:35:05.680 --> 01:35:12.680] So if you're going to claim you own your own business, the business is not making any profit, [01:35:12.680 --> 01:35:24.680] you need to pay in a little bit so you can claim no profit and get that little bit back. [01:35:24.680 --> 01:35:32.680] No, now that is a misconception that a lot of people have. [01:35:32.680 --> 01:35:37.680] You don't have to pay anything in at all because you don't have to file it till the end of the year. [01:35:37.680 --> 01:35:42.680] IRS wants you to. They want you to file quarterly and be paying some money in quarterly, [01:35:42.680 --> 01:35:47.680] but if you're running out of loss, why should you file it at all? [01:35:47.680 --> 01:35:53.680] You shouldn't file that because you're going to get all the money back or you're not going to owe any money. [01:35:53.680 --> 01:36:00.680] How would your penalties and interest be affected if you didn't know any? [01:36:00.680 --> 01:36:03.680] So I guess there wouldn't be any. [01:36:03.680 --> 01:36:07.680] No, you have to owe $1 for them to penalize it. [01:36:07.680 --> 01:36:11.680] You have to owe for them to put penalties and interest on what you owe. [01:36:11.680 --> 01:36:13.680] That's all they put it on is on what you owe. [01:36:13.680 --> 01:36:19.680] So if you never owed any, there's not going to be any penalties and interest anyway. [01:36:19.680 --> 01:36:26.680] So you wouldn't need to be paying any in throughout the time. [01:36:26.680 --> 01:36:31.680] See the objective from IRS. [01:36:31.680 --> 01:36:35.680] While I was in the Marines, I had IRS come out and talk to the troops one time, [01:36:35.680 --> 01:36:48.680] and they said that all you have to have for your own business is that you have to have a profit-making objective. [01:36:48.680 --> 01:36:49.680] Okay? [01:36:49.680 --> 01:36:52.680] Oh, so that don't mean you actually have to make profit. [01:36:52.680 --> 01:36:53.680] No, no, no. [01:36:53.680 --> 01:36:55.680] You just have to want to. [01:36:55.680 --> 01:37:02.680] There is no law against being a bad businessman, and in a lot of cases, that's good. [01:37:02.680 --> 01:37:09.680] Because you've heard everyone say that 90% of all the businesses that start up go under and lose money. [01:37:09.680 --> 01:37:13.680] Well, none of those guys owed any taxes. [01:37:13.680 --> 01:37:18.680] There's no law against being a bad businessman, so no, absolutely not. [01:37:18.680 --> 01:37:22.680] You won't owe any money, so you wouldn't be paying any in, and there's no penalties and interest, [01:37:22.680 --> 01:37:24.680] because you never owed any in the first place. [01:37:24.680 --> 01:37:26.680] Wow, that's good to hear. [01:37:26.680 --> 01:37:28.680] That means I'm safe. [01:37:28.680 --> 01:37:29.680] Yeah, you are. [01:37:29.680 --> 01:37:30.680] Most people are. [01:37:30.680 --> 01:37:32.680] Most people don't know it. [01:37:32.680 --> 01:37:37.680] I've been in business a long time, and I've made squat. [01:37:37.680 --> 01:37:42.680] And you'd be in good shape to be able to do this if you wanted to. [01:37:42.680 --> 01:37:48.680] Now, the simple two-page tax return that I did will fit just everybody. [01:37:48.680 --> 01:37:53.680] And like I said a while ago, I did a generic thing, and I just pulled $50,000 out of there and said, [01:37:53.680 --> 01:37:55.680] okay, here's $50,000. [01:37:55.680 --> 01:38:05.680] And I did a generic return, and anybody that would like to have a copy of that return, I'll be glad to send it to them. [01:38:05.680 --> 01:38:12.680] If anyone would like to talk to David, or has a question for David, or would like a copy of that return, [01:38:12.680 --> 01:38:19.680] send me an email, Randy at RealVlogRadio.com, and ask for a reference to David. [01:38:19.680 --> 01:38:30.680] I realize David does tax, and he has his own business, but I have a rule here that I never give out contact information. [01:38:30.680 --> 01:38:36.680] So if you want to contact him, send me an email, I'll forward it to him. [01:38:36.680 --> 01:38:44.680] And that always, you know, if you call into my show and I have any information about you, I will never give it out to anybody. [01:38:44.680 --> 01:38:53.680] If somebody wants to contact you, send me a request, and I will forward it, and then if they want to respond, they can. [01:38:53.680 --> 01:38:57.680] So you don't have to worry about us giving out your information. [01:38:57.680 --> 01:39:04.680] Unless somebody wants to buy it from me, David, you know anybody who'll buy all this worthless information I have? [01:39:04.680 --> 01:39:07.680] Oh, absolutely. [01:39:07.680 --> 01:39:15.680] Okay, but if you want to talk to David, if you have some questions, send me an email, I will get it to him. [01:39:15.680 --> 01:39:24.680] Been dealing with David for a long time, and if you listen to my show, you know I don't recommend people very often. [01:39:24.680 --> 01:39:25.680] Well, never. [01:39:25.680 --> 01:39:39.680] Randy, if there's anyone that is looking to try to get in on this money that they're supposed to be sending out to everybody, they need to have filed a 2018 tax return. [01:39:39.680 --> 01:39:40.680] It's looking like. [01:39:40.680 --> 01:39:46.680] Now, they're putting this funding package together. [01:39:46.680 --> 01:39:51.680] It'll probably be voted on on Monday in the Senate. [01:39:51.680 --> 01:40:10.680] But it's a trillion dollar bailout for everybody, and it's supposed to be the reason they're saying they're wanting to send every person $1,200 is because right now they're telling every person because of this coronavirus, don't go out. [01:40:10.680 --> 01:40:15.680] Get out, stay in your home, don't go, and this is to help you stay on your feet. [01:40:15.680 --> 01:40:27.680] So we really don't know what all the parameters going to be to be able to get that until Monday, but they should be ready to file a 2018 tax return if they never have. [01:40:27.680 --> 01:40:30.680] Okay, that was going to be my question, David. [01:40:30.680 --> 01:40:44.680] If I didn't file last year, could I file the 2018 return at the same time I file to get this credit? [01:40:44.680 --> 01:40:50.680] Okay, you should file the 2018 return right now. [01:40:50.680 --> 01:41:04.680] That's the reason I was calling you in to let people know you ought to file that in the next few days because they're trying to set this up where they send these checks out to people in about three or four weeks. [01:41:04.680 --> 01:41:23.680] Now, if you file the 2018 return and they have your address on the return, they're automatically, if you had a refund coming back and you got $1 back, if you put your bank account information on there and they put your refund back in your account, [01:41:23.680 --> 01:41:39.680] you don't even apply for this refund money, it's just going to show up in your account. If you had filed the 2018 return, which I did not, and most people that I know did not even file the 2018, [01:41:39.680 --> 01:41:54.680] I'm going to file one in the next few days on a short form, like Brett was talking about, the equivalent of an easy form, and just put general income money that I had on there and go ahead and send it in. [01:41:54.680 --> 01:42:06.680] That way, it'll be in the system next two or three weeks, and if they do come up with this cash handout, like they're telling everybody they're going to do, then they'll automatically go right into your account. [01:42:06.680 --> 01:42:11.680] If you don't apply for it, you don't call an 800 number, you don't do anything. Okay? [01:42:11.680 --> 01:42:22.680] And listen, I won't take up any more of your time, Randy. I was just going to call in, say hi, and let everybody know that's the latest I heard, and I was going to get your share if they're going to throw it out there, everybody. [01:42:22.680 --> 01:42:44.680] That's really good news. One question, David, do you know anything about this legislation they just passed where they will pay you, where they're ordering companies to pay people if they can't come into work, and then the companies can then deduct all of that from their taxes? [01:42:44.680 --> 01:42:58.680] Yes, they're trying to make it go through the small business administration, and that's part of this funding package that they're going to sign Monday. All of this is together in this trillion dollar package. [01:42:58.680 --> 01:43:18.680] That's about half of it. About half of it is money going out to all the people, and the other half is trying to take the SBA, Small Business Administration, and have them loan money to businesses that can get this money to stay alive. [01:43:18.680 --> 01:43:29.680] People don't go to work for a month. People can't afford to pay their rent, and they're going to close down all of their own businesses. So they're trying to avoid this from happening. [01:43:29.680 --> 01:43:42.680] So the SBA is going to loan them plenty of money to get through the next few months, and then there's going to be provisions that you may or may not even have to pay it back, but they're just trying to keep America together. [01:43:42.680 --> 01:43:54.680] Oh, wonderful. Okay, hang on. We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Will La Radio. We'll be right back. [01:43:54.680 --> 01:44:00.680] Glad David called in. Oh, I'm still in the air. [01:44:00.680 --> 01:44:09.680] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:09.680 --> 01:44:17.680] At this time, we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.680 --> 01:44:25.680] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.680 --> 01:44:31.680] Logo Serial Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.680 --> 01:44:39.680] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.680 --> 01:44:47.680] When you order from Logo Serial Network.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.680 --> 01:44:51.680] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.680 --> 01:45:02.680] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:02.680 --> 01:45:05.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:05.680 --> 01:45:09.680] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:09.680 --> 01:45:17.680] The affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:17.680 --> 01:45:24.680] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.680 --> 01:45:29.680] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.680 --> 01:45:36.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:36.680 --> 01:45:45.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.680 --> 01:45:54.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.680 --> 01:45:58.680] Please visit LulavLawRadio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:58.680 --> 01:46:22.680] Our call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.680 --> 01:46:29.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, LulavLawRadio. We're talking to David and Austin. [01:46:29.680 --> 01:46:43.680] Okay, David, we had Scott Richardson read a legislation that was just passed a few days ago, [01:46:43.680 --> 01:46:54.680] and it was about if someone can't get into work, if the company has to shut down and stop letting people work, then they have to pay them. [01:46:54.680 --> 01:46:59.680] And then the government will reimburse them, but they can take it all off their taxes. [01:46:59.680 --> 01:47:07.680] I thought that was one of the most well-structured pieces of legislation I had ever seen, [01:47:07.680 --> 01:47:13.680] and he was reading it, he was saying that companies are required to pay these guys, [01:47:13.680 --> 01:47:22.680] and I was thinking that's not going to go off very well, but then they countered that by taking it all off their taxes. [01:47:22.680 --> 01:47:26.680] How can we use that to our benefit? [01:47:26.680 --> 01:47:30.680] Are you familiar with that particular legislation? [01:47:30.680 --> 01:47:34.680] No, I'm not. Now, is that something that just passed the House or did it? [01:47:34.680 --> 01:47:43.680] Yes, just a couple days ago, Scott sent it to me. As soon as we get done, I will email that to you. [01:47:43.680 --> 01:47:48.680] Okay, well, I believe that's just the House version. I remember it has to pass the House and the Senate. [01:47:48.680 --> 01:47:53.680] No, no, no. Trump signed this one in the legislation. [01:47:53.680 --> 01:47:59.680] Oh, okay. Okay. Good. Good. No, I'm not acquainted with that one then. I understand. [01:47:59.680 --> 01:48:04.680] That's what they're working on, but they're working on a much bigger one right now. [01:48:04.680 --> 01:48:12.680] That was the $8 billion legislation that they passed before. Now they're working on the entire country. [01:48:12.680 --> 01:48:22.680] Okay, I will get that to you. We're on our last segment, so if anybody has any questions for David or you want to talk to David about your taxes, [01:48:22.680 --> 01:48:31.680] send me an email, randy at realloveradio.com, and I will get it to David, and he will help you out. [01:48:31.680 --> 01:48:36.680] David, how's Millie? She's doing good today. [01:48:36.680 --> 01:48:43.680] David's a fat old jarhead. He's almost fat as me. [01:48:43.680 --> 01:48:49.680] But Millie, one of my favorite human beings on planet Earth. [01:48:49.680 --> 01:48:52.680] Thank you. [01:48:52.680 --> 01:48:55.680] Okay, thank you, David. [01:48:55.680 --> 01:48:57.680] Okay, have a good night. [01:48:57.680 --> 01:49:05.680] Okay, now we're going to go to Ken in New York. Hello, Ken. What do you have for us today? [01:49:05.680 --> 01:49:07.680] Hi, Randy. Hi, Brett. [01:49:07.680 --> 01:49:23.680] Well, not so much the original question, but after listening to David for a while, we were just given off time from our place of employment until April 1st, [01:49:23.680 --> 01:49:39.680] tentatively, and we're being made to run out our personal time. For example, I had a lot of hours piled up, so I don't think it's going to be a problem for me, [01:49:39.680 --> 01:49:44.680] but this puts a different picture on it, what he was just talking about. [01:49:44.680 --> 01:49:56.680] Should I be made to run my time out, or should they be compensating me for it? Because I'm one of the people that does not cash my time out. [01:49:56.680 --> 01:50:00.680] I don't know what you mean by cash your time out. [01:50:00.680 --> 01:50:10.680] Okay, we have a choice. If you have personal time hours accumulating, and what happens is if we accumulate up to 300 hours, which a lot of us do, [01:50:10.680 --> 01:50:19.680] because it's so short-handed, we don't get any extra personal time until we start using some of that time up. [01:50:19.680 --> 01:50:27.680] So typically what people do is they're in dire straits as they'll take those hours and cash out a few weeks of them. [01:50:27.680 --> 01:50:31.680] They'll turn them into cash instead of taking them off. [01:50:31.680 --> 01:50:42.680] This was addressed in the legislation. Send me an email, and I will forward this legislation to you, Scott, send it to me. [01:50:42.680 --> 01:50:49.680] I'll send it to you, but it addressed your regular time and your vacation time. [01:50:49.680 --> 01:51:02.680] What they were saying was, is your employer has to pay you a certain percentage of what you would have made had you worked up to a certain amount per day. [01:51:02.680 --> 01:51:12.680] And then after that, you could take your leave time or your vacation time, and that way you have steady income. [01:51:12.680 --> 01:51:22.680] But it wasn't clear on how to do this. I'm not sure. I will send you the legislation you can read through. [01:51:22.680 --> 01:51:29.680] It wasn't that. He read the whole thing on the air, so it's not that terribly long. [01:51:29.680 --> 01:51:36.680] And I was surprised. It was so well written. It covered every objection I had. [01:51:36.680 --> 01:51:50.680] As he kept reading, they handled that objection. I was surprised that the government could get something like this out so quickly and have it so apparently well structured. [01:51:50.680 --> 01:52:07.680] The real question that I actually called you up about is that something happened to me today that has never happened to me before. I went into one of these dollar stores to go pick some batteries up, some extra batteries, and stock up on a few things. [01:52:07.680 --> 01:52:22.680] And I want to use my bank card as a credit card, which I usually do when I'm not around banking institutions, because I just don't like using my pin number on it. [01:52:22.680 --> 01:52:33.680] And I put it as a credit card and it got rejected for $20. Now, I can assure you I have a lot more than $20 in that account. [01:52:33.680 --> 01:52:42.680] And I was standing there and people are sitting there looking at me and I put it through again and it wouldn't go. [01:52:42.680 --> 01:52:55.680] And I fortunately had a credit card with me also and I put that in and it went. I called my bank up and I'm going to deal with them tomorrow because they had the bank closed. [01:52:55.680 --> 01:53:04.680] And the only way you can get to the bank is to get online, which I went and did and I found 20 cards. It looked like people were doing a slow run on the banks. [01:53:04.680 --> 01:53:09.680] So I pulled some cash out so I can have cash on hand. [01:53:09.680 --> 01:53:22.680] And they told me, they gave me this lame excuse about, well, they've been having fraud in some of the dollar stores and I should use it as a debit card and use my pin. [01:53:22.680 --> 01:53:31.680] Well, if they're having fraud problems, why would I want to put my pin number into their bank, you know, into their card system? I don't know what's going on there. [01:53:31.680 --> 01:53:38.680] Well, they're probably trying to help the fraudsters out a little bit because they need to make a living too. [01:53:38.680 --> 01:53:48.680] Yeah. Well, I'm going to call the manager tomorrow or the system manager and run up and down on them and see what I can get out of them. [01:53:48.680 --> 01:53:53.680] This is another, this is something that I expected and I heard might be happening. [01:53:53.680 --> 01:54:03.680] We thought I had a banking problem and I'm wondering what to do about it. [01:54:03.680 --> 01:54:10.680] I mean, I would go tell them, I'll just go pull my account out and transfer it someplace else. [01:54:10.680 --> 01:54:28.680] Unfortunately, when you sign, I don't know if you're aware of this or not, when you go and sign a card in the bank, when you open a bank account, they never want to show you the banking policy or the sheets with the actual policy on it. [01:54:28.680 --> 01:54:40.680] They won't give you that and the lefties sign the card and typically inside the banking policy or their rules is you waive the right to a jury trial. [01:54:40.680 --> 01:54:44.680] For binding mediation? [01:54:44.680 --> 01:54:46.680] I'm sorry? [01:54:46.680 --> 01:54:51.680] You waive the right to a jury trial, do they also require binding mediation? [01:54:51.680 --> 01:55:04.680] That's a good question. I didn't notice that. I have a copy of the banking rules but clearly they all do the same thing and there's really no way you can open a bank account without, you know... [01:55:04.680 --> 01:55:20.680] For me, you know, I listen to that and I'm not too concerned about that because the fact that they will not show you the conditions until you have agreed to the conditions that makes the conditions [01:55:20.680 --> 01:55:23.680] essentially unconscionable. [01:55:23.680 --> 01:55:33.680] That was a question I was going to ask and they are not, is that like un-informed consent or contract? [01:55:33.680 --> 01:55:55.680] Right, so because they are operating under federal sanction, then all of your rights are bound to what they do so they don't show you what their rules are until after you've signed. [01:55:55.680 --> 01:56:09.680] Well, you know, if I had a private bank that had nothing to do with the government, then someone would have a harder time I would say, well, you didn't have to do business with my bank. [01:56:09.680 --> 01:56:12.680] Yeah, but then they all do the same thing. [01:56:12.680 --> 01:56:19.680] But if it's a federal bank, if it's under federal sanction, then that's different. [01:56:19.680 --> 01:56:28.680] You have federal sanction, you have to grant us all of our rights, so you create an unconscionable contractual agreement. [01:56:28.680 --> 01:56:29.680] Okay. [01:56:29.680 --> 01:56:38.680] Then while it may say that and those people who don't know any better may think that matters, those who listen to this show know that that's a bunch of nonsense. [01:56:38.680 --> 01:56:41.680] We can beat that. [01:56:41.680 --> 01:56:43.680] Oh, goodie. [01:56:43.680 --> 01:56:49.680] And even then, when lose, draw doesn't make any difference. [01:56:49.680 --> 01:57:01.680] Once you understand how the system works, you can drag them into the court and beat them up until they want to make a deal and go away and get loose from you so you stop giving them grief. [01:57:01.680 --> 01:57:12.680] Yeah, it sounds like what you were talking about earlier with the, I don't know if it was Dave or previous caller, was that just the threat of litigation is enough to make them want to settle? [01:57:12.680 --> 01:57:13.680] Exactly. [01:57:13.680 --> 01:57:17.680] I'm helping Tim put together a case right now. [01:57:17.680 --> 01:57:22.680] And the whole purpose is to make a deal. [01:57:22.680 --> 01:57:37.680] How do we create a case that raises issues that the bank is absolutely not want to allow to get to the court of appeals? [01:57:37.680 --> 01:57:55.680] Like Jazanowski got to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court reamed the banks in their decision and I thought, who on earth ever allowed that stupid case to get to the Supreme? [01:57:55.680 --> 01:58:01.680] You don't let that stuff that'll hurt you get there make a deal deal out. [01:58:01.680 --> 01:58:07.680] On the way out, I have a solution over your financial problems at Logos. [01:58:07.680 --> 01:58:09.680] It's not going to be guns. [01:58:09.680 --> 01:58:13.680] It's not going to be the British Brown best that I asked you to substitute for me. [01:58:13.680 --> 01:58:21.680] I think for every hundred dollar donation, if you offer the 12 pack of toilet paper, you're that friend you don't even know about. [01:58:21.680 --> 01:58:27.680] Good idea. Does it have to be new or can we offer used? [01:58:27.680 --> 01:58:29.680] Oh, never mind. [01:58:29.680 --> 01:58:31.680] We're out of time. [01:58:31.680 --> 01:58:33.680] It can't be. [01:58:33.680 --> 01:58:36.680] Brett Faust rule of law radio. [01:58:36.680 --> 01:58:38.680] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:38.680 --> 01:58:39.680] We'll be back next week. [01:58:39.680 --> 01:58:40.680] Same time. [01:58:40.680 --> 01:58:41.680] Same station. [01:58:41.680 --> 01:58:49.680] Good night. [01:58:49.680 --> 01:58:53.680] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [01:58:53.680 --> 01:58:57.680] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:57.680 --> 01:59:01.680] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text. [01:59:01.680 --> 01:59:05.680] But in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [01:59:05.680 --> 01:59:08.680] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:08.680 --> 01:59:12.680] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate. [01:59:12.680 --> 01:59:17.680] But the real story is the more than 9000 explanatory footnotes. 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